I made a gdoc with a list of work from home opportunities back in April. Hope this helps! https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nF8FH-5f-51-Q_Hzt06jhYMN...
The challenge for me is always knowing what to eat to help me accelerate my weight loss. I need structure. If I don't have structure, it's easy for me to eat things I shouldn't. I started a weight loss program 5 weeks…
Former Softie, worked in Windows for 9 years from Vista to Win8, mostly on the Shell and UI platform teams. For Vista and half of Win7 development, I was the PM owner for our UI platform (comctl32, DirectUI, Visual…
I don't buy into his argument. This UX pattern does have benefits for the user. It has a low cognitive load with very little friction to show more items. All the UX challenges he calls out are solvable. In addition,…
This article explains it pretty well: http://www.zdnet.com/article/why-microsoft-just-bought-linke...
UX always wins. Build a great "open" UX and you have a chance to gain traction. A bottoms up approach where we put the protocol first instead of experience is the "Architect Astronaut" way of looking at solving this…
I made a gdoc with a list of work from home opportunities back in April. Hope this helps! https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nF8FH-5f-51-Q_Hzt06jhYMN...
The challenge for me is always knowing what to eat to help me accelerate my weight loss. I need structure. If I don't have structure, it's easy for me to eat things I shouldn't. I started a weight loss program 5 weeks…
Former Softie, worked in Windows for 9 years from Vista to Win8, mostly on the Shell and UI platform teams. For Vista and half of Win7 development, I was the PM owner for our UI platform (comctl32, DirectUI, Visual…
I don't buy into his argument. This UX pattern does have benefits for the user. It has a low cognitive load with very little friction to show more items. All the UX challenges he calls out are solvable. In addition,…
This article explains it pretty well: http://www.zdnet.com/article/why-microsoft-just-bought-linke...
UX always wins. Build a great "open" UX and you have a chance to gain traction. A bottoms up approach where we put the protocol first instead of experience is the "Architect Astronaut" way of looking at solving this…