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Followup

July 17, 2000 by Michael Boyle

on the IAM.com/Razorfish saga: “Our Work’s Fine, Just Pay the Bills“

I may be naive, but I think it’s ridiculous for a dot-com company to farm out their web design work. I can understand a bricks-and-mortar company hiring a company to do pure design work that will be overlaid on a structure they build themselves, or that they have partnered with someone else to do. I can even relate to a strategic partnership with a web company with the latter providing the actual site. But to hire someone straight up like that? I think it invites failure. It’s like a recipe. The knowledge of designers or programmers has to be deeply accounted for by management of a dot-com – it’s an essential piece of the puzzle. Their familiarity with the business model, the history of the project, but from their own unique perspective, is critical. And – the key challenge of a dot-com is just that – to integrate the technical knowledge of designers and programmers and others with the “product” as defined by a deep knowledge of the market, the business proposition, the value to users and to investors/clients. That’s not a casual thing – it’s a mission. I have some understanding of that – it’s a grandiose way of describing a big part of my job.

Tags: Business, Design, GNE, History, Web, Web Design

A portent of things

July 14, 2000 by Michael Boyle

to come? Razorfish is being sued for what their client thinks was bad, unprofessional web design. “[…] The company delivered (late) a site that was ‘flawed by grave technical and navigational problems.'”

Tags: Design, Professional, Web, Web Design

Three thoughts that

July 10, 2000 by Michael Boyle

have been coursing through my brain in the last little while:

  • No matter how many Ferrari stickers you put on, no matter how much you tint the windows, no matter how eager you are to blow by the minivans when the light turns green, your Honda Civic will never look like a slick racing car.
  • If you have an annoying song in your head, all you have to do is sing or hum the first few bars of Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire and the other song will be gone. It works astoundingly well. [BTW under no circumstances go to the official Johnny Cash website unless you enjoy inline audio messages every time you load up the index page. This has been a public service message.]
  • I would appreciate it if someone could recommend good flowcharting software that works on Macs. Everything I’ve tried, including Visio under Virtual PC, makes me want to pierce my temple with a Robertson screwdriver.

Tags: Software, War, Web, Windows

I’m not sure if

July 7, 2000 by Michael Boyle

my expectations from the web are appropriate or out of whack. All I want is the final score of the Epson Cup rugby game between Canada and Fiji. OK OK, it’s being held in Apia, Samoa, of all places. But the game was on the 7th and as far as I know the 7th is over in Samoa. And yet no score on any of the rugby sites.

Tags: Canada, Game, Web

From Brent’s Inessential.com:

July 7, 2000 by Michael Boyle

An extended riff on punk, the end of rock, and the web, mixed with a personal history and context. A good argument for the weblog form.

Tags: Blogging, History, Personal, Web

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