Some of my favorite feedback on Basecamp for iPhone has been that the app feels wicked fast, and all native. The app actually is a mix of web and native UI, but it’s difficult to see where the line is drawn. The majority of the content shown in the app is web: From the login screen, to posting a message, and even uploading photos on a comment, that’s all done using UIWebView. Chrome inspired us th
Office not required. As an employer, restricting hiring to your local region means you’re not getting the best people you can. As an employee, restricting your job search to companies within a reasonable commute means you’re not working for the best company you can. REMOTE shows both employers and employees how they can work together, remotely, from any desk, in any space, in any place, anytime, a
I’d be happy if 37signals is the last place I work. In an industry so focused on the booms and busts, I find myself a kindred spirit with the firms of old. Places where people happily reported to work for 40 years, picking up a snazzy gold watch at the end as a token of life-long loyalty. Committing myself to this long-term focus has led to a peaceful work atmosphere and an incredible clarity of p
Below: Q&A with Chris Wanstrath, CEO and Co-Founder of GitHub. This is part of our “Bootstrapped, Profitable, & Proud” series which profiles companies that have $1MM+ in revenues, didn’t take VC, and are profitable. Chris and Tom from GitHub have also answered reader questions in the comments section of this post. What does your company do? We offer public and private source code hosting to compan
You're reading Distilled Thinking. Who are you? My name is Dan Shipper. In 2012 (my sophomore year of college) I started a company called Firefly with some friends. Since that time we bootstrapped our way to the mid-six figures in revenue and are used by thousands of SMBs, financial advisors, and a few huge companies. In July we sold the company to Pega. Read more about the experience here. This b
Using URLs instead of ID references in your APIs is a nice idea. You should do that. It makes it marginally more convenient when writing a client wrapper because you don’t have to embed URL templates. So you can do client.get(response[:person][:url]) instead of client.get("/people/#{response[:person][:id]}"). But that’s about it. The recurrent hoopla over hypermedia APIs is completely overblown. E
Don’t build a fast company, Jason Fried tells Fast Company. Build a slow one. Jason Fried is a founder and CEO of 37signals, a software company based in Chicago. Fried also treats 37signals as something of a laboratory for innovative workplace practices–such as a recent experiment in shortening the summer workweek to just four days. We caught up with Fried to learn how employees are like fossil fu
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Over the past few months I’ve developed some icons for use on our marketing sites and newsletters. A few of these icons have made it into production. Some are simple and some are detailed. Most haven’t seen the light of day just because they weren’t a right fit for what we were trying to communicate at the time. I want to release the artwork for these icons as open source. They’re free for you to
A couple of years ago a lot of buzz started in the Ruby community about Erlang, a functional programming language developed by Ericsson originally for use in telecommunications systems. I was intrigued by the talk of fault tolerance and concurrency, two of the cornerstones that Erlang was built on, so I ordered the Programming Erlang book written by Joe Armstrong and published by the Pragmatic Pro
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