Fast Company • 17th October 2022 https://www.fastcompany.com/3018071/what-software-makers-need-to-know-about-sound-effects What everyday apps can learn from the sounds that suck us into video games.
Fast Company • 23rd September 2013 What Software Makers Need To Know About Sound Effects Before the birth of the web, most developers knew nothing about visual design and had never worked with a graphic designer. Now no application is created without one. In game...
Fast Company • 20th November 2013 Yes, Coders Can Be CEOs–If They Learn This One Skill Technical employees aren’t usually considered “CEO material.” Here’s why they should be.
Fast Company • 17th November 2014 Tips For Techies Who Want To Wow A Crowd Nancy Duarte has seen a lot of bad tech presentations. Here are her tips to ensure that yours isn't one of them.
Fast Company • 16th December 2013 Why Good Programming Projects Go Bad Fred Brooks wrote the software development classic The Mythical Man-Month almost 40 years ago. In this interview, Brooks explains why managers still make the same mistakes.
Fast Company • 30th April 2014 Secrets To Building A Totally Addictive App (Without That Guilty Feeling) Eyal teaches entrepreneurs how to create habit-forming tech products which users open without any conscious thought at all. A habit, he says, is an action we take automatically in response...
Fast Company • 15th August 2013 How To Find The One Metric That Really Matters If Lean Startup was a jigsaw puzzle, a new book called Lean Analytics is its missing piece. Lean Analytics co-author Ben Yoskovitz explains how to measure what really matters.
Fast Company • 18th February 2014 The Five Secrets To Running A Totally Distributed Company With 65 employees in more than ten locations, this company’s CEO says these five rules keep them working together.
Fast Company • 20th March 2013 Box’s 65-Year-Old Android Engineer Gives Your Startup Some Unsentimental Advice There are precious few people who have seen and comprehended enough of the rise of computing, and then mobile computing, to have some perspective.