34 // Bring your own client with Geoffrey Litt
Metamuse - Un pódcast de Adam Wiggins, Mark McGranaghan
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In today’s world, apps and their data are tightly coupled—but what if each person could pick and choose their own tool for use in a collaborative project? Geoffrey Litt is a researcher working on this problem at MIT. He joins Mark and Adam to talk about email as the original BYOC case study; how shared protocols enable niche software; whether it’s possible to design software for someone other than yourself; and how to accidentally become an expert. Discuss this episode in the Muse community Follow @MuseAppHQ on Twitter Show notes Geoffrey Litt / @geoffreylitt “teach them to yearn for the vast and endless sea” Project Cambria MIT Software Design Group Ink & Switch Human-Computer Interaction Doug Engelbart Superorganizers profile of Geoffrey including Muse screenshots Bring Your Own Client email as one of the first internet protocols Pine, Mutt Superhuman, Front, Tempo not many clients support video in HTML emails tractor attachments and the three-point hitch HTML meta tags for Google and Twitter progress enhancement reverse engineering ad blockers end-user programming aspiring programmer progressing from Livejournal to HTML coding PHP Hubspot, Mailchimp “toolmaker humility” from Balint @ Craft Solid accessibility in collaborative writing VS Code won the text editor wars “ed is the standard text editor” episode on video games Flash, Java servlet Changing Minds Bonnie Nardi ethnographic study of distributed problem-solving in spreadsheets Wildcard