Just
Launches
A book about sketching for app design
You don't have to learn drawing to sketch digital products
Textato: A word processor that doesn't think it's a typewriter
Most text editors still think the end goal is a piece of paper, and not the web.
An eye tracker that doesn't need humans
Millions of years of human eye evolution and 39 people aged 18-50 years old, who thought they were doing one experiment, when they really were doing another. All in one small Mac app.
A mobile browser for desktop
I made a compact power-saving browser. But that's not how it started.
An app that replies to your texts
Text messages are driving our lives, and we're on the back seat frantically trying to reply before the next one comes in.
I doomed mankind with a free text editor
Will long and complex words make you look smarter? Meet the people who think that short words will make us dumb
We're not done with you, stopwatch app
A stopwatch uses the clock, but what if it also used all the other sensors?
Friends don't let friends listen to music alone
Streaming your Spotify to any number of friends and strangers, legally
Making screenshots and screen recordings of Android phones
Screenshots of phones should be as easy as taking a picture on a phone
Buying an ebook with a physical book
The only thing better than buying a physical book is reading it digitally. Here's how to have both.
Seeing how long it takes to read a book with a paper clip and a browser extension
Ebooks are great, but they're hard to judge by the cover - and thickness
Uber for tech support
It's a well-established fact in the universe that there's a lot of moms out there needing help with their computer. It's also a fact that their kids are not always around the corner. But someone is. Could we fully automate tech support for moms? A mom would call our automated phone number, which would prompt her for her postal code, then send out text messages to our army of tech supporters. The first to answer the message gets the mom's phone number—and a customer. Did it work? Surprisin
Bringing social networks into real life
If you think about your life, your partner, your friends, your job, the place your live. How many of those happened more or less randomly, bumping into the right person at the right time and place? To me, it's almost all of it. Self-help gurus will tell you to prepare your self for luck, then you will be lucky. So how do you do that? Imagine a world where you walk into a room and instantly know who everyone is, who your common friends are, what interests you share? This world already exist