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  • 23rd April 2013

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DevBootcamp threadless Consume Content t-shirt iphone

A VIDEO

My first Threadless design is up for voting! It’s a detail from the mural I did for DevBootcamp Chicago’s new space. 

I’m excited to do more designs from my past pieces, so if you have a favorite you’d like to see on a shirt, iPhone, or whatever, tweet it at me here: @agentFin

“Consume or Be Consumed” 

http://www.threadless.com/threadless/consume-or-be-consumed/

  • 9th April 2013

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DevBootcamp Dave Hoover sketchnote

A VIDEO

Over the years, I’ve gotten used to people leaning over my shoulder to watch me sketch, at conferences, at coffee shops. I’ve always meant to do some kind of recording of my process, but til now, I just hadn’t. 

Showing process, showing the hours that happen behind the scene, the indecision, the overwhelming question of “where to start?” … this matters to me HUGELY. 

In essence, I am a curator of ideas. I distill and coalesce what others say, find cross applications and common patterns. But mainly, it’s listening.

This mural was different. Pulled straight from the ether. But it was informed from conversations with Dave Hoover who commissioned it for DevBootcamp, drawn from all the previous metaphors I’ve constructed at the design and developer talks I’ve gone to… and then I had to actually put first chalk and then ink to the wall. 

There was no map or path provided. There was only this idea of what the mural was intended to inspire: for people to think, and to share those thoughts, visually, on a surface. 

So here you go. A glimpse into the making of a sketchnote on the large scale.

  • 22nd February 2013

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Vitamin Vitamin T Vitamin Talent Shay Howe Freelancers 1871 starter league

A PHOTO

Threw down a quick sketchnote of Shay Howe talking about 1871, StarterLeague, collaboration, freelancing, finding developers… good lord. That was a LOT to fit into just two-minutes!

You can watch him speak for himself here: 

UX-pert Shay Howe on Freelance Front End Developers & Networking

  • 21st February 2013

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Jen Myers DevBootcamp Design David Kadavy Design for Hackers geekfest

A PHOTO

I always love a talk that starts by lighting a fire in someone’s corner, and Jen Myers, Instructor at the freshly launched DevBootcamp Chicago, did not disappoint at this week’s Geekfest. 

It might not seem like it, but the best way to get folks to learn is to tell them they CANT do something. Design is like that. Telling developers they can’t design… well, they’ve been hearing that on the sly for a while. The trick is you have to then provide some direction, some resources for those you’ve just knocked. 

Design, like art in general, has become this mystical thing that you’re either born knowing how to do, or will fail at epically for your whole life. Malcolm Gladwell [now getting props from Macklemore] has shed some light with the 10,000hrs theory. But unless the process is revealed, those 10,000hrs can be spend flailing, rather than learning and practicing efficiently. 

I’ve experienced the challenge of this when I’ve taught my sketchnote classes. Explaining my process, the tricks I use that are now so naturally embedded in my habit, was incredibly difficult at first. But in teaching, I learned more about what I really do. 

So, developers, ask designers better questions. Ask them if you can watch their process. Designers, when a developer tells you “we can’t do that” ask them to explain what it would take. LEARN FROM EACH OTHER. 

The distance between design and code is shrinking, between prototype and implementation, between build and ship. If we don’t start learning what happens on the other side, it’s going to get really ugly around here. 

Some good start points: 

“Design for Hackers” - David Kadavy: Great for the coders, but also important for designers to realize how obtuse some of what they take for granted really is. 

“The Non-Designers Design Book” - Robin Williams: The most straight forward and easily digestible entry into design, complete with exercises to help you realize why red really isn’t the right color there… 

[see full size here]

  • 20th February 2013

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Excelerate TechStars Tech Stars sketchnote Starter League StarterLeague Troy Henikoff

A PHOTO

Troy Henikoff swung by Starter League to tell the story of not only where he came from, but also where Excelerate Labs [now TechStars Chicago] is headed. You wouldn’t expect someone with boat building dreams to wind up in startup land, but maybe it makes perfect sense. After all, incubators are all about putting wind in someone’s sails, about streamlining and surviving the taking and jibing to make it to the finish line. 

[see full size here]

  • 8th February 2013

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RubyMotion Ray Hightower geekfest sketchnotes MacBacon Bubble-wrap WisdomGroup Groupon

A PHOTO

Ray Hightower, President of WisdomGroup, presented “Extending Ruby Motion with Gems and Pods” at this week’s Geekfest.

So, you want to build an app, but your team is Ruby based… That’s exactly what RubyMotion was created for. Objective-C isn’t evil, it’s just not efficient to try to work another code base into your team process when you’re already rolling in Ruby land.

Yes, you still need XCode, but such is the life with iOS anything. At least they’re upfront with the guidelines they want you to follow to get into the AppStore! [HIG] 

As you dig in, it’s pretty much gems all the way down [haha] making every step of your app building process as Ruby-ified as possible. From testing with MacBacon, to Ruby syntax for your Objective-C method calls with Bubble-Wrap, it’s all there for you and your team to keep on truckin.

[see full size]

  • 25th January 2013

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Adrian Holovaty Geekfest Groupon Soudslice Canvas HTML5 Sketchnotes

A PHOTO

It’s been a while since I got to go to a Geekfest, and this past week was a treat. Adrian Holovaty did a demo and deep dive into Soundslice. Created to smooth the path to transcribing guitar tabs and using all HTML5 Canvas, it’s an elegant addition to the music-tech world. 

Caught with just my moleskin I went “all pen” this time. Been interesting giving myself the chance to try out the single-phase technique. Oh, and no. That’s not a real triple-fold moleskin.

[see full size]

  • 18th January 2013

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Harper Reed Obama Luke Shepard Marcy Capron Craig Ulliott Kevin Willer Polymathic Tech Trends CEC StartupForecast

A PHOTO

CEC [Chicagoland Entrepreneurial Center] presented their second annual StartupForecast at Chase Bank Auditorium. Their panel of predictors touched on the top trends in the tech world, including how tech is breaking out into the real world.

Panel: Harper Reed (@harper) CTO of Obama for America, Luke Shepard (@lukeshepard) CTO of eSpark Learning, Marcy Capron (@marcymarcy), CEO of Polymathic, and Craig Ulliott (@craigulliott) CTO of Belly. Moderated by Kevin Willer (@kwiller)

  • 21st November 2012

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sketchnotes C4 Failure

A PHOTO

What do we do when we “fail?” 

C4 [Chicago Consumer Culture Community] brings research by Linda Tuncay Zayer and Cele Otnes on how failure is dealt with. The four main tropes identified are: 

1) Failure Inherent to the Service Context

2) Failure as a Mobilizing Frustration

3) Failure as Fated

4) Failure as a Cue to Re-evaluate.

“Consumers’ Conceptualizations of Failure in a High-Risk Health-Related Service Context”

http://chicagoconsumerculture.com/Current.html

  • 9th November 2012

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xdchi sketchnotes Grubhub josh evnin kurt peterson ux user experience Jack Kent

A PHOTO

Josh Evnin, Kurt Peterson and Jack Kent [the UX team for GrubHub] present how they combatted the dreaded Kitchen Menu Drawer. #XDCHI 

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