Hacker Timesnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | oneplusone2's commentslogin

Worst implementation of bookmarks yet. I have over 5k of them and managing them in Chrome will be a futile process. Clicking the "Open all Bookmarks in New window" button also crashes the browser when you have that many.

It is nice and fast though.


Are you trying to index the entire web in your own bookmarks?


In my opinion the bookmark implementation is the BEST yet. You essentially can have multiple bookmark menus for different topics, as any folder you drag onto your bookmark bar becomes a pulldown menu.


I think this falls in to the 'best for what?' category. Bookmarks are something that gets used differently by different people.

Some freaks (no offence) with thousands of bookmarks have radically different needs to others.


I would love an invite! (thanks!)


I am pretty much the exact opposite. I am a designer, but not really a programmer. I can program, but it is not pretty and has to be pretty basic. I am pretty much forced to rely on ExpressionEngine to get things working.

However, I don't care. I focus on what I am good at in order to get even better. Don't try to diversify. Specialize. There is more money in it.


Wow another designer on HN ... and I thought I was the only one.


I have a degree in design and half a degree in engineering :)

With respect to the topic.. good design studios get involved in a project from day one and have a tremendous impact on the outcome of the final project. It's not simply a "skin" over a technology. It's should be a critical part of your operation.

I find it bizarre that many people assume anything "artistic" requires innate talent and you either have it or you don't. Design requires constant practice and dedication to be good and ten years (or more) of experience to be truly great, just like any other discipline.

My designs from 15 years ago are laughably bad but now I can whip up some decent fairly quickly. On the other hand... I haven't programmed anything in 10 years and have a long learning curve ahead of me.

I'd recommend looking for some good designers on one of the freelance sites.. there's no shortage of choice. If you decide to go it alone, or even if you don't, I recommend picking up the book "Design Elements" by Timothy Samara. It's the best, most concise, book on the general principles of design I have yet to find. It will give you a good overview and some talking points with any designers you hire.

Good luck!


Ugh.. ignore the typos.. typed too quickly.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: