Monthly Archives: September 2010
Introducing the new London Made
We are extremely pleased to tell you that we have launched the second version of our website. This comes from over a month of user experience testing (A/B Testing, etc.) and we are glad that we can finally share our hard efforts with the world. We introduced our first version of London Made over a month ago with the sole intention of testing the waters. I will be writing up a case study on the design decisions and thinking behind the website in the future.
Me, on “The new London Made”
The beard… It’s gone.
After 15 months of growth, I have shaved my beard off. I already miss it and it’s coming back ASAP. I really did it for my mother for her birthday as she hates it, and it made her incredibly happy so that makes it a bit better.
If the animation isn’t working, click here for a panorama.
HTML5 Is Not That Powerful
I don’t like posting twice in one day and this is usually something I would try to keep for the tl;dr section but something is really getting on my nerves.
HTML5 is a current big buzz-word in the industry and people are very excited about the new technology. There has been a lot of misappropriation about the word and a lot of scathing backlash because of it. I can not forget to mention the obvious recent event of when Jeremy Keith slaughtered Rebecca Lieb for her badly reported article. (In my opinion; it was wrong but it did not call for that level of aggression.) One of the faults she made was grouping multiple technologies into one and calling it HTML5, something a lot of Web Professionals seem to do lately.
Currently on the internet there seems is a lot of love for some of the awesome new experiments like Never Mind The Bullets and The Wilderness Downtown. These are beautiful fun examples of HTML5Javascript.
The truth of the matter is that HTML5 has barely anything to do with those websites. They are attaching themselves to a buzz word for a minor press advantage. Most of the sparkle was achieved through the Javascript and was all achievable in HTML4. Sure HTML5 helped but it was never the underlying technology that made these experiments be able to exist.
What upsets me the most is that HTML5 brings some awesome new features, some harnessed in these experiments but everyone is focussing on the pretty, rather than the functional and relevant.
Once the 500th version of these experiments occur, they will go on the pile of “Annoying and Irrelevant” much like obnoxious flash websites, auto-playing music and “Enter Now” landing pages.
Me. A bit of a life story.
My life has not always been easy but I think I can appreciate that now. I watched a lot of beautiful business and it helped shape who I became. I was born May 9th 1986 in London and am the third out of four children. Like all my brothers I was born premature which was probably an explanation in why I was born with multiple life altering diseases. Among a few of note was dyslexia, motor apraxia and colour-blindness. While these problems do not hinder me in my adult life and no one thinks I was born any different, it took many years of extra circular activities such as physiotherapy to get to that place.
As a weird but eventually wonderful result, it changed my life for the better. School ran at a different pace than I did and did not hold my interest for long (I was predicted all A-Stars but only walked away with 2 GCSEs.) I soon switched off and started in my own direction. At age 12, I picked up a Macromedia Flash 3 demo disk. After searching the internet for help and tutorials, I soon became adept at it. Firstly making crude animations and then quickly learning it for commercial usage. It was the age of bulletin boards and I found a web design community called Pixel Junction. I met my then soon-to-be business partner David Hope. We ran a company called Reality Art Studios for a total of 6 years before we decided that we both started to want different things and wanted to grow in a different environment.
Around 2002, while I was learning PHP, my travels I met my then future partners and close friends Bryan Veloso and Faruk Ateş. Two people who my respect for has only grown. In 2005, we briefly started a company called LT3media with Cindy Li, Hayo Bethlehem and Victoria Rendell. It was not to be, all 6 of us trying to fit our schedules together did not work and we parted ways.
Fast forward to 2005 and I leave for Asia to be with a girl (who eventually became my fiancée, then my ex.) A while later she tells me that she has to move to America, and so I tell her I will follow her. I do and spend 2 years in Galesburg, Illinois. At that point Obie offered a job at Hashrocket where I spend 90% of that time leading a vital project. I got to enjoy far too much Patron and hot tubbing with great friends and watch the company grow. 7 months later I decide that I need to be my own boss again.
Now, I have started London Made with the incredibly talented Jonathan Conway.
Since an early age I watched my father while he worked in the movie industry. He is a fountain of fun stories that include hanging out with Rod Stewart in hotel rooms, his help in creating the original Clash Of The Titans and so on. He also was one of the chartered accountants that worked on the Rolls Royce receivership and ran a successful pub for many years. My mother was much the same and is an MBA who used work as a Stock Trader, etc. I think it gave my parents equal parts joy and frustration that I was the only one of their 4 children to become an entrepreneur.
I do want to be a millionaire, but not so that I can pack up my job and retire, so that I can build more businesses, help other people with their dreams and build some charities. That has always been my dream.
I really enjoy helping people with their dreams and passion and am a true believer of the pay it forward concept. I spend about 35% of my day helping people; be it life or work. Truthfully, I am more than happy to do it. If I help one person and it changes their life for the better, chances are they will help at least one person and so on.
Few facts:
- According to Working With Rails, I have worked with Rails for 5 years and 8 months.
- I have designed for a total of 12 years.
- I would rather do it right and the best I can, than be rich and do it half-heartedly.
- My favourite books include The Hitman Diaries, Memoirs of A Geisha, Enter The Dragon, Freakanomics, Yes!: 50 Scientifically Proven Ways to Be Persuasive.
The Art of Recommendation
Throughout the businesses that I have owned and run and particularly at London Made, we pride ourselves on being able to fulfil most requests. We have worked with many developer’s or designer’s that have fit the project better. If it is a small task in a big project, we will often subcontract. Otherwise, we hand off projects.
If we can not handle it, I will nearly always try to seek a colleague that I think fits the project needs and deserves the work. A large part of it is spreading the love but there is some awesome by-products such as colleagues remember you and that colleagues often try to pay you back somehow. Be it a gift, a referral back or a hat tip in a blog post or such.
One major downside being that your neck is on the line. If you recommend a colleague that does a bad job, you are also remembered in that equation. That’s why I am very careful who I send it to.
Start forwarding the projects you can not fulfil and watch the rewards now!
Why Tumblr Sucks
After 40,000 followers and 4 years on Tumblr; I’ve had enough. I spent much time over the years on my multiple tumblogs hosted at Tumblr but finally the bad outweighs the good.
It brings me no pleasure to write this post. I understand as badly I think the team run Tumblr, I do not wish any harm or upset on them. I do think that their complete lack of care for their product should be known, so others do not make the same mistake I have. Frustrated with them and their service, I have finally succumbed to moving my blog to WordPress.
Why? Let me show you some of the reasons.
This is an example of the lacklustre programming that Tumblr are known for. My friend’s private post is exposed to the world because Tumblr did not have a proper SELECT query excluding private posts. Luckily it was not too sensitive or private, but if it was and my friend had trusted Tumblr, it could have been detrimental.- There have been countless posts that have been lost when they migrate their database. There is always an uproar due to it.
- What feels like 70% uptime. I got many complaints that people could not access my website and got the Tumblr Maintenance Page. Even Twitter never had it this bad.
- The queue system randomly works. Right now it does not work at all. This causes frustration to a lot of people who rely on it that have day jobs or other responsibilities.
- Multiple times a wrong system clock has caused the queue to misspost.
- The Question feature validation is client-side. Obviously this should be validated on the server-side. While this does not cause any issues with security, it is another example of how the code has been “hacked” together.
-

Multiple months after I had recommended that blog.
Multiple times when I have recommended someone, it has not appeared for weeks. If I had actually paid for stickers (an optional extra service to show your appreciation when you recommend someone,) then I would be really angry.
There are a lot of small issues I have missed. A post having -1 Notes is an example.
The Support
- I had arranged a Tumblr Meetup in London. I decided that I would give Tumblr 3 weeks notice for their sticker package and for them to add it to the website. I arranged it and ended up emailing a week after my initial contact as I had recieved no human response and was worrying that I would not get a reply in time.

Meaghan's Response
I got a response yet another week later…
just posted your meetup– I updated it to the new venue (because I am awesome)
Unfortunately she posted it 30 minutes earlier than I had asked her to and labeled it with a “16+” age limit and I still had no stickers. This was a problem for two reasons; I had to leave work 30 minutes earlier to wait for anyone who got the wrong time due to her mistake. Since it was at a bar, any 16 year olds or 17 year olds that turned up due to her incompetency would be turned down due to their being a strict 18+ age policy. Since I had already said this in the email, my annoyance was further enhanced by her “I’m awesome” comment.
She then proceeded to update the age limit, but forgot the time. And told me that they ship them every 2 weeks and to give them more notice next time, even though I gave her over 3 weeks notice.
-

Absolutely no reason for that level of disrespect.
My friend wanted access to her blog back. She had her email and name on the front of the blog. She politely asked them for access back. They rudely responded telling her it wasn’t hers.
- Another friend purchased their advertising for his blog. In the box it asked him to say which URL that he wants the advertising for. He wrote the URL and paid his money. They linked it to his personal blog and lost him potentially a lot of followers. They did not refund him for their cock-up.
Put bluntly… Tumblr sucks!
The Worst Part
The team know about this. They are too busy hanging out with famous people to care.

Terry Richardson and Tumblr Staff. One of the many people they hang out with on the company dime.
Yes, that’s Terry Richardson, the man accused of coercing models into sleeping with him and making him a “Tampon Tea” (I kid you not.) in fear of losing their job in the industry.
Tumblr is just another “fund first, monetize later” startup. They had no revenue model until last year. Considering I had been a member for 3 years by that time, that’s a long time. They take quite a slack approach to work and while that is not always bad, they seem to show a lack of real care for their product.
With all their troubles and all their bugs, you think they would put something in place to protect that. Apparently not; Marco himself even boasts that you won’t find any Factories in his codebase. Tests neither by the look of it.

Cowboy Coders
Why would I bash something I’ve been on for 4 years? Something that has meant a lot to me. It’s because the community make it, not the software. Just as our governments do not make our communities, Tumblr is not responsible for it’s community. Unfortunately, the community is the only thing it has going for it and people on the internet are fickle.
[Edit] I wrote a followup post.
My Journey And The State Of The Web Industry
While I would like to say “I am back”, I never truly was here. I projected images and did not truly project my soul into my blog.
I started commercially working in the web industry over 12 years ago. I attended my first conference only 5 years ago. While people were very nice and accepting, I quickly felt that my age held me back. It did somewhat, I was maturing1 and I had not learnt many of the fundamental life lessons. It did not help me.
I started a blog but I never put my personality behind it. I used it as a tool to project an older image and to generate leads and ultimately I felt that I did myself a great disservice. I did not blog for myself nor did I use my greatest selling point, myself. Although, this blog is not to sell; there is a handy link at the top if you wish for my services but I will not push them.
I grew to have a lot of frustration for the web design community and the ‘web celebrities’, with the huge egos and more importantly with the “Preach first, practice later” mindset. The truth of the matter is; no matter how much I felt like that, I should have just tried to separate myself from that.
The web celebrity culture is a flip sided coin. It does good in the fact that it gives incentives for people to blog but it also intimidates a lot of both new and experienced talent. I have spoken to no less than 8 people in the last 12 months who were considering getting into web design, but were strongly considering not to because of it.
I also believe that due to this culture, the more popular get more popular and the rest of the industry blog ecosystem becomes more stagnant.
When I started my old personal blog, it had thousands of followers with only a year. The reason behind this was because I bared my soul to it, I gave a real piece of me to it. That’s what I aim to do with this blog.
I’ve been considering starting again for months and on Saturday I decided that I would stop thinking about it and just do. So I quickly made a design and implemented it (excuse the fact it is rough around the edges) . So I am back, or I am starting, or whatever. This is my proper go at a blog. Thank you for reading and I hope you stick around. While I am trying to start fresh, I will try to find some of my best still-relevant posts from the past and repost them.
- though when do we stop? [↩]
