Products are people — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in Designing for Emotion by Aarron Walter
Don’t be carefree and foolish with your most precious asset — life. — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in The Zombie Survival Guide by Max Brooks
So I have to fit this in here, because it bears repeating: PHP is a community of amateurs. Very few people designing it, working on it, or writing code in it seem to know what they’re doing. (Oh, dear reader, you are of course a rare exception!) Those who do grow a clue tend to drift away to other platforms, reducing the average competence of the whole. This, right here, is the biggest problem with PHP: it is absolutely the blind leading the blind. — http://me.veekun.com/blog/2012/04/09/php-a-fractal-of-bad-design/
I, too, have a pet little evil, to which in more passionate moments I am apt to attribute all the others. This evil is the neglect of thinking. And when I say thinking I mean real thinking, independent thinking, hard thinking. — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in Thinking as a Science by Henry Hazlitt
Writing books and offering high-level consulting advice is easy. Running a business is not. — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in Seven Strategy Questions by Robert Simons
the way to do really big things seems to be to start with deceptively small things — Frighteningly Ambitious Startup Ideas
Don’t worry if something you want to do will constrain you in the long term, because if you don’t get that initial core of users, there won’t be a long term. — Frighteningly Ambitious Startup Ideas
We forget that businesses are just collections of people — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in Designing for Emotion by Aarron Walter
If we want to achieve long-term remarkability, we need to build in long-term delight. — Highlighted by Ale Muñoz in Designing for Emotion by Aarron Walter