Friday, May 16, 2008

staff:  
Yesterday, Amit Gupta had a great suggestion to include thumbnails on Video posts in the Dashboard:  I love Tumblr, but I almost never watch the videos people post. But I click on photos to see the bigger version all the time. Video posts could really use a still frame to give you a peek at what’s inside. Anyone else feel this way?  We were already doing this with videos uploaded to Tumblr.  Now we’ll also show thumbnails next to YouTube videos. Thanks, Amit! 
   Woohoo :)
Plus, if you mouse over the screenshot, it’ll actually show a few animated frames from the video. Extra special cool.
p.s. I didn’t know there was a Tumblr Staff blog.

staff:

Yesterday, Amit Gupta had a great suggestion to include thumbnails on Video posts in the Dashboard:

I love Tumblr, but I almost never watch the videos people post. But I click on photos to see the bigger version all the time.

Video posts could really use a still frame to give you a peek at what’s inside.

Anyone else feel this way?

We were already doing this with videos uploaded to Tumblr.  Now we’ll also show thumbnails next to YouTube videos.

Thanks, Amit! 

 Woohoo :)

Plus, if you mouse over the screenshot, it’ll actually show a few animated frames from the video. Extra special cool.

p.s. I didn’t know there was a Tumblr Staff blog.

Second Cheapest Syndrome

ahref:

dihard:

Ever order the second cheapest wine on the menu while dining out? Well, one in four diners do (in the UK, at least). In the marketing world, we can define this as a choice set effect with respect to reference pricing - using the cheapest bottle of wine as a standard of comparison against which the other wines are compared.

But did you know that the second cheapest bottle is usually the worst value?

“Restaurant owners will often price the wine they buy cheapest at wholesale as the second cheapest wine on the menu. Why? Because people generally don’t order the cheapest wine and thus often turn to the second cheapest. Price that one higher, and you get a bigger marginal profit. Presto — restauranteur as microeconomist!” (from a reference to an old WSJ article I can’t locate online)

Poptimistic 
Poptimistic is not his coinage; it seems to be circulating in the design and style world, but I think it perfectly captures the upbeat, day-glo brightness of a technicolor future. It manages to contain many of the optimistic strands of the digiterati, and the pop masses. 
- Conceptual Trends and Current Topics

Poptimistic

Poptimistic is not his coinage; it seems to be circulating in the design and style world, but I think it perfectly captures the upbeat, day-glo brightness of a technicolor future. It manages to contain many of the optimistic strands of the digiterati, and the pop masses.

- Conceptual Trends and Current Topics