From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...

Bitcoin as Battery
One of my favorite things about crypto is that, every so often, your conception of what it is changes.Bitcoin at first was "weird internet money...

The Internet's Next Business Model: A Conversation with Cloudflare's Matthew Prince
I just released a new episode of The Slow Hunch with Matthew Prince, CEO and co-founder of Cloudflare. Since we invested in their Series C back in 2013, I've watched Matthew and his team build one of the most critical pieces of internet infrastructure—protecting and accelerating vast portions of global web traffic. Our conversation traces Matthew's journey from his early "slow hunch" that the internet was fundamentally broken and needed fixing. We start with his law school days in 2000, when ...

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Investing @ USV. Student of cities and the internet.
From Crypto-Native to Crypto-Enabled
I’m not one to make big annual predictions, but one thing that seems likely to me is that 2024 will mark the emergence of mainstream apps powered by ...

Bitcoin as Battery
One of my favorite things about crypto is that, every so often, your conception of what it is changes.Bitcoin at first was "weird internet money...

The Internet's Next Business Model: A Conversation with Cloudflare's Matthew Prince
I just released a new episode of The Slow Hunch with Matthew Prince, CEO and co-founder of Cloudflare. Since we invested in their Series C back in 2013, I've watched Matthew and his team build one of the most critical pieces of internet infrastructure—protecting and accelerating vast portions of global web traffic. Our conversation traces Matthew's journey from his early "slow hunch" that the internet was fundamentally broken and needed fixing. We start with his law school days in 2000, when ...
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Over the past few weeks, I have varied up my computing habits a bit. For a laptop, I have been using a Pixelbook, and I have also been spending more timing using an iPad Pro for work (vs my default of using a Mac laptop for everything).
What I have discovered is that the form factor of the device I'm using matters a lot in terms of what kinds of work it supports best. Both devices have exactly the same apps, but the experience on each couldn't be more different.
For example, the iPad (the 10.5" Pro model in particular) is great for long-form reading: I use Pocket to gather articles (from wherever I am - phone, tablet or computer) and when I want to sit down and read, I do it on the iPad. And beyond reading, email on the iPad is possible, but forces you to write shorter responses. So it's both good for deep reading and also good for quick email processing. That combination has been working great for me.
I have been trying to avoid reading -- especially at home, when I am around my family -- on my phone. There is something about the posture you take when you read on a phone that is both uncomfortable and anti-social. Hunched over, hands up, squinting down. By contrast, reading on the iPad feels more like reading a book or a newspaper - open, relaxed. Not only is the reading area a better size, but it feels more like a "public" device, in the sense that by reading it you aren't lost in the private world of your phone.
The Pixelbook (google's new chromebook) is great in a different way. What is nice about the Pixelbook is how simple login and setup are (especially if you are a heavy google apps / google chrome user). You just sign in, load up some web apps (and many enterprise desktop apps such as Slack and Zoom work just as well as Chrome apps) and you're good. It feels very lightweight and efficient. Low overhead, lean and mean. When I log into the Pixelbook I feel ready to go. (There is also an added security benefit to using a Chromebook for work - sign-in can be protected by 2FA).
It just goes to show that the form factor / design / packaging of a system (device, app, etc) really matter so much in terms of how it can / should / will be used. Maybe this is obvious, but it has really struck me lately.
Over the past few weeks, I have varied up my computing habits a bit. For a laptop, I have been using a Pixelbook, and I have also been spending more timing using an iPad Pro for work (vs my default of using a Mac laptop for everything).
What I have discovered is that the form factor of the device I'm using matters a lot in terms of what kinds of work it supports best. Both devices have exactly the same apps, but the experience on each couldn't be more different.
For example, the iPad (the 10.5" Pro model in particular) is great for long-form reading: I use Pocket to gather articles (from wherever I am - phone, tablet or computer) and when I want to sit down and read, I do it on the iPad. And beyond reading, email on the iPad is possible, but forces you to write shorter responses. So it's both good for deep reading and also good for quick email processing. That combination has been working great for me.
I have been trying to avoid reading -- especially at home, when I am around my family -- on my phone. There is something about the posture you take when you read on a phone that is both uncomfortable and anti-social. Hunched over, hands up, squinting down. By contrast, reading on the iPad feels more like reading a book or a newspaper - open, relaxed. Not only is the reading area a better size, but it feels more like a "public" device, in the sense that by reading it you aren't lost in the private world of your phone.
The Pixelbook (google's new chromebook) is great in a different way. What is nice about the Pixelbook is how simple login and setup are (especially if you are a heavy google apps / google chrome user). You just sign in, load up some web apps (and many enterprise desktop apps such as Slack and Zoom work just as well as Chrome apps) and you're good. It feels very lightweight and efficient. Low overhead, lean and mean. When I log into the Pixelbook I feel ready to go. (There is also an added security benefit to using a Chromebook for work - sign-in can be protected by 2FA).
It just goes to show that the form factor / design / packaging of a system (device, app, etc) really matter so much in terms of how it can / should / will be used. Maybe this is obvious, but it has really struck me lately.
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