kvwong
kvwong
Kevin V. Wong
6K posts
Hey there, I'm Kevin Wong, a Design Manager @Airbnb and advise at Groove. A Seattle native now living in San Francisco. Sometimes I take photos of food, but mostly share updates about design in tech.
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kvwong · 8 years ago
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One of several VR demos at Worlds Fair Nano. More than expected. I hope there will be as much energy poured into immersions that promote learning and empathy as there currently is in entertainment (esp in light of recent events). We'll need it more than ever. Game on. #worldsfairnano #vrarcade (at Pier 70, San Francisco)
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kvwong · 8 years ago
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Homemade country pins (at Airbnb HQ)
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kvwong · 8 years ago
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at Starbucks Reserve, Roastery and Tasting Room
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kvwong · 8 years ago
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Chip inspiring 3000 people to be hospitable and human. #AirbnbOne #Airbnb #airfam (at SF Armory)
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kvwong · 8 years ago
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#sutrobaths #landsend #tides #peace #sunset #pacificocean #fujifilm #fujifilm_xseries #xt1 #35mm (at Sutro Baths)
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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Cypress Tree Tunnel (at Cypress Tree Tunnel)
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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Two great moments today: 1) delicious poke bowls at Pokecon and 2) discovering the wireless feature for my #fujixt1 #fujinon23mm ! (at SoMa StrEat Food Park)
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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The Inexorable Logic Of Infrastructurization
I’ve written a great deal about the out-migration of users from the overly plowed territory of social collaboration technologies. In Understanding The Failed Promise Of Social Collaboration, I wrote
Work — in the basic sense of getting things done, not the place we go to do it — is a combination of focused individual activity, focused joint activity (working together with others in real time), and cooperative and coordinative activities (working asynchronously with others on framing and planning of work, like chatting online about deadlines and features in a product development cycle). Social collaboration tools overemphasize the last of these three categories of work, and de-emphasize — or ignore — the first two. The reason? Perhaps one reason is that the last category is the province of old school managers: those who were charged with managing others.
My sincere belief is that we are seeing a shift from social collaboration tools toward alternatives — like work chat — where the first two categories of work are supported and the last category — overseeing others’ progress and managing what others do — is significantly de-emphasized. We are moving to smaller social scale, starting with the individual, and then on to small cooperative groups, or sets.
Just as we are seeing a shift toward chat in the ‘consumer’ web, the same is going on in the workplace, and we are seeing the continuing displacement of social collaboration exactly where work chat’s value proposition is strongest: focused joint activity on work in small teams (or ‘sets’ as I spelled out in The Rise of Work Chat Anti-Hype). 
So this is one megatrend: the widespread adoption of tools based on the chat design metaphor across the board in personal and work life. Chat is the new normal for communication, displacing both email and social collaboration tools. 
Adoption of a technology at this scale has led in the past to the Internet Giants paying serious attention. What is missing in the Giant’s stacks – if central to contemporary use – rapidly becomes infrastructure. 
We’ve seen that with email – now provided mostly by Microsoft, Apple, and Google –  and most other competitors wiped out. Today we’re seeing that trend with distributed core (or what is called file sync-and-share), which started as a tool – like Dropbox, or the dozens of other startups scrambling to offer a virtual distributed file system – but is really a patch to the operating system, which is why Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Amazon are baking it into their stacks. 
We’re seeing the same with so-called ‘productivity’ tools (Microsoft Office, Google Docs, Apple’s Pages/Number/Keynote), which are now part of the baseline operating environment those companies offer, and which have killed off most small fry competitors.
So, applying the inexorable logic of infrastructurization (yes, I went there), the Giants will roll out a spectrum of chat solutions integrated with other elements of their infrastructures. 
Arguably, Apple and Microsoft might think that their current messaging tools – Messages and Skype – fit that slot, but they don’t for business purposes (for a long list of reasons). Skype’s really for calls and meetings – real-time conversations – although chat is built in. 
I expect to see versions of iOS, OS X, and Android where the user experience is increasingly chat oriented, with text and voice approaches. This is something like what I do on iOS when I ask Siri to set an alarm or open Shazam. But imagine if the default iOS or OS X screen was Messages-like chat rather than the Mac finder or iPhone apps. Siri should just be another being I am communicating with via chat.
Google tried to get social a dozen times, it seems, and Orkut, Wave, and Google+ just never got very far. Hangouts – spun out of Google+ – is doing much better, partly because it’s integrated with Gmail. For reasons that totally escape me, Google has not yet built in Hangouts into Google Drive, which would be the natural place for supporting discussion about work. More to follow there, I bet, and some AI there, too.
Microsoft’s Groups – baked into Office 365 – is leaning in the social collaboration direction, so they’ll need something else. But Cortana is a step in that direction.
Facebook is the first Giant to build its infrastructure without a dedicated hardware section of their stack ( which is where Microsoft is headed, too, as the Windows monopoly unwinds). Facebook for Work is potentially the biggest new challenge that social collaboration vendors face, right behind Slack*.
Watch Out For That Wave
The tsunami is about to hit. The water has pulled back from the shore, and the massive wave is about to wash over the land. And the social collaboration vendors are headed for the hills, hoping to find a niche where they can survive the damage. 
So we will see the broad promises of social collaboration scaled back. Instead of ‘transforming your company’ we’ll see ‘become more connected to your customers’ as some vendors shrink their ambition into customer community outreach. Or more of a focus on discovery and management of talent across corporations, or during mergers. And less of an emphasis on the work of small teams – focused joint activity – and instead trying to meet the needs of HR staff or managers.
And the core capabilities for people communicating, sharing structured and unstructured information at their desks or on mobile, those capabilities will be provided by the Giants, and soon. 
* Sub-question: Will Slack become a Giant, or be acquired by one? Any of the existing Giants would be smart to buy it, with Microsoft and Google having the most obvious motivations. (But I wouldn’t rule out Amazon from anything, these days.) What happens to Slack if and when the Giants all roll out something intended to match it?
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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Dutch Railway Warehouse | Bedaux de Brouwer Architecten
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kvwong · 9 years ago
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Simple + Useful = Elegant.
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For more cool UX stuff follow us on Behance: http://bit.ly/UXstudioBehance
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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Introducing Pixate Studio 2.0
We’ve been hard at work for the past few months working to make Pixate Studio significantly faster, and adding great features like a zoomable canvas, support for audio and video in prototypes, and a lot more. So much more, in fact, that it made sense for us to call this release Pixate Studio 2.0. Today, we’re proud to announce that Studio 2.0 is available for everyone.
So what’s new in Studio? Glad you asked. Here’s a full rundown of the improvements we’ve made.
Better, faster, stronger
We’ll skip the technical details, but we’ve completely rewritten how data is stored in Studio, making it much, much faster. In fact, it can now handle hundreds and hundreds of layers without breaking a sweat. If you have a really complex prototype that previously ran slowly in Studio, Pixate 2.0 will be a huge improvement!
Zoom your canvas
We’ve all been there. You’re building a large prototype and wish you could see more of it on a small screen. Or, you’re moving things around pixel by pixel, and wish you could zoom in and see the tiniest details up close.
Well, wish no more. The canvas can now be zoomed in and out in steps (200%, 100%, 50%, 25%, 12.5%). This is one of our favorite new features, and we hope you like it too.
Use audio and video
If a picture is worth a thousand words, and a prototype is worth a thousand pictures, what’s a prototype with videos in it worth? A lot, we imagine. To that end, Pixate Studio now supports audio and video assets in prototypes. That’s right, you can now play sounds and videos right in your prototypes.
There are obvious uses of this, but we’re also really excited to see how much potential this adds to Pixate. Have a really complex animation in After Effects and want to show it in Pixate? Just add it as a video. You get the idea.
Scroll a scroll view
Scrolling is fun, but also an essential interaction in almost every mobile app. With Pixate Studio 2.0, you can now set the scroll offset of a scroll view with the new Scroll animation. If you’ve ever wanted to change how far a scroll view was scrolled, say, when another layer moves, you now can.
This is the first time we’ve introduced an animation that can only operate on layers with a specific interaction (Scroll). To handle this, if a Scroll To animation is added to a layer, we automatically add the Scroll interaction to the layer if you didn’t already add one.
Much, much more
In addition, there’s a lot more cool stuff in this release:
New controls for aligning and distributing layers in the Properties pane
Actions have been moved to their own tab, opening up more room for Interactions and Animations to stack
Layer selection has been greatly improved. You can now select and move many layers, as well as have more control over which layer you’re selecting in the canvas (learn more)
Layers can now be locked, making them unselectable in the canvas
Shift-drag resizing is more accurate and smoother
Animations can be reordered with drag-and-drop
Layer handles are now hidden when moving layers with the arrow keys (especially helpful when moving around tiny layers)
A layer in a collapsed layer group will be automatically be revealed when selected in the canvas
If you already have Studio, you should be able to update it now to get 2.0. If you don’t have Studio yet, you can download it here.
We hope you’re as excited as we are about this release. Let us know your thoughts on Twitter or in our community.
Andrew Holt
Head of Product
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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Something happening somewhere
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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Meow mix, David Seguin
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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No available routes in @routeshare for iOS. (submitted by @jstnrs.)
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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MISSY ELLIOTT’S “WTF (WHERE THEY FROM)” IS HER FIRST MUSIC VIDEO IN SEVEN YEARS
And it feels like home.
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kvwong · 10 years ago
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THIS ROBOT FINGER WILL PUSH ALL KINDS OF BUTTONS FOR YOU, BECAUSE PUSHING BUTTONS IS PRETTY HARD OR SOMETHING
Or something.
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