Showing only Notes & Links tagged integrity on art, design, creativity and, technology

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It should be unacceptable for us to say that lying about one’s abilities is something that everyone has to do to get ahead. It should be unacceptable for us to say that arrogance and aggression are to be aspired to.

Instead we should be demonstrating that great projects, like the ones Apple produces, are at least in part based upon trying to produce the best thing possible, feeling the integrity in the product you’re making. Trying to do something good.

Tom Coates (plasticbag.org: Should we encourage self-promotion and lies?)

Generally good advice and the best answer so far to Clay Shirky’s sensationally titled Rant About Women.

A commenter points out:

I think what Clay’s getting at is simply: willingness to take calculated risks. His example of saying, “my drafting’s fine” in order to ensure a place in a class is a good example. It’s an obnoxiously macho thing to take badly calculated risks (e.g the financial crisis was not in any significant way caused by women, I bet), but it’s often a productive means to an end.

(via @caterina)

Real life, non-techie users care almost exclusively about “content.” They want to watch American Idol and listen to Jay-Z. They don’t really care how that content is delivered or what platform it’s on. Which is why Joost failed, and why so many video and music-related startups have struggled. Skype, on the other hand, didn’t have significant dependencies on other companies – its content, like its technology, was truly peer to peer.
Chris Dixon — Why did Skype succeed and Joost fail?
Your final allegiance is not to [the client], but to the quality of the work, something that you cannot in good conscience permit them to jeopardize with their lack of taste.
Michael Bierut — How to Make Your Client’s Logo Bigger Without Making Their Logo Bigger
Integrity comes natural to the artist because it is the raw material that invisibly dominates her work — honesty is the medium of choice.
John Maeda (on Twitter)