Using the mobile web as a constraint to think about web design is growing in popularity. I see it in my own efforts and the efforts of our portfolio companies. When users spend more time accessing your service over a mobile device, they are going to get used to that UI/UX. When you ask them to navigate a substantially busier and more complex UI/UX when they log onto the web, you are likely to keep them on the mobile app and off the web app.
I'm starting to think a unifying vision for all apps should start with the mobile app, not the web app. And so it may also be mobile first web second in designing web apps these days.
Verified by Visa and Mastercard SecureCode are broken and need to be fixed
Verified by Visa is a pet hate of mine, notably the rules that your password has to satisfy.What Works: The Web Way vs. The Wave Way
And people aren't looking for a replacement for email, or instant messaging, or blogs, or wikis. Those tools all work great for their intended purposes, and whatever technology augments them will likely offer a different combination of persistence and immediacy than those systems. Right now, Wave evokes all of them without being its own distinctive thing. Which means it's most useful in providing reference implementations of particular new features.
(via Sippey)
[..] Wave has not seen the user adoption we would have liked. We don’t plan to continue developing Wave as a standalone product, but we will maintain the site at least through the end of the year and extend the technology for use in other Google projects.
I never understood why Google thought people would prefer Wave over email.
What an absolutely atrocious piece of software. No wonder people are switching to Macs.
Introducing the new Google Geocoding Web Service
I love me some geocoding.
