


And I came back and it only had one video on it. But then I had this moment … I set up one of these hunting trail cameras, I don’t know if you’ve seen these things, but you … it’s got some motion sensors, right? And a camera and you set it up in your yard and it catches the critters that go by and these types of things. So I naturally have this inclination to stay on top of stuff. Right? So I’m still pretty excited and interested in it. I mean I think it boils down to staying very curious. I always think in the back of my mind like okay, what would Luke do here? And what would he think about this? How do you keep on top of all of that stuff? In addition to all the other things that you’re doing.


You keep track of, specifically in the mobile world, you keep track of UI and data and trends. And likewise, you’re … back in the day when I was still talking able to talk about CSS because I was able to keep up on it, we spoke at a lot of conferences together and I was just always … you’re still doing this. Luke: I mean in all seriousness I did use that.ĭan: Aww, man. It’s all kicked off from a bullet proof CSS so thank you for that. I’ve just always admired you’re speaking and your writing, your entrepreneurship you’ve just kinda got all these things going on. There’s so much to talk about here because your career alone has kinda taken on many stages. We go way back, for many years.ĭan: But it’s been a while since we’ve seen each other. This is actually the beginning of the episode. We’ll decide what to talk about as we go. You know we’re gonna keep it pretty casual today. It’s so great to have you here.ĭan: Thanks for having me Luke. Luke: Well, I would like to welcome you to the show. Subscribe to Overtime on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Push the limits of design and start creating beautiful, impactful websites that are uniquely yours at wix.com/dribbble. In this episode, Dan and Luke discuss the key ideas behind his book Mobile First and how that translates to building for devices today, why we should be data-informed, not data-driven when it comes to building products, and what he learned from his time creating and building Bagcheck and Polar. Instantly type a word and you're off to god-knows-where. The sum of human knowledge available via web browser on any desktop, that kind of thing. When I look back on the things that have been the most interesting that I've done, I really liked the web because I thought the web was extremely empowering in terms of the things it brought to the planet.
