“I just simply wouldn’t do anything that I wasn’t terribly in charge of. I don’t let anything go. I worry about the font on the back of the DVD, and I’ll do this as long as that continues … We only do what we think is good and what we’re happy with. I do that in stand-up, I even do it with my children’s books. I don’t do market research, I don’t have focus groups, I don’t care. I don’t care if it fails, honestly. I’d rather have something that’s completely mine fail than something succeed that I’m not proud of.”
Matt
that’s great. there’s a great scene at the end of zach galifianakis’ (funny comedian) final VH1 show. he reveals he’s been cancelled and breaks into a song and dance number that reveals a big whiteboard with the phrase: “At least I’m not Carson Daly.” similar sentiment.
Basecamp wrote this on Jan 26 2007
There are19 comments.
Re: that shopping cart. It’s very nice. I made a cart that doesn’t make you leave the page at my T-shirt store. Now I just need to make more shirts to sell!
That shopping cart is nice, until you get too many items in your cart with a small screen.
Sergio Bayona
on 26 Jan 07
I was a big Yoshinoya fan (Japanese fast food restaurant) when I lived in Tokyo. When I moved back to the US and started living in Los Angeles I was surprised to see there were Yoshinoya restaurants all over.
It only took one try to be completely disappointed at the taste and quality of the American Yoshinoya. It was awful.
RS
on 26 Jan 07
Thanks for linking your store, Jed. That’s a really cool design.
Regarding the Indian Home Cooking, I took a cooking class with Suvir right when the book was coming out. He’s a great guy and the food in that book is indeed quite wonderful and fairly easy to make. I would definitely recommend it to anyone interested in it.
Definitely try the soups.. They’re killer.. :)
Jamie
on 26 Jan 07
Jamis, we have a similar cart implementation at Crate and Barrel, however right now it isn’t AJAX. We’re working on that now. What was that about the jackhammer spoon thing again? :P
McGurky
on 26 Jan 07
You guy’s should try Vij’s Indian food cookbook. Vij and his wife run my favorite restaurant anywhere (Vij’s) in Vancouver and he recently published a cookbook of the restaurant’s recipes. My wife and I have dug into it and it is fun, easy and amazing tasting. See it here: http://www.amazon.com/Vijs-Elegant-Inspired-Indian-Cuisine/dp/1553651847
I’m wondering whether or not to show that yarn site to my insane knitting wife….... hell, she’s probably already bookmarked it. At any rate, the shopping cart functionality is really nice and effective. Too bad the logo typeface looks to be the dreaded Comic Sans. =D
You’ve made me blush. You’ve also made me crave Indian food.
AND, you’ve made me love Gervais even more than I did before—what an awesome guy!
John Kranz
on 27 Jan 07
I saw a recent shopping cart solution that was quite nice. Included a drag and drop to a lower pane to add items to a cart. I don’t think there is anything available on the market yet, per say, that would be considered to be a Web 2.0 shopping cart implementation.
I was impressed with the coherence of the design and function, until I turned off javascript to see what they cooked up for accessibility. Nothing. If your wife is drooling, just go turn disable javascript and your wallet will be protected. There isn’t even a warning about the loss of function.
I am trying to cook up a site right now that includes a shopping cart where products get moved from the page into an always visible cat displayed as a thumbnail-bar. I”m using dojo for the js effects and ajax. Has anybody seen something like this that works well and looks good?
1) 37 signals comment posting is broken without javascript.
2) Panic Shirt’s cart is pretty sweet. I enjoyed playing around with it for quite a while, and it even looks pretty good. Unfortunately after a couple of minutes, it went haywire and started charging me for everything I put in the cart, but only displaying items 3 and beyond. Even clear-all didn’t fix this. The first two items I would add ratcheted up the total, but no product was displayed until #3 went in. Also, this too suffers from a complete lack of accessibility.
nate
on 26 Jan 07NSFY = No Soup For You
Jed
on 26 Jan 07Re: that shopping cart. It’s very nice. I made a cart that doesn’t make you leave the page at my T-shirt store. Now I just need to make more shirts to sell!
MattLat
on 26 Jan 07That shopping cart is nice, until you get too many items in your cart with a small screen.
Sergio Bayona
on 26 Jan 07I was a big Yoshinoya fan (Japanese fast food restaurant) when I lived in Tokyo. When I moved back to the US and started living in Los Angeles I was surprised to see there were Yoshinoya restaurants all over.
It only took one try to be completely disappointed at the taste and quality of the American Yoshinoya. It was awful.
RS
on 26 Jan 07Thanks for linking your store, Jed. That’s a really cool design.
Ben Lowery
on 26 Jan 07Regarding the Indian Home Cooking, I took a cooking class with Suvir right when the book was coming out. He’s a great guy and the food in that book is indeed quite wonderful and fairly easy to make. I would definitely recommend it to anyone interested in it.
Definitely try the soups.. They’re killer.. :)
Jamie
on 26 Jan 07Jamis, we have a similar cart implementation at Crate and Barrel, however right now it isn’t AJAX. We’re working on that now. What was that about the jackhammer spoon thing again? :P
McGurky
on 26 Jan 07You guy’s should try Vij’s Indian food cookbook. Vij and his wife run my favorite restaurant anywhere (Vij’s) in Vancouver and he recently published a cookbook of the restaurant’s recipes. My wife and I have dug into it and it is fun, easy and amazing tasting. See it here: http://www.amazon.com/Vijs-Elegant-Inspired-Indian-Cuisine/dp/1553651847
Dan Boland
on 26 Jan 07I’m wondering whether or not to show that yarn site to my insane knitting wife….... hell, she’s probably already bookmarked it. At any rate, the shopping cart functionality is really nice and effective. Too bad the logo typeface looks to be the dreaded Comic Sans. =D
Clint
on 26 Jan 07RE: Shopping cart…
href="javascript:Add2CartCat(1971,'CategoryProducts1_rptProducts_ctl13_Prod_drpStock');"YUK!
Speaking of Javascript. I get an error posting a comment when JS is turned off.
Anonymous Coward
on 26 Jan 07Clint, it’s time to upgrade your browser to 2007.
Jed
on 26 Jan 07@ RS
You’ve made me blush. You’ve also made me crave Indian food.
AND, you’ve made me love Gervais even more than I did before—what an awesome guy!
John Kranz
on 27 Jan 07I saw a recent shopping cart solution that was quite nice. Included a drag and drop to a lower pane to add items to a cart. I don’t think there is anything available on the market yet, per say, that would be considered to be a Web 2.0 shopping cart implementation.
Jed
on 27 Jan 07@John Kranz
Panic’s shirt store fits that description.
John Kranz
on 27 Jan 07Yes, I like that implementation, but I don’t believe it’s offered as a service. (I’m in the market for such a service).
Caleb Maclennan
on 27 Jan 07I was impressed with the coherence of the design and function, until I turned off javascript to see what they cooked up for accessibility. Nothing. If your wife is drooling, just go turn disable javascript and your wallet will be protected. There isn’t even a warning about the loss of function.
I am trying to cook up a site right now that includes a shopping cart where products get moved from the page into an always visible cat displayed as a thumbnail-bar. I”m using dojo for the js effects and ajax. Has anybody seen something like this that works well and looks good?
Caleb Maclennan
on 27 Jan 071) 37 signals comment posting is broken without javascript.
2) Panic Shirt’s cart is pretty sweet. I enjoyed playing around with it for quite a while, and it even looks pretty good. Unfortunately after a couple of minutes, it went haywire and started charging me for everything I put in the cart, but only displaying items 3 and beyond. Even clear-all didn’t fix this. The first two items I would add ratcheted up the total, but no product was displayed until #3 went in. Also, this too suffers from a complete lack of accessibility.
Jon Crawford
on 29 Jan 07I love the “Need” word from clients. And by “love” I mean “hate”. Drives me crazy.
I want to tell them that they don’t even NEED a website. They don’t NEED a computer at all!
I NEED to probably drink a little less coffee and NEED to get more sleep!
!jon
Rachel
on 30 Jan 07Ah, two of my favorite things – SVN and yarn – together in one post. I’ll bookmark this site.
This discussion is closed.