You’re reading Signal v. Noise, a publication about the web by Basecamp since 1999. Happy !

Fun with Highrise stats: Countries referenced more than 1000 times in over 8 million Highrise contacts

Jason Fried
Jason Fried wrote this on 45 comments
+--------------------------+---------------+
| country                  | country_count |
+--------------------------+---------------+
| United States            |        403585 |
| United States of America |        201800 |
| USA                      |        127270 |
| Canada                   |         88615 |
| United Kingdom           |         77154 |
| Great Britain            |         41376 |
| Australia                |         27648 |
| Germany                  |         25266 |
| Spain                    |         23312 |
| France                   |         22422 |
| UK                       |         16280 |
| Netherlands              |         15488 |
| Ireland                  |         15439 |
| New Zealand              |         12391 |
| Belgium                  |          9648 |
| Italy                    |          9608 |
| Deutschland              |          9600 |
| Switzerland              |          9281 |
| Mexico                   |          8866 |
| US                       |          8351 |
| Denmark                  |          7044 |
| India                    |          6302 |
| Brazil                   |          5835 |
| Sweden                   |          5662 |
| China                    |          5139 |
| Poland                   |          4963 |
| South Africa             |          4894 |
| Schweiz                  |          4514 |
| Japan                    |          4168 |
| Singapore                |          4141 |
| Norway                   |          4125 |
| Austria                  |          3793 |
| England                  |          3434 |
| Hong Kong                |          3422 |
| United Arab Emirates     |          3410 |
| Thailand                 |          2705 |
| Israel                   |          2598 |
| U.S.A.                   |          2496 |
| Portugal                 |          2491 |
| Russian Federation       |          2360 |
| Costa Rica               |          2337 |
| Philippines              |          2269 |
| Viet Nam                 |          2142 |
| Jordan                   |          1973 |
| Nederland                |          1928 |
| Finland                  |          1848 |
| Brasil                   |          1804 |
| Argentina                |          1750 |
| Turkey                   |          1713 |
| Peru                     |          1488 |
| Malaysia                 |          1481 |
| The Netherlands          |          1433 |
| Russia                   |          1398 |
| Greece                   |          1144 |
| Chile                    |          1142 |
| Romania                  |          1106 |
| Danmark                  |          1063 |
| België                   |          1056 |
| Ukraine                  |          1048 |
+--------------------------+---------------+

For example, there are 1481 people in the Highrise contact database from Malaysia, 3422 from Hong Kong, 23,312 from Spain, etc.

Note: People can enter whatever they want in the country field which is why some enter USA, some United States, and some United States of America.

Describe 37signals in 20 seconds or less

Matt Linderman
Matt Linderman wrote this on 168 comments

We’ve got a problem. We don’t know how to describe to average civilians just what it is that 37signals does.

Like when we’re at a cocktail party and someone asks, “What does 37signals do?” The answer typically starts with “a web software company…” and goes to something like “that helps small businesses organize information…” and ends with the other person snoring.

What do you think our hook should be for average people? What’s a good way to quickly describe what 37signals does that doesn’t put non-techies to sleep? How would you make what 37signals does sound interesting to civilians…in under 20 seconds?

A radical idea: Charge people for your product

Basecamp
Basecamp wrote this on 12 comments

In “A Radical Business Plan for Facebook: Charge people” [Slate], Farhad Manjoo proposes “something crazy”: Tech companies should start charging people to use their services.

David is interviewed in the piece and explains why “having a price is really cool for making profits.”

“[Hansson:] “You have customers, they pay you money for the product or service, and you get profits! It’s almost too simple to work.” Of course, 37signals didn’t come up with this idea on its own, either: “I’ve heard that over time—hundreds of years actually—this has been how most businesses have made their money. But somehow that notion got lost in the Web world.”...

“People tend not to look closely at the odds,” Hansson told me. “There will always be people winning the lottery, but that doesn’t mean a good financial strategy is to go out and buy lots of lottery tickets.”

Instead of taking a heap of venture capital money—lottery tickets—in the hope of one day getting a huge payout, Hansson says that Web entrepreneurs would be better off starting their businesses in the way most offline entrepreneurs do: Use a small amount of seed capital to make a good product that appeals to a client base that is willing to pay you for it. Then, over time, use the money you make from your customers to improve the product or to create more products—allowing you to attract more paying customers, which then lets you invest more into the business, and so on. It’s a cycle that has proved quite successful over the millenniums that humans have engaged in economic activity.

Read the full article for more.

Also recently published: Die Kraft des Mittelfingers [brand eins] is a recent article (in German) on 37signals. Even if you don’t speak German, you may be able to get the gist:

David Heinemeier Hansson ist vulgär, und das ganz bewusst. Seine “Fuck you! ”- und “That’s bullshit”-Sprüche setzt er dosiert ein, wenn er Gesprächspartnern seine Sicht der Dinge nahebringt.

Related: The Secret to Making Money Online [SvN]

ffp-comparison-2._V261895878_.jpg

Amazon launched “Frustration-Free Packaging,” a new initiative designed to make it easier for customers to liberate products from their packages. The initial focus is on hard plastic cases (“clamshells”) and those secured with a large number of plastic-coated wire ties, commonly used in toy packaging. (Disclosure: Amazon’s Jeff Bezos is an investor in 37signals.)

This initiative oughta make David Pogue happy: “Over the years, these sharp-edged, steely-hardened acrylic crypts have broken countless scissors, ripped flesh and wasted ridiculous amounts of people’s time.”

Matt Linderman on Nov 3 2008 40 comments

CachedExternals: managing application dependencies

Jamis
Jamis wrote this on 8 comments

We’ve been slowly trickling some of our internal projects onto GitHub, making them more widely available in the hopes that (for one) they’ll be as useful to others as they are to ourselves, and (for another) that people will contribute patches back to make the projects even better.

Today I moved our CachedExternals plugin there. You can read all about it in the README, but read on for an overview (and justification).

Continued…

New in Highrise: Much faster sidebar searching

Jason Fried
Jason Fried wrote this on 31 comments

Today we’re excited to unveil an enhancement that makes using Highrise even more convenient: The sidebar search-for-a-person feature is now significantly faster than before.

Searching for a person or company from the sidebar on the Dashboard or a person/company’s page is the most frequently used feature in all of Highrise. Highrise is about getting to a person/company’s page so you can enter a note or look up a previous conversation or grab a phone number. Now you can do that a whole lot faster. More speed and less wait time makes this experience markedly better.

Making this faster on the user experience side wasn’t the only goal here: The new sidebar search also reduces call-backs to the server. That lowers the number of requests to the database which, indirectly, makes everything else a little bit faster too.

Watch this video to see it in action

Sam Stephenson, one of our developers here at 37signals, has been working hard to make this a reality. And now that we’ve launched it, he put together a video showing you the before and after:



We hope this helps makes using Highrise an even better experience. Thanks for your continued support!