Stewart Butterfield on creating Slack, learning from games, and finding your online identity

Stewart Butterfield on creating Slack, learning from games, and finding your online identity

If you came by the Vox office, you would find it oddly quiet. That's not because we don't like each other, or because we're not social, or because we don't have anything to say. It's because almost all our communication happens silently, digitally, in Slack.Slack is Stewart Butterfield's creation, and it's the fastest-growing piece on enterprise software in history. But here's the kicker: he didn't mean to create it, just like he didn't mean to create Flickr before it. In both cases, Butterfield was trying to create a new kind of game: immersive, endless, and focused on experiences rather than victories. The story of Butterfield's pivots from the game to Flickr and Slack have become Silicon Valley lore. But in this conversation, we go deep into the part that's always fascinated me: the game Butterfield wanted to create, the reasons he thinks gaming is so important, and the ways in which his philosophy background informs his current work. We also talk a lot about the nature of status, identity, and communication in online spaces, as Butterfield's company is now revolutionizing all three.This is a deep, interesting, and unusual conversation — we went places I didn't expect, and I left thinking about topics I'd never really considered. Butterfield is as thoughtful as they come, and I hope you get as much out of this as I did. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Det här avsnittet är hämtat från ett öppet RSS-flöde och publiceras inte av Podme. Det kan innehålla reklam.

Avsnitt(765)

Melinda Gates (live!) on stopping climate change, ending malaria, and the problems money can’t solve

Melinda Gates (live!) on stopping climate change, ending malaria, and the problems money can’t solve

Melinda Gates is the co-founder and co-chair of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the largest private foundation in the United States. With more than $40 billion in assets, the Gates Foundation w...

19 Mars 201853min

A better conversation on guns

A better conversation on guns

Want to know why we can’t make any progress on the guns debate? Because this isn’t a debate over policy. It’s a debate over identity. After last month’s shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High Schoo...

12 Mars 201852min

This isn’t Joe Kennedy’s grandfather’s Democratic Party, and he knows it

This isn’t Joe Kennedy’s grandfather’s Democratic Party, and he knows it

When you’re sitting in front of Rep. Joe Kennedy, it’s clear that you’re sitting in front of a Kennedy. The face, the jawline — it’s all uncannily familiar. But Kennedy, the grandson of Robert F. Kenn...

5 Mars 20181h 5min

Amy Chua on how tribalism is tearing America apart

Amy Chua on how tribalism is tearing America apart

Human beings are tribal creatures, particularly when they feel threatened. And the reality of living in America in 2018, at a time of massive demographic change and social upheaval, is that we all fee...

26 Feb 20181h 2min

How technology brings out the worst in us, with Tristan Harris

How technology brings out the worst in us, with Tristan Harris

In 2011, Tristan Harris’s company, Apture, was acquired by Google. Inside Google, he became unnerved by how the company worked. There was all this energy going into making the products better, more ad...

19 Feb 20181h 12min

Steven Pinker: enlightenment values made this the best moment in human history

Steven Pinker: enlightenment values made this the best moment in human history

Does the daily news feel depressing? Does the world feel grim? It’s not, says Harvard professor Steven Pinker. This is, in fact, the best moment in human history — there’s less war, less violence, les...

12 Feb 20181h 9min

Why my politics are bad with Bhaskar Sunkara

Why my politics are bad with Bhaskar Sunkara

Bhaskar Sunkara is the founder and publisher of Jacobin, a journal of “socialist perspectives on politics, economics, and culture.” He launched the publication in 2011 when he was an undergraduate at ...

5 Feb 20181h 14min

How Democracies Die

How Democracies Die

The year is young, but Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt’s How Democracies Die is going to be one of its most important books. It will be read as a commentary on Donald Trump, which is fair enough, b...

29 Jan 20181h 15min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

aftonbladet-krim
motiv
p3-krim
aftonbladet-daily
svenska-fall
politiken
flashback-forever
rss-krimstad
spar
rss-sanning-konsekvens
rss-krimreportrarna
rss-expressen-dok
rss-vad-fan-hande
rss-frandfors-horna
rss-flodet
olyckan-inifran
kungligt
grans
blenda-2
dagens-eko