Ray Sensenbach

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Ray Sensenbach

Ray Sensenbach

@ll_coolray

Work hard & be nice to people. I draw boxes and move text around. Teaching about design for dashboards and data-dense applications ➡️ https://t.co/dIKzxghv2a

Rocklin شامل ہوئے Mayıs 2009
2.1K فالونگ768 فالوورز
Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
Aaand the "supervisor" will be following up with me via email. Sometime in the future. Oh joy. Thanks @onepeloton for a seamless experience! Can't wait to send you ~$50 a month!
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
You have to sign in on the Bike... But the bike doesn't support google auth login... Escalating to support chat's supervisor...
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
Picked up a used Peleton... Absolutely blown away by how unclear and complicated it is to login, choose the correct membership level and add a family member. Tsk Tsk @onepeloton
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
@zoink To be able to transfer tickets for Config.
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Dylan Field
Dylan Field@zoink·
What are your hopes and dreams for tables in Figma?
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
@DannPetty Buy, buy, buy? I'm digging the last option! The best memories are made with family and experiences. Everything else is temporary.
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DANN©
DANN©@DannPetty·
So…I turn 40 in several days. Been thinking of what to do. Buy a nice watch to hand down to my son one day? Buy some kayaks for the family? Buy a motorcycle? Buy a dirt bike? Fancy espresso machine? Get a dog? IDK!! Already have a fun car and definitely doing a trip.
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
@awilkinson @2percentJazz2 Huge congratulations! I use many of your companies daily, great design and experience is always at the forefront. Cheers
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Andrew Wilkinson
Andrew Wilkinson@awilkinson·
I started my company 16 years, 3 months, and 5 days ago. Today, it went public. But let's rewind for a second... 5,939 days ago, I was a barista at a small cafe called @2percentJazz2, in Victoria, Canada. I made $6.50 an hour. Two guys, Chris and Jeff, started coming into the cafe. They'd sit there all day drinking espresso and typing away on their laptops, using the wifi. After weeks of this, I asked them what they did for a living. Didn't they have jobs? They told me they were "web designers" and this — sitting on their laptops — was their job. As I dug in, they told me how it worked: They asked local businesses if they needed a website, then charged them a couple thousand bucks to make one. They could whip a website together in a few days, and each make $1,000. Simple. This blew my mind. And at that moment, I realized something: I wanted to be the guy drinking the espresso, not the one serving it. Chris and Jeff were clearly smart, but I knew some basic HTML and figured I could do the same. I decided to try it out. When I got off my shift, I took the bus over to a book store downtown and bought a book called 'Bulletproof Web Design' by Dan Cederholm (@simplebits) to hone my skills. Then, I googled "freelance web design jobs" and found a tech job board called Authentic Jobs made by this guy in Utah, @cameronmoll. There were hundreds of posts, mostly from startups in San Francisco, looking for freelance web designers. I decided to try to win one of these contracts, but I had a critical insight: Nobody wants to hire an 18-year-old barista to build their website. So, I decided I'd create a fake design agency. Using tricks from Dan Cederholm's book, I whipped together a slick looking site and called my "agency" MetaLab (after the tag in HTML). The website was very vague as to what exactly MetaLab did, who worked there, or where we were located. It also featured a cringe-inducing tagline "We Help People Make Cool Stuff." Like an email spammer, I started sending emails to every single web design job post I could find. I was met with crickets, until I got an email from a guy named Kavin Stewart (@kavinstewart). He worked at a startup called Offermatica in San Francisco and told me he needed an interface designed for a web app. I barely understood what a web app was, but I assured him I could do it. He proposed a $2,000 USD budget and my eyes went wide. This was more than I earned in a month, and the project was just a few days of work. I walked into the cafe the next day and quit my job. I told myself that if I could just make enough money to wake up whenever I wanted and comfortably make rent, I'd be good. The rest is history. But I slightly overshot. I still own MetaLab, but along the way me and my business partner @_Sparling_ started dozens of companies, then began buying wonderful businesses, including one (Dribbble) — amazingly — from Dan Cederholm, the designer whose book I bought when I first started. Today, Tiny went public, and as of this moment has a market capitalization of just under $800 million. I can't even begin to explain how mind boggling this is to me. This has not been a feat of entrepreneurial genius. My key skill has been choosing incredible people to work with, both internally and externally, and I wanted to say a huge thank you to everyone who has worked at Tiny and our various companies over the years. And a special thanks to @simplebits, @cameronmoll, and @kavinstewart for helping with my first step😉 Watch for us on the TSX Venture Exchange under the ticker TINY (how cool is that ticker?). finance.yahoo.com/quote/TINY.V?p…
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
I think I've unsubscribed from over 500 forms of @LinkedIn emails. They just keep adding more, so I can be auto opted-in. It's wild.
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Ray Sensenbach ری ٹویٹ کیا
George Mack
George Mack@george__mack·
My favorite question in 2023: What is ignored by the media -- but will be studied by historians? Here's the 9 best examples:
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Dan
Dan@Betraydan·
Any designers out there still drawing rectangles and using them for alignment and spacers in their work?
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Benjamin Hoppe
Benjamin Hoppe@mrbenjaminhoppe·
Any website that changes your cursor is a bad design. I will die on this hill.
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
At this point I’m stocking up on the $6 @Target t-shirts just to spite my endless feed of ads for bogus $80 “designer” Ts on the gram.
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
@DannPetty Balancing IC and Manager workloads. The context switching is a killer.
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DANN©
DANN©@DannPetty·
As a designer, what’s THE thing that you struggle with the most right now?
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Ray Sensenbach
Ray Sensenbach@ll_coolray·
@x_agility Hello! Could you please clarify what the difference between these two offerings is? Is the "first five" the same thing? Early bird special? Hoping to purchase a seat for a member of my team for this course: x-agility.com/executive-agil…. Cheers!
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Ilya · イリア
Ilya · イリア@ilyamiskov·
Am I the only one who just doesn’t use Figma plugins?
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