Full Width [alt+shift+f] Shortcuts [alt+shift+k]
Sign Up [alt+shift+s] Log In [alt+shift+l]

New here?

Welcome! BoredReading is a fresh way to read high quality articles (updated every hour). Our goal is to curate (with your help) Michelin star quality articles (stuff that's really worth reading). We currently have articles in 0 categories from architecture, history, design, technology, and more. Grab a cup of freshly brewed coffee and start reading. This is the best way to increase your attention span, grow as a person, and get a better understanding of the world (or atleast that's why we built it).

14
Live every week like it’s Taco Week. Last year’s articles are now up on Medium.
over a year ago

Improve your reading experience

Logged in users get linked directly to articles resulting in a better reading experience. Please login for free, it takes less than 1 minute.

More from Alex Baldwin

Small-batch bespoke emails with Gmail and Streak

You’ve seen the same boilerplate emails come into your inbox which you immediately archive for being wrong, out-of-date, or simply forgetting the merge tag (F you people that leave $FNAME). When it came to my first time sending out a batch email, it was only to a dozen or so people about booking user research time. However, I had a major sticking point thinking I was sending out a spammy email. Luckily I had met the team behind Streak and knew the power of mail merge to make something a little more individual and helpful. We’re going to continue using my real life example email, a sponsorship request for Hack Design. Here’s the actual email template I sent out: Hey there $FNAME, Wanted to reach out about $COMPANY becoming a Hack Design partner. Since 2012, we've helped hundreds of thousands take their first steps in learning design. We're looking to partner with a handful of companies in order to offset server costs and support producing new lessons in 2018. Partnership perks: * Logo placement with link on the home page. * Text link in our footer, 30,000+ page views per month. * Text link in every email, 200,000+ which go out every month. * Free posting on our job board, set to release by the end of the year. As of right now, we have 245,000+ subscribers. It's likely that with new lessons going out next year, you'll see these numbers easily double. Because of that, our sponsorship tier costs $XXX per month. If you're able to commit to sponsoring before October 1st, I will grandfather you in to the super early bird pricing of $YYY per month through the end of 2018. If you have any questions or are ready to sponsor, please hit reply. $POSTSCRIPT Thank you so much, Alex Baldwin My emails aren’t very long, encourage replying as the primary action, and I hope use variables in a tasteful way. Make each email personal You may have noticed the odd $POSTSCRIPT variable in my template. The P.S. at the end of the message is super easy for readers to skip to and it’s almost guaranteed that it’ll be read. That’s the key to the whole thing. Almost every recipient I know personally or have done research on. It would be a huge missed opportunity to not acknowledge that personal connection. For speed purposes, it’s easiest to do this part in Google Sheets. Add another column called Postscript to your Google Sheet. For each recipient write a custom note that will go at the end of your email, i.e. “P.S. It was super nice meeting you at SXSW 2017, still waiting for you to come visit San Francisco.” If you don’t know them personally already, at least make the effort to do your research and make a connection. It’s easy enough to comment on some of their work you admire, I’m talking to you recruiters who never look at my portfolio. Export your Google Sheet to a CSV. Import your CSV into Streak Thankfully since we’ve been working in Google Sheets, we’ll be able to straight import into Streak without any fuss. Install Streak for your browser and open Gmail. Go through the authentication flow for Streak. From the Gmail sidebar, hit Pipelines +New. Pick any of the types, I usually do Business Development and then quickly rename it to my project name. Optionally, invite anyone else to collaborate on this pipeline. On your pipeline page, press the gray more icon. Click Import boxes from Google Sheets. Follow yet another authentication process. Go through the steps to finish your import by mapping your columns to Streak data. They have a lot of options, for those with more data feel free to connect it all up. You’ll see everything from Google Sheets, now nicely organized in your Streak pipeline as a Lead. You can now track as someone goes through your funnel to Closed - Won, it’s the big time sales process for the little guy. Send out that hand-crafted email with Streak After all that prep work, we’re finally ready to put the pieces together. Getting used to the interface and finding the small links or buttons can be quite a chore. Streak is a tool meant for sending much larger batches for sales professionals. We can lay low under the quotas with basic features and get a ton out of it. When I was doing marketing for commercial real estate, we used to use Excel and Microsoft Word to send out massive mailing campaigns. The mail merge feature for Streak works just like it’s offline Microsoft counterpart except with much better tracking and ability to follow up. Put it all together and get ready to hit send Hit Compose in Gmail. Click the link Mail merge. Select your Streak pipeline as the recipients. Write your beautiful email template and use the Customize with Template link at the bottom to sprinkle in customizations. When you’re subject line is perfect and your template customized hit Send, releasing your artisanal emails to their proper recipients. More coming soon Next up we’ll wrap by tracking and following up with our small batch of recipients. This article is part two of a three part series, released weekly. You can read part one here. Subscribe to get access first.

over a year ago 15 votes
Artisanal outbound with Clearbit Connect

For press releases, advertiser requests, or similar sales campaigns you’re sending a small batch of, usually cold, emails out with a specific ask. Finding potential recipients, writing an email that’s helpful, and tracking the results doesn’t need to take all day or be painful. I’ve watched my fellow product people struggle with the pitfalls of outbound; spend all day trying to find emails, copy and pasting boring boilerplate copy, and then never following up. By stringing together Clearbit Connect, Google Sheets, and Streak, you can knock out these outbound projects super quickly, personalize them, and track progress through a funnel. I’ll walk you through exactly how it works using my most recent campaign, a sponsorship request for Hack Design. Researching for the right audience First up, you’re looking for the most likely people to be interested. For a press launch, that may be who frequently cover products in that space. In our example, Hack Design’s sponsor list, I was quickly able to look at who else was sponsoring comparable websites. For me, that meant researching the advertisers on Offscreen, Sidebar, Dribbble, recent design conferences and podcasts. It’s super simple to save your research and move on to finding the right people at those companies. Add companies to your list Start a Google Sheet with the column name Company. Research the companies most relevant to your outbound campaign. Great places to look are Angel List, Product Hunt, job boards (to see who is hiring in a space), Crunchbase, etc. Anywhere that let’s your group and filter through relevant companies. Add the company name to your list. Finding anyone’s email in seconds Now that you have a list of potential companies, let’s find the emails for the best people to talk to there. For my Hack Design list, I was lucky and had about a dozen sponsors from previous years. However, since we haven’t accepted sponsorship in over a year, a lot of my contacts at those companies were out of date. This process made it trivial to find the new people in those roles and be able to reach out. Get the right contacts from Clearbit Connect Add the column names Email and Full Name to your Google Sheet. Install Clearbit Connect if you haven’t already. This is the secret sauce that will allow you to find anyone’s email, for free. Connect does have a limit but for small batches, you shouldn’t have any problems. Disclosure: I’m a small-time investor in Clearbit. In Gmail, hit the Clearbit button in the top nav and then press Find email. Yep, it’s really that easy. You must start with the company and then narrow down by name or title. Copy and paste that into your Google Sheet. More coming soon Next up we’ll write our email and learn how to quickly customize every single one of them. This article is part one of a three part series, released weekly. Subscribe to get access first.

over a year ago 15 votes
One line of CSS to add hanging quotes

The hanging-punctuation property aims at giving web web designers a finer grained control over typography on the web. The idea behind hanging punctuation is to put some punctuation characters from start (or to a lesser extend at the end) of text elements “outside” of the box in order to preserve the reading flow. blockquote p { hanging-punctuation: first; } Since it only applies to quote marks, you can avoid single purpose classes and trust that your quotes will hang everywhere. Chrome hasn’t yet implemented the hanging-punctuation property, but it works perfectly in Safari. Typeset.js is an HTML pre-processor that adds a lot more functionality and will allow you to get cross browser compatibility.

over a year ago 15 votes
Rave Robot

Full-screen gif mayhem. Worked on this one day last year with CH Albach in order to show it off for a Halloween party. Since the domain is expiring, I’d prefer it live on in the lab. It was truly ahead of it’s time, but now Cochlea and Giphy GJ have surpassed it’s meager feature list. Let me know if you have any feature requests.

over a year ago 16 votes

More in design

No research is often better than “some” research

Weekly curated resources for designers — thinkers and makers.

16 hours ago 3 votes
Xilote restaurant by Espacio 18 Arquitectura

As in many a capital city across the planet, the culinary scene in Mexico City continues to evolve at full...

14 hours ago 2 votes
Tag, You’re It

I saw these going around, but didn’t think I’d ever see myself get tagged — then Eric assuaged my FOMO. As I’ve done elsewhere talking about how I blog, I’m gonna try and impose a character limit to my answers (~240). I’m not sure if that makes my job as the writer easier or harder, but it should make your job as the reader easier. Why did you start blogging in the first place? I think I started because everything I learned about building on the web came from reading other people’s blogs online, so I wanted to be a “web person” like them. What platform are you using to manage your blog and why did you choose it? At the time of this writing (April 2025): I write in iA Writer. Code for my blog and notes is on GitHub. Deployment/hosting is via Netlify. I’ve arrived at this setup less from a combination of choice and evolution. As me and my writing evolve, my process and tools evolve too. Have you blogged on other platforms before? Blogspot, way back in the day. It’s no longer up, which is probably for the best. I was posting stuff I made from following “make this in Photoshop” tutorials. Or I’d practice trying to visually express silly puns. Or I’d make visual mashups of culture at the time. How do you write your posts? For example, in a local editing tool, or in a panel/dashboard that’s part of your blog? For a detailed history of changes on how I blog, I blog about blogging under #myBlog and I blog about microblogging under #myNotes. Read any of those posts for insights into my ever-changing process. When do you feel most inspired to write? When I read other people’s thoughts. Do you publish immediately after writing, or do you let it simmer a bit as a draft? I’m a simmerer. Rarely does a post go from thought to published in one sitting. For example, here’s a screenshot of my current simmering drafts (note my sophisticated editorial process of assigning each draft a letter prefix for sorting based on my appetite for finishing it). What are you generally interested in writing about? Stuff I make. Or stuff others make. Or thoughts I think while reading thoughts others think. I have a tags page that tries to capture what I write categorically — for example, I blog notes from books I read, and podcasts I listen to — but TBH it’s not the greatest taxonomy of my writing. Reductively: I blog about web design and development. Who are you writing for? Whoa, that question got me more introspective than I expected. Gonna move on before this becomes an existential crisis. What’s your favorite post on your blog? I used to highlight some of my favs on my home page, but I stopped. Choosing favorites is hard. My blog posts are like my kids: I love them all equally, lol. I suppose my favorite blog post is the one I’ll publish next. Any future plans for your blog? Maybe a redesign, a move to another platform, or adding a new feature? Will I redesign? Lol, the question is: when will you redesign? Tag ‘em Sorry if I mention someone who’s already been tagged: Piper Haywood — Love Piper’s mix of the personal and professional. Still have bookmarked to try grandma’s recipe. Tyler Gaw — Have loved and respected this dude since I met him at my first “real” webdev job in NYC. David Bushnell — Been enjoying David’s short- and long-form writing a lot as of late. Plus we feel the same about Deno & HTTP modules. Katie Langerman - Ah gotcha, that’s not a blog link. It’s Bluesky. But I’ve followed Katie on the socials and always enjoy her perspective. Not sure she has a personal blog, so this is a vote of confidence in her starting one :) Jan Miksovsky — Jan is doing really cool stuff with Web Origami (also just a super nice guy). Sorry, I’m not gonna ping any of these folks. If they read my blog, they’ll see their names. Otherwise, dear reader, consider it a suggestion to go subscribe to their stuff. Email · Mastodon · Bluesky

3 days ago 4 votes
TEC Energy offices by A+

This boldly elegant workplace located in 3,000 ft2 of an industrial building in Montreal is a noteworthy example of an...

4 days ago 4 votes
Flow State and Surfing

Jack Johnson is on Rick Rubin’s podcast Tetragrammaton talking about music, film making, creativity, and surfing. At one point (~24:30) Johnson talks about his love for surfing and the beautiful flow state it puts him in: Sometimes I’ll see a friend riding a wave while I’m paddling out, and the thing I’ll see them do just seems like magic...I’ll think, “How in the world did they just do that?” And then on your next ride you’re doing the exact same thing without thinking but it’s all muscle memory and it’s all in this flow that you get into. That’s a really beautiful state to get into, to do something that feels like a magic trick, like something you shouldn’t be able to do, but all of the sudden you’re doing it. I’m not a surfer, and I can’t do effortlessly cool. But I know what a flow state feels like. Johnson’s description reminds me of that feeling when you get a little time on a personal project — riding the wave of working on your personal website. You open your laptop. You start paddling out. Maybe you see an internet friend who was doing something cool and you want to try it but you have no idea if you’ll be able to do it as well as they did. And before you know it, you’re in that flow state where muscle memory takes over and you’re doing stuff without even consciously thinking about it — stuff that others might look at and perceive as magic (cough anything on the command line cough) but it’s not magic to you. Intuition and experience just take over while you ride the wave. Ok, I’m a nerd. But I don’t care. It’s a great feeling, regardless of whether it’s playing an instrument, or surfing, or programming. That feeling of sinking into a craft you’ve worked at your whole life that you don’t have to think about anymore. Email · Mastodon · Bluesky

6 days ago 10 votes