infl8ed 12 hours ago

IMHO UK currently holds the gold standard for this https://design-system.service.gov.uk/

Most/many government services use the standard design architecture and, although it is not perfect, it is several orders of magnitude better than I've seen elsewhere.

  • mikeyouse 12 hours ago

    As mentioned in the piece - the designers at 18F were explicitly following the UKs lead here and were attempting to do just that before being DOGE’d in favor of some political hacks with no understanding or appreciation of the task at hand.

    • infl8ed 12 hours ago

      Thanks! Guilty as charged of not fully reading through the piece before commenting :)

  • belZaah 9 hours ago

    Former CTO of a country here. Anything GDS did filled me with deep envy: it was beautiful and made so much sense and I had none of it at my disposal. Then Brexit. I was there in GDS offices a few weeks after the vote and the organization was being dismantled under my very eyes. See, the trick with such endeavors is not what you can drive centrally, it’s what you can make others implement. Reporting to the Man is a good way of creating pressure, but as the current examples in both UK and US show, you can’t sustain that pressure for, say 30 years. Also, centralization neither scales very well nor is democratic as it centralizes control and removes responsibility from the service owners. So how do you have something placed fairly low in the government working horizontally effect meaningful change in other organizations? Have tried it in a few countries, have a few answers and many questions, AMA.

    • bythreads 8 hours ago

      I've done the same for a multinational with 1000 franchises-like subcompanies - trying to get them to conform to horizontal guidance. It is an impossible task, noone takes it that serious and are focused on imminent kpi and okr's.

      My only success has been internal reviews of wcag compliance and the threat of fines if found lacking.

      But for non digital design its embarrassingly hard

enobrev 12 hours ago

> They realized money could be made, and built a website to let other people do the same thing, through them, not [Craigslist]. This is important: the very first act of creation was an act of piracy.

Unless Craigslist owned the building they lived in, this is a ridiculous assertion.

  • wahnfrieden 11 hours ago

    It's poorly written but you've misread the intended meaning. It says that they learned from illicit transactions on Craigslist. And then wanted to replicate that on their own platform.

    They've edited a correction:

    > They realized money could be made, and built a website to let other people do the same thing, through them, not Craig. Good on them, but renting a space is regulated differently than selling a used couch for many good reasons. What you could once attribute to the same quaint naivety of setting up a lemonade stand, you can no longer. The people who funded them knew better, and eventually, so did they.

    • enobrev 11 hours ago

      Even so, "piracy" is rather hyperbolic. The correction definitely clarifies the point.

erulabs 12 hours ago

If you even remotely agree that Airbnb is a simply a clone of Craigslist, I think it’s perfectly sane to absolutely disregard every other opinion you have on running an organization. Absurd thing to imply, and especially absurd that it’s being digested at all on HN.

  • 3ternalreturn 12 hours ago

    the author didn't write anything like that

    • anon7000 12 hours ago

      Direct quote from article:

      > They realized money could be made, and built a website to let other people do the same thing, through them, not Craig[slist]. This is important: the very first act of creation was an act of piracy. What AirBnB does today is no different

      • quantified 9 hours ago

        Doesn't commit to it being a clone.

monster_truck 9 hours ago

None of their sites are 508/WCAG compliant, that's how you know things are getting bad.

staplers 12 hours ago

  This is important: the very first act of creation was an act of piracy.
It usually is, as with Spotify, any AI platform, Uber. While you're under the radar, do the illegal shady stuff to bootstrap, then scale, then regulatory capture (fight piracy).
argomo 12 hours ago

The swamp overfloweth. How do we cure the intractable corruption of Trump and his administration? Will the nation be worth a fragment of what it was once we do?

  • ares623 10 hours ago

    What is happening in the US now has happened in other developing countries in the past.

    The US will be paying for this for decades. For reference, in the Philippines, the effects of the Marcos regime still resonate some 50+ years later, and the changes imposed by it (and the corruption as a consequence of it) have solidified and have become normalized up to the present day. There is no going back.

  • ValveFan6969 8 hours ago

    >Will the nation be worth a fragment of what it was

    America was worth something during Biden's days?

  • bongodongobob 12 hours ago

    Sites like these that bury articles like this sure aren't helping. What our administration is doing is beyond just political, it's immoral, dangerous, and plain old fascism. This submission will be flagged within the hour.

    • hackyhacky 11 hours ago

      1. It's flagged not because it isn't true, but because that's not what HN is for.

      2. Increasing the visibility of articles like this anywhere, but especially on HN, is unlikely to change anyone's mind. At this point, I don't think anyone is going to change their opinion about the current administration no matter what.

      3. There are more effective ways to mobilize voters.

      Edit: typo

    • 3ternalreturn 12 hours ago

      It's already been flagged and un-flagged. I'm sure that will keep happening.

      • wahnfrieden 12 hours ago

        Unflaggers generally cannot win. The flagging kills vote momentum and when it reemerges unflagged, it's already dropped from the front page and from the new list, its only chances for revival.

        • loeg 12 hours ago

          It's on the front page.

        • delaugust 12 hours ago

          I still see it on the New list.

titanomachy 11 hours ago

> President Trump’s appointment of AirBnB co-founder Joe Gebbia as “Chief Design Officer” of the United States is a sickening travesty

Can we reserve words like “sickening” and “travesty” for things a little more serious than this? A war crime is a “sickening travesty”. This is, at worst, a pointless waste of resources.

  • riehwvfbk 11 hours ago

    When politicians of certain stripes wanted to spend money on renaming SF schools to atone for "past trauma" and canceling math because it's "not equitable" - that somehow wasn't a travesty. Spending some money on design is apparently the most evil thing imaginable though.

    Thankfully the tiger moms of SF stood up for their kids and got the grifters kicked out. Let's stand up to lowbrow idiotic articles like this one too.

Mallowram 12 hours ago

the disintegration of the federal government.

saubeidl 7 hours ago

Putin-style capture of government institutions by autocrat-aligned oligarchs.

munchler 12 hours ago

Proofreading nit: "soundbyte" should be "soundbite".

ChrisMarshallNY 12 hours ago

One of the things about the Apple Store, is that folks want what it sells. Because of that, they put up with it.

Personally, I find the Apple Store to be a pain in the ass. The online version makes me a clickaholic, and the IRL version is very confusing.

Government sites are very different.

I have no opinion on the new position. I don’t know the guy, and don’t use AirBnb. I just find that the insistence on making govt sites “like the Apple Store” to be weird.

In a local mall, we have an Apple Store on one end, and a Microsoft Store on the other.

Aesthetically, they are quite similar.

But the Apple Store is always packed, and the Microsoft Store is always empty.

[UPDATED TO ADD] As was pointed out, this was reflective of a long time ago. Microsoft closed all their stores a few years ago.

  • bigDinosaur 11 hours ago

    AirBnb has one dark pattern that I'm aware of, that I absolutely despise: the search listings don't display the actual price, but instead the price minus the fees (so not what you'll actually pay). Thankfully some jurisdictions made this illegal (e.g. if you use the Australian AirBnb website you'll get the actual prices), but it's a horrible pattern presumably designed to get people to commit to initiating a booking and thus less likely to not proceed when they see the final total.

    I have zero faith that anyone who was okay with that should be in charge of anything for the public good.

    • 2arrs2ells 11 hours ago

      This has changed - at least for me, in the US, Airbnb shows all-in pricing.

      • foobarian 11 hours ago

        This has started to turn around in the US, and states like CA and MN require it, with MA to follow in a few days.

        The problem is that if you don't use that dark pattern, you take a double digit revenue hit. So you revert to the dark pattern while shaking your fist at why the customers "just don't understand?"

      • nativeit 9 hours ago

        I think that was one of Biden's FTC initiatives about hidden fees in things like airlines, car rentals, hotel rooms, etc.. Honestly one of the better moves by the FTC, here's hoping it survives.

      • quantified 9 hours ago

        And for me, not. Hate to say it, but it depends. On what I can't say.

  • lotsofpulp 11 hours ago

    > In a local mall, we have an Apple Store on one end, and a Microsoft Store on the other.

    I had to check if I had opened an old thread. Microsoft closed all of its stores in Jun 2020.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Store_(retail)

    • ChrisMarshallNY 11 hours ago

      Shows how long it’s been, since I’ve been past there. I don’t really do IRL stores, much, these days (but I have been to the Apple Store a couple of times, in the last few years).

      s/have/had/g

      My bad. Thanks for pointing that out.

  • bongodongobob 12 hours ago

    Why would I ever go to a Microsoft store? To buy a Windows CD?

    • wnc3141 9 hours ago

      for a while they were making a play to be in the devices market.

    • ChrisMarshallNY 11 hours ago

      It looks like I’m dreaming of a glorious past, but they seemed to sell XBox stuff.

  • fakedang 12 hours ago

    > But the Apple Store is always packed, and the Microsoft Store is always empty.

    Perhaps because more people associate Microsoft with software and Apple with hardware? Also there are way more stores selling Windows-based hardware equipment compared to Apple stores.

havaloc 12 hours ago

"AirBnB’s present dominance isn’t the product of real innovation. He and his friends stumbled upon an idea after listing their apartment on Craigslist for under-the-table sublease during a popular conference."

Does the author wish he thought of it first?

  • delaugust 12 hours ago

    envy isn't necessary for legitimate critique you know

    • Pedro_Ribeiro 11 hours ago

      This barely qualifies as a critique; it's a hit piece with no constructive criticism and some anti-capitalist rhetoric thrown in.

      > The National Design Studio is a clear case of nepotism, and they're greatly overpromising. Dismantling 18F was a massive mistake.

      There, I just said the same thing but cut out the personal attacks and the ridiculous take that Airbnb was somehow built by thieves (does anything actually believe this?).

      I'm surprised this article has stayed up this long. Have the mods read it? It's low signal-to-noise ratio.

      • jjani 8 hours ago

        > Dismantling 18F was a massive mistake.

        Mistake to me implies unintended consequences that differ from the original goal. I've never heard anyone say "Opening Auschwitz was a massive mistake", as its consequences were exactly as intended. In the same way, dismantling 18F is not a mistake.