I'd always thought the world was a wish-granting factory.
Just make people better at something they want to be better at.
Give users what they actually want, not what they say they want. And whatever you do, don't give them new features just because your competitors have them!
Upgrade your user, not your product. Value is less about the stuff and more about the stuff the stuff enables. Don't build better cameras - build better photographers.
The secret to building great products is not creating awesome features, it's to make your users awesome.
In many cases, the more you try to compete, the less competitive you actually are.
It does not matter how awesome your product is or your presentation or your post. Your awesome thing matters ONLY to the extent that it serves the user's ability to be a little more awesome.
We can only take it so far, because man can only take it so far, lower self can only take it so far, and you have to realize that the public is only at a certain place.
I cannot pursue my architecture without considering the minimization of energy consumption, simple and direct technologies, a respect for site, climate, place and culture. Together, these disciplines represent for me a fantastic platform for experimentation and expression. Of particular importance is the junction of the rational and the poetic resulting hopefully in works that resonate and belong to where they reside.
Who can sleep on the night that God became man?
And the brave make their own fortune!