Introducing our iPad App.

Who wants to lug around a bulky Macbook Pro? Take your work to go with a fullscreen slideshow that works both on and offline. Perfect for interviews, meetings, and everything in between.
The Tools We Use, Part II
A follow up to our first post about the tools that power Well Crafted.
We thought some of you may be interested in how Well Crafted is built, so we’ve compiled a list of hardware, web services, open source software, and design tools that have contributed to our product. This post covers some of the pieces we did not discuss in our first post.
Slideshows

Show off your work with an HTML–based slideshow. Simply type /slideshow after your homepage or project URL. Then enable fullscreen mode in your browser.
Avoid duplicate work – there’s no reason why you need to produce imagery for both your online portfolio and a Keynote presentation.
We’re excited to get this into your hands and keep pushing the needle on development.
See some examples here:
Project Library

Save every project you’ve ever made (well, up to 500) and access them at any time via your project library. Simply type /library at the end of your portfolio’s URL.
This feature is another step forward in fulfilling our vision for Well Crafted. Showing your best work is important in your public portfolio, but maintaining a library of past work is smart as well. Not only can you send people links to past projects, but you can view your career progression by taking a look back.
Stop the Online Piracy Act
This just caught our attention - Congress is voting on two well-intentioned, but deeply flawed bills called the Protect-IP Act and the Stop Online Piracy Act. Passage of these bills would enable U.S. corporations to utilize the same DNS censorship techniques used by China and Iran. This is very bad for the future of the internet.
TAKE ACTION at http://www.tumblr.com/protect-the-net/
Read more about the ramifications of this bill:
- Read the open letter from tech companies (AOL, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google, etc)
- The Architecture Of The Internet by Fred Wilson
- Ars Technica’s article about the issue
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s take on the bill