John Gruber recaps Mike Matas career

An accidental recap of the Mike Matas career

John Gruber in Bad Dye Job after extensively criticizing the responsible of the Liquid Glass debacle at Apple, Alan Dye:

Mike Matas, the wunderkind designer who became a sensation with Delicious Library in 2005, soon thereafter moved on to work at Apple, where he designed such things as the "slide to unlock" interface on the original iPhone. Matas was a key designer on that glorious first version of the iPhone's OS. He then left Apple and formed Push Pop Press, and wound up at Facebook in 2011 after Facebook acquired Push Pop — before it had even shipped its core product. (I saw a still-in-development version of Push Pop's publishing system in 2011, before Facebook bought them and shut down the product, and it remains to this day one of the most impressive, exciting, "this is the future" demos I've ever seen. It's not merely a shame but a goddamn tragedy that it never even shipped.) Zuckerberg wound up assembling around Matas an entire little superteam of "Delicious" era designers and design-focused developers. That team wound up shipping Facebook Paper in 2014 — an iOS-exclusive alternative client for Facebook that espoused the same principles of elegance, exquisite attention to detail, and, especially, direct manipulation of content in lieu of user interface chrome, that infused Push Pop Press's publishing system. Facebook Paper was so good it almost — almost — made me sign up for a Facebook account just so I could use it. But Facebook Paper went nowhere, fast. Zuckerberg lost his boner for "design", Facebook Paper was pulled from the App Store in 2016, and the team behind Paper disbanded.

I’ve followed and I’m a big fan of Mike Matas from that era, from time to time I still see some of his posts on his instagram were he doesn’t share anything about interaction design but shares beautiful pictures of his life and family. He managed to build a great studio in the nature for him and his wife, Sharon.

Mike Matas also worked for Microsoft after he created an AI classifier app, Lobe.

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