One of the things of being on an european time zone is that when an american assumes that he's going to write you in the morning, it actually does it just after lunch :)
Joke aside, it would be awesome for this to have two things:
1) The ability to set a delivery hour
2) The ability to not receive emails on weekends
Apart from that, it's an interesting way to apply spaced repetition / exposure to knowledge.
I thought this too. It might be interesting to look at how many people changed the starting date to Monday instead of the default of tomorrow / Sunday.
This is off-topic, but does anyone look at their website without javascript enabled? For some reason you actively suppress the content with a loading image even though it's fully rendered beneath that overlay.
I was wondering why there was even a loading image in the first place. Not like this is a web app. It's a simple content site so I just expect the next page to load.
If anything the spinner makes it seem like the page loads even slower.
Looking at the source the site uses WordPress. Couldn't you just slap in a plugin like WP Super Cache and have everything cached up and loaded up instantly?
I'm not really sure how this is a personal knowledge hacking tool, but mini-lessons or articles emailed to me everyday might be interesting. I signed up for paradoxes.
It's an awful lot of courses to pick through when you're signing up. Maybe just offer the five most popular to start?
I also second this. A good approach may be to show 3-5 subjects (e.g. Philosophy, Startups, Architecture) and highlight one of the courses that would be the best beginners course. So if I'm interested in philosophy it's very easy to just see immediately where I could/should begin and click just one button. Going in to feature creep here but; as I just signed up I haven't completed a course yet, obviously, so I don't know what happens then, but it would be great (for retention etc.) to be recommended a natural next course to take as well. Dumb it down for the user even more. Actually what I would do is to have a button in the last email of a course that would read "Continue with GREATEST PHILOSOPHERS IN HISTORY". So just one click and I would be in the loop again.
I definitely got in to a "oh this is nice.. and this too.. and these two would be cool..". At the same having the full catalogue of courses available is good of course, but don't overwhelm the first time user.
I would test having the "popular courses" feature, or something like proposed above, just under your headline actually. So it's super easy to see what the site is really about without even having to scroll. That would show off the kind of content you have and even though your name is Highbrow, it might not be clear if you're teaching out nail painting techniques or philosophy when I just read the headline and the feature list you have.
I'd suggest the 5 best quality courses, and a "More.." button. The "buzzfeed" comment elsewhere leads me to believe the other guy picked one of the courses that was not curated as well as what I chose, which is the basis of my suggestion.
I've received one highbrow email thus far, and I am happy for reading a good quality blog post instead of having to sift through serps and junk blogs for myself, and also to learn about some new resources in my area of interest. I totally get the one thing at a time, 5 minute per day commitment, I think it's a great idea.
I agree, and I think it's disappointing because it had potential.
e.g Have a course on Cathedrals, e-mail me a picture of a cathedral everyday/week, and offer the same uniform info for each one... like Country, Style, Influences, Year, and a general short description.
versus
Have a courses on "famous paintings" and e-mail me with paintings I obviously already know about (hence "famous").
I think having the articles come to your inbox on a regular basis is a more interesting, novel approach than me having to scan them myself. Feels more personal.
Nice work, love the layout of the site and the courses look interesting. Maybe some info on who put each course together would be useful? I've signed up to the short story course.
We want you to form a good daily habit and not tire yourself out at the same time. Thus, you can subscribe to only one course at a time and take all the courses one by one.
If you don't already, maybe you should explain this on the site. Maybe allow the user to sign up for 2 or 3 courses at a time if they really want to though? You could still warn them before they try to bite off more than they can chew...
Unfortunately, you can't. Highbrow is a one-course at a time deal. We want you to form a good daily habit and not tire yourself out at the same time. Thus, you can subscribe to only one course at a time and take all the courses one by one.
First good habit: not having spam I react to in my inbox every morning.