If you read this site in RSS or Instapaper be sure to re-read the updated post from today about Minimal Computer Geeks. I posted an important update at the bottom.
Month: November 2010
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Get an iPad for $399
TJ-Maxx is selling the iPad (16GB Wi-Fi only flavor) for $399, which is $100 off the ‘normal’ price. It is not at every store and they won’t tell you which, it’s like hide and seek.
If you want one, but money has been an issue this is probably as good a deal you will find before Christmas.
If you are wondering how they can do this – I am guessing that they are eating the $100 and calling it a marketing expense, otherwise they would be at every store. This is a great idea if I am right.
[via everyone, yesterday.][Updated: 11/19/10 at 7:58 AM] MacRumors (via Gruber) reports that Marshalls has them too and are getting 100 day over a 3-day period.
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To Minimalist Computer Geeks (Like Me)
I, like so many others, was inspired by Patrick Rhone when he started Minimal Mac – I wanted to make my Mac experience less cluttered and more focused. As it turns out Patrick and I are not alone, judging by the popularity of his site there exists quite a large group of Mac users who feel this way. This essay is for those people.
Ian Hines recently launched a new interview blog, and one of the first interviews was with Patrick Rhone, in this interview he stated:
Sometimes I use TextEdit. If it requires a lot of formatting (which I do with Markdown), I use TextMate.
This statement seemed innocent enough, and I do believe it is, but it got me to thinking: what does minimalistic computing really mean? Does it mean that we use as few applications as possible, or mean that we use our computers as little as possible? Then again does minimalistic computing mean that we have a lot of apps that are themselves very minimal in what they do?
So many questions, none of which I know the answer to. Thinking about it another way:
If everything Patrick does in TextEdit can be done in TextMate, but not the other way around, would the minimal thing not be, to use only TextMate? I am guessing he uses TextMate (like I do) to convert Markdown formatted text into HTML markup for posting. ((Using the great MultiMarkdown Bundle.)) If that is the case then why use TextEdit?
Ah yes, but TextEdit can do somethings that TextMate can’t – like say, open a Word document. So would the minimalist approach to computing then be: that you use many single focused (do one thing well) apps, such as Patrick is doing, or be to have one app that can do all of these things?
That is an honest question, what is the answer? Better yet, does the answer even matter?
I don’t mean to pick on Patrick, so let’s look at my computing setup instead. I use two web browsers every day. Every day. Two browsers.
I use Safari and Chrome. I use Safari as my primary browser and Chrome as a backup when I need to get some Flash going. I could easily accomplish everything in one or the other, but I choose not to have Flash installed in Safari to speed up my web browsing and increase battery life – the downside being that I have one more app I must run. Right or wrong it is a choice that I have consciously made, does it go against minimalistic computing though? On the one hand I eliminate Flash, however in doing so I created a need for a second web browser. I could easily have just one web browser, but that would mean having to keep Flash installed…and so on. Which solution is more minimal?
Same can be said with Photoshop and Pixelmator. Photoshop is more powerful, but Pixelmator is my go to, and then I inevitably make the switch back to Photoshop because I can’t easily do something I want to do in Pixelmator. Look at this tracking chart of my Photoshop vs Pixelmator usage for 2010 (thanks to Daytum):

As you can see I use Photoshop overwhelmingly more than Pixelmator, and the fact is that I can do everything in Photoshop that I could in Pixelmator, but not the other way around. So why keep Pixelmator?
For starters it is faster and lighter to use on my Mac, so it makes good sense when I want to run a bunch of apps at once. It is also much, much, cheaper to purchase. It is more stable. However, wouldn’t the minimal thing be to get rid of Pixelmator and go all Photoshop? Or would it be to stick with the more minimal Pixelmator and ditch Photoshop? Or keep them both using them for different things – as I currently do?
Does any of this matter?
Isn’t what really matters the things that work for us the best? If I want to keep using multiple photo editing apps and that workflow makes sense for me then would that not be the best workflow solution for me? I think so.
There are more questions here than answers and I think most are rhetorical to be honest. I do think though that there is a difference between these three concepts:
- Minimal Computing
- Productive Computing
- Best Solutions
That is, minimal computing seems to be a concept around which a certain group of us strive towards – minimizing and simplifying certain aspects of our computing lives. Productive computing is another facet – something that we all want to obtain, so that we can stop wasting time. This concept is centered on focus based tools like: OmniFocus, alarms, WriteRoom. Best solutions though are the things that work best for us and only us – like Patrick using both TextEdit and TextMate, or how I use two web browsers.
I think a lot of times we get these concepts confused because they so closely relate to one another. All to often I tend to blur the line between the three and it usually results in a compromise to the most important of the three: best solutions.
For instance let’s look at our menubars shall we…
There are nine icons in my menubar right now: Transmit, Dropbox, Bluetooth, Battery, Keychain, AirPort, Clock, Sound, Spotlight. A minimal approach would be to get rid of as many of these icons as possible. A productive approach might be to add as many as possible, to get the most information you can, or to get rid of as many as possible in order to decrease distractions. The best solution though is more vague, the best solution for me is to have nine.
I used to pride myself on the fact that I only had a handful of icons in the menubar, I removed the clock, sound, battery, wifi, bluetooth and Transmit. All to what end though? I ended up adding most back in Dashboard in one form or another and just ended up hitting F4 a lot more during the day. Likewise I used to have the icons stretch until they hit the other side with all sorts of things that monitored: temperature, fan speed, RAM usage and so on – that just resulted in ugliness. So I did a minimal and practical thing, I removed everything and added back what I missed. That’s how I ended up with nine – that’s how I found my best solution to the problem.
I know that sometimes I get caught up on trying to make my computer as productive as possible, or as minimal as can be – it occurred to me though that while that is all well and good, the best thing I could do would be to setup up my computer so that it works best for me, and only me.
I encourage you to do the same. ((That does not mean that you should stop reading sites like Minimal Mac, just that you don’t have to do everything posted on the site, or use every tool talked about – not that anyone said you ever did.))
[Updated: 11/19/10 at 8:03 AM] Patrick Rhone on Twitter reminds me that he too feels the same way, and that we really should read the About page on Minimal Mac (which I did read before posting this) where Patrick states:
I believe the most minimal computer is the one that is optimized for you. How you work. The menubar items you need. The dock items you need. The applications you need. The system you need. The peripherals you need. The tools you need to get the job done.
I believe most of us do not take the time to evaluate what that need is. The entire mission of this site is to help you ask those questions and find the answer that is right. The only answer that is right. The one that constitutes what is enough for you and only you.
Again I didn’t mean to sound like I was attacking Patrick Rhone, what he has done for my computing life and for the Mac community at large is wonderful. I was simply meaning to pose some questions that had been rattling around in my head, and some things that I see others not paying attention too.
It seems that I was not clear in my writing here today and for that I apologize. At the end of the quote from the Minimal Mac about page Patrick states the sites mission, which is to get people to think and ask questions about what they need. I had wanted to ask the specific questions that were in my head out loud and try to offer a look at how I answer those questions.
I was also pointed to these great posts on Minimal Mac: Computing Simplicity and Minimalism: More Than Just a Desktop ‘Theme’.
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Emergency broadcast warnings to be sent to cellphones
Tiffany Hsu:
The “Broadcast Message Center” would allow government agencies to zap alerts to phones in the geographic area affected, whether across a few blocks or nationwide.
Sounds cool.
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How to Ask a Nerd for Help (and Get It) Without Looking like a Huge Jerk
Brett Kelly:
Reason being, if you don’t give enough of a crap to try to rectify your own situation, then neither does he. Effort shows that you’re (albeit clumsily) committed to getting the problem sorted out and have only come to him out of necessity, not laziness.
So true, also try Googling for your answer first.
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Opting Out of TSA for Airport Security Still Requires Full Body Scanners
This is not good, Ken Tyndall reports:
The TSA points out that even if an airport decides to use a private firm for security, the screeners still must follow TSA guidelines. That would include using the full body scanners if they are installed at the airport.
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Defenseless
Mike Lee:
As an airline employee, I gave up a lot of rights, because airlines are considered a necessary part of the country’s basic infrastructure. That’s why we bail out the airlines when privatization fails.
It’s mighty disingenuous, then, to now claim that airline travel is some kind of luxury reserved for those willing to submit to humiliation by the TSA.
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Atleast One Politician is Mad About Porno-Scanners
Congressman Ron Paul:
In one recent well-publicized case, a TSA official is recorded during an attempted body search saying, “By buying your ticket you gave up a lot of rights.” I strongly disagree and am sure I am not alone in believing that we Americans should never give up our rights in order to travel. As our Declaration of Independence states, our rights are inalienable.
and:
My legislation is simple. It establishes that airport security screeners are not immune from any US law regarding physical contact with another person, making images of another person, or causing physical harm through the use of radiation-emitting machinery on another person. It means they are subject to the same laws as the rest of us.
Those are my favorite parts, but the whole article is excellent and well thought out. This transcends political parties and Congressman Paul makes an excellent point that if “political elites” were subject to this type of screening it would never have gotten this far.
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Hi, My Name is iTunes and I am a Hoarder
I had to wait until after the epically over-hyped Beatles announcement was made to make sure that iTunes wasn’t suddenly dead – since iTunes remains I thought we should talk about why I think it is the biggest piece of crap software that Apple ships. More accurately iTunes is what I call ‘bloatware’ – a piece of software that has taken on the characteristics of a hoarder and a ball hog all at once, software that wants to be everything to everyone.
In the beginning iTunes was great, but that was back when all it did was allow you to deal with music only – now days it tries to be so much more. Certainly you can still handle music in iTunes, but iTunes feels lost to me – like it has forgotten its roots. For instance have you ever tried to manage duplicated songs in iTunes? Holy crap is that a pain in the ass. I recently merged my library with my Wife’s, and with our media center. I have over 4,800 duplicate tracks in iTunes and the only way to get rid of duplicates is to manually select which one I want. It is 2010 and I have to make over 2,400 clicks to get rid of duplicates? Give me a break.
We haven’t even gotten to the fact that iTunes is now: a video store, app store, bookstore, social network, syncing engine, and more. I am not saying that each of these should be their own apps, but certainly some of them should be. Ping should be browser based and stay out of iTunes aside from being integrated with the playlist so a user can ‘like’ something without leaving the app. Video can stay. Apps and books should be in their own app, I don’t know about you but when I think iTunes I don’t think: games.
Why was syncing ever made apart of iTunes – for the longest time Apple had been using iSync to handle this, but iPods slowly killed it off (though it is still alive on Macs). Interestingly it is where you control these options for MobileMe:

The whole thing makes no sense, my iPhone and iPad are not media devices they are computers, so why should I sync them with iTunes?
There is only one culprit to blame: Windows. ((IMHO))
Think about it, Apple must ship iTunes to Windows users in order to keep iPod/iPhone/iPad customers happy. Apple needs to ship all the features and additives in iTunes to Windows users as well to support these devices. So what is easier for Apple? Creating separate apps for both Windows and Mac users for each of these services and then having to tie them together on Windows? Or just cramming all the crap they can into iTunes?
Obviously putting it all in iTunes is the most economical solution – but good God y’all it is the most un-Apple solution possible.
Think about it another way, if we take the iLife suite and iTunes-ify it you get one app that does: Video editing, photo editing and management, music studio creation software, web development, DVD authoring. Perhaps iWeb gets left out to be fair, but the rest would all be one app aptly named iLife and it would suck a lot. That is how I feel about iTunes.
Again you can do this with iWork: word processing, page layout, presentation, spreadsheets all in one app. Wouldn’t that be a real gem to use?
Nobody wants the iWork and iLife suite to become one app – not even Apple. We don’t want that to happen because we all know that it will just look and feel like iTunes, introducing a completely new level of suckage that would only rival Microsoft Office.
I am of course leaving out all the strange UI conventions that Apple uses in iTunes, but no where else. Never mind this for now.
Every time I spend more than a few minutes in iTunes I have to cringe – the way that it handles most everything is painful.
For example:
- The iTunes store could not load slower – internet connections do not matter, that thing is slow.
- App updates are a joke – seriously have you ever tried updating your apps in iTunes, then get the error, that the updates iTunes just listed are out of date and need to be refreshed? Then you go through the same cycle 15 times before you can download one update? Yeah happens every time.
- When you add a new video file you can’t specify Movie or TV Show when you add it. So then you have to edit the metadata after you add it to get your TV Shows to appear in the TV Show section.
- Additionally if you add a home video you will notice that there is no home video tabs – I mean really?
- It’s 2010 ((Pronounced Twenty-Ten get with it.)) and iTunes still doesn’t automatically remove the track numbers from titles that I import? Really? I mean that seems easy enough for software to do.
- Ping makes me cry.
- Why is their separate ‘Purchased’ lists for each of my devices, yes you can delete them, but why make them to begin with?
- Why can’t genius work with every song?
- Why does genius take two years to deliver me information?
- Why waste so much space keeping all those backups from my iPhone and iPad?
- Why are you still called iTunes?
I could keep going, but I started to get too depressed about the whole thing.
Dear Apple, you can do better and we both know it. Please do better.
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Backing Up Facebook
Ian Hines messaged me on Twitter last night to ask if I knew that you could export your Facebook data. It was the first I heard of it, but it turns out that indeed you can export your messages and wall posts among other things.
Here’s a video from Facebook explaining it all.
If you are thinking about leaving (and I think you should) then this looks like a smart thing to get before you say goodbye.
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U.K. Government to Snub BBC, Google Over Web Access
Let’s hope U.S. politicians still ignore other countries, because as Alan Purkiss reports:
In a speech at a London telecommunications conference organized by the newspaper, the minister will say the market should decide the extent to which service providers can charge for preferential content delivery and slow down other traffic.
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Google, Facebook Don’t Innovate
Chris Nuttall for the Financial Times:
Mr Wilson, author of the popular A VC blog and a managing partner at Union Square Ventures, said Google had not come up with anything truly transformative that was a home-grown product since Gmail, introduced in 2004. It had relied on acquisitions instead to develop new services.
Clever, but the story is a great very short read. Apparently Google board members don’t pay much attention to acquisitions their company makes.
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One More Thing – TSA Porno-Scanners
Carol Pucci reporting for the Seattle Times:
Rachel Hawkridge, chairwoman of the state Libertarian Party, said she will gather volunteers at noon at Seattle’s Best Coffee in the main terminal at Sea-Tac airport, then go from there to security gates to hand out information to passengers on privacy and health risks associated with the scanners.
This is awesome, I wish I was in town for this so I could lend a hand. If any readers are around I encourage you to participate.
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Today in TSA
Instead of flooding you with a bunch of links in the stream, here is what I am reading today in TSA news:
Josh Mitchell for the WSJ:
Mr. Pistole also tried to allay privacy concerns about full-body-imaging screenings, which allow inspectors to view graphic images of passengers going through security checks. He said devices lack the ability to store or transmit the images.
That’s why there has never been a leak of say, oh, 100 images.
Isaac Schlueter on his experience ‘opting-out’:
After the first 4 “OPT-OUT” calls, they just passed us all through the regular metal detector. No one got groped.
Information, properly delivered, is power.
Great story, be sure to read it.
Noah Shachtman for Wired adds:
It’s the same kind of trade-off TSA implicitly provided when it ordered us to take off our sneakers (to stop shoe bombs), and to chuck our water bottles (to prevent liquid explosives). Security guru and scanner-suit plaintiff Bruce Schneier calls it “magical thinking…. Descend on what the terrorists happened to do last time, and we’ll all be safe. As if they won’t think of something else.”
Read the last two sentences again.
I don’t remember if I linked to this or not, but here is a letter from a Biochemist at UCSF talking about some ‘Red Flags’ and really if you read anything I posted here, read this.
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iOS Twitter App Push Notifications
Loren Brichter on who to quiet push notifications while you sleep:
Pushes should honor sleep time settings (set on the web). In-app settings are on the todo list.
Very nice.
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Macworld’s Outlook FAQ
Interesting that Outlook looks like a great upgrade for those using Entourage and integrates well with Apple’s apps on the Mac. BUT, it is a proprietary ass in regards to calendar data – which looks like more than just an annoyance.
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Quote of the Day: Standards & Quality
Greatness comes when one sets standards for their own results that are far higher then anyone expects and they strive to meet those consistently. -
‘Jet Lag May Cause Stupidity’
In what has to be the best headline I have seen today, Laura Sanders writes:
Even after 28 days of a back-to-normal schedule, the formerly jet-lagged hamsters still showed learning and memory problems.
That is a bit concerning if you frequently travel – at least you should be concerned about it.
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Windows Oddities
A nice look at some interesting things relating it the history of Windows, my favorite is the ‘Whistler’ logo they had.
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TSA boss: Our pat-downs turn up “artfully concealed objects”
Perhaps a better way to fight the TSA on this is to start demanding airports opt out and hire private security firms that do not use these methods. In fact perhaps we should start boycotting airports that continue to use TSA.