A nice beta build of 1Password for Windows – 1Password is one of the best programs you can get for your Mac, and it appears they put a lot of time into making it great for Windows as well. Windows users, check this out ASAP.
Month: November 2010
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National Opt-Out Day
A call to action from National Opt-Out Day:
The government should not have the ability to virtually strip search anyone it wants. The problem is compounded in that if you do not want to go through the naked body scanner, the government has made the alternative perhaps worse! In an effort to try and make everyone comply with the scanners, the government has instituted “enhanced” pat downs. There are reports from travelers across the country about how the TSA now touches the genitals and private areas of men, women and children in a much more aggressive manner. We do not believe the government has a right to see you naked or aggressively feel you up just because you bought an airline ticket.
They want to do it Wed Nov 24th, also known as the day before Thanksgiving, perhaps one of the busiest travel days of the year. If I was flying that day I would be in, are you?
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Tricorder TR-580 for iPhone
Umm this does nothing, but I still bought it.
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Why I Don’t Have A Commenting System (Other Than Email)
I very rarely agree with anything Gizmodo says, in fact I do not enjoy Gizmodo at all – instead of trashing them in comments I decided to unsubscribe and just steer clear of them. Someone who’s opinion I value pointed me to this article posted by Joel Johnson of Gizmodo. In the article Johnson went off on all readers of Gizmodo, not just the commenters.
I can certainly understand why, some of the comments that have been written about things that I have written (in places like Hacker News and Reddit) have been down right nasty. Instead of writing back, I just stopped reading them. I setup this blog from day one to not have comments, not because I don’t enjoy engaging with people, or want what I say to be the final say, rather because I want commenters to own what they say to me.
If you are going to say something nasty about what I write you can only do so anonymously on sites like Hacker News and Reddit, otherwise you need to use Twitter, Email, or your blog. That means it will be associated with you. I have been told I was wrong countless times in emails and on Twitter – each time it was a civil and well reasoned comment.
I love every email I get from readers, the depth and care that is typically put into sending that email to me is amazing. The conversations change and effect both the commenter and I. I have only had one bad email from a reader, which is amazing to me.
Comments fail because when people believe that they can hide behind a cloak of anonymity they decide that they can be as mean or nasty that they want. Comments fail because most all comment systems fail to make the commenter own what they are saying.
I disagree with most of what Johnson posted, it seems misplaced and angry – that said I can’t say that I blame him for posting it. Though there are much better ways to deal with commenters that how Gizmodo dealt with them, for instance they could just turn them off for a bit like Engadget did a while back.
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Build and Analyze a New Podcast
Build and Analyze is a new podcast with Marco Arment (creator of Instapaper) and Dan Benjamin (podcasting extraordinaire), I just listened to the first episode and it was truly great. Set aside some time this weekend to check it out.
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We Won’t Fly .com
What you need to know to stop the ‘porno-scanners’.
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Pretend Your Mac is an iPad for Flash-less Browsing
John Gruber on setting Safari’s user agent string to Mobile Safari – iPad:
This trick makes video work in Safari on Mac OS X — with no Flash — from Flickr, Vimeo embeds, TED, MSNBC, and probably any other site that offers video that works on the iPad. This doesn’t work for all video, but it should work for any video that works on the iPad.
Very clever and he mentioned this on the last episode of The Talk Show and I have been using that trick ever since, why you ask? I defer to Gruber:
Both Safari and my entire computer as a whole run better today than they did before I uninstalled Flash. Uninstall Flash on your Mac and see for yourself.
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More Writing Tools [Reader Suggested]
If you want to get a lot of emails, leave out someone’s favorite writing tool. At least that is what I learned with today’s look at Mac writing tools. I got a lot of suggestions from people, and while I don’t have the time nor the desire to check them all out I thought I would share them with all of you. Here they are in no particular order, with what I know about them or copied and pasted from the site.
- MacVim: “a port of the text editor Vim to Mac OS X.”
- GNU/Emacs: “an extensible, customizable text editor—and more. At its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a dialect of the Lisp programming language with extensions to support text editing.”
- Internet Type Writer: this one is just a web app, but pretty neat and never heard of it before so I thought I would include it.
- Bean: “Bean is a small, easy-to-use word processor (or more precisely, a rich text editor), designed to make writing convenient, efficient and comfortable. Bean is Open Source, fully Cocoa, and is available free of charge!”
- Mellel: billed as a word processor for technical writing, among other things.
- Fraise: I am told this is the (more) active project to the now dead Smultron that I mention in the previous post.
- SubEthaEdit: “a powerful and lean text editor. And it’s the only collaborative one that is a joy to use. By combining the ease of Bonjour with the world’s best text collaboration engine, it makes working together not only possible but even fun…”
- Nisus Writer: “a word processor that’s fast, clean, and with all the power you need.”
- Komodo Edit: “a fast, smart, free and open-source code editor. Switching your trusty code editor is hard, but give Komodo Edit (or its big brother Komodo IDE) a try: it’ll be worth your while.”
- Cetix: this one seems pretty interesting and certainly geared towards media production, not writing per se, but screen writing for sure.
- TextMate Blogging Bundle: Justin Blanton emailed in to remind me that he has a TextMate bundle to help preview and publish from TextMate to a blog. It is pretty sweet so I do apologize for not linking to it earlier. He also has the sript working for Chromium/Chrome users here.
- [Updated: 11/15/10 at 4:15 PM]
- xPad: ” the ultimate notepad, TextEdit and Stickies replacement for Apple’s OS X. With a simple, easy-to-use interface and powerful multi-document features, xPad will quickly become your daily text editor of choice.”
I will be updating this as more come in, so feel free to get in contact if you have more, be sure to also check out the original writing tools post.
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A Project for the Weekend
The OpeniBoot project:
OpeniBoot is an open source implementation of iBoot for Apple iPhone and iPod Touch devices. It allows booting of unsigned code such as linux kernels on the device. There is also and OpeniBoot console (oibc) which can be connected to from a libusb enabled computer.
OpeniBoot is critical for the booting and usage of linux on the iPhone as it sets up and initializes many devices ready for the linux kernel to take over. Many iBoot functions are replicated here, however when booting iOS iBoot is chainloaded from the NOR to guarantee iOS will boot without problems even with OpeniBoot installed.
Pretty neat stuff going on MacGasm has a video of it in action. MacGasm reports that the project is hoping to get Android OS up and working on the iOS devices – which would be kinda neat.
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AirPrint Hacktivator
Someone wrote a program to install the needed files on your Mac that will allow AirPrint to work as it was announced by Steve Jobs. You still need 10.6.5 and iOS 4.2 to make it work. I have not, and will not try this, so buyer beware.
[via MacStories.net] -
Looking at Different Writing Tools for Macs
I started by trying to talk about how I write, more specifically the workflow that I use, but that turned out to be rather pedestrian and boring. Then I thought I would write a review of the software that I use, specifically Ulysses, that too seemed boring. Then it dawned on me that I have tried just about every writing tool out there ((I am too poor to try all the iOS writing apps, so I am limiting myself to Mac apps.)), so why not give people my thoughts on these pieces of software. The only problem is that I have tried so many I can’t remember them all, so here are my thoughts on the ones that I do remember. ((Please email me if I left out one you were wondering about, I probably have tried it at some point.))
- TextEdit: Apple’s built in text editor and word processing machine, the cheapest and easiest way to work with .txt files on the Mac. I don’t hate it, but I am also not among those who love it.
- WriteRoom: A fullscreen text file editor from Hog Bay Software, there was about a year period where I only wrote stuff using WriteRoom and couldn’t bring myself to use anything else. I still love this program, sadly it has given way to some better options. ((Better for me.))
- Smultron: A free open source text editor with a stupid looking icon. I used this for a while because I needed something to better highlight code, it has since fallen by the wayside, and I never quite liked it, Smultron always felt a bit off for some reason. Unfortunately the project looks to be dead now.
- MacJournal: Made by Mariner Software I always wanted to like this program, but it never stuck and I could never quite pin down why. The whole program just feels a bit off to me.
- BBEdit: A Bare Bones piece of software that they claim: “It doesn’t suck.®” That tagline I must admit was the reason I started using the program, I always found it to be good, but I never quite found it to fit my needs, plus the icon does suck and it is blue. ((Really with the blue icons people?))
- TextMate: Stumbled upon Textmate while looking for something to replace Smultron and the whole thing just stuck with me. I was just starting to write in Markdown and found out that it could convert Markdown to HTML, and from there it all started. TextMate is like TextEdit Pro and do I ever love me some ‘Pro’ versions.
- Ulysses: I found out about this great writing program from a Gruber sponsorship post. I wanted to write a novel at the time, I have sense given up, now I use Ulysses for writing just about every long form blog post I do (split with TextMate for shorter posts) and I love it. I especially love that I can manage all the posts in one database and have fullscreen with notes. A great program, there is also a cheaper ‘Core’ version for bloggers, I of course have the ‘Pro’ version because I apparently like to waste money. ((My wife confirms this.))
- OmmWriter: Most days I think that I am one of the only people out there that finds OmmWriter more distracting than MS Word, I just never got why anyone would need a picture background and music with typewriter clicky sounds in order to write.
- Microsoft Word: Honestly you couldn’t pay me enough to write in this wretched piece of crap.
- Apple Pages: Slightly better than Word, but really not a ‘writing app’ so much as it is create ‘lost dog flyers’ type of an app. There are a lot of people that love it, and I use it all the time, mostly though for doing quick page layout operations and pasting in text written in other apps. ((We have our company letterhead setup as a Pages template.))
- Adobe InDesign: Is not a writing app…that said you can pry this app from my cold dead hands. I love InDesign and if you want to make documents look really good this is the tool you need, that said, don’t write in it just copy and paste.
- Scrivener: I must admit that I only tried Scrivener for about two days before deleting it. I think that if I wast a playwright, novelist, or screenwriter it would be excellent. I am, sadly, none of those.
- Notational Velocity – A text file note taking app seems like the perfect writing client, no? No not really, Notational is best left to do what it does best – take notes.
- MarsEdit: I love MarsEdit, but it is a blogging app, not a writing app. I copy and paste into it, the only words that are directly written in MarsEdit are those short quips I make on linked posts, nothing else. Though I do highly recommend it for publishing to blogs.
- TextWrangler: I have to admit that I never wanted to install this program based solely on its terrible icon – I am a huge icon snob it appears. I don’t have anything bad to say about it, nor do I have anything good to say about it. Still a TextMate fan.
I know there are a lot of programs that have been left out, if your favorite is missing please email me, or just accept my apology. I have probably tried it, but forgot about it completely.
Be sure to check out the updated list of reader suggestions that I missed.
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Four Worthless Samsung Galaxy Tab Reviews and One Useful
Mossberg, Pogue, Wired, Engadget and Gizmodo all reviewed the Samsung Galaxy Tab, all I wanted to know was one thing: what is it like to type on a 7″ screen. Only one of them mentioned this. Pathetic, this was the first thing people talked about with the iPad and now they ignore it for a device that is much smaller – what you don’t ever type things?
The closest Mossberg gets:
The Tab has a 7-inch screen versus the 9.7-inch display on the iPad. That may seem like a small difference, but the numbers are deceptive, because screen sizes are always described using diagonal measurements. In fact, the actual screen real estate on the Tab is less than half of the iPad’s.
The closest Wired gets:
Compounding matters is the problematic location of the power and volume buttons. Holding the device in your left hand often causes you to hit these by accident. They’re temperamental and touchy, until you eventually adapt to a grip further down the chassis.
And Pogue:
You can dictate text instead of typing it, or search Google or Google Maps by voice. (On the Galaxy, you can also type using Swype, which I reviewed in July.)
Maybe everyone is just walking around talking to these things? I learned more about contracts and pricing then I did about the actual device – again pathetic.
But that’s OK I thought, surely gadget blogs will have covered that all important aspect.
Closest Engadget came:
Steve Jobs may not think the size is optimal, but we loved being able to wrap our smaller hand around the 0.83-pound / 0.47-inch thick Tab when reading a book or hold it like a phone and use our thumbs to type on the on-screen keyboard.
sigh…
Closest Gizmodo got:
There is no way to not feel like a total dorkface while typing on this thing. In portrait, it’s like tapping on a massive, nerdy phone. In landscape, it’s just dumb. You still have to thumb type, only you’re stretching out further, and text entry swallows up the entire screen. Swype might be dandy on a phone, but on a seven-inch screen it doesn’t work so well—you have to travel a lot further to sketch out words. In other words, you get the worst of a phone’s input problems—amplified.
Holy crap, it took Gizmodo, to actually address a major usability issue with this device. No other publication addressed it that I could find. And guess what Gizmodo doesn’t like typing on that small screen, so then Pogue, and Mossberg who both say they love the device, must like typing on it otherwise they surely would have addressed the problem, right?
I addressed typing in my MacBook Air review – it has a normal keyboard. I can learn about data plans later, but I am utterly screwed if I get this thing home and find out it is terrible to type on.
One Last Note: I am not trying to bash these good people, I just want people to look at what they are doing and ask if it is really what the reader wants to see. I for one would like to know more about using the device then I would about contract pricing.
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Hidden – Making Simplenote Private
Hidden is a new Simplenote app that looks and feels a lot like regular Simplenote, except that any note you begin with an underscore is hidden from view, stored in a separate hidden area of the app and can be passcode protected. This is rather nice, I have a few notes that I would rather not be accessible to everyone. I downloaded it last night I like it so far, they say an iPad version is coming and that it will make the app universal, meaning you only have to pay $1.99 once.
Very neat app.
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Instapaper 2.3 for iPhone and iPad now available
Instapaper was updated last night for iOS. Again another amazing update that includes OmniFocus support and automatically detects when it is night out and switches its color themes based on that. Amazing. Every time Marco Arment updates Instapaper I want to send him $5 – in fact I think I just may.
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Smartening Up iPad News Apps
I keep four news(paper) apps on my iPad, and I rarely use any of them. In fact I mostly keep them on my iPad for when I am bored and to stay up to date on what these apps look like. Yesterday I downloaded #4 and that was the new Washington Post iPad app – a subpar news app to say the least. In looking through the Washington Post app it struck me what really annoys me about all these news apps: they still are not leveraging the power of digital, and are refusing to cater to short attention spans.
I am not talking about how they layout the news, or even how antiquated having to sign up for free accounts is, instead I am talking about what you see about the story on the front page. For instance on the Washington Posts front page you see this on the iPad:
Take a look at the most prominent story on that page, then start to read the blurb about it. Seems all normal right? Yep, except then you should remember that OS X has had built into it summarize services for quite some time. If the Washington Post really wanted to use technology to its best they could easily implement a summarization service for the story and show you that instead of the first few sentences.
What read: ((Also of note is the this is the beginning text for only the iPad app, the website version of the same story read differently. Odd.))
An international backlash against the Federal Reserve’s move last week to pump billions of dollars into the U.S. economy is threatening to undercut the Obama administrations’s economic goals for this week’s G-20 meeting of world leaders.
Heading into the summit of the Group of 20 economic powers…
Would now read: ((This is three words longer, I am trying to keep them all about the same exact length.))
In a letter released shortly after he arrived in the South Korean capital for a Group of 20 summit meeting, Obama defended his administration’s actions to boost the U.S. economy and argued that strong growth and job creation would be the most important U.S. contribution to global economic recovery.
So I ask you: which is more helpful to you, the reader?
The Washington Post is not alone, most all of these apps do this ((In fact I don’t know of any that don’t do this.)) take a look at these screen shots, I have accompanied each screen shot with the summarized version of the most prominently displayed story.
Current:
The soaring price of gold reflects international unease about the strength of major developed economies that must be taken seriously by the G20 group of leading nations, according to Robert Zoellick, president of the World Bank
New:
Speaking at a conference on infrastructure spending, Mr Zoellick said the price of gold, which this week surged past $1,400 a troy ounce, indicated that the world was heading towards a new monetary system in which the US dollar would be only one of a number of reserve currencies with flexible exchange rates.
Current:
SEOUL, South Korea — President Obama, marking the start of a summit meeting that has already tested the limits of international cooperation, implored other world leaders on Wednesday to shift global economic demand away from its historic reliance on American consumption and borrowing.
In a letter to other leaders of the Group of 20 economic powers, released shortly after he arrived here, Mr. Obama tried to calm the currency tensions that have roiled global
New:
President Obama said that the United States needed to stimulate demand in the short run but curb its addiction to borrowing in the long run; that China needs to reduce its reliance on exports and allow its consumers to buy more and save less; and that Germany needs to wean itself off the fixation on frugality and productivity that helped it through reunification in 1990 but that now poses a threat to the economic integration of Europe.
Current:
President Barack Obama responded to widespread criticism that the United States is deliberately weakening the dollar while trying to swing the G20 spotlight back onto global imbalances
New: ((This is as short as one can reasonably make this section, though it is longer that what would fit, Reuters should really look into the useless amount of space they give to this sub headings.))
A draft statement echoed an earlier finance ministers’ pledge to move toward more market-determined currency rates and appeared to offer no new proposals on how to ease tensions between struggling rich nations and rising economic powers such as China and Brazil.
Again I ask, would it not be more helpful to have a summary of the story on the front page, instead of the industry standard ‘we put as much of the stories text that we can fit even though it provides no value’?
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10.6.5 and AirPrint Saga Continues [UPDATED]
I was just contact on Twitter and email by a Developer who has iOS 4.2 GM and 10.6.5 working via AirPrint on is Touch and iPad. He was originally using the Mac OS X 10.6.5 beta versions and updated to the release version today, after doing so printing still working with his iOS devices, he then applied the combo updater to his Mac and the printing still works for him. Printing is being done via an older HP 1300. This is all done running iTunes 10.1 beta 2 for developers, but adding that to my machine changed nothing.
Take a look at the screen shots that he sent in below.
[Updated: 11/10/10 at 8:33 PM] Looks like this is a result of a preference pane that is not overwritten in the released version of 10.6.5 – so if you have the dev betas installed this will probably work for you.
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AirPrint Sharing a No Go in 10.6.5
[Updated: 11/10/10 at 6:05 PM] See post above for more info.
AirPrint sharing to Mac OS X 10.6.5 does not work with the version released today by Apple and the iOS 4.2 gold master build.

I guess Steve Jobs really expects us all to buy expensive P.O.S. HP printers.
Hat tip to MacStories.net and Federico Viticci for calling this one.
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Aaron Mahnke Calls Us All Out
Aaron Mahnke talking about why we are so drawn to interviews and pictures of people’s ‘setups’:
They offer connection. They offer us a chance to connect with someone else in a way that goes beyond reading a twitter status update or viewing a portfolio. They offer us the illusion of a face-to-face conversation, the shadow of an in-person tour of someone else’s office or library or desk or home.
An accurate and great post, be sure to read the entire thing today.
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A World of Tweets
It is like a live infographic that shows where all the Tweets have been coming from. Also I love this quip:
…degrades gracefully to Flash on older browsers.
[via Hans Gerwitz on Twitter]









