Year: 2010

  • On Caps Lock

    There has been a lot of brouhaha about the lack of a caps lock key on Google’s development Chrome OS device the Cr-48. I find it very interesting that of all the companies out there it is Google of all companies that is the first to realize just how silly the caps lock key is. How often do you actually use that key? It only ever gets in my way, probably the same with you.

    Did you know though that as a Mac user you can actually rid yourself of the caps lock key right now, no tools needed?

    Screen shot 2010-12-10 at 2.58.20 PM.png

    Just pop open ‘System Preferences’, go to ‘Keyboard’, click on the button that says ‘Modifiers’ and select what you want caps lock to become. As you can see in the above screenshot I have my caps lock set to ‘no action’ so no matter how many times I hit the key it doesn’t do a thing.

    It is all rather great.

    I agree with Google, there is no need for the caps lock key, I don’t know why there ever was (though I suspect someone will email me a reason). All I can say is that most computers users today do not need the key and are probably only hindered by it.

    Go forth and rid yourself of the caps lock key, Google says it’s OK.

  • ”A new WikiLeaks” revolts against Assange

    Ossi Carp:

    According to the internal documents shared with DN.se, Openleaks intends to establish itself as a neutral intermediary ”without a political agenda except from the dissemination of information to the media, the public, non-profit organizations, trade- and union organizations and other participating groups.”

    “All editorial control and responsibility rests with the publishing organization. We will, as far as possible, take the role of the messenger between the whistleblower and the organization the whistleblower is trying to cooperate with,” says one anonymous informant.

    That has been the thing that bugs me most about WikiLeaks, they too have an agenda, yet get mad at those that also have an agenda. Hopefully these guys will be able to live up to their lofty goal.

  • Notational Velocity Alt

    I had previously linked to a build of Notational Velocity that allowed for a better widescreen and full screen views. This version of NV from Brett Terpstra is even better, it has a widescreen layout and preview mode for people who write in Markdown. Go get it.

  • A Windows Phone 7 Review by Brad Kellett

    Kellett on Windows Phone 7:

    Excitement, followed by disappointment.

    The more I think about it the more I think I will try to get my hands on one for a week or two so that I can check out the OS more thoroughly.

  • MacSparky Interview

    If you are interested the MacSparky blog did and interview with my about how I am using my iPhone, with a current screenshot of my home screen.

  • Military Bans Disks, Threatens Courts-Martial to Stop New Leaks

    Wait, this wasn’t already the policy? Christ they deserved these leaks then.

  • Some Great Little Mac Apps

    First let’s define what I mean by “little”. Little means often overlooked, something that may not get a ton of press, but that is massively useful. Little does not mean: cheap, limited, useless. Now that I have that out of the way here are some great ‘little’ apps that I love.

    The Apps

    • Hazel: I talked in depth the other day about it, but it really is a great app that is often overlooked.
    • Droplr: This is an app that sits in your menubar and allows you to share things, files/code/notes/links/pictures with a short URL (d.pr). It is fast, easy and free. There are many others out there that can do the same thing, Droplr does it all in style though – especially the beautiful iPhone app.
    • IOGraph: This may not be useful for many people, it tracks your mouse path and creates a lively looking path photo out of it. Like digital art for people who suck at painting (me). The most interesting part of the app is that it can visually show you where you are wasting a lot of time with the mouse, and then I try to see if I can reduce that mouse movement using the keyboard more. For example my mouse seems to never go to the bottom right corner of my screen, but spends way too much time clicking on Menubar items.
    • Img2Icns: Just like the title says it takes an image file (preferably a PNG) and converts it to a ICNS, Folder Icon, iPhone icon, Favicon. I use it all the time for creating custom Icons and especially for creating Favicons.
    • Soulver: This is a real mans calculator, well a real computer geeks calculator that is. You can write equations in app and is spits out an answer, you get line references and a running total of all lines. I love that fact that you can see where you messed up, and you can save the files to come back to them later. It is like a mini-Excel for running some quick calculations.
    • xScope: Just about any Mac using designer is going to swear by this tool. I love it because I can measure the dimensions of stuff on the web, and check to make sure that things really are lining up. It really is a handy little tool, the demo is very gracious as well, so you can download it and use it for quite a while before you decide to buy.
    • TextExpander: I could not write without this, well I could but it would be slower and riddled with more typos. This allows you to type a short code and then it is automatically expanded into the full text that you set. For instance if I type: “MBA” it expands to “MacBook Air”. If you blog about gadgets or find your self typing the same long phrases/names out over and over then this is a must have tool for you. You can though do somethings this app does with the built in tools on Mac OS X.
    • Growl: A preference pane utility that adds a notification system to OS X. I use it to monitor Tweetie and Dropbox, but there are a host of other applications. Just remember that these notifications can and will be distracting if they are constantly coming up.
    • Perian: Another preference pain utility that allows QuickTime to open a lot more file formats than it can out of the box. It is a truly handy tool to have in your toolbox.
    • Keyboard Maestro: This allows you to program a ton of keyboard shortcuts that do everything from launching apps to moving your mouse one pixel to the left. I am working on a full write up and a look at how I use it, until then you can get a pretty good idea from the examples that come with the app.
  • No Crappy Apps

    I just got an email from Brad Gies who has setup a site called “No Crappy Apps” that analyzes the Android Market and allows users to comment and rate Apps on the site, as well as allowing developers to respond.

    Gies on what makes this system better:

    Well.. first of all we analyze not only the ratings for the apps, but the comments as well.. You might notice that we don’t allow anonymous comments on our website, only registered users can leave comments. We track the comments and analyze them to find out if a commenter has only been rating apps from certain developers highly (and sometimes they rate competing apps very lowly). When our software determines that a commenter is a spammer all of their comments are disregarded for our ratings.

    I am not sure of how this actually pans out given that I don’t have an Android device any longer to browse and download apps he is marking as spam, but look at these numbers from the site:

    • 122,600 total apps
    • 3,401 spam apps

    Gies emailed me to say that he expects that the number of spam apps will reach 20,000 in the next 2 months, given that his system needs 10 weeks worth of data. That is pretty amazing and pretty sad for the Android Market. Now who is up for doing this for iOS?

  • “The Wikileaks scandal is more than just a diplomatic scuffle; it’s a war for the future of the Internet”

    Tom Mendelsohn on just how monumental the hackers defending WikiLeaks movement is:

    Make no mistake, if they win here, online life will change. Expect tighter government control, more regulations and sanitised information flow. It won’t end the web as a place of freedom – but it will raise the technological barriers to entry, necessitating secrecy software and technical savvy. People without the IT skills may never be able to stumble upon radical ideas or free speech.

    Perhaps the most troubling thing to me personally is that this group trying to defend Assange is missing a very key point. That is whether the timing is odd, or whether Assange was truly arrested on to face charges of rape, or whether he is being detained for WikiLeaks actions seems to be lost on these hackers.

    WikiLeaks is releasing these confidential documents to expose corruption and wrong doing, to enlighten the public about what is really the true nature of events. They are basically asking the U.S. Government to own what they are doing and face the consequences of their actions.

    Sweden too is asking that of Assange. I find this all a bit hypocritical. You cannot be made about Assange being arrested and tried for rape, that is him facing actions he may or may not be guilty of.

    As for the banks ceasing funding and Amazon cutting of WikiLeaks, sure it is fair to be angry with those sites, but are you angry with them because they took a moral stand against what WikiLeaks is doing, or are you angry because perhaps they caved to governmental pressure? Either way shutting them down isn’t the right move.

    If you want to shut them down because they made a decision on their own about how they want to run their company then you are acting foolishly. That is any businesses right, you wouldn’t try to hack a business just because they refused to sell you something, would you?

    If you are shutting these sites down because they caved to pressure from others, wouldn’t you best be served by shutting down those pressuring them instead?

    I think so.

  • P.R. in a Digital World

    A short while ago Evan Williams, of Twitter, tweeted:

    Screen shot 2010-12-09 at 12.42.36 PM.png

    Now that tweet was presumably read, or has the potential to be read by all 1,269,159 followers that he has (as of this writing). Not to mention the followers of the 20 other people that retweeted that message.

    I can’t help but think that Verizon needs to pull their heads out of their asses on this one. I mean certainly not selling someone a full price phone is not worth having a million plus people think you are idiots.

  • All New Archives

    I have been working the past few days to get a better archive page up, with 100% less crap in it. I am happy to say that I have done just that, now instead of looking by month or by category just click the Archives link to the right.

    What you see is all my posts, minus all of the links posts. They are not gone, you can still search for them. I just felt that those links posts are not as important to have cluttering up the archives.

    Let me know if you have any suggestions.

  • Adam Lisagor on Why AirPlay is Important

    Adam Lisagor on AirPlay:

    Because what AirPlay promises is that I can touch media here, and then weightlessly move it there.

    The entire post is pretty interesting, I had never thought about the response gadgets invoke, the ability to ‘touch’ and ‘thumb through’ your media is a pretty powerful thing.

  • The Publishing Industry: Just Waiting to be Rescued

    I am growing tired of pundits speculating on whether or not the iPad, or any other digital medium for that matter, can “save” publishers (e.g. The New York Times, Wired). It is naive to assume that any one device, or any singular medium, can save these publishing titans when it is so very obvious that most all of these publishers only care about being rescued. There exists an important difference between being saved by something and having something rescue you.

    Remember the financial meltdown and how the U.S. government swooped in to keep AIG from going under? That was a rescue situation, AIG had only one solution and that solution was to die a painful death – that is, until the U.S. tax payers stepped in and rescued them with a boat load of hard earned tax payer cash.

    This is not the same idea as being saved by something. People talk about the iPad as saving the publishing industry, because the fact that the iPad exists does not solve the problems that the publishing industry is having. No, the fact that the iPad exists does nothing for the publishing industry all by its lonesome. The publishers must choose to use the iPad to save themselves. ((I am not saying that this is possible.)) We have seen some publishers take steps to try and save themselves by publishing iBook and Kindle versions of things, this is choosing to try and save yourself rather than waiting to be rescued.

    The problem though is that it sure as hell feels like what most publishers are doing is standing around waiting for someone to come by and rescue them. They seem incapable of saving themselves by leveraging new tablets and eReaders or the Internet for that matter.

    Rescue them from what you may ask?

    For starters their declining revenues, more importantly though, publishers need rescue from their own stupidity. I don’t say this to be dramatic or overly mean – how can any person look at what these publishers are doing these days and think anything but: “wow these guys don’t have a clue.”

    Think about Wired for a minute, they have a very pretty iPad magazine app and robust online offerings. They give away the online stuff for free and they sell a printed copy of their publication each month. Now the printed copy used to be their cash cow, the advertising paid for them all to get very fat – still pays for quite a bit I would imagine. These advertising revenues have started to drop off precipitously and publishers like Wired are scrambling to find a new income stream.

    This is the point when people really start talking about new devices and mediums as potential saviors for the publishers. Keep in mind though, that these things could save them if they properly leverage them. What these devices won’t do is rescue them, meaning the publishers have to actively engage, they can’t sit idly by and wait, they need to immerse themselves are really fight for survival.

    That is where the iPad comes in, Wired launched their iPad app for $4.99 per issue of the magazine. That sounds like a pretty decent business model, but the more you think about it, the more it begins to look pretty stupid. For starters you are tying the success of your company to the iPad and its success. Further you are massively limiting your customer base to just iPad owners. ((Though the number continues to grow it will never out number the amount of people online, let alone the amount of people with mailboxes.)) You can further reduce that number by the amount of people that will not download Wired for a fee, instead of just reading it online. A recent report said that on average people only buy 6 iOS apps a year – essentially you would be competing with games; and magazines don’t necessarily stand up well against games. To recap then you have a very small sliver of the iPad market for paid apps, this sliver is highly competitive so people will tend not to keep paying for continued use of the app.

    The real bone head move of this whole thing though: ads. Wired’s iPad app costs you money and has advertising in it. Information Architects recently took a look at this and determined that Wired would be better off from a revenue stand point giving away the app and only charging for the advertising space.

    Oliver Reichenstein on Wired’s app:

    But one thing is clear: The app store pay wall is not a great source of income for a publication of that dimension.

    I can’t say I disagree with that analysis, but to further drive home the point that a paid app containing ads is a stupid idea you need to think about it from the users perspective. Most users see the iPad as a web based platform – that is, apps seem to function much like websites. There is a great number of apps that are free, but ad supported. These apps typically have a paid version that turns off the ads. The precedent for web based “apps” seems to be that if you are using it for free you can expect to see advertising; while if you are paying to use it, you can expect to see no advertising.

    This is not the model that Wired has chosen, they seem greedy in the eyes of a typical web enabled consumer – forcing users to pay to read Wired AND still collecting money from lucrative advertising deals that are plastered in the app’s content. This pisses off a very important group of people: the people that are adopting these new technologies that publishers are hoping save them.

    It will take a lot more than being greedy to lose your loyal readers, those will always be there (unless you do something really stupid, which frankly doesn’t seem out of the question). The readers that you lose are all the people that were previously on the fence, you have decided for them: this magazine isn’t for them. Can you really afford to lose those readers when iOS users are only willing to pay for 6 apps a year and you are asking them to pay 12 times for one app (you must by each issue on a monthly basis)?

    Subscriptions on devices like the iPad will solve some of these problems, but why are you charging for the app when you are also providing advertising in-app? Does it really cost that much for Wired to use Adobe’s InDesign CS5 and their new translator to make the app? Certainly it costs money to do this, but surely the cost is far less on an issue by issue basis than the entire printing and distribution model Wired uses for the print magazine. A magazine, I remind you, that costs the same amount on the newsstand and next to nothing for a subscription.

    Wired and the rest of the publishing industry really needs to think rationally here. There is one reason, and only one reason people read your publication: because the content adds value to the readers life.

    Now, if you are asking them to put up with distracting ads next to the content that adds value, then you are slightly devaluing your content. Ask those readers to then pay for the content AND be faced with the ads and you start to really devalue your content.

    So I ask this of all publications: just how valuable do you think your content really is?

    Wired it would seem thinks they have some of the most valuable content out there, but only when it is read through their iPad app. Apparently that SAME content is not as valuable on the web because they only plaster ads around it, and only slightly more valuable in print because you have to pay a marginal cost to get it and be faced with some ads. No, the iPad content is clearly much better (even though it is the same content) because you must buy a $500 device, then pay $5 an issue, while being forced to see ads – all while trying to read the damn content in an app that was hardly optimized for reading on the iPad.

    Wired: producing the most valuable content in the world (at least according to how they value their content). ((Honorable mentions for The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times.))

    Now it is important to note that I am only picking on Wired because they have had the most written about them, and they also seem very willing to try and save themselves. The rest of the industry though is acting just as dumb. The New York Times will be soon putting up a pay wall, the Financial Times already has, and the Wall Street Journal always has. I don’t think pay walls are necessarily a bad thing, but I do think that if you ask your reader to pay for something, then the content must add more value to the reader then the sum they paid to get that content. I think I am just as well informed not reading the Financial Times or the WSJ.

    Another way to look at this is to think about ads and content in terms of value. If say I pay $5 to buy an issue of Wired and would be willing to pay another $2 to remove the ads from the app, then I am saying that I expect to gain more than $7 in value from reading Wired’s content. The problem though is that what I am really saying is that I expect to get $5 more in value out of Wired’s iPad content then I am out of Wired’s web content (the same content).

    I just don’t think that is possible.

  • The website of the world’s first-ever web server

    It would be even cooler if the original server still powered it. Though it was a NeXT computer, so that is cool enough.

  • Google Executive on Why Google Is Not “Healthy”

    The executive, Susan Wojcicki, does not say Google is unhealthy, I do. She does effectively say that Google buys companies because it is easier to do so than it would be to start from scratch. Which is pathetic if you ask me. The iPhone was made from scratch and it is pretty damn great.

    I have previously written about this topic before.

  • The Woz

    A fascinating article from CNN’s Mark Milian about a tour he took with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. Of note is that Woz carries way too many cell phones (up to 10 sometimes), which is all forgiven by the fact that he apparently has a white iPhone 4 (jealous). Worth the time to read the entire article.

    [Updated: 12/8/10 at 12:50 PM]
    Stephen Hackett reports that the white iPhone Woz has is fake. Which bums me out a bit.

  • Apple iOS the New Mobile Gaming Platform?

    Chris Foresman on how iOS is affecting devices like Sony’s PSP:

    That point is underscored by the fact that nearly a quarter of those that use a mobile phone exclusively for gaming have a DS or PSP but never use it.

    That seems pretty logical to me. For instance: before my iPhone the last mobile gaming device I owned was a Sega Game Gear (that thing rocked back in the day).

  • Quality photos of Motorola’s upcoming Honeycomb tablet

    Notice the Motorola branding right smack on the front of the device. Even Samsung had the good sense to not do this on the Samsung Galaxy Tab.

  • Quote of the Day: Scott Berkun

    “I write in WordPress, Microsoft Word, Notepad, I don’t much care, and chasing tools is a waste of time. Shakespeare, Hemingway and Carver didn’t need much from their pre-electric and pre-web tools to write masterpieces and neither should you.”
  • Ian Hines Helps You Move From Tumblr to WordPress

    Ian has put together an exhaustive guide on how you move from Tumblr to WordPress while keeping all of your posts and those posts’ URLs working. This looks like a simple process, but a very tedious one. I recommend though, that if you rely on your blog for anything you get off of Tumblr soon.