Month: March 2012

  • Omni Sync Server: Beta No More!

    Brian on the Omnigroup Blog about their sync servers coming out of beta:
    >We’ve had the server up for almost two years now – it launched way back in April of 2010. In that time[…]

    Imma let you finish, but first let me finish that sentence for you.

    In that time:

    1. Cultured Code (makers of Things) wrote post after post about how syncing is *really* hard.
    2. Cultured Code (makers of Things) actually shipped a beta version of their syncing engine for just Things — surprised me too.

    In other words the Omnigroup ran a very stable (in this testers opinion) sync service that grew to more than just one app, while Things *just* launched a beta version of sync.

    Ok, go ahead with the good news Brian:

    >Oh, and did we mention that you can have this all for the low, low price of zero? One of the things we learned is that we can build and run a service like this without needing to charge for it.

    Great work guys.

  • Sentenced to Remedial Training

    Chris Morran on the latest TSA fuck up:
    >The mother of four says she’s a frequent flier and has never been hassled about her breast pump in the past.

    >Before going through security last week, she’d even dumped out the milk that she’d already pumped and bottled so that the TSA wouldn’t hassle her.

    >But it’s precisely because those bottles were empty that the TSA screener gave her trouble.

    She had to go into the public bathroom and pump milk to *fill* the bottles before she could pass through TSA security. Read that again. What a bunch of dumbfucks.

    Oh and:

    >The TSA admits that the screener made a mistake, and “The officer in question is receiving remedial training.”

    *Fantastic*. Wouldn’t it just be easier and cheaper to actually train these “officers” in the first place?

  • ‘I Use My iPad Like an iPad, Not Like a PC’

    Jim Dalrymple:
    >The right question to ask is “does the iPad fit my lifestyle?”

  • ‘How Can I Opt-Out of Readability View?’

    Basically you have to email them. Not sure if I am going this route yet or not.

  • ‘A Dependable iPad’

    Michael Lopp on what he needs from iPad:
    >Via whatever my final usage patterns are, if I need to charge the iPad more than once a day, I’ll be disappointed.

    *Ditto*

  • The Macalope Weekly: Punchlines

    The Macalope on Android phone announcements:
    >Well, remember, it’s all about choice, and having as many lousy, eye-bleeding, and poorly-thought-out choices as possible. Because Apple doesn’t offer that.

    Pure gold this week from The Macalope, go read it.

  • Denso [Sponsor]

    [Denso](http://click.syndicateads.net/2012/03/Denso/brooksreview.html) is a video app for people who don’t know what to watch.

    Create [personalized video channels](http://getdenso.com/features#social) by connecting your Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and Google Reader accounts.

    Connect your Instapaper, Readability and Evernote accounts to Denso so you can bookmark videos from around the web to [Watch Later](http://getdenso.com/features#watch-anytime).

    Browse from our carefully [curated list](http://getdenso.com/features#discovery) of channels which have an eclectic mix of interesting videos.

    See what all the fuss is about. It’s Free on the [App Store](http://bit.ly/densoapp) and the [Android Market](http://bit.ly/densodroid).

  • Square Register

    Can’t wait to see one in person.

  • Studio Neat: FRAMES

    This is a great little app from the guys behind the excellent [Glif](http://www.studioneat.com/pages/glifoptions). This is a simple time-lapse app that I have been playing with for quite a while now. Even though I don’t make a ton of time lapse videos, the app is simply a joy to use.

    I downloaded a few other time-lapse apps just to see how this compared and all I can say is that this is far superior to the apps I tried. I have used it a couple of times to shoot time-lapse videos of my drive into work, but unfortunately for me — even though the app is great — it doesn’t make my videos interesting by default. Go check it out, it’s $2.99.

  • ‘Dude, it’s a laptop you want, not an iPad’

    Andrew:

    >Basically, people want cases that (a) prop the screen up and (b) have a keyboard. The thing is, we already have a gadget that does these two things. It’s called a laptop.

    He’s got a point, but I think there is more to it than his conclusion of wanting a ‘MacBook Air with a detachable screen’ — I think it’s mostly about wanting the simplicity and fantastic-ness of iOS.

  • The Readability Fallacy

    [Danny Silverman with a noble reason for switching from Instapaper to Readability](http://agblog.com/entry/3932):
    >You see, the ability to strip out all of the ads, pagination, navigation, and other chrome from an article and just get the pure text is a wonderful thing for the end-user, but it is not at all good for the publisher. Those ad impressions are what pay for that content. As long as I have used Instapaper I have always felt a little bit dirty.

    (**Update:** One other thing about his statement is that my site has been carefully designed so that you don’t see any menus or ads once you start reading a post. This is because I too hate seeing those distracting things when I read.)

    That reason is really nice — honestly. But there is a problem with that statement. The problem is that (at least with Instapaper) you must first visit the page before you can save the page for later — thus you have already given the publisher the needed ad impressions. ((The notable exception is when saving directly from Twitter clients. Even in the Instapaper browser you need to first visit the page before saving it for later, a friction creating step that I commend Instapaper for keeping in the app. Update: Also RSS readers completely forgot about that one. ))

    As a reader your job is done in (most) publisher’s eyes once you give them a page view. Clearly Silverman wants to further support people that he reads, but as a publisher myself I can say that Readability isn’t the savior many thought it would be (myself included).

    [As I noted this week](https://brooksreview.net/2012/03/readability-ios/) the amount of money I get from Readability has gone from $30 to $1 — the new iOS apps may spur those numbers back up, but I doubt that many people are paying for the subscriptions given what I have seen and heard.

    I have also [documented the problems with Readability’s business model and the problem I have with them collecting money in other peoples names without (at least some of the time) their consent](https://brooksreview.net/2011/11/readability-agency/). So what if I didn’t want Readability to collect money on my behalf, say I didn’t even want to be associated with them — well that’s easy I just delete my publisher account, right? Ah, but there’s another problem: no users of Readability will know that I have am not and do not want to participate, so therefore people like Silverman may be mistakenly thinking they are supporting my site when actually they are just sending a few cents a month into a black hole. ((Large publishers, to my knowledge, still can’t or won’t sign up so kiss that money you are sending the NYT goodbye.))

    I like what Readability has tried to do with the service, and the apps are gorgeous, but I have a big problem with the approaches being taken by them. For one I can’t figure out if they want to be a great place to save articles for reading later, or do they want to be a middleman that helps make money for independent publishers and large publishers alike, or… I don’t know. The motives matter to me and I can’t figure out Readability’s.

    That’s the problem I really have with Readability.

    I completely understand the need and want to switch from Instapaper to Readability, but please do it for reasons we know exist and not the notion that you may, possibly, maybe, perhaps, be helping publishers pay bills.

    *Note: I will not be switching — in part because Readability seems a lot like Things to me whereas Instapaper feels more like OmniFocus. We all know where I stand in that debate.*

  • Lytro Light Field Camera Review at Digital Photography Review

    Richard Butler:
    >As it is, it feels like a product arriving before the underlying technology is really ready.

    This is a really great and in-depth review so if this camera interests you (it should) then be sure to read this. I have no more questions about the Lytro after reading this and am glad I didn’t preorder one.

  • The B&B Podcast – Episode 49: Dude I’m Holding a Phone

    Shawn’s out caring for his new son, so I asked Federico Viticci to fill in. We talked about the iPad 3, iPhone 5, iOS privacy, and Samsung for good measure. It’s a fun episode so be sure to check it out — also I say ‘button’ a few times for everyone.

  • Ars Examines Nokia’s 41 Megapixel Smartphone Camera

    Chris Foresman goes over just how that 41MP Nokia smartphone camera works. A nice primer if you are wondering if Nokia is nuts. ((Also, good job on the straight forward headline Ars.))

  • Canon EOS 5D Mark III

    The new hotness — man do I want this.

  • Did Twitter Change the Way Replies Work? Maybe Not

    Matt Honan has the word:

    >Twitter says it’s a bug, and they’re going to fix it

    I guess we will see.

  • How I Use Hazel

    Sorry for the self link, but back in 2010 I post about how I use Hazel on my Mac. Seems a lot of you aren’t using it yet, so this is a decent place to start.

  • ‘How Twitter Broke Twitter’

    Austin Frakt:
    >Clicking “reply” now means that only joint followers see the tweet even if you prefix it with a “.” (or anything else for that matter). You can still tweet at (@) someone with a “.@” construction and have all your followers see it but not if you click reply. When did this change occur? I cannot find anything on the internet that documents it. Is this the first post to do so?

    I have seen a lot less of these types of replies and I thought he may be wrong — until I saw that a few were using a work around: not hitting the reply button instead creating a new tweet. What a pain in the ass.

  • ‘Sony and Samsung Tablets Miss the Mark Thanks to Contracts and Pricing’

    Abdel Ibrahim and Jon Dick:
    >The Galaxy tab 7.7 will set you back a minimum $499, and that’s with a 2-year contract. If you say to hell with carriers, the price of the puny tablet swells to an eye-watering, deal-breaking $699.

    Maybe that’s what they [meant by “double down”](http://parislemon.com/post/18390218572/winning-duh)?

  • Stupid Misleading Headlines at Ars Technica: Round 2

    Jonathan Gottfried runs with this headline: “Don’t bet on “Linsanity”: US seizes online gambling domain over sports wagers”. Aside from the headline of the post and the link to the very article you are reading in the side bar, “Linsanity” is never mentioned again.

    Actually the post is just about the U.S. seizing Bodog.com. I would assume Ars went with the headline to drive pageviews making the weak connection that Bodog is/was about sports betting — but really that’s pretty lame.