Year: 2014

  • Samsung in a Nutshell

    Stefan Constantinescu on the (excellent) Tab Dump site, breaks down the Samsung report for everyone:

    Samsung: They had a shit quarter (profits and revenues down year over year), so they published a long list of reasons as to why. Spoiler: Korea’s currency is too strong. Chinese people like Chinese phones. No one buys a phone in Q2. Our marketing budget is ridiculous. People aren’t updating tablets as often as phones. And it just keeps going. Excuse after excuse.

    Tab Dump is currently the best site on the web.

  • Using Little Snitch to Lower Your LTE Bill

    Eddie Smith offers a clever way to use Little Snitch for both protecting your data on public wifi, and for keeping data usage in check when on LTE tethering. It’s very smart.

    I’ll have to implement this for sure.

  • The Wearable

    Nate Barham on wearables from Apple:

    If it isn’t notifications and it isn’t health, then what is it that this new device will do or allow us to do that isn’t blatantly obvious? Payments could certainly be easier on a device that is already out and accessible. Though few of us need to shave a couple seconds off a notification check, many have felt the pressure of fiddling with our phones in line at a coffee shop.

    This is the same thing I have been wondering: what the hell does a wearable do for me which is substantially (or even marginally) better than the phone in my pocket?

  • Facebook Virus

    Jessica Ferris:

    I’m reminded here of viruses, which, as Wikipedia points out, can only replicate inside the living cells of other organisms. Facebook benefits when this relationship remains invisible. When we make the mistake that I made—when we forget that Facebook is using our friendships as hosts, and not the other way around—our forgetting is very convenient for Facebook.

  • Charge Your Devices

    Some ass at the TSA:

    As the traveling public knows, all electronic devices are screened by security officers. During the security examination, officers may also ask that owners power up some devices, including cell phones. Powerless devices will not be permitted onboard the aircraft. The traveler may also undergo additional screening.

    Emphasis mine.

  • Brooks Review Podcast Chat

    I had long been toying with an idea for a podcast chat room, but how do you do that when you don’t air live? Glassboard might work.

    I’ve created a Glassboard for the podcast and all can join with code BUJRH. Come and comment whenever you want on anything about the podcast. I look forward to seeing what you all have to say.

  • Quote of the Day: David Foster Wallace

    “If you’re automatically sure that you know what reality is and who and what is really important — if you want to operate on your default setting — then you, like me, probably will not consider possibilities that aren’t pointless and annoying.”
  • Bathing in Sweat and Dirt

    James Gowans:

    On an occasional camping trip or outdoor expedition, the knife catches a glimpse of what it's life could be like. Cutting through rope and wood. Bathing in sweat and dirt. But these moments are seldom and fleeting as the excursions become more suburban.

    I loved this short little post.

  • Quote of the Day: John Gruber

    “Kottke I trust. But if he hadn’t linked it, I wouldn’t have read it, because when I saw it yesterday, I figured it was a bullshit article because of its headline.”
  • Provide Meaning with Motion

    Two things really stood out to me about this article:

    1. If you are working with 60fps, you have to design 58 frames moving you from A to B. That's staggering (and yeah not actually design those screens, but more “think about” how you move between them).
    2. The ripple effect that Stamatiou has animated to show a sense of transition is really good.

    Yes this is an article about Android design, but more than that it is an article about modern design. UI is in motion, and it's not simply a matter of saying this screen looks like this, and that screen looks like that. You have to be able to design the transition from screen to screen as well.

    To me, that's what takes an OK app to an outstanding app. The best example I have of this is Vesper. The design is good, not revolutionary. The app is OK, functionality wise, as it doesn't do much of anything new.

    But what makes Vesper so great is that animations. The way the arrow stretches as you swipe to archive. Those little touches move it from just another app, to something special — even with its limited functionality.

    Stamatiou:

    Things like page transitions will still exist but involve more of the elements on each page. You'll begin choreographing. In the next few years consideration for motion will be required to be a good citizen of your desktop/mobile/wearable/auto/couch platform. It will be an expected part of the design process just like people will begin to expect this level of activity and character in software.

  • Amazon Resisting FTC on In-App Purchases by Children

    Here we have Amazon taking the FTC to court over the fact that the FTC wants Amazon to prompt for passwords more often so as to prevent children from buying apps/IAP. That's actually pretty reasonable from the FTC (fines, etc. notwithstanding).

    I know Apple has had to deal with this too, but take iOS 8 for example. Where Apple has gone over and above to create a system whereby parents get an approval notification on their device if their children want to buy something.

    Why? Just think about where these companies are making their money. Apple from the devices themselves, Amazon from selling stuff. No wonder Amazon is fighting this, and Apple is just trying to make families want to be all Apple devices.

  • Right to be Forgotten Not Going So Well

    Robert Peston:

    So there have been some interesting developments in my encounter with the EU's “Right to be Forgotten” rules.

    It is now almost certain that the request for oblivion has come from someone who left a comment about the story.

    On the surface, the European Union's 'Right to be Forgotten' law seems like a win for privacy advocates, but it is a complicated law. It can be both good and very bad. Take the linked article for example. In this case someone asked that the article be purged because they person made a comment on the article — the article isn't about them, they just commented on it. That's surely not the intent of the law, but it is the law.

    What's even more odd, is that it appears that only searching for that person's specific name will show the article missing, other searches still turn up the “removed” article.

    So essentially what the EU has created is a law that:

    1. Is being abused already.
    2. Doesn't actually work.

    Well done.

  • Great Website: Tab Dump

    Just wanted to point you guys over to this website. It's a really great site and one I read daily. It's also handy when you are busy and just want to know what is going on without going down the rabbit hole that is your RSS reader.

  • Begin.app Extension is Free this Weekend

    We've made the in-app purchase for Begin, which unlocks loads of cool shit, free for the Fourth of July weekend. Go get it, the app is free already so there's really no point in not getting the app.

    Also, Kyle has made his excellent calendaring app 'Horizon' free for the weekend too. That's an app on my home screen.

  • TBR Podcast: Episode One: Apathy and Horniness

    This week Ben is joined by Pat Dryburgh to talk about social media. What does it mean, and what is its impact on our lives? Is blogging social media? Ben and Pat also dive into the fear surrounding the NSA and Facebook’s “research” projects.

    I’m still working on getting the production quality up, but I’m extremely pleased with this show. The discussion was really great. Thanks for listening.

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    • Macminicolo.net: The best and most productive hosting you can buy.
    • Keyboard Maestro: Ben’s favorite Mac app, and ultimate power tool. Enter TBRPOD at checkout to get 20% off for a limited time.
  • A review of the Blackphone

    Sean Gallagher:

    What’s really important in the end about the Blackphone is that it has made the idea of a privacy-focused phone a reality—and it opens a conversation about what security technology can do for average people. And if it brings enough people into the conversation, the next generation of the Blackphone, and of mobile security products in general, could reach a much wider audience—and perhaps force some of the bigger mobile players to pay more attention to privacy.

    It’s about what I expected: good at privacy not great at the “other” phone stuff. I do like the above quote because it is what I hope happens. I hope that this phone pushes Apple to make their phones even more secure.

    Side note: How did these guys miss a prime opportunity to color their UI with green text on a black background? It’s like they’ve never seen a hacker movie.

  • Polymo – A better place for photos

    I’ve had a chance to test out this app for a while now, and it is quite useful. It won’t replace my standard app, nor is it a substitute for VSCO cam, but it is pretty handy.

    The app works like this: you set a tag for the pictures you are taking, or about to take, and then snap photos. The app then allows you to view photos by tag.

    For me, the neatest use of this app is in my day job. Often I do site visits to buildings and I need to snap a bunch of photos — this is the perfect way to keep all those photos together. Just tag with the building name and snap away — the app remembers the tag until you remove it.

    Pretty clever, and could be useful for travelers as well. $1.99 on the App Store.

  • Quote of the Day: Joanne McNeil

    “I knew what a blog was in 2002, I knew what it was in 2008, which was slightly different but still definitely a “blog.” Now, I have no idea what the word means any more.”
  • Sleep as a Competitive Advantage

    Tony Schwartz:

    Too many of us continue to live by the durable myth that one less hour of sleep gives us one more hour of productivity. In reality, each hour less of sleep not only leaves us feeling more fatigued, but also takes a pernicious toll on our cognitive capacity. The more consecutive hours we are awake and the fewer we sleep at night, the less alert, focused and efficient we become, and the lower the quality of our work.

    It seems to me, at least from what you see in popular culture that napping used to be more socially acceptable, but now it seems to have a pretty nasty stigma associated with it.

    I’ve never been a napping type of person, but I am a big believer in getting enough sleep at night. I’ve started napping a bit here and there on the weekends since the kids nap, and it is quite refreshing.

    What I like best about getting lots of sleep most nights is that on those odd occasions where getting lots of sleep isn’t possible — it feels like I can more easily “bounce back”.

    Getting more sleep doesn’t mean you can’t stay up late, it just means you need to allot enough time for sleep.