Glenn Greenwald:
It is quite possible that Chinese firms are implanting surveillance mechanisms in their network devices. But the US is certainly doing the same.
Glenn Greenwald:
It is quite possible that Chinese firms are implanting surveillance mechanisms in their network devices. But the US is certainly doing the same.
I’ve always felt that my best images come from my best camera(s). Yet as it turns out, the images that are my favorite are always shitty ((Shitty is to mean, blurry, poorly composed, poorly exposed, etc.)) snapshots that tell the story of my daily life and are captured with whatever is on hand — sometimes that is my best camera, but mostly these days it is my iPhone.
But it doesn’t really matter, well the camera that is, as 51% of photographers will tell you: “the best camera is the one you have with you”. I’m constantly reminded of this as I dig through my archives of images. Like this shot snapped on a rainy, misty, and relatively boring hike that my buddy and I took quite a while back now.
Literally everything we saw that day was some shade of green with flat light from the rain/mist. It was an average hike with wasted energy mostly spent on carrying camera gear we didn’t want to use for fear of it getting too wet. But that image turned out really well and I didn’t even realize it was there until just recently. And it was shot not with my best camera just a camera. Slightly off center, probably shot full auto, eye level, on a wet miserable hike and I love it.
The camera doesn’t matter to me in hindsight , and I doubt I would have grabbed a much better image with a better camera. Just a different image, ever so slightly different, taken in more or less the same sloppy fashion.
I hate the mantra that the best camera is the one with you, but in hindsight it does seem to hold true — well, kind of. You see in hindsight, and even now, we don’t really know what images we are missing, or missed. I don’t know what other images I could have had on that hike if I had tripods, lenses, dSLRs, ND filters, and patience. I don’t know, and I don’t care to try and think back on it.
What I do know, is that I don’t give a shit what camera I took and image with after I’ve taken the image. I only care about the camera when I am taking the picture, and more often then not I can’t stand not having my ‘best’ camera to take the image.
‘The best camera’ doesn’t mean anything to me anymore, instead I sit back and greatly enjoy the simple images like this, instead of admiring the ‘better’ images like this.
I will always find it more enjoyable to take a picture with my best camera, but I find that no matter what camera I use to make the picture, my enjoyment of the picture is never diminished by which camera I used at the time.
It is, then, only in the process of making the image that I care about the camera. Once the image is there, I tend to only care about the image itself.
David Sparks:
In the end, it’s worth remembering that both efficiency and productivity are about your time. And your time isn’t simply a scalar quantity, with shorter being better—it’s a vector that takes into account whether that time is spent in enjoyment or frustration.
Something to keep an eye on:
Syncthing replaces Dropbox and BitTorrent Sync with something open, trustworthy and decentralized. Your data is your data alone and you deserve to choose where it is stored, if it is shared with some third party and how it’s transmitted over the Internet.
For now I will stick with BTSync (which has been fantastic for me, truly), but this could be promising once it gets a little further along.
Here’s another addition of ‘your review doesn’t match your rating’. This time from Mark Goldstein, at the fantastic PhotographyBLOG, where he ends his Leica T Review as follows:
In summary the new Leica T is an incredibly well-built, beautiful camera that delivers excellent image quality, but it’s also a camera that’s frustrating to use (especially for power users), slow to focus, lacking in features and undeniably expensive. If ever there was a camera that you should try before you buy, the Leica T is definitely it…
He then goes on to give it four stars (out of five) and labels the camera ‘recommended’. Now, maybe you think that is in line with his concluding paragraph (I don’t), but then skip back up a couple paragraphs to:
Having said all of that, for us the Leica T ultimately doesn’t offer enough to satisfy either the camera-phone upgrader or the affordable Leica camp.
“It’s not great, but we recommend it.”
Ken Rockwell on the 56mm from Fuji:
The Fuji XF 56mm f/1.2 ASPH is an extraordinary lens. When a lens is just about optically and mechanically perfect, there isn’t much to say, other than to get one.
I’ve been dreaming of buying this lens ever since I tested it. Simply a fantastic lens.
Shawn Blanc:
A surprisingly critical part of maintaining a consistently creative lifestyle is stepping away from the creative work at hand in order to recharge.
Good advice all around, but the above is one I struggle with in particular. I try to take at least one straight week off from writing anything for this site each year. I find people to fill in for me for no other reason than to tell myself: someone else is covering it, forget about it.
If you write a blog regularly I suggest you find a way to take at least a week off each year. Every time I do so I come back with a storm of ideas. Taking time off is a fantastic productivity and creativity tool.
Gautham Nagesh on FCC Chairmen Tom Wheeler’s proposed changes to his shit ‘net neutrality’ plan:
The redrafting reflects the challenge Mr. Wheeler faces as he pushes forward with a vote Thursday on the plan that would then open the proposal to public comment. The chairman, agency officials said, is trying to address the backlash to his initial proposal while sticking to what he thinks will be the fastest course of action.
Read the last four words again. Not the “best course of action”, no sir, the fastest course of action.
Because screw doing it right, let’s just do something, you with me? U.S.A, U.S.A., U.s…
Wheeler needs to go.
Very neat, I have yet to try it but am told it works.
Josh Ginter:
Begin gives a sense of delight greater than any other to-do app I’ve tried.
Ken Rockwell on the Fujifilm X-T1:
The Fuji X-T1 is a real camera, made of metal, not plastic, for real photographers.
The X-T1 has shutter and aperture dials. Nikon and Canon don't any more.
The X-T1 has a real exposure compensation dial. LEICA and Nikon don't any more.
The X-T1 has a real ISO dial. LEICA, Canon and Nikon don't any more.
Overall, a glowing review from Rockwell.
Matthew Guay:
Ulysses III was everything a web or print writer needed in one Markdown-powered app. You could write, easily keep up with all of your texts, and export in any format, all in one app. It’s a one-stop-shop for all your writing needs, and a beautiful one at that.
Great review, and agreed on all accounts.
Back in December I wrote about how I had switched from OmniFocus to Flow (getflow.com) as my task management system. I don’t think one can really get a sense as to how good a task management tool like this is until they’ve use it for a year, but I wanted to update you on a few things I have been finding now that I have close to six months of usage under my belt.
These are random thoughts in no particular order.
The organization of Flow is much different than many other task management apps I have used. For starters Flow allows you to have many different sections where you can have different collaborators — Flow calls these ‘workspaces’ and they make a lot of sense. Flow is giving a nod to today’s work environment where people are often working with others who are not necessarily a part of their company, but an important piece of the overall project.
Workspaces in that sense work really well, and I have four setup:
– Personal
– Day Job
– Project 1
– Project 2
What’s odd is that Flow won’t allow you to set one workspace as your personal workspace. Instead Flow is always showing you your personal workspace as if it was a 15 person team’s workspace. That’s a bit annoying because there could be simple changes made to a fully private space to make it more useful. Things like changing ‘comments’ to ‘notes’, and turning off the rather useless dashboard (useless that is only if you are the only person in the workspace).
Flow further breaks down your task storage with lists, residing inside workspaces. Each list can have sub-lists, and all of that gives you a very GTD/OmniFocus ‘project’ based planning tool. I’ve been playing around with these lists and have come to realize a few things:
It’d be fine if Flow stopped there, but it also allows adding sub-tasks to a main task. So if my task is “buy groceries for party” then I can add sub tasks within that task that is my actual shopping list, which is useful if said task doesn’t just fit into my ‘Costco’ list, or if I want to take a trip to Costco just for that set of items.
At first I thought sub-tasks solely added another layer of obfuscation to my task management, but I have come to find that it is actually very handy. While I don’t use it for my shopping lists (as I cited in the above example) — I have found it to be killer when a task suddenly becomes so much more than just another task. These are like mini-projects in a way. Not always useful, but indispensable when you come across the need for sub-tasks.
One issue with sub-tasks is that the main task is only ever shown and complete or incomplete, no matter how many sub tasks have been completed. Therefore you could have a task with 19 of 20 sub tasks done, but it still looks just as incomplete as it did when it was originally created. I’d love for there to be more indication of status in Flow (for sub-tasks and in general).
I’ve found that the iOS apps are rather buggy (which is odd since they mostly feel like web views). By this I mean that often I have to quit the app out of the tray, or log back in, to get the app working. Recent updates have improved this, but it is very annoying.
The iPad app is really annoying because it is portrait only, I just don’t get this move.
Overall I am downgrading my initial ratings of the iOS apps to average at best.
Since there is no full-fledged Mac app I run Flow in a Fluid instance. That’s not always ideal, but for this app it actually works really well. The biggest annoyance is the lack of native keyboard shortcuts, but I haven’t been bothered by this enough to consider it a deal breaker.
The official menubar app for Mac works perfectly for quick entry, but it is annoying that a workspace is pre-defined instead of easily being typed in. To change workspaces requires touching the mouse, and I really try to avoid that if I want to do anything “quick”. Also the lack of repeating options in the entry panel is limiting if you regularly create repeating tasks. You actually have to jump into another Flow app to make a task repeating.
Right now here are some of the main annoyances I am facing:
I am still sticking with Flow, but only for now, as it is only better than OmniFocus in some ways and not all. The real question is whether the areas that Flow is better in are worth some of the reduced functionality and only more time will tell on that front.
Looks fantastic, (still) works better than Google.
Good take on iPad sales by Christopher Mims:
The mathematics here aren’t complicated: If iPads last a long time, and Apple is still selling a respectable 15 million to 20 million per quarter, most of them to people who have never owned one in the first place, the rate at which Apple sells iPads can stall even as iPads continue to take over the world—or at least the US and other rich markets.
I also like his argument for a tablet specific OS. With OS X being for PCs and iOS being for phones — the iPad would likely do better with its own variant of iOS/OS X that has been designed just for its larger screen size.
Sam Byford has an interview with Fujifilm about the awesome X-T1 and I loved this bit:
“Our X design is classic and authentic,” says Imai. “I could have chosen an ergonomic style but our X design is completely different. It’s flat and straight and based on ‘good-old-days’ camera style.” In particular, Fujifilm’s own Fujica ST901 from 1974 served as inspiration for Imai. “Late ’70s to ’80s SLRs were very cool to me,” he recalls. “The ST901 was very small with a very characteristic finder, so this was very close to the X-T1 concept. Very simple, not so ergonomic — this was the basic inspiration.”
The whole thing is a great read and shows a lot about why I love their cameras.
Love David Sparks’ TextExpander trick, which he notes:
It is a great way to remind everyone of the meeting and what we intend to accomplish. It also makes me look scary-organized.
I just set one up for myself, very cool.
Watts Martin:
In the long run, broadcast notification services only survive if they do become like email services. App.net isn’t making enough money to sustain a full-time business, but so far Twitter isn’t either. They both believe the value is in the infrastructure, and they’re both wrong. The value comes from making the infrastructure free.
Riccardo Mori on the annoying negative App.net comments from many bloggers:
Brief aside: $36 per year is not a fortune. They keep insisting how paying for apps and services is the right thing to do. What’s the harm in giving $36 as a donation to support the cause, even if they’re not active App.net users? Or why not switch to a monthly subscription, try to get involved again, see what happens?
Mori has some really good points in his post.
Khoi Vinh:
But I still get a good deal of satisfaction out of supporting the Mozilla Foundation and its good works. And more than that, I like using a browser that is not owned by one of the major tech companies; that’s an independence that is becoming rare and may one day become a luxury.
I haven’t used Firefox regularly in over 6 years. It feels too slow to me where Safari and Chrome seem snappy. I do have fond memories of Firefox from my college course. I remember walking into the classroom and seeing the switch to Firefox campaign URL scrawled across the whiteboard. It seemed like such a great anti-IE movement back then. I loved it.