Category: Links

  • Ulysses 13

    Some fantastic new features. Both fenced code blocks and a new deadline feature for sheets are tops. I’ve been testing this for a while and the deadline feature has a lot of potential.

    Since I track all my writing in in Ulysses I’ve been setting deadlines as “at most 1,500 words, deadline DATE” this not only keeps me at a reasonable word count but let’s me plan out my writing better. Good stuff, can’t wait to see how this feature evolves.

  • One of My Favorite Lights Available: ReyLight Pineapple Brass AA Flashlight

    I own two, and it’s all I can do to not buy another.

  • Here’s Amazon’s explanation for the Alexa eavesdropping scandal

    Weed is legal in Seattle, in case you wondered how they came up with this explanation.

  • Obscura 2

    Out today is Obscura 2. I had a chance to play with the beta version and came to like it quite a bit, and it has become a home screen app for me. More information on the blog post here. I don’t know what it is about this app, but it’s really stuck with me, I like the controls and the amount of control it gives me — while at the same time working like “normal” when I don’t have time to futz about.

  • Instapaper Temporarily Shuts Down

    Nick Statt:

    Instapaper happens to be owned by Pinterest as of 2016, which does add a bit of a wrinkle to the situation as it’s not entirely clear what type of data on users’ reading habits or any other behaviors Pinterest may have gleaned from its subsidiary. When questioned by Williams on Twitter about the subject, Brian Donohue, a product engineering manager at Pinterest, said, “I can’t comment on specifics other than to say that I’m actively working on resolving it.”

    Sketchy.

  • Castro Podcasts

    There’s a new version of Castro out, which switches the app to the now popular subscription model. Castro, as far as I am concerned, is the best podcasts app you can get. But also don’t take it from me because I so loathe podcasts.

    One thing to note here is the additional features of the app: silence trimming and chapter support. These are both features you only get if you pay for the app.

    Ryan Christoffel in his overview of the app for MacStories writes:

    Eventually though, I became more selective about the portions of podcasts I listened to, and Castro’s lack of chapter support sent me elsewhere.

    The line cracks me up, because you need to think about this in terms of what you are paying for with Castro. Listening to podcasts is free, it always has been. You are now paying, and not a small amount of money (but not much), a subscription fee so that you can make podcast listening better because the podcast producers themselves don’t. I know that sounds harsh, and like another slam from a guy who loathes podcasts, but think about it.

    Podcasts are too long, but instead of podcaster doing the hard work to shorten them, listeners use hacks like trimming silence (ruining the tempo, not that there was any) and playing at faster than normal speed playback. Listeners (and this was literally news to me today) also use chapters to jump about in the podcasts to skip over the boring bits.

    Isn’t the entire point of a podcast that the entire podcast is relevant and entertaining?

    Why are people paying to get these “features” instead of demanding better content? This entire thing reads to me like people saying “that book is too long, where’s the Cliff’s Notes version of it?”

  • How Facebook Binds, and Shatters, Communities

    Antonio Garcia Martinez:

    Facebook is to real community as porn is to real sex: a cheap, digital knockoff for those who can’t do better. Unfortunately, in both instances use of the simulacrum fries your brain in ways that prevent you from ever experiencing the real version again. But we’ll take what we can get.

    I’m not one to defend pornography — it does strike me as poor wording to say “for those who can’t do better” above. Both for pornography, as well as for community. Because I don’t think “doing better at community” is what not using Facebook is.

    That notwithstanding, the analogy is interesting, because like pornography everything is amplified to a fictitious level on Facebook. Which then creates real problems, like porn does for sex education and expectations, in the real world. It’s not people flock to Facebook because they are incompetent at finding real people to talk to, its that when you go to talk to real people they are buried in their iPhones. It’s that when you go to talk to real people, they ask you if you saw what they just posted on social media.

    The other interesting analogy here is that not only can people be “thine true self” on Facebook as with porn, but they are also far more likely to see and desire to see the limits. “What crazy shit can I post to get people to like it?” Which becomes problematic because it normalizes the extraordinary.

  • Details on a New PGP Vulnerability

    Bruce Schneier:

    Why is anyone using encrypted e-mail anymore, anyway? Reliably and easily encrypting e-mail is an insurmountably hard problem for reasons having nothing to do with today’s announcement. If you need to communicate securely, use Signal. If having Signal on your phone will arouse suspicion, use WhatsApp.

    I wondered the same thing, though I do use ProtonMail. Signal is great, I question WhatsApp’s long term changes which might cause encryption woes later on. But I can answer why use encrypted email: for many people it’s easier to type out emails on a laptop than tap them out on a phone. Signal is trying to overcome this, but I think it is an uphill battle. Still, way better than encrypted email.

  • Medium keeps killing off blogs in the name of saving the internet

    Cale Guthrie Weissman:

    It’s true that ad-based digital media is unsustainable, but bringing on journalists and editors and then killing their revenue in the name of a business pivot hardly seems like the appropriate fix. As one person impacted by Medium’s business changes in 2015 told me, the company is “throwing shit at the wall to see what sticks.”

    That’s probably the most accurate take on Medium I’ve seen.

  • Subscription hell

    Paywalls are not sustainable, but he’s got everything else in this post wrong. The notion that article size in kbs bloat means there’s a greater cost, is bullshit. Content is the expense, not the hosting. What’s changed is that no one believes any longer that if you put in the sweat equity that you’ll cash out later.

    Turns out, you need to pay rent, and rents are going up everywhere. Turns out, sweat equity isn’t very liquid, wait it technically is, never mind.

    Look at podcasting or the App Store, both more recent and over a shorter timelines hit the same wall. When these were small places it was easy to make money, and thus you didn’t need to charge people. But when there are now 5,000 podcasts which are essentially two white guys talking about tech, it’s pretty hard to demand money for that content. When there’s 3 clones of your app in the store, and 15 competitors which are slightly different, it’s hard to to convince people to pay for your app.

    The bottom line is that just as paywalls don’t scale, neither does advertising. At least not if you want to afford rent. If money is to be had from ads then competition for that money increases and the shares to most are diluted to the point of not mattering. With paywalls, no one can afford them all. The audience is, the patron pool, is smaller. What’s the ideal? No clue, if I knew I’d be doing it.

  • Facebook accused of introducing extremists to one another through ‘suggested friends’ feature

    Martin Evans:

    Researchers, who analysed the Facebook activities of a thousand Isil supporters in 96 countries, discovered users with radical Islamist sympathies were routinely introduced to one another through the popular ‘suggested friends’ feature.

    Move fast and break things?

  • The Grim Conclusions of the Largest-Ever Study of Fake News

    Robinson Meyer:

    And blame for this problem cannot be laid with our robotic brethren. From 2006 to 2016, Twitter bots amplified true stories as much as they amplified false ones, the study found. Fake news prospers, the authors write, “because humans, not robots, are more likely to spread it.”

    The conclusion is essentially that social networks cater to, amplify, and rapidly spread disinformation and there’s no obvious way to solve it because it’s really a human problem made worse by these networks.

    Unless, of course, we agree social networks are terrible and get rid of them. That seems rather obvious.

  • A Good Summer Short Sleeve Henley

    Over on Everyday Wear, I posted a review of a new short sleeved merino wool Henley that is likely to be a staple this summer.

  • At first life without a smartphone was terrifying. Then it was beautiful

    Eitan Chitayat:

    There were six individuals sitting down. One on his laptop, the other five all staring at their smartphones. Not one person had their head up. What’s the point of weaning me off this thing so I can enjoy looking around me when all I see are other addicts all looking into their iPhones? It’s a bloody epidemic. All I could think about was what are kids who come in with their parents thinking about all these people? I mean, young kids who are three, four, five, 10 years old even—this is the world they’re inheriting. No one really looks at each other anymore. They think that’s normal.

    Great read.

  • I tried leaving Facebook. I couldn’t

    It’s hard for me to fathom why people can’t give up Facebook, since I’ve been off of it most of my post-college life. So I found this post eye opening, and sad.

  • Twitter Sold Data Access to Cambridge Analytica–Linked Researcher

    Selina Wang:

    Twitter Inc. sold data access to the Cambridge University academic who also obtained millions of Facebook Inc. users’ information that was later passed to a political consulting firm without the users’ consent.

    Not shocking, and I suspect this shit to keep coming out.

  • Overcast Privacy Update

    This update to Overcast isn’t fucking around on privacy. More of this please.

  • Amazon Alexa Has Got Some Serious Skills—Spying On Users!

    Ridiculous headline aside, Mohit Kumar:

    Checkmarx reported the issue to Amazon, and the company has already addressed the problem by regularly scanning for malicious skills that “silent prompts or that listen for unusual lengths of time” and kicking them out of their official store.

    I’d personally just assume that all Alexa-type devices can and will be compromised at some point to eavesdrop on you. What I don’t get is that this reporting makes it sound like Amazon is combatting the issue not by making a software patch for this loophole, but rather by policing to make sure bad actors are kicked out of the store. Which is not how this should be handled.

  • 1Blocker X for iOS Review at MacStories

    John Voorhees:

    Although I wouldn’t suggest purchasing an app based on the promise of future features, it’s also worth noting that the 1Blocker X team says partial site whitelisting is coming soon. When implemented, the feature will allow you to do things like unblock comments and ads for a site, but leave trackers and other content blocked adding further flexibility to the app.

    Great app, you should buy it. Ads are a shady business, and I strongly recommend you use a content blocker until better sets of regulations are in place to protect visitors of websites.

  • dumber phone

    Nathan Toups on how to make your smart phone less addicting without going back to a feature phone has this closing thought:

    This setup will cause you to be less responsive on chats and email, but that’s sort of the point. Your phone shouldn’t dictate to you what you focus your attention on, and the behavior it cultivates in keeping you “always ready” is unhealthy and spills over into parts of our lives that aren’t serving us well.

    I’ve largely been doing this for the past 8 months now as well. The best tip I can give with the largest immediate impact is the notifications tips he gives. I mostly only allow app badges. Be careful though, you’ll want to turn off “sounds” as well, otherwise a notification comes in, makes a sound, but you see nothing and get really confused about what the fuck is going on. Anyways, I encourage you to give this a shot.