Hugh Sissling shares how he organizes his iPad homescreen and — well — it is the polar opposite of what I do.
Category: Links
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WSJ Review of Firefox 4
Walt Mossberg on Firefox 4:
>Though Mozilla doesn’t say so, I believe one reason for the revamp is to try to win back the hearts and minds of those techies and influential users who shun IE and once swore by Firefox.I’m guessing that those users aren’t going back full time. Firefox has become quite the resource hog.
[via Harry McCracken] -
Dickbar No More
From the Twitter blog:
>Rather than continue to make changes to the QuickBar as it exists, we removed the bar from the update appearing in the App Store today. We believe there are still significant benefits to increasing awareness of what’s happening outside the home timeline. Evidence of the incredibly high usage metrics for the QuickBar support this. For now, we’re going back to the drawing board to explore the best possible experience for in-app notification and discovery.Half of the above I believe to be a lie, specifically: “Evidence of the incredibly high usage metrics for the QuickBar support this.”
Why remove a feature if it is *truly* that popular? You don’t.
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It Takes One to Know One
John Oates:
>Microsoft has made a formal complaint against Google to the European Commission accusing the search and advertising giant of using various illegal methods to dominate the European search market.Something comes to mind about throwing rocks and glass houses…
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Broken iOS Icons
Neven Mrgan commenting on icons and specifically app names that get truncated on the homescreens of iOS users:
>I understand that iOS icon-label limits are frustrating, but please, please, pick a name that fits! This truncated nonsense looks super unprofessional.Agreed.
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iPad as Digital Whiteboard
Fraser Speirs on using the iPad as a digital whiteboard:
>So, what does iPad + Penultimate + AluPen get you? It gets you a digital whiteboard with infinite pages and undo. The beauty of this is that you get to keep every whiteboard you draw during the lesson. You can flip between whiteboards and go forward and backwards and insert new pages in between the others. It’s really kind of remarkably powerful.What a great use case.
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Dual-Screen Touchbook
You know what I want? A 14″ laptop with not one, but two screens — oh yeah and get rid of that silly keyboard. Clearly carrying this around would be better than an iPad **or** a laptop.
Who wants this?
This is one of those devices that looks really cool in movies, but sucks in real life. Why does it suck in real life — because in real life you have to actually use the damned thing.
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RIM Will Ship PlayBook Without Mail, Messaging or Contacts
Charlie Sorrel, reporting on a leaked document that says the PlayBook (RIM’s upcoming tablet) will ship without a basic email, messaging or contact app on the device, adds this nugget:
>You can almost smell the desperation that has crept into RIM ever since the iPhone arrived on the scene.The smell is getting pretty strong too.
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Clarity
Camera+ came out with a new update (version 2.2) that boasts a new ‘filter’ called Clarity. Typically when you see the words ‘clarity’ or ‘definition’ in photo editing software it means that it will be adjusting the micro-contrasts. Basically it is going to make your shots look a little sharper and give them some more depth — as with any photo filter this can be both a good and bad thing.
I took an iPhone snap from Victoria B.C. that I took and ran it through this new filter to see what it looks like. Here is the [original iPhone photo](https://f3a98a5aca88d28ed629-2f664c0697d743fb9a738111ab4002bd.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com/Stock.jpg) taken with the stock Camera app; this is the [HDR version](https://f3a98a5aca88d28ed629-2f664c0697d743fb9a738111ab4002bd.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com/HDR.jpg) of the same shot from the Camera app again; here we have the [Camera+ version](https://f3a98a5aca88d28ed629-2f664c0697d743fb9a738111ab4002bd.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com/Clarity.jpg) with Clarity applied; lastly this is the original photo [edited in Lightroom](https://f3a98a5aca88d28ed629-2f664c0697d743fb9a738111ab4002bd.ssl.cf1.rackcdn.com/Lightroom.jpg) 3 ((I applied a ton of tweaks and settings in Lightroom, taking only 30 seconds to make the photo look as good as I can in that time period. I have no doubt you can get a better image with more time, but that’s not the point of this post.)).
I have no comment on which is best, but I thought it would be nice to show the range of editing you can do on these photos.
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CF Setter
Following up on his work to make his Slugger+ plugin work with iOS WordPress apps so that you can set the ‘slug’ field in WordPress — Justin Blanton made another plugin that allows you to set a custom field using the same framework.
This is absolutely amazing — I can’t tell you how much of the ‘pain-in-the-ass’ factor this will eliminate when blogging on an iPhone or iPad. Thank you very much Justin!
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Pricing Problems and The New York Times Digital Subscription
Peter Merholz on the NYT paywall and pricing structure in general:
If you look at the companies that offer the most confusing pricing plans (telcos, health insurance providers, most major airlines), they are also the companies that deliver the poorest customer experience. This is not a coincidence. These are companies whose success is built on little competition, and who know they can squeeze money out of their captive audiences.
That is so very true. To get an even better perspective on just how terrible the NYT’s pricing plan is read the second paragraph in this article — if you don’t clearly remember and understand how the pricing plan works, then guess what: it’s a bad pricing plan.
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Lenovo Joins Tablet War With LePad
Kathrin Hille for the Financial Times, reporting on the new Lenovo ‘LePad’ tablet:
Lenovo’s focus on China, which will make it a late-comer in other markets, is expected to be the group’s biggest strength. “When it comes to tablets, what matters is software, not hardware,” said Mr Yang. “Lenovo’s strength is that they have a Chinese interface and Chinese applications.”
Now the tablet has a stupid name and will not impress American’s (we tend to shun things that sound overtly French). That said the strategy is smart, the price is comparable to the iPad and somebody at Lenovo actually ‘gets’ the most important thing about tablets: software and interface. I am blown away by how smart of a play these seems to be — even going into China first where they stand to have a better chance of success is smart.
Color me impressed.
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The powerful, mystical Spotlight. On steroids.
Some great tips on how to make Spotlight a little more useful. I love tools like Launchbar, but sometimes you just need to search system files and see lists — that’s when I start with Spotlight.
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The Secret to Comfortable Typing on Your iPad
So very true.
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The Cosmonaut
I have huge respect for the guys behind the Glif, but I don’t think this new dry-erase marker style iPad stylus will be useful. The simple fact is that iOS is not and has never been designed for use with a stylus. To make such a tool work you need the right software and there just isn’t software (perhaps even hardware) that can support the most fundamental uniqueness of drawing: pressure sensitivity.
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Cultured Code & OTA Syncing
Jürgen for Cultured Code on the state of OTA syncing in the still popular Things app:
I’m sure the question on the mind of many readers is: when will I be able to play with Things cloud sync first-hand? As it happens, the integration of cloud sync with the Mac version is a little further ahead of its counterparts on iOS. We have therefore decided to start with a beta of Mac-to-Mac sync first.
I can’t make this stuff up. Cultured Code needs to get a clue. Mac users aren’t the ones that need OTA syncing — iOS + Mac users are. This should be pretty obvious.
The best part though is this bit:
iOS devices will join the fun once we are confident with everything server-side.
Which, given Cultured Code’s track record isn’t very reassuring.
[Updated: 3.28.11 at 1:39 PM]
So yeah, I guest their servers aren’t that “confident” yet:
Due to high demand, we’re experiencing intermittent server downtime – thanks for your patience.
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How to set post slugs from within WordPress’ iOS apps
This trick is nothing short of amazing for iPad WordPress bloggers. Previously I had been creating the post and saving it as a draft, then going to the backend in Safari and editing the slug — obviously this is far better.
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Shawn Blanc on “The Value of Twitter”
Shawn Blanc in response to my “Twi$$er” ((The title of which has really been messing with Twitter itself and how it tries to pickup stupid things when you use a “$”. It has been quite funny to see how Twitter is screwing with this title.)) article, has this to say about Twitter in a footnote about his own article on the subject:
It’s an article observing what Twitter as a company sees as their most important goals, and how, in some ways, nobility and ubiquity have become of higher value than profitability.
Sure, I can see that argument — but there is no value in a service that dies next year because they can’t afford to keep running it. I highly doubt the U.S. government, or any other, see the “value” in Twitter to the point that they would “bail” Twitter out.
Though Shawn knows that Twitter needs money to keep going, he also adds this to the discussion:
It would be regrettable if those who cannot pay were locked out from using one of the most powerful tools for global communication and information sharing there has ever been. The NPR writer adds that “Twitter purposefully allows everyone access because information — both good and bad — should be allowed to flow freely.”
I agree with that general notion — I truly do — but it is a heavily flawed view. The mail system is vital, yet it costs money to send a letter. The phone is crucial to the world, twice over, yet it costs money to place a phone call. The Internet is perhaps the most vital communication tool yet conceived by man, yet it costs money to gain access too. Power and water are also vital and, thus, we pay for them as well. Don’t forget that you must already pay to get on the Internet before you can even get to Twitter.
I agree with Shawn that it would be ideal for Twitter to remain free and thus “open” for anyone to use. But, I don’t think it is viable and therefore I would rather pay for Twitter and subsequently exclude users — especially when the alternative would be Twitter going away.
This is a great take by Shawn and I really do agree with it — I just don’t think it is possible and the reason I don’t think it is possible is stated clearly by Shawn:
However, Twitter is not trying to answer the question of who would or would not stay and pay. They are trying to find a business model that will support those who cannot pay so even more of them will sign up.
I think the tried and true method to support people who can’t pay is, and always has been, for those who can pay to subsidize that cost. Whether by making food stamps and shelter available this has been the U.S. way for quite some time. What I am saying is that as stupid as the “Pro” account model is — it very clearly subsidizes the cost for most ‘non-paying’ users.
I think what everyone is forgetting is that Twitter isn’t trying to make the service free so those who can’t pay will continue to use Twitter, but they are trying to make it free for everyone — that way there is no room for competition.
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CareerExcuse.com
From the FAQ of this website that will be your fake reference for your fake company or residence:
Is misinformation on a resume illegal?
No, Since a resume is not a legal document, it is not illegal to misrepresent on a resume.Actually, it’s called Fraud.
Which, according to dictionary.com, is:
deceit, trickery, sharp practice, or breach of confidence, perpetrated for profit or to gain some unfair or dishonest advantage.
So yeah…