Category: Links

  • At SXSW, Apple schools the marketing experts

    Since I have been at SXSW I have only seen three huge lines: this make-shift Apple Store, the Frog Design opening party and a session I failed to get into today.

    I have seen just as many original iPads in use as I have iPad 2s being used. I have also seen a deluge of Macs and very few Windows PCs.

    I have yet to see any Android tablets. I did see one Google phone as the user was smacking the side of the phone to try and get the screen to rotate.

    Apple has zero advertising that I have seen, yet has the overwhelming presence. Amazing.

  • The B&B Podcast, Episode #3: Sissies

    Shawn and I talk about waiting in line for our iPad 2s and a few thoughts on our limited time with them. A huge thanks to our two sponsors Due app and Justin Blanton.

  • Twitter To Developers: Enough With The Twitter Clients

    For the first time I can think of, Twitter has made a greedy move. Without apps like Tweetie and TweetDeck I think it is safe today Twitter would not be where it is today. Now they are turning on these developers to seemingly protect thier revenue stream. Shame.

  • WordPress Guided Transfers

    Hew with WordPress:

    We’re launching a new upgrade called Guided Transfer where for a $99 one-time fee we’ll handle every detail and tech thingamajig involved in moving your content, theme, domain, and more to any one of the recommended hosts we’ve vetted. (And of course your new site will be Jetpack-powered.)

    That’s a bargain if you ask me.

  • Helping Japan

    I would like to ask all of you to help Japan recover from this natural disaster they are currently experiencing. I have family there and thus far we have not been able to reach them. Anything you donate helps.

  • What Your Email Domain Says About You

    Amanda Green:

    Yahoo! users are most likely to be overweight women ages 18-49 who have a high school diploma and are spiritual, but not religious.

    The funny thing about this report is that it seems pretty accurate based on my encounters.

  • Flare: Fun photo editing for the Mac

    Stephen M. Hackett:

    It brings the fun of iOS to the Mac, in an app that is much more lightweight than something like Photoshop or even Pixelmator. With the ability to edit filters and save presets for later, it really is pretty powerful.

    Just from the looks of it, this app isn’t for me — but I think Stephen hits the nail on the head, in that it is a great little iOS type app for most Mac users.

  • Instapaper 3.0 is here!

    Marco Arment:

    You can find friends through your linked Facebook or Twitter accounts, your email addresses in Contacts (from the app), or by entering their email addresses yourself (on the website). Since we’re starting from zero, check back often over the coming weeks to find more friends who linked their Facebook or Twitter accounts with Instapaper.

    This is a great update to one of the best apps and services I have used in the past 3+ years. This update is worth $20, but will cost you nothing — amazing.

  • Quicksilver: Mac OS X at your Fingertips

    I switched over to LaunchBar a long time ago, but it is good to see that Quicksilver has a new home and is being developed once again — adding not just bug fixes but new features as well.

  • Square’s Response

    Jack Dorsey responding to criticism from VeriFone:

    The waiter you hand your credit card to at a restaurant, for example, could easily steal your card details if he wanted to—no technology required. If you provide your credit card to someone who intends to steal from you, they already have everything they need: the information on the front of your card.

    You should read the entire letter because really it was a silly play on VeriFone’s part.

  • Readability Goes Full HTML5

    For all the whining over Readability’s App Store rejection I think the HTML5 version turned out quite nice.

  • Gruber’s iPad 2 Review

    John Gruber:

    The fact is, Apple got it right with the iPad 1 in almost every way, and the iPad 2 reflects that. If you didn’t like the original iPad, you’re not going to like the iPad 2. If you liked the original iPad, you’re going to like the iPad 2 even better.

    I suspect that is going to echo my sentiments when I get one.

  • Walt Mossberg’s iPad 2 Review

    Walter S. Mossberg:

    It never crashed in my tests, unlike every Android tablet I’ve tested.

  • Engadget’s iPad 2 Review

    Joshua Topolsky:

    For owners of the previous generation, we don’t think Apple’s put a fire under you to upgrade.

    That seems to be the gist of most reviews.

  • MLB.tv on Apple TV

    It’s lame that there isn’t at the very least a free account that lets you look at the highlights of the game like you can on the iOS apps. It is even more lame that a subscription will run you $99/yr.

    What’s cool is that this is on the Apple TV — also NBA is there, but that’s less cool.

  • Keyboard Maestro on the Mac App Store

    If you don’t have it already…well now is the time to rectify that. Here’s why.

  • VeriFone Releases Open Letter to the Industry and Consumers

    Douglas G. Bergeron, Chief Executive of Out-of-touch, on Square being insecure and vulnerable:

    Don’t take our word for it. See for yourself by downloading the sample skimming application and viewing a video of this type of fraud in action.

    That’s neat — I can’t wait for Microsoft to start making viruses for OS X to show that OS X is just as vulnerable.

    (Also I doubt Apple will approve that app.)

  • “Better Together”

    Shawn Blanc:

    How long until Apple updates Mobile Me (or builds something new) that lets 3rd-party devs sync their apps over the air and that easily lets users keep their apps in sync just using our Apple IDs

    That’s a good question. I don’t think it really matters though, the Dropbox and Simplenote sync services have been working pretty darn good. I loathe to think I would need to use MobileMe to do it and I am not one of those that think MobileMe will go 100% free.

    Though, admittedly, I still think Apple should buy Dropbox.

  • Apple releases iOS 4.3

    It’s a solid update and one of the most stable iOS betas I have ever used. As noted everywhere else the best improvement is in Safari — be sure to check that out.

  • Couldn’t Be More Wrong

    “FC Expert Blogger” Patrick J. Howie thinks a bunch of things about the tablet market and every single paragraph is another link baited piece of…

    He starts really strongly ending the first paragraph with this bit:

    There are somewhere in the neighborhood of 100 tablets coming out this year, and most of them seem to have no better sense of purpose than to replicate the iPad. This is a doomed strategy, if it can be called as strategy at all. But the iPad and the majority of its competitors are focusing on a very narrow view of what the tablet can do.

    I can buy that, but I need you, Howie, to sell me on that last sentence. And so he tries:

    Rather, the tablet has the potential to improve our productivity. While the iPad 2 makes some strides in this direction compared to the original iPad (especially with the stronger processor), the focus of most of the enhancements are aimed at improving the entertainment value of the device.

    When did anyone ever complain about the processor? I seem to remember people applauding it and complaining about the lack of RAM, but ok let’s move on.

    But it is just stronger processing power along with a mindset towards increasing our capacity to do things–not just playing games–which represents the future of the tablet.

    OK, but you just said the iPad 2 has a stronger processor, so we are all good then right? Also didn’t you just say that the processor is only a minor part and that we need to focus on productivity — surely you don’t think processing power and productivity go hand in hand?

    Apparently not, because he starts to talk about the Kno tablet and brings up this gem:

    First, the Kno comes with a pen, which is too “uncool” for the Apple but which is very handy for writing compared to the impractical touch-screen keyboard.

    Right, because all those pen computing devices of the past worked out so well for people, I mean even the Palm Pilot wasn’t great. But I can see the practical advantage of pen computing for writing notes and Howie follows with another strong point:

    With the dual-screen, you can truly multitask in a way that just is not possible with the single-screen iPad. Users can compare two articles side by side, perform an Internet search and take notes at the same time, and even perform analysis on one side and document the results on the other.

    That is a killer feature, but only for a very niche group of users: academics. Also you should Google: “laptop”.

    But what is this:

    If Apple would spend more effort improving the functional ability of the iPad, enabling application developers to create apps that truly improve our productivity, then the future of the tablet will arrive that much sooner.

    Where is the proof that they are stifling or not-approving apps that increase user productivity? Simplenote, Dropbox, OmniFocus, 1Password are just a few of the approved apps that I use daily to improve my productivity. Most apps that are not approved are entertainment apps, not productivity apps. I really don’t see the evidence here and I think this is an idiotic statement, but I digress.

    Because now he gets to the Xoom:

    This is why the Xoom is so intriguing. Motorola and Google are two companies that have proven their ability to see around the corner and they have made it much easier for developers to get applications to market than Apple has with the iPad. However, the Xoom is really built to be another iPad with an emphasis on entertainment–as if two cameras is really the key to success in this category–which is a shame for all of us.

    So the Xoom has potential because Motorola AND Google are building it!!! But, alas, it is just another iPad clone according to Howie.

    I don’t even understand the logic here: he starts to touts the Xoom before then lumping it with the 100s of other iPad clones. This makes no sense, if you say that Motorola and Google are “two companies that have proven their ability to see around the corner” then do you mean that Apple is not that type of company?

    After all it was Google that created Android and Motorola that created the iPhone — wait, nope. Google bought Android and Motorola is on its death bed.

    I think the real argument Howie is trying to make is that Apple should allow all apps on iOS — which is clearly what he seems most frustrated about, not that he really thinks the iPad 2 is bad.