Category: Links

  • When It Comes to Culture, You Can Be Right, or You Can Be Successful

    Luke Kanies:

    Your culture has the same need to dial into your audience. As the founder, it doesn’t matter what you think of the company’s culture. It’s not for you. But for better or worse, you do get to decide who your culture is for. A lot of these failures of culture are actually the CEO making bad decisions about who the culture is for.

    Good read.

  • Some Knives for Sale

    I am trying to clear out some old knives. I’ve given many of them away, but this lot has yet to find homes and I believe they are above my threshold in value for gifting to others or Goodwill, or simply not a knife fit for those I would gift things to. So here they are, and all are in excellent shape (and sharpened to a razor edge).

    The list:

    • SOG Aegis $45
    • SOG Spec Elite 1 $50 SOLD
    • SOG Spec Elite Mini $45 SOLD
    • James Brand County $70 SOLD
    • James Brand Folsom $90 SOLD

    All prices are what they are, if you want to make an alternate offer go for it, but yeah, just send me an offer. I can only ship to the USA, and shipping cost is reflected in the price.

  • PDF Expert 6 Adds Powerful Editing Tools and More

    John Voorhees:

    The Annotate and Edit buttons in the center of PDF 6’s toolbar let you switch between the two modes. Annotate mode includes the ability to add text, shapes, stamps, and handwritten notes to PDFs. You can also highlight existing PDF text and add strikethroughs and underlining, all of which were already available in PDF Expert.

    This looks like a hell of a good update.

  • Google’s “Fuchsia” smartphone OS dumps Linux, has a wild new UI

    Not really a lot to see here except for this exquisite opening from Ron Amadeo:

    Google, never one to compete in a market with a single product, is apparently hard at work on a third operating system after Android and Chrome OS.

    That is such a perfect summary of Google.

  • Apple’s China Problem

    Ben Thompson:

    None of that lock-in exists in China: Apple may be a de facto monopolist for most of the world, but in China the company is simply another smartphone vendor, and being simply another smartphone vendor is a hazardous place to be.

    That’s really a hard thought to fathom from a US-centric perspective, wow.

  • Apple’s (AAPL) dividend alone is enough to buy a third of the companies in the S&P 500

    Jason Karaian:

    At current prices, Apple’s forthcoming annual dividend alone is worth as much as a third of the companies in the S&P 500. With the money it will pay in dividends this year, Apple could buy up all the shares in companies like Tiffany (free diamond bracelet with every smartwatch purchase), Foot Locker (free VaporMax shoes with every MacBook), or Chipotle (free burrito with every iPad).

    Stupid giveaway ideas notwithstanding, holy shit.

  • Major apps abandoning Apple Watch, including Google Maps, Amazon & eBay

    Neil Hughes:

    The fact that these high-profile removals have gone largely unnoticed could be a sign that the apps simply were not widely used. In contrast, removing iPad support from an iOS app, for example, would likely be noticed immediately and generate headlines.

    Largely unmentioned in this post is whether or not any of these Apple Watch apps were good, like even passably good…

    The updated, with a statement from Google, makes it seem like Google knows something most don’t. But by in large, the apps listed have no real value on the Watch. Even Google Maps, it didn’t have the level of integration Apple Maps has.

  • Meet the new Surface Laptop

    They seriously are upping their game. Still runs Windows though.

  • Ghostery is Acquired by Cliqz!

    Yeah, [I’d uninstall Ghostery as quickly as you can](https://twitter.com/1BlockerApp/status/858578767039651841). FWIW, 1Blocker ([iOS](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/block-ads-trackers-more-with-1blocker/id1025729002?mt=8&uo=4&at=1l3v36d), [Mac](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/block-ads-trackers-more-with-1blocker/id1107421413?mt=12&uo=4&at=1l3v36d)) is your best option. Second, I think we can all agree on a new internet rule: if the company name ends with an exclamation mark, run away.

  • N.S.A. Halts Collection of Americans’ Emails About Foreign Targets

    Charlie Savage:

    > The decision is a major development in American surveillance policy. It brings to an end a once-secret form of wiretapping that privacy advocates have argued overstepped the Fourth Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches — even though the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court upheld it as lawful — because the government was intercepting communications based on what they say, rather than who sent or received them.

  • iPad Diaries: DEVONthink’s New Advanced Automation

    The single most amazing thing about this post is that DEVONthink actually adds the items to the library quickly. (Do note how he’s not entirely sure where in the list they are added, the app is confusing by design.)

    UPDATE: Wanted to post that Viticci pointed out that my aside about not knowing where the file would end up isn’t accurate. See his tweet [here](https://twitter.com/viticci/status/857974372304289792). What I mean in that comment was that he would add a file in the video and then scroll around on the list to find it. To me that seems counter intuitive to how the app should handle this. Why not just select the new file added right away in this case? That’s what the app should do, but doesn’t. Thanks to Federico for pointing out the vagueness of my comment.

  • The James Brand Folsom Knife Review

    I wrote up a review of a knife for Tools & Toys, go check it out if you were missing my knife writing.

  • Killing the iTunes Affiliate – BrettTerpstra.com

    Brett Terpstra on the change with iTunes App affiliate links:

    > I use affiliate links on everything. I’ve built many tools, including SearchLink to make this easy, and it generates a small portion of my monthly income. Not a lot, but it’s enough to notice. On an average month, I’ll make about $200. With this cut, that same amount of traffic will bring me about $75 dollars. A popular post written for MacStories can earn me $200 in affiliate sales on its own. Again, that’s now $75. And the average post, even with MacStories traffic, earns $20 to $30… which is now $10 or less. It’s a drastic cut to mention in passing just one week before it takes effect.

    I mentioned this on Twitter, but I make about $70 a month off what small affiliate linking I do for apps. At this point, with this change, it no longer is worth any effort on my part to be annoyed with making those affiliate links for iTunes. Luckily, I have a [business model which is stable](https://brooksreview.net/join). But this really sucks for a lot of great sites and writers. $200 on a guest post is nothing to bat an eye at — it’s more than most get paid directly for such articles.

  • In the Mobile-First Era, Don’t Forget the PC

    Ben Bajarin on why you need mobile and desktop apps:

    > The counter-argument is to say it isn’t that hard to pick up your smartphone and open the app and do what you want to do. However, having observed a range of consumers who have both desktop and mobile apps of the same software, there is no arguing that being able to do what you want or need to do on the device you are using is far superior. While it seems easy enough to just pick up your smartphone to use an app you don’t have on your desktop, it misses the reality of the increased friction in that experience.

  • Uber’s C.E.O. Plays With Fire

    Mike Isaac:

    > In a quest to build Uber into the world’s dominant ride-hailing entity, Mr. Kalanick has openly disregarded many rules and norms, backing down only when caught or cornered. He has flouted transportation and safety regulations, bucked against entrenched competitors and capitalized on legal loopholes and gray areas to gain a business advantage. In the process, Mr. Kalanick has helped create a new transportation industry, with Uber spreading to more than 70 countries and gaining a valuation of nearly $70 billion, and its business continues to grow.

    And to end it:

    > But only momentarily. After all, Mr. Kalanick had faced off against Apple, and Uber had survived. He had lived to fight another day.

    You likely saw the best part, where he was scolded by Cook, but these two bits are far more telling. The only way Uber stops being shady shitheads is if they face real consequences. They should have been pulled from the App Store immediately.

  • The Whale

    MG Siegler on Amazon:

    > Those magical stores where you just walk in and walk out, item in hand, without ever waiting in line to pay, may have some kinks to work out. But those kinks will be worked out. Is there really any question that this is the way this should be done in a world where every single person has a super computer in their pocket? Have you used Uber? Would you bet against this? Would you bet against this company doing this?

    If it weren’t for the stigma which surrounds the work-life balance of working for Amazon, I would have to think they would be the single biggest source of talent drain across *most* industries. Astonishing what they accomplish.

  • Bose Wireless Headphones Spy on Listeners, Lawsuit Alleges

    Tim Hardwick:

    The lawsuit alleges that Bose tracks the listening habits of users when they are wearing headsets like the company’s QuietComfort 35 headphones, gleaning information through the app such as music tracks played, podcasts, and other audio listened to.

  • Google Plans Ad-Blocking Feature in Popular Chrome Browser

    Jack Marshall:

    The ad-blocking feature, which could be switched on by default within Chrome, would filter out certain online ad types deemed to provide bad experiences for users as they move around the web.

    Marshall also notes that Google pays to be part of the “acceptable advertising” program and might actually block all ads on sites with the shady ads instead of just the shady ads.

    This is devious as fuck on Google’s part.

    They control a major web browser, (47.4% market share in US) and they rely on ads for profits. Now they get to decide which of those ads people who use Chrome can see, by default. If you think for one moment Google is going to block Google ads, then you are wrong. This is a smart business play, but fucking devious.

  • Random Notes from a recent trip to Japan

    Om Malik:

    What I like about Japan is its subtlety. It is aloof, it is shy and almost silent. And yet when you slow your rhythm to its ways, the slow hypnotization starts to take control of your sense.

    Japan is one of my favorite countries, not just because it is a part of my genetics, but in spite of the the fact I loathe most traditional Japanese food. Even still, it’s magic.

    To me Japan represents the core of respect, and it can take time to pick up on that. If you do get the chance to go, I can show just exactly what I mean, in a very short time span: go to McDonalds. Yeah, I know what you are thinking, but go there and get two things: a burger and fries.

    Don’t dive into it like you would in your home country, instead look at it. It looks like the fucking marketing pictures, and it’s astounding. I can’t tell you how many people don’t believe me on this.

    Respect. Love Japan. Amazing country.