Category: Links

  • Accessibility Showdown: iPhone 6 vs. iPhone 6 Plus

    Great post from Steven Aquino, talking about the oft over looked importance of accessibility on devices. This time he tackles the iPhone 6 plus, and brings up some really good points about the physical size of the device.

  • Welcome to 1984

    Won't be long before devices are touted as having “no listening and seeing devices” in them.

  • Disintegrating Baddies

    Over at my “day job” we are creating one hell of a game. I know nothing about how these games are made, but Jeff LaMarche wrote a huge post showing you how to disintegrate bad guys. Amazing stuff to see the level of work that goes into just one thing like this.

    It's more of a tutorial, so if you aren't a game developer you likely just appreciate some of the videos and screenshots.

  • The Canon AE-1 Program

    Álvaro Serrano:

    If you feel like feature creep is getting the better of you, the AE-1 Program is how you fight back. It was enjoyed by millions of people years ago, and it continues to be a landmark in photography for many film enthusiasts around the world.

  • Wishlists on The Newsprint

    I liked this post because I do something similar, though not all in OmniFocus.

    For me I keep all goals in OmniFocus, at different ‘elevations’ according to the GTD methods. But for material goods I store everything in Pinboard using tags like: to-buy gift-idea bag camera. That way I can quickly see everything and if I have some money that I want to spend on something I can filter things around and make a pick.

    I’ve also found that by keeping things in Pinboard that way I don’t feel the need to buy it right away. My brain knows it is somewhere where I will not forget about it.

  • Lenovo Installs Adware on Customer Laptops and Compromises All SSL

    Marc Rogers:

    A pretty shocking thing came to light this evening – Lenovo is installing adware that uses a “man-in-the-middle” attack to break secure connections on affected laptops in order to access sensitive data and inject advertising. As if that wasn’t bad enough they installed a weak certificate into the system in a way that means affected users cannot trust any secure connections they make – TO ANY SITE.

  • Alto’s Adventure

    I’ve had the privilege of testing this game for a while now, and I really love it. The visuals are stunning and it is good fun. Dusk mode is nearly impossible, as I always have trouble seeing in dusk times — but man, good game.

    It’s on the App Store.

  • What We Want Next

    Marco Arment in summary of his post on declining blog traffic across the board:

    If we want it to get better, we need to start pushing back against the trend, modernizing blogs, and building what we want to come next.

    This makes no sense. ‘Modernizing blogs’ and ‘building what we want to come next’? I don’t even know what he is meaning here.

    Blog traffic only matters if you have an ad on your site. If you have members paying, well traffic doesn’t matter any more.

    When members pay you, all that matters is the one part that should matter: content.

  • The Analog Aspect

    Mike Bates:

    Since then I’ve realized that, at least for me, there’s something slightly magical about putting pen to paper. I’m able to get my thoughts out by hand so much more easily than if I’m typing them. Somehow pressing a key is so much less organic, creative, and romantic than writing out the letters with one’s pen. The visceral reaction I get from looking over a handwritten outline now is very different from looking at the same result in a typed form.

  • Newsletter Issue 1

    Since you can’t see the archived issues (for now) here’s the first one to give you a taste.

  • My Newsletter

    I created a newsletter on Revue, because Revue looked really cool to use. Also, here’s the thing, I read about a lot of stuff and try a lot of stuff, but don’t have the time, or enough words, to post about it here.

    So that’s what this newsletter is: the stuff I didn’t get to throughout the week. Lots of links, really short commentary.

    Hit the link and sign up.

    See issue one here.

  • Darkroom

    I’ve been beta testing this app for a while and it’s my favorite way to edit photos on my iPhone. Less filters than VSCO, but a much better workflow and much easier to use. Go download it.

  • I’m Brianna Wu, And I’m Risking My Life Standing Up To Gamergate

    Wu:

    I have a folder on my hard drive with letters from dozens and dozens of women who’ve abandoned their dream of becoming game developers due to Gamergate, some as young as 12.

  • Quick Tip: Give group messages a name in iOS

    Fair warning, all members of the group see this. But it is amazing.

  • Panasonic Lumix 20mm f/1.7 Pancake Lens

    Josh Ginter:

    The Panasonic Lumix 20mm f/1.7 pancake lens is the best lens to buy for any new Micro 4/3 user. There, I said it.

    Yep. In fact it’s the biggest hole in the lens lineup of every other camera system that I have looked at. Sony, Fuji, Canon, Nikon — none of them have a lens comparable to this little guy.

  • Alto – Trailer

    I’ve had the privilege to test this game, and man is it fun. Also this trailer makes me really want to go and play it.

  • Why the iPad Became Viticci’s Main Computer

    Federico Viticci:

    The larger screen was, for me, the biggest concern in switching back from the iPad mini to the iPad Air. After an initial period of shock where every iPad app looked unreasonably large and spacious, three months of daily usage have rewired my perception of the Air's screen size. I prefer the Air's bigger screen to the mini one now, but only because the design changes in the latest model make it as comfortable and painless as the mini to hold with one or two hands. The iPad is, after all, a screen that you keep in your hands, and the practical consequences of that screen are a product of the comfort you find in holding the device.

    I could quote damn near his entire post. The iPad I near perfect, it just needs to be a touch bigger.

  • Nikon FE – A Camera Review

    My wife:

    They allow an outsider to see with the same eyes as the photographer, to live in her shoes, feel what she feels, for just a snippet of time. It’s romantic. It’s pure. Film photos have a life, realness, grittiness, and emotion to them.

  • The GORUCK GR1 on Tools and Toys

    I wrote up a review of the perfect GORUCK GR1 over on Tools and Toys. Turned out pretty well.

  • Get your loved ones off Facebook

    Salim Virani on why you must get off Facebook:

    According to the FTC settlement from a few years ago, after Facebook was sued by the US goverment for its privacy practices, Facebook is “required to prevent anyone from accessing a user’s material more than 30 days after the user has deleted his or her account;”

    There are different interpretations of this. Some say you need to delete each post separately, others say delete your account, and some say they’ll still keep your data anyway — that all you can do is stop giving them more data.

    I’m going to do both as a precaution. There are a few helpful browser add-ons that will delete your posts individually, which I’m running now but needs some baby-sitting to keep running. And some great instructions on actually deleting your account while Facebook tries to trick you into deactivating it instead.

    He does a far better job verbalizing why this is important than I can, but the above quote is very telling if you ask me. Facebook makes it so hard to clean your data off their servers that people make tools to help you.