What a great list from Brent Simmons, I subscribed to them all.
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Designing the Front Page of Your Site
Did you even consider not using a reverse chronological layout for your blog?
One of the things I kept thinking about, after writing about The New York Times website and advertising models post in general, is just how poorly most front pages are designed. I am not meaning that often sites have ugly front pages, but I mean that often sites are showing entirely the wrong things on the front page.
This applies to most websites, across a wide range of categories, but the greatest offenders are the blogs. It feels very much like people choose to show the same content on the front page of their blog, because that is how it has always been done, instead of thinking through what might actually be useful on those pages.
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Exposure versus Money
Don’t ever do it for the damn exposure.
I’ve not found myself in many places in life where people ask me to do something, which I should very much be paid for, for the exposure alone. This is, however, fairly common in the design world, and to a lesser extent for bloggers. While there have only been a handful of times which I was approached and asked to ‘syndicate’ content on this site to another ((Fuck you Business Insider.)) , I still find this a decision I have to make on a regular basis. Writing for another site, at the cost of that writing not being on this site.
This isn’t a subject many people talk about in a permanent form — typically choosing to dole out advice around this on Twitter where it is forgotten 5 minutes later — and that’s safe for everyone. But it has always bugged me that this isn’t a topic talked about more on blogs so others may find the information.
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Is Using iOS As Your Primary OS, Masochism?
Well probably if you are using an iPad mini.
Justin Williams, in The Chicken or the iPad Pro:
The sad reality is there aren’t enough Omnis in the ecosystem right now to make the iPad Pro a viable productivity platform for anyone but those executives, retired folks, and masochist bloggers who jump through more hoops than a circus elephant to use an iPad instead of a Mac.
Williams makes a lot of great points in his post, but the one thing I left his post wondering about the most, was if he was right about the masochism of iOS. It’s been something I have been going back and forth with for most of the day — just eating at me a bit.
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They Never Even Tried For Value
If publishers would have known what they do now when they started on the web, it would be a better web.
There has been a lot said over the years about publishers trying to make money in the changing landscape that is their online world. It is also no secret that I loathe advertising. Where advertising was once an exciting art form, it has now devolved into a creepy data driven model which is unapologetic for its invasive nature. But that is not what we are hear to talk about today.
We are here to talk about the fact that publishers never really took the Internet seriously, and so they made bad decisions which ultimately cornered them into using a foundation which was unstable at best for building their business on. And now publishers only focus on making advertising better, instead of tearing everything back down to its very foundation and starting over.
Which is why they continually struggle.
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Some Cheap Bluetooth Headphones
They are cheap and perfectly adequate.
If there is one thing I absolutely cannot stand, it is wires dangling from my head. They get in the way, they are visible, and they are a terrible annoyance to me. It’s not even so much that they are pulling on your head, it’s that no matter what I do, my arm touches the cord. I cannot stand my arm touching wires on my desk.
You can also see that damned wire running out of the headphone jack and to your head — who wants that?
The thing is, I never got around to buying bluetooth headphones. Each time I looked at some I gravitated towards $500+ headphones and then I would always decide I had better places for that money to go. One day I was fed up enough and decided to order something to get rid of that damned wire.
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I No Longer Backup, In the Traditional Sense
It turns out, I really hate plugging in backup drives.
In college I never had a backup for any of my computers. I knew about backups. I knew I should have one — especially given I was on Windows for the first couple of years. But I never had one. I did constantly reformat my computer (Windows), so I had backups of my working files and pictures, but that was about it.
Which really sucked, because a couple years into college my computer was stolen. Amazingly I didn’t really lose much. I lost some images, and some files, but not a whole ton of stuff.
And yet, when I got a new computer a few days later, I again didn’t backup. It wasn’t until I was out of college and getting heavier into photography when I started to back up. And then I started to get really into the nerdy side of backing things up.
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Developing for the iPad Pro
Manton Reece: I remain very optimistic about the iPad Pro, especially when the Apple Pencil is actually available. From a business standpoint, it also seems like a better investment in time than either the Apple Watch or Apple TV. There are so many platforms and distractions now. If I can’t focus on a single platform,…
Manton Reece:
I remain very optimistic about the iPad Pro, especially when the Apple Pencil is actually available. From a business standpoint, it also seems like a better investment in time than either the Apple Watch or Apple TV. There are so many platforms and distractions now. If I can’t focus on a single platform, I want to at least be proactive in saving some attention for the iPad.
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Elyxir
Speaking of Thomas, you can find his game here.
Speaking of Thomas, you can find his game here.
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Writing a Video Game Using SceneKit in a Month
A nice article on building an tvOS game for the first time.
A nice article on building an tvOS game for the first time.
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A Smattering of iPad Pro Thoughts Twenty-Four Hours Later
That thing bloggers do to try and stay relevant even though they didn’t get a review unit and really have not had time to form a full opinion on a new device. I’m doing that.
I’ve had my iPad Pro for just over twenty-four hours now, as the title implies, and to stem my emails I wanted to share a few early and rough thoughts about the device.
I set the iPad Pro up from scratch, which took much longer than I expected, and put my laptop away after that. I’ve only been using the iPad Pro as my computer since then, but it’s also only been a day so that’s nothing new or revolutionary. At this point there is no judgments I can make about the iPad Pro as a work device, I can only make guesses, so it’s not worth talking about.
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Slack is My World
I promise this is not another post about how Slack is changing business. I would save that for Medium.
What’s my most used app on my iPhone? Slack. On my iPad? Slack. On my Mac? Slack. Yet this isn’t an article about how good Slack is, or how revolutionary it is. Because for as good as Slack is, there are some really rough spots.
No, This is an article about the fact that a large part of my world exists only in Slack. If you stop and think about this for a moment — wow.
My entire office and most of the work I do is in Slack. I also have a large group of friends from around the world, whom I only communicate with in Slack. I have an entire professional network of people I hardly know (like any good professional network) which is only in Slack. I have Slacks with people I am working on hobby projects with and on and on.
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On the lack of a flagship iPad Pro app from Apple
Stephen Hackett: However, with the iPad Pro — and to a lesser extent, the new Apple TV — Apple's launched a new hardware product without a great first-party example of what people should do with it. I would argue that Apple didn't launch a great first-party app because they no longer need to launch these…
Stephen Hackett:
However, with the iPad Pro — and to a lesser extent, the new Apple TV — Apple's launched a new hardware product without a great first-party example of what people should do with it.
I would argue that Apple didn't launch a great first-party app because they no longer need to launch these with iOS devices. And there is no need to define the iPad Pro, because the people who wanted one, already got it. If you don't get the iPad Pro, then there is no great app which is going to help you get it.
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The Completionist
Can someone wipe out all my subscriptions for me?
Years ago, when Shawn and I were still podcasting together, we had a few shows where we talked about my insane RSS feed subscriptions. At one point I remember the subscribed count reaching close to 700 feeds for me. Thousands of posts came through every day and I went through them all. Shawn would tell me it was nuts to have that many. He would tell me he had less than 200 or maybe 100 feeds. I would think he was nuts — and that was basically the gist of every episode we recorded.
Recently, I was in a chat with Justin Blanton when he said that he was “completionist” meaning he didn’t want to miss a single thing in whatever thing it was that he did. Whether that was RSS or Twitter, and I chimed in agreeing that this is very much how I work and how I feel.
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Living with a 12” Screen
You know you want a MacBook.
Back in late May I took delivery of a new 12” Retina MacBook and proceeded to move everything to it — making it the only computer I use outside of my iOS devices. It has been a very long time since I have lived with such a small screen as my only screen, and I know many people think it is just too small of a screen to work with for a daily driver.
Since I’ve had the machine for just over five months I can tell you that there is no turning back for me. Sure, I’ll get an iPad Pro when they launch, but as far as Macs go, this 12” Retina MacBook is all I need. It is my perfect machine.
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Why Android One Flight Failed to Take Off?
Good article, but as I read it I couldn’t help but think: it’s amazing how little control Google is willing to assert over partners. It’s not even that they can’t assert that control — they could. It’s that they don’t want to. What other option do cellphone makers have outside of Android? Not much. Yet…
Good article, but as I read it I couldn’t help but think: it’s amazing how little control Google is willing to assert over partners. It’s not even that they can’t assert that control — they could. It’s that they don’t want to. What other option do cellphone makers have outside of Android?
Not much.
Yet Google bends to them when they really shouldn’t. Especially on things like timely updates.
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‘Day One In Depth’
Great new book from the crew at The Sweet Setup. I’ve had a chance to read through most of it, and it is really well done. Day One is an enigma to me: I love the app, but can’t get into a routine with it. I’m thinking this book is going to help with that.
Great new book from the crew at The Sweet Setup. I’ve had a chance to read through most of it, and it is really well done. Day One is an enigma to me: I love the app, but can’t get into a routine with it. I’m thinking this book is going to help with that.
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Anxious Robot on Medium
This is a great new site. I’d say it is one which you must add to your RSS subscriptions, but Medium doesn’t have fucking RSS feeds. I honestly have no clue how you are to accurately follow publications on Medium. Yes, you can follow them, but there’s no easy way… Forget it. This is a…
This is a great new site. I’d say it is one which you must add to your RSS subscriptions, but Medium doesn’t have fucking RSS feeds.
I honestly have no clue how you are to accurately follow publications on Medium. Yes, you can follow them, but there’s no easy way… Forget it.
This is a new thing from Justin Blanton, which means it is worth the follow — whatever the fuck that means on Medium.
UPDATE: Turns out there is a hidden RSS feed:
https://medium.com/feed/@jblantonApparently one of you knew. Thanks! -
My Love-Hate Relationship with ‘Hey, Siri’
I hate talking out loud to Siri, but damn if it isn’t far more useful if you talk out loud to her.
Let me first start by saying that this post is not about the quality or accuracy of Siri. For everything I have used Siri for, it has been more than accurate and I have no issues with Siri as a service.
My problem is the interface itself.
What’s the easiest way to look up a sports score? Siri. What’s the fastest way to set a timer? Siri.
How do I typically look up sports scores? Safari. How do I typically set timers? Control Center.
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The Constant Thinning of Electronic Collections
I don’t dare get rid of this USB 1.1 cable, what if I need it?
Years ago I helped my older sister move from Washington to Arizona. I was young at the time, and still in that phase of life where even if you kept everything you had ever owned — it wouldn’t have amounted to much. So I really didn’t get what someone with an established life would have to move — and it was a ton of stuff as it turned out.
At one point while helping her, I saw a tiny box of clothes they were getting rid of, and I made some bad joke about how it must have been hard to decide to get rid of such a large amount of clothes. That’s when my sister told me about the system she uses to keep their clothes thinned out all the time.