Mike Rohde joins me to talk about notes and Sketchnotes — we also dive into talking about travel journaling.
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The Brooks Review Podcast: Episode Thirteen – Rohde
Mike Rohde joins me to talk about notes and Sketchnotes — we also dive into talking about travel journaling.
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SmartNews
One of my favorite apps for finding new stories to read is Digg, all the others I have tried don’t do a great job curating things down to the truly good. Next Draft also helps with this, but that’s only a weekday newsletter. SmartNews is a new (to the U.S.) app that shows the top…
One of my favorite apps for finding new stories to read is Digg, all the others I have tried don’t do a great job curating things down to the truly good. Next Draft also helps with this, but that’s only a weekday newsletter.
SmartNews is a new (to the U.S.) app that shows the top stories in user selectable categories. I’ve been using it about a day now, and I like it. I don’t love it, as I find the inconsistent content layout between categories odd, but it’s way better than subscribing to “news” type RSS feeds.
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wordpress-convert-post-format on GitHub
Great little plugin from Marcelo Somers. When I switched to this theme I made a big change on the way that posts are displayed, I started to use Post Formats instead of just categories. Previously WordPress would decide how to display a post based on the category, but now that is based on the format.…
Great little plugin from Marcelo Somers. When I switched to this theme I made a big change on the way that posts are displayed, I started to use Post Formats instead of just categories. Previously WordPress would decide how to display a post based on the category, but now that is based on the format. Alas, Editorial and MarsEdit (the two ways I post to this site) don’t support Post Formats so I was left publishing, then logging into the site to change the the format.
With this plugin that is done automatically. This is one reason I love WordPress: the community is so large there is bound to be someone else with the same problems I have, who have also found the solution.
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Ways to Work from Home More Effectively
Carolyn O’Hara on working from home: They discovered that the best workers typically worked intently for around 52 minutes and then took a 17-minute break. And these restorative breaks needn’t take any particular form.
Carolyn O’Hara on working from home:
They discovered that the best workers typically worked intently for around 52 minutes and then took a 17-minute break. And these restorative breaks needn’t take any particular form.
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It Just Works
Russell Ivanovic: On the surface, nothing has changed. The problem is, it feels like everything has changed. In short while Apple’s hardware continues to impress me, their software has gone downhill at a rapid pace.
Russell Ivanovic:
On the surface, nothing has changed. The problem is, it feels like everything has changed. In short while Apple’s hardware continues to impress me, their software has gone downhill at a rapid pace.
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The Newsletter and The Magazine App
I am constantly thinking about starting a newsletter, or a magazine app. But upon further reflection: no thanks.
For a couple years now, these mediums have been gnawing at me. The newsletter, so humble and easy for people to get. And the magazine app, so trendy, stylish, but isolated. I personally don’t subscribe to many newsletters, and I don’t subscribe to any digital magazines. It’s odd, because I think these mediums have merits, and I want to publish on all of them, but they are so hidden compared to the humble blog that I am left perplexed by them.
With each medium there’s a limit to what can be said and often what is said cannot be updated, tweaked, or edited. WordPress has no such limits, I can post 60,000 words in one post and split that into pages, or just right two words. I can edit, tweak, and adjust everything.
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U.S. Law Enforcement Seeks to Halt Apple-Google Encryption of Mobile Data
Del Quentin Wilber: U.S. law enforcement officials are urging Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Google Inc. (GOOG) to give authorities access to smartphone data that the companies have decided to block, and are weighing whether to appeal to executives or seek congressional legislation. Good luck with that. While they are at it, they should also require…
Del Quentin Wilber:
U.S. law enforcement officials are urging Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Google Inc. (GOOG) to give authorities access to smartphone data that the companies have decided to block, and are weighing whether to appeal to executives or seek congressional legislation.
Good luck with that. While they are at it, they should also require that the government gets the keys/codes to all safes — that’s basically what they want.
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Can We Trust Uber? No.
Peter Sims: At that point, it all just started to feel weird, until finally she revealed that she was in Chicago at the launch of Uber Chicago, and that the party featured a screen that showed where in NYC certain “known people” (whatever that means) were currently riding in Uber cabs. After learning this, I…
Peter Sims:
At that point, it all just started to feel weird, until finally she revealed that she was in Chicago at the launch of Uber Chicago, and that the party featured a screen that showed where in NYC certain “known people” (whatever that means) were currently riding in Uber cabs. After learning this, I expressed my outrage to her that the company would use my information and identity to promote its services without my permission. She told me to calm down, and that it was all a “cool” event and as if I should be honored to have been one of the chosen.
Welp, add Uber to the list of things I won’t ever be using again.
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‘Stream your podcast audio live from your iOS device’
This is fantastic, I’ve been wanting to figure this out for a while now.
This is fantastic, I’ve been wanting to figure this out for a while now.
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Release Bash 3.2.53
MacMiniVault has a really fast way to patch BASH on your Mac.
MacMiniVault has a really fast way to patch BASH on your Mac.
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Ready for Rain
Great essay about why, we in Seattle, love the rain.
Great essay about why, we in Seattle, love the rain.
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The Placement of Controls for iPhones 6
Top of the app navigation has got to go, it doesn’t scale for these larger iPhones.
Many of us have had an iPhone 6 in our hands now for just under a week and many of us have already formed opinions on how good, or bad, decisions around the new phone designs are in practice. Yes, the camera bump is unnatural and annoying, but you rarely notice it. Yes it is bigger — too big for some (many?).
There’s been a lot going around about the size of these two new iPhone models. Charts showing where a generic white males thumb can and cannot reach (because all iPhone users are generic white males, right?). Talk about zoomed versus native, and chiding at those developers who did not scramble to update their apps for the new display resolutions.
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iPhone 6 Design Impressions
Ole Begemann on the design of his 6 plus: The way the display glass curves around the sides is stunning and feels great in the hand. There is almost no discernible seam between glass and aluminum. It must have taken Apple’s industrial design team tons of work to arrive at this level of workmanship. The…
Ole Begemann on the design of his 6 plus:
The way the display glass curves around the sides is stunning and feels great in the hand. There is almost no discernible seam between glass and aluminum. It must have taken Apple’s industrial design team tons of work to arrive at this level of workmanship. The curves also make the built-in swipe gestures feel a lot more natural.
I am in 100% agreement here, and in fact his entire ‘design’ segment of his first impressions are spot on.
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Review: The iPhone 6 at 512 Pixels
Stephen Hackett: The iPhone 6 is actually 17 grams heavier than the 5S but it feels lighter, due to not being as dense. The glass over the screen is thinner, making taps feel more hollow than on the old phone, or even the iPad. The combination of these things makes the iPhone 6 feel cheaper…
Stephen Hackett:
The iPhone 6 is actually 17 grams heavier than the 5S but it feels lighter, due to not being as dense. The glass over the screen is thinner, making taps feel more hollow than on the old phone, or even the iPad. The combination of these things makes the iPhone 6 feel cheaper than the 5S somehow.
I agree with most of Hackett’s review, but this blurb I have to strongly disagree with. To me the fit and finish of the iPhone 6, feel in hand, and ever other detail feels leaps and bounds better than the iPhone 5s. It’s not even close if you ask me. I’m not sure what he means about feeling more hollow, it feels more solid to me. The iPhone 5S always felt kind of empty to me.
The iPhone 6 feels like solid metal and glass.
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How to setup Medical ID with iOS 8’s Health app
This is one of my favorite features about iOS 8. It works well, and you can put in a lot of stuff. Do note that you can only see this if you use a passcode to lock your iPhone, but you are doing that right? One thing I added to the medical notes section: a…
This is one of my favorite features about iOS 8. It works well, and you can put in a lot of stuff. Do note that you can only see this if you use a passcode to lock your iPhone, but you are doing that right?
One thing I added to the medical notes section: a reward for returning my phone.
I showed this to a coworker when iOS 8 launched and his response was: who will ever find that? Indeed it is a bit hidden, but iOS is so prevalent that I suspect it won’t take cabbies, or EMTs long to be knowledgeable about this.
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The BASH Vulnerability
There’s a nasty hole in BASH (think Terminal) which affects Macs and should be patched. You can do so manually by following this thread on StackExchange. I patched my Macs already, but note that you need Homebrew, MacPorts, or Xcode installed to use this method.
There’s a nasty hole in BASH (think Terminal) which affects Macs and should be patched. You can do so manually by following this thread on StackExchange. I patched my Macs already, but note that you need Homebrew, MacPorts, or Xcode installed to use this method.
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In-App Browsers Considered Harmful
Craig Hockenberry: How many apps on your iPhone or iPad have a built-in browser? Would it surprise you to know that every one of those apps could eavesdrop on your typing? Even when it’s in a secure login screen with a password field? Oh boy.
Craig Hockenberry:
How many apps on your iPhone or iPad have a built-in browser?
Would it surprise you to know that every one of those apps could eavesdrop on your typing? Even when it’s in a secure login screen with a password field?
Oh boy.
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How Does the iOS 8 Time-lapse Feature Work?
Dan Provost: I am biased, obviously, but I am of the opinion that if you are putting that much time into the creation of your time-lapse, you should have some say over the final output.
Dan Provost:
I am biased, obviously, but I am of the opinion that if you are putting that much time into the creation of your time-lapse, you should have some say over the final output.
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The Practical Aspects of iOS 8
To many iOS 8 is playing catchup to Android, but to me it is a very magical update.
I used to spend an inordinate amount of time testing and writing about any new Apple operating system. This time was only slightly different in that I didn’t spend any time writing about iOS 8, but I did spent a lot of time testing it.
I decided to take a wait and see approach to decide what really need to be said after the surge of ‘reviews’ and ‘thought’ pieces on launch day. I haven’t read them all, but I read and skimmed enough that I think there are two aspects of iOS 8 that are being overlooked: the magic and the ‘about-damned-time’. I’ll tackle each separately, but know that they are very much related.
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Is the App Ecosystem Sustainable?
Bob O’Donnell: The reason is, we’ve now reached a point where there are too many apps (yes, I said it) and there needs to be more focus on quality versus quantity. But if everyone involved seems to think building more mobile apps is their ticket to millions, the problem is just going to get worse.…
Bob O’Donnell:
The reason is, we’ve now reached a point where there are too many apps (yes, I said it) and there needs to be more focus on quality versus quantity. But if everyone involved seems to think building more mobile apps is their ticket to millions, the problem is just going to get worse. And that’s, ultimately, why I believe the app ecosystem could end up buckling under its own weight.