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Quote of the Day: Craig Mod
“Giving a shit does not require capital, simply attention and humility and diligence. Giving a shit is the best feeling you can imbue craft with.” – Craig Mod
“Giving a shit does not require capital, simply attention and humility and diligence. Giving a shit is the best feeling you can imbue craft with.” -
Where’s the Justice at Justice?
Maureen Dowd: “It’s hypocritical,” [James] Risen said. “A lot of people still think this is some kind of game or signal or spin. They don’t want to believe that Obama wants to crack down on the press and whistle-blowers. But he does. He’s the greatest enemy to press freedom in a generation.” This is one…
Maureen Dowd:
“It’s hypocritical,” [James] Risen said. “A lot of people still think this is some kind of game or signal or spin. They don’t want to believe that Obama wants to crack down on the press and whistle-blowers. But he does. He’s the greatest enemy to press freedom in a generation.”
This is one of the last things I would have pegged Obama as being, but thus far his administration has been aggressive at pursuing “leaks” — which would be fine, but he doesn’t seem overly concerned at respecting journalism.
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Tragic Times in America
The failure of America’s police force in Ferguson is a national tragedy.
This week a tragic thing has been ongoing and largely ignored in this country: a young man was shot, the police over reacted, and journalists were arrested for reporting — and so much more.
Amy Davidson sums up the spark for this tragedy well:
Michael Brown didn’t die in the dark. He was eighteen years old, walking down a street in Ferguson, Missouri, from his apartment to his grandmother’s, at 2:15 on a bright Saturday afternoon. He was, for a young man, exactly where he should be—among other things, days away from his first college classes. A policeman stopped him; it’s not clear why. People in the neighborhood have told reporters that they remember what happened next as a series of movements: the officer, it seemed to them, trying to put Brown into a car; Brown running with his hands in the air; the policeman shooting; Brown falling.
The response to this was absolutely fucking nuts. There was looting and rioting, which is very bad. But the police didn’t even come close to handling the situation well.
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Vesper and Hand Notes
Josh Ginter writing about Vesper: If I find myself without a pen and memo book and I have a thought or journal idea, I quickly jot it down in Vesper. Once I get back to my written journal, I can write the contents of the note in my book and expand on them if necessary.…
Josh Ginter writing about Vesper:
If I find myself without a pen and memo book and I have a thought or journal idea, I quickly jot it down in Vesper. Once I get back to my written journal, I can write the contents of the note in my book and expand on them if necessary.
As I talked about with Patrick Rhone on my podcast, I will simply never understand this mindset of analog first tools. To me it is backwards: notes should be flowing back into apps like Vesper, not the other way around.
But all of that is beside the point of this link.
Because the point of this link is two-fold:
- Ginter has written an excellent review, and the accompanying photography is outstanding. If he keeps up this level of work I’m out of a gig.
- He makes some really good points about Vesper in general, which is worth reading if Vesper makes you scratch your head.
Ginter clearly loves the app, and it’s an odd app to love because on ‘paper’ there are so many better options (Simplenote to name one).
But as I said in my review of the app: “You either are compelled to use things you love because of practicality or because of the way they make you feel.”
Vesper sits next to Simplenote on my iPhone and I use Vesper for everything — unless I absolutely know I need that info back on my Mac. Simplenote is really only used to receive things from my Mac, because most of the time I just don’t need notes on all my devices, as I mostly just need them on a device I have with me.
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The Brooks Review Podcast: Episode Seven – Glowing Rectangles
Today I am joined by Patrick Rhone of Minimal Mac and The Cramped, as we discuss putting our glowing rectangles down, and using an actual pen for writing. Bonus content: Patrick takes me to task over my often lack of editing my blog posts. Thanks to Hoban Cards for sponsoring.
Today I am joined by Patrick Rhone of Minimal Mac and The Cramped, as we discuss putting our glowing rectangles down, and using an actual pen for writing. Bonus content: Patrick takes me to task over my often lack of editing my blog posts.
Thanks to Hoban Cards for sponsoring.
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SpamSieve
This is the only option for ridding yourself of spam.
When I initially setup my Mac mini server, I did so by using the Server.app IMAP tools and SPAM filtering tools. Things started off just fine, but after a couple of months the SPAM I was getting started to get out of hand. SPAM messages were coming right through the SPAM filtering Apple was trying to do and was dirtying up my inbox — SPAM was driving me nuts. This amounts to 81 SPAM emails per day and I would say Apple’s system caught 20% of them.
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Don’t Forget To Remember This
An outstanding post from John Carey on the state of photography: Your tool of choice is your choice. Spend money on a camera, or not, but don’t do it to feel more confident or to fit in. Buy a camera that suits your lifestyle. Really love this, be sure to make time to soak it…
An outstanding post from John Carey on the state of photography:
Your tool of choice is your choice. Spend money on a camera, or not, but don’t do it to feel more confident or to fit in. Buy a camera that suits your lifestyle.
Really love this, be sure to make time to soak it all in.
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Dear Dads: Here’s How to Talk to Girls
Angelica Asadi: I grew up imagining I could do anything that any one of my brothers could do. Society decided to disagree with me and threw obstacles in my way. A person was at every corner telling me that I could not achieve all that I dream of because I was born the wrong gender.…
Angelica Asadi:
I grew up imagining I could do anything that any one of my brothers could do. Society decided to disagree with me and threw obstacles in my way. A person was at every corner telling me that I could not achieve all that I dream of because I was born the wrong gender. The truth is, I could have taken every single obstacle and turned them all into a stepping stone to get me where I wanted, if the one man in my life who I trusted more than anyone else believed in me. Instead, I hid from the world, I hid from the challenges, and brought up every excuse for not pushing the boundaries, because deep down inside, I began to believe I was not good enough.
The scariest thing in the world to me is not properly supporting my two little girls so that they never feel held back by stupid bullshit — coming from me or anyone else.
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ReFocus
It’s time to start taking back the time sucking activities we all love to indulge in.
Some of you may have noticed that a chunk of the writing here has once again been about productivity (beyond just Keyboard Maestro). Part of this is what I call ‘the natural cycle of human interest’ — a thing which ebbs and flows over time and topics bringing you back to the same topics you once thought to be fully explored. I think we have all experienced this at some point in our lives — things which were once near obsession are mostly out of our heads, only to pop back up years later.
I used to write a productivity blog, and a photography blog too. Those are still topics I know and love, but they aren’t what has captivated most of my attention.
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Quote of the Day: Guy English
“Being opinionated and shipping the truest form of your vision of software doesn’t assure success.” — Guy English
“Being opinionated and shipping the truest form of your vision of software doesn’t assure success.” -
Patience and Details
Regaining the patience that I once had, and which I desperately need now.
I used to be a patient person, or at least I think I used to be a patient person. I at least know that people used to tell me that I was a patient person, but I also know it has been nearly a decade since anyone thrusted that label upon me.
I was the guy that had no problem spending hours polishing and waxing my car. Now I often stare at that last fender wondering: “Does it even need wax, no one would notice, right?” I used to spend an entire month working on a problem and be happy when I finally solved it — never feeling the urgent need to half-ass it just to get it off my plate.
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The Brooks Review Podcast: Episode Six – Indie v. Corporate
This week I am joined by Bryan Clark, a mobile designer at Starbucks and creator of Blixt — the best App.net client ever. We talk about mobile design life as an indie, versus at a large corporation. We also dive into our iOS 8 dreams. I really love this episode. Thanks to Hoban Cards and…
This week I am joined by Bryan Clark, a mobile designer at Starbucks and creator of Blixt — the best App.net client ever. We talk about mobile design life as an indie, versus at a large corporation. We also dive into our iOS 8 dreams.
I really love this episode.
Thanks to Hoban Cards and Word Counter.
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Übersicht – JavaScript Widgets on you Desktop
Very cool tool (see Patrick Welker’s description). The main reason I like this over Geektool: I can style it using CSS and that is awesome.
Very cool tool (see Patrick Welker’s description). The main reason I like this over Geektool: I can style it using CSS and that is awesome.
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Simple To-Do List Apps on Vimeo
Nice video talking about the two most important features of a to-do list app: adding tasks and checking them off.
Nice video talking about the two most important features of a to-do list app: adding tasks and checking them off.
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Barack Obama’s Secret Terrorist-Tracking System
Jeremy Scahill and Ryan Devereaux: “We’re getting into Minority Report territory when being friends with the wrong person can mean the government puts you in a database and adds DMV photos, iris scans, and face recognition technology to track you secretly and without your knowledge,” says Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s…
Jeremy Scahill and Ryan Devereaux:
“We’re getting into Minority Report territory when being friends with the wrong person can mean the government puts you in a database and adds DMV photos, iris scans, and face recognition technology to track you secretly and without your knowledge,” says Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Security Project. “The fact that this information can be shared with agencies from the CIA to the NYPD, which are not known for protecting civil liberties, brings us closer to an invasive and rights-violating government surveillance society at home and abroad.”
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nemex.io
Think of this like a personal, self-hosted, version of Day One. It’s really nice, and really neat. In particular I like that I can have different projects to organize. Right off the bat I created a “shots” project to save snapshots of the kids that I like, and a “thoughts” project to save snippets of…
Think of this like a personal, self-hosted, version of Day One. It’s really nice, and really neat. In particular I like that I can have different projects to organize.
Right off the bat I created a “shots” project to save snapshots of the kids that I like, and a “thoughts” project to save snippets of things I am wondering about.
Very neat, very simple to install.
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Is Every Speed Limit Too Low?
Alex Mayyasi: It seems counterintuitive, but it’s a formula Americans should love: Raise speed limits, make roads safer. Interesting read on how speed limits are set. I’d also point out that people perceive driving faster as more dangerous so a couple factors of faster speed limits could also come into play: Better focus when on…
Alex Mayyasi:
It seems counterintuitive, but it’s a formula Americans should love: Raise speed limits, make roads safer.
Interesting read on how speed limits are set. I’d also point out that people perceive driving faster as more dangerous so a couple factors of faster speed limits could also come into play:- Better focus when on highways (e.g. No cell phone use.)
- Slower drivers avoiding faster highways when not needed.
I’m a fan all around of faster speed limits.
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Quote of the Day: CJ Chilvers
“As noble as you may believe your pursuit of excellence is, it means nothing if you go home at night to people who do not recognize you or want you around.” — CJ Chilvers
“As noble as you may believe your pursuit of excellence is, it means nothing if you go home at night to people who do not recognize you or want you around.” -
Smallpdf.com
Glad this exists, I get a lot of questions everyday about how to do just this.
Glad this exists, I get a lot of questions everyday about how to do just this.
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I Still Can’t Be Ok With Just My iPhone
I try out the Lesser Photographer approach and find that, once again, I focused on the gear and not the content.
After talking with CJ Chilvers on my podcast I couldn’t help but to keep thinking about the mantra that he puts forth for photographers of all skill levels to follow. Chilvers’ overall philosophy can best be distilled down to: worry less about what you use to take pictures, and more about what is in your pictures. And even at that: try your best to always tell a compelling story.
And I agree with him, well in principle, because when it comes to practicing his mantra it is a whole different ballgame.
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