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  • Quote of the Day: Paul Shawcross

    “Why would we spend countless taxpayer dollars on a Death Star with a fundamental flaw that can be exploited by a one-man starship?” — Paul Shawcross

    “Why would we spend countless taxpayer dollars on a Death Star with a fundamental flaw that can be exploited by a one-man starship?”
  • “Open in” Is Not the Solution

    [Federico Viticci has a smart response to](http://www.macstories.net/links/open-in-is-not-the-solution/) my [post about App Silos](https://brooksreview.net/2013/01/app-silos/): >Therefore “Open In”: a menu that copies a file from Location A to Location B, getting from one document to two documents, now available in two different locations. And I would argue that the second most complicated aspect of managing documents is: figuring…

    [Federico Viticci has a smart response to](http://www.macstories.net/links/open-in-is-not-the-solution/) my [post about App Silos](https://brooksreview.net/2013/01/app-silos/):

    >Therefore “Open In”: a menu that copies a file from Location A to Location B, getting from one document to two documents, now available in two different locations. And I would argue that the second most complicated aspect of managing documents is: figuring out the “right” version of a file.

    Viticci is right, of course, that’s something I hadn’t considered. The duplication effect would be horrible, so perhaps a better solution is something more akin to “send this here file to that there app”. Or just a button that reads “Send to…” or “Move to…” depending on which wording Apple likes better (my vote is Send to).

    That would essentially allow you to relocate a file from one silo to another instead of duplicating it. The trouble here for users would simply be remembering where they sent the file, but that’s still less frustrating for average users than seeing the actual file system as you do in Finder.

  • The Dyneema Smart Alec

    400d, lighter and faster.

    Tom Bihn is still iterating on the Smart Alec and their latest change is to the exterior fabric. They have added an option to the bag that has a 400d Dyneema exterior. This is the classic grid patterned nylon that Tom Bihn is known for on the interior of their bags, but a bit thicker now that it is used on the exterior.

    The result is a strong material that is also much lighter. I’m told the bag is now 30% lighter, and I can verify that you can feel the difference when you compare the two side by side.

    Tom Bihn sent me a review unit that I have been testing for a few weeks now and it’s still the fantastic Smart Alec that I love. In day to day use the weight savings aren’t felt, but if you load the two bags for hiking, or any other weight conscious activity, you can and will notice the difference.

    However the difference you will notice everyday is the look of the material. What I’ve always liked about the Smart Alec is its understated look. Yes it’s a nylon backpack, but it still looked handsome and not as nylon-y as other bags. The Smart Alec Dyneema looks like a nylon bag — there’s no way around that.

    At first I really didn’t like the look of the bag — just not my style. It’s less professional looking and a bit “louder”. My father, upon seeing it (he uses my original Smart Alec), loved how it looked and so have a few others that have seen the bag while I have been carrying it around.

    After about a week I was liking the look too, but I still like the original all black better. The gray grid is neat looking and different, but it a bit more outspoken.

    Overall this is yet another great Smart Alec that I’m sure many will love and that hikers should really give serious consideration when choosing a versatile daypack.

    Extras

    With the bag Tom Bihn has sent me some goodies that they just finished up:

    New Tool Strap
    • Tool Strap: This is an all new accessory that has not been released yet, but it is sweet. Basically it is the same as the keyring strap, but has a little rectangular d-ring on one end that allows you to clip things to it. What kind of things? Knives for one — though I believe Tom Bihn mentioned Flashlights too. Either way, what a great little strap.
    • 3D Mesh Organizer Cube: This is actually a great little cube. I have the original 3D Organizer that has clear sides and use that for toiletries, but this one makes an excellent cable tote. Much more compact than the Snake Charmer and thus better for day-to-day use for me.
    • Dyneema Organizer Cube: Same as above, but without the mesh. I don’t like it nearly as much as the mesh version as it traps a bit of air when zipped so it doesn’t compress as easily, but this would be handy to keep prying eyes away. If in doubt, go with the mesh one.
  • Quote of the Day: Tim Lee

    “I worry that Swartz’s prosecution is a sign that America is gradually losing the sense of humor that has made it the home of the world’s innovators and misfits.” — Tim Lee

    “I worry that Swartz’s prosecution is a sign that America is gradually losing the sense of humor that has made it the home of the world’s innovators and misfits.”
  • Quote of the Day: Lawrence Lessig

    “That person is gone today, driven to the edge by what a decent society would only call bullying. I get wrong. But I also get proportionality. And if you don’t get both, you don’t deserve to have the power of the United States government behind you.” — Lawrence Lessig

    “That person is gone today, driven to the edge by what a decent society would only call bullying. I get wrong. But I also get proportionality. And if you don’t get both, you don’t deserve to have the power of the United States government behind you.”
  • Keyboard Maestro as OmniFocus’s Little Helper

    [Patrick Welker has an amazing Keyboard Maestro macro for all OmniFocus users.](http://rocketink.net/2013/01/keyboard-maestro-as-omnifocus%27s-little-helper.html) Be sure to look at the rest of his site, and then kiss your weekend good bye.Just [another reason](https://brooksreview.net/tag/KM-SERIES/) why Keyboard Maestro really is an amazing tool. [via Shawn Blanc]

    [Patrick Welker has an amazing Keyboard Maestro macro for all OmniFocus users.](http://rocketink.net/2013/01/keyboard-maestro-as-omnifocus%27s-little-helper.html) Be sure to look at the rest of his site, and then kiss your weekend good bye.Just [another reason](https://brooksreview.net/tag/KM-SERIES/) why Keyboard Maestro really is an amazing tool.

  • Mobile News Reading and Delivery

    I am a news junkie. There’s no way around that fact. It started in eighth grade when our history/current affairs teacher required students to have a subscription to Newsweek. ((I went to a small, very wealthy, private school where such demands seemed very normal.)) I remember waiting every week in anticipation of the next issue,…

    I am a news junkie. There’s no way around that fact. It started in eighth grade when our history/current affairs teacher required students to have a subscription to Newsweek. ((I went to a small, very wealthy, private school where such demands seemed very normal.)) I remember waiting every week in anticipation of the next issue, reading it cover to cover and being completely enthralled in events occurring in a world that I truly didn’t understand at the time.

    From that moment my love of periodicals exploded. In college I transitioned to publications like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. Then I got a Mac and heard about this little program called NetNewsWire and this technology called RSS.

    I was hooked.

    I’ve spent so much time since then reading RSS feeds that I don’t even care to guess at how long all that time would add up to. At one particularly dark point in my life I subscribed to over 700 RSS feeds.

    ‘700 RSS feeds of what?’, you may ask. To which I would answer: nothing really. I just always wanted there to be at least 100 RSS items to read when I checked in. This was when I discovered that many RSS programs don’t count over a few hundred unread items — oops.

    Life is markedly busier for me now. I still have over 450 RSS subscriptions, but increasingly I think that there *must* be a better way to read about today’s news.

    RSS readers like Fever° do an excellent job of showing what others are linking to and talking about. Things like NextDraft, The Brief, and Evening Edition, do an impeccable job of keeping you informed about worldwide current events and ensuring you don’t look foolish at the next trivia night. None of these really offer you the same experience of following one person, or one outlet, to see the entire river of information coming out of that site. So while you know the gist of what’s going on, you miss a lot of small and very interesting articles.

    With that in mind I set out to see if any enterprising iOS developer has solved this problem. I tested three apps: Summly, Prismatic, and Circa. All three want to rescue you from RSS and keep you informed.

    None of them come close to rescuing *me* from RSS.

    ## Summly

    I initially downloaded [Summly](http://summly.com) because the design looked very nice and—true to the screenshots—is very nice, if a bit confusing at times. Summly asks you to subscribe to different news categories: Headlines, U.S. News, Local News, Technology, World News, etc. Drilling down through the categories shows the different websites from where the news will be sourced, allowing you to “turn off” certain sites, like TechCrunch.

    Once you’ve chosen and subscribed to all the categories you’re interested in Summly shows a list of categories with an unread article count. You can then swipe through the stories, which have been loosely summarized, and see a word count for the article at the top should you decide to read the whole thing.

    The entire interface is gesture driven and it feels backwards. To get to the next story you swipe from right to left. Swiping from bottom to top will, annoyingly, take you back to the category list. Even more annoyingly: Swiping from top to bottom will take you to the full story — which annoys me because I wish I could just tap.

    The most annoying aspect of Summly’s interface is the cover-page. Here you’re shown a total unread count and a “hot” story. The entire page feels like you should be able to swipe and read through all your content, but nope. This is the dumbest screen I have encountered in an iOS app in quite a while.

    Summly’s layout and design is pretty, but its user interaction is horrible. Worse yet: There’s very little value being added to most of the stories and no real eye on “what’s important”. I can’t tell you how many European soccer stories I see. It should be clear, based on my location, preferences, etc, that I probably don’t care for European soccer stories.

    Overall Summly, like many before it, is simply a pretty RSS reader that hides the RSS technology from less advanced users.

    ## Prismatic

    [Prismatic](http://getprismatic.com/landing) has been getting rave reviews from fellow news junkie [Justin Blanton](http://hypertext.net) — that alone was enough to necessitate trying it — and I can see why Justin likes this app. The design is nice and the app is fast. Like Summly, Prismatic is simply an RSS reader with no import or export to OPML files. However, you can actually choose specific sites you want to subscribe to.

    Everything is shown in one long list that snaps to scroll points, which actually feels more like janky scrolling than a feature. Tap a story to read the full thing. You can share but you can’t send a story to a read-it-later service like Instapaper. (None of these apps allow this.)

    I really wanted to like Prismatic, but at the end of the day it’s just another RSS reader that lacks Instapaper support.

    ## Circa

    I had almost given up on the idea that “we” are ready to move beyond RSS when I came across [Circa](http://cir.ca). Let’s get something out of the way right off the bat: Circa is not a pretty looking app. There’s a lot of odd UI choices and overall I really hate the way it looks.

    That said, Circa really is a *good* app. Like Summly the news items are broken into categories, however, unlike Summly you can’t choose those categories: Circa gives you categories for Top Stories, United States, Politics, and World.

    Nothing new here. Clicking on a category opens a list of news headlines with photos and the opening paragraph of the story. Where Circa really changes the game is when you dive *into* a story. What you find is not the full story or a computerized summary of a story: You find a collection of snippets *about* the story.

    This may seem really useless at first glance, but it truly is neat. When I click on a story about black and white TVs still in use in the UK, I find in just five quick swipes the following information:

    – 13,202 users in the UK still use a Black and White TV
    – There are 25 million TVs total in the UK
    – There is some kind of license fee for a color TV that costs more than for a black and white TV
    – There’s a bit about sentimental value
    – And lastly information that Amazon.com sells just one black and white TV for $86.

    I listed those all from memory after skimming the snippets in Circa for 15-30 seconds. This is what Circa excels at: news for people that only want the talking points.

    But Circa doesn’t stop there.

    Let’s say you find a story about the TSA being charged with treason. (I can dream right?) You can hit a follow button on that story and as Circa adds snippets of information to the story, you have quick access back to that story to see subsequent updates.

    Let’s take a story we know a little more about: Apple’s recent rule changes for developers that prevent developers changing screenshots in the App Store without a review. Most readers of this site know, or have read, about this story and it’s a pretty easy concept to grasp.

    Here’s what Circa tells me about the story (in the order shown in the app):

    1. To fight scams, Apple now requires developers to re-submit their app for approval with any screenshot, or description change.
    2. This fights a scam where scammers upload an app and then, once approved, change the screenshot to match a more popular app’s screenshots and descriptions.
    3. This change sucks for legitimate developers, as they now have to pay the same penalty of re-submission.
    4. Panic showed how developers do this, using Mooncraft as an example.

    It’s a simplification of the story, but pretty accurately stated. We have the change Apple made, the reason, the impact to others, and credit to Panic who pointed out the problem.

    In a sense Circa is a larger scale version of Evening Edition or The Brief, where a human (or really good computer algorithm) takes several stories about one topic and uses them all to create an informative, but short, executive summary.

    You can see the source links if you want, but honestly this is best for people who want to read a lot of news, not a lot about the news.

    ## Is this the future?

    My goal was to see if there were any apps that could replace RSS for me. What I found was two RSS reading apps masquerading as something more, and one truly new app. I didn’t find a single app to replace RSS for me.

    Circa is easily the most interesting app of the bunch, which I could truly see myself using when I travel, over the holidays, or any other time I just want a break from RSS. It’s more of a news summary app than a news reader. Still, it’s very good.

    None of these apps do a very good job collecting the stories that are likely to interest me. Services like [Stellar.io](http://stellar.io), or [Instapaper’s social network](https://brooksreview.net/2011/09/ego-less/) do a much better job finding things that truly interest me — but those services only work if a lot of other people use them, which is rather hit and miss from day to day.

    RSS is still king for me, but Circa is a better news information tool than my RSS reader with over 450 RSS feeds. Impressive job, Circa.

  • Quote of the Day: Dan Pallotta

    “Your ability to stand up for your truth is a muscle, and the more you exercise it the stronger it gets. “ — Dan Pallotta

    “Your ability to stand up for your truth is a muscle, and the more you exercise it the stronger it gets. “
  • Microsoft’s Office Suite and Printers Sitting in a Tree…

    [John Moltz makes the argument that part of the reason office suites are less important today is in large part due to the death of printed pages](http://www.macworld.com/article/2023572/office-for-ios-may-be-coming-but-does-it-really-matter-.html): >But eventually I, like many others, simply stopped needing to print. Everything I wrote I transmitted electronically or put on a webpage. And really, good riddance to printing.…

    [John Moltz makes the argument that part of the reason office suites are less important today is in large part due to the death of printed pages](http://www.macworld.com/article/2023572/office-for-ios-may-be-coming-but-does-it-really-matter-.html):

    >But eventually I, like many others, simply stopped needing to print. Everything I wrote I transmitted electronically or put on a webpage. And really, good riddance to printing.

    And if you really think about it, that’s what office suites do: transform your content into something that will fit onto a flat rectangle. Moltz really has a great point and I think it shows just why most people don’t care about office on their tablets.

    There’s a flip side to this, though, and that is spreadsheets. Those are still king of the mountain in business and there is a real need to read Excel files on a mobile device. Apple’s Numbers does an average job at this, but like on the Mac, it is no Excel.

    The problem that Microsoft is facing is of their own creation. Had Microsoft shipped Excel when tablets came out, for tablets, users would have just bought it without thinking twice (business expense FTW). Now that tablets have been in users hands for almost three years, Microsoft has allowed users to figure out that there’s a lot more that can be done on a tablet with no Excel — more to be done than most thought.

    That’s a dangerous line of thinking if you are Microsoft.

    Initially everyone figured that they needed Word, Excel, Outlook, and Powerpoint in order to make a tablet useful, but they bought one anyway and what users found instead was: Safari, iBooks, FaceTime, Angry Birds, Photo Booth, Mail, and so forth. What users found was a tablet that was only marginally less useful than a tablet with Office. Three years later the clamoring for Office on iOS is all but a whisper.

    That’s one big “oops” for Microsoft.

  • The Future of Design

    [Dave Wiskus has an article up on Macworld looking at the state of skeuomorphism in Apple design and where we are headed from there](http://www.macworld.com/article/2023604/apple-and-the-future-of-design.html). Wiskus makes a point that I never considered: that skeuomorphism ([which I loathe](https://brooksreview.net/2011/04/mimics/)) is a bridge, a stopgap, used until the world was deemed ready to be comfortable with digital only…

    [Dave Wiskus has an article up on Macworld looking at the state of skeuomorphism in Apple design and where we are headed from there](http://www.macworld.com/article/2023604/apple-and-the-future-of-design.html). Wiskus makes a point that I never considered: that skeuomorphism ([which I loathe](https://brooksreview.net/2011/04/mimics/)) is a bridge, a stopgap, used until the world was deemed ready to be comfortable with digital only approaches.

    Wiskus thinks that change is about to come:

    >Technology is no longer witchcraft to be feared by the masses. We’ve grown accustomed to having phones, tablets, and computers around us to do things. With both visual and interaction design, we’re nearly past the point of real-world metaphors being useful, and the simplest representation is usually best.

    He points to the ascendence of Jony Ive over all things design at Apple as being the indicator that the time for skeuomorphism to die is coming near. (At least at Apple, who I see as the biggest contributor to the “movement”.)

    It’s a fascinating thought, that Ive will rid the app store of leather isn’t the most interesting bit, but that he will approach design as digital only. A digital only design is something that I cannot picture the look and feel of.

    What is a digital only interface?

    Is it really the interface, or lack thereof, of Clear, Letterpress, and others?

    Or is it something that we have yet to see? Something *more* intuitive to a generation that has grown up not knowing what a floppy disk, Dayrunner, Rolodex, and analog telephone are.

    To those users, the users that will soon be making the tools we use, such physical objects mean nothing. How do you convey saving, pictographically, if the user doesn’t know what a floppy disk is? Apple has largely answered this: you making saving a non-user controlled function that is done automatically (with versions stored for rollback). Apple’s removal of the save button altogether is a far better solution than changing the icon on the button.

    I hope we see more intuitive features like that — tools that allow users to just use the device without having to command the computer every step of the way.

  • The Apps that Stuck in 2012: iPad Edition

    As I noted in my [iPad app usage post from 2011](https://brooksreview.net/2012/01/apps-stuck-ipad/), my iPad is a much different beast than my iPhone. During 2012 the iPad went from a tool primarily used in meetings (those duties shifted more to my iPhone) to a productive part of my computing setup. With the removal of a MacBook Air…

    As I noted in my [iPad app usage post from 2011](https://brooksreview.net/2012/01/apps-stuck-ipad/), my iPad is a much different beast than my iPhone. During 2012 the iPad went from a tool primarily used in meetings (those duties shifted more to my iPhone) to a productive part of my computing setup.

    With the removal of a MacBook Air from my toolset, and the retina MacBook Pro being much less portable, the iPad has picked up the slack. Over the course of 2012 I used my iPad for a few things (in order of most use):

    1. Reading.
    2. Writing.
    3. Wasting time.

    ## Reading

    I use my iPad to read a lot. Here’s the apps I use for reading:

    – [iBooks](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id364709193): I prefer this to Kindle because I can buy the books directly in the app — this is powerful for Apple — but don’t love the UI of the reading interface. It’s six-in-one half-dozen-in-the-other for Kindle v. iBooks.
    – [Instapaper](http://www.instapaper.com): Still the gold standard in the “read it later” game, although lately I’ve noticed more crashes than normal. Is it just me?
    – [NextDraft](http://nextdraft.com): It’s where I find the most interesting things to read on the web — and one thing I look forward to each work day.

    I have a few Newsstand apps, but none that I read often enough to feel they warranted inclusion on this list for 2012.

    ## Writing

    I use more than just iA Writer to write on my iPad. In order of most used:

    – [iA Writer](http://www.iawriter.com): It’s just perfect.
    – [Poster](http://www.tomwitkin.com/poster/): For getting stuff into WordPress. It even holds it’s own as a writing app.
    – [OmniOutliner](https://www.omnigroup.com/products/omnioutliner-ipad/): For outlining bigger posts and taking notes.
    – [Notesy](http://notesy-app.com): Dropbox access to my notes.
    – [Drafts](http://agiletortoise.com/drafts): My scratch paper.
    – [Paper](http://www.fiftythree.com/paper): My more literal scratch paper.

    The first two are most used by a wide margin. The rest are useful enough that they’re on my Home screen, but not so useful that I would miss one if they didn’t exist. The lack of OmniOutliner would be a pain, but I’m not a big outliner anyway.

    ## Time Wasting

    Another way of saying: ‘games’. I’m not a huge gamer on my iPhone, but I love to play games on my iPad. Here’s some of my favorites:

    – [Fifa 2013](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fifa-soccer-13-by-ea-sports/id547407138?mt=8)
    – [The Room](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/the-room/id552039496?mt=8)
    – [Plague Inc.](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/plague-inc./id525818839?mt=8)

    You may note the absence of Letterpress. I think Letterpress is better played on the iPhone.

    ### TV Shows

    I’ve mentioned before that [I stream videos from my old G4 Mac mini to my Apple TV using FileBrowser](https://brooksreview.net/2012/08/g4-for-life/). I also use FileBrowser to watch TV Shows on my iPad. It really is a good app, but it’s ugly as all hell.

    ## Honorable Mention

    Apple’s [Pages](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pages/id361309726?mt=8) gets a mention here because of its ability, added late in the year, to track and view changes made to documents. It’s become the best tool for me to review leases and other real estate documents. Pages is so much better that it may find its way to my Home screen by the end of January.

    ## 2013

    All I want for 2013 is a useable iPad calendar. I’ve been using Agenda and Calvetica, which are less than stellar on the iPad.

    Please, developers, just make a good calendar app already. (Maybe Fantastical for iPad?)

  • The Apps that Stuck in 2012 — iPhone Edition

    [Once again](https://brooksreview.net/2012/01/apps-stuck-iphone/) I tested a ton of different apps over the course of the year. Many of the apps I never, or perhaps only briefly, mentioned on the site. Let’s take a look at the apps that I ended the year using. ## Weather At the end of 2011 I was back on the [Apple…

    [Once again](https://brooksreview.net/2012/01/apps-stuck-iphone/) I tested a ton of different apps over the course of the year. Many of the apps I never, or perhaps only briefly, mentioned on the site.

    Let’s take a look at the apps that I ended the year using.

    ## Weather

    At the end of 2011 I was back on the [Apple Weather app](https://brooksreview.net/2012/09/apple-weather/). By the end of 2012 I have two weather apps on my Home screen — and a lot of other apps that challenged them.

    For a good chunk of the year I was using the built-in weather app. Apple’s done a better job than most transitioning the app to the iPhone 5, and I really give them credit for a job well done.

    At the end of the year, however, I am a firm believer in [Check the Weather](https://brooksreview.net/2012/10/check-the-weather/) as the best all-around iOS weather app you can currently get. It has everything, including Dark Sky integration.

    Speaking of [Dark Sky](https://brooksreview.net/2012/04/dark-sky-review/), it’s still worth having on your phone even if you own Check the Weather. The push notifications alone are fantastic, but moreover the app itself looks gorgeous and offers a better graph for upcoming precipitation. I *absolutely* love Dark Sky.

    Some others I tried but they didn’t stick: [S°lar](https://brooksreview.net/2012/07/solar-review/), [WTHR](https://brooksreview.net/2012/06/wthr/), and [Sun](http://pattern.dk/sun/). Each of those are good apps, with a pretty aesthetic, but I found each lacking in some way, shape, or form.

    ## Calendar

    I wish I could stick with one calendar app, but this year I was fed up with them all. [Agenda](https://brooksreview.net/2012/06/agenda-3/) has long been my go-to iOS calendar app, but it was dethroned on my iPhone this year.

    First [Today](https://brooksreview.net/2012/08/calendar-today/) kicked it off. The simplicity of today was a breath of fresh air, but the design of the app is terrible. Next, [Tempus](https://brooksreview.net/2012/04/tempus/) poked its head back up and showed me it’s refreshing design, but again the app was lacking. Finally I found an app I love: [Fantastical](https://brooksreview.net/2012/11/fantastical-iphone/). It really is *the* best calendar app on iOS — iPhone or iPad — hands down.

    At the end of this year I’m very happy with Fantastical. It’s not my perfect app, but it is the best calendar app in the store. The only caveat is the limited number of days visible at a glance: Agenda is still better if you need to see more.

    ## Flashlights

    I went on a tear this year to find the best—no, *fastest*—flashlight app. I chose [Lighty](https://brooksreview.net/2012/08/flashlight-iphone/), which was dethroned by [iTorch Pro](https://brooksreview.net/2012/11/itorch-4/) soon after.

    There’s a lot I don’t like about iTorch, the icon and the UI among them, but I love the speed of the app and the ability to dim the flashlight (if only a bit). Very well worth the money: It’s the fastest flashlight in the store.

    ## The Rest of the Lot

    That’s it for this year’s challenges. Now for the mainstays on my Home screen (i.e. the apps you should own):

    – [iA Writer](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/ia-writer/id392502056?mt=8): Simply fantastic. Integrated and consistent writing interface between iOS and the Mac: What more could I want? I use this app everyday. The greatest testament is that I didn’t even bother trying to look for its replacement. (And is it just me, or has the whole Dropbox-powered iOS text editor sector died down lately?)
    – [Poster](http://www.tomwitkin.com/poster/): When stuff is done in Writer, I use Poster to send it to this site. Not only [is Poster excellent](https://brooksreview.net/2012/08/poster-a-wordpress-blog-editor/), it beats the crap out of the official WordPress iOS app. There’s not much I don’t like about Poster — it’s right up there for best new app in 2012 in my book.
    – [OmniFocus](https://www.omnigroup.com/products/omnifocus-iphone/): It isn’t even challenged these days — nothing compares. [End-to-end encrypted sync](https://brooksreview.net/2012/06/secure-of-sync/), robust, stable, perfection. It’s just silly to use anything else at this point.
    – [Soulver](http://www.acqualia.com/soulver/): Why anyone uses any other calculator app is beyond me — I’d have to ask an Android user to explain it to me.
    – [Sunstroke](https://goneeast.com/sunstroke/): Best way to read your Fever° RSS links on the iPhone. Actually it’s the best way to interact with Fever°, period.
    – [Scratch](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scratch-your-quick-input-notepad/id533320655?mt=8): What a great app. I like [Drafts](https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/drafts/id502385074?mt=8) too, but Scratch suits me much better for reasons I cannot verbalize.
    – [Felix](http://www.tigerbears.com/felix/): Hands down the best iOS App.net client on the market. Forget about robot interfaces, just use a *good* interface.

    ## 2013

    There are other apps on my Home screen, but nothing I would emphatically urge you to own. For 2013 I am hoping for a perfect calendar app, but not holding my breath. Oh, and [I still want this](https://brooksreview.net/2012/07/open-road/).

  • Quote of the Day: Don Melton

    “If your signature is longer than your actual email content, then you’ve failed at the Internet and you must leave. Now.” — Don Melton

    “If your signature is longer than your actual email content, then you’ve failed at the Internet and you must leave. Now.”
  • VIPR Teams

    [Christopher Elliot (writing on Linked In of all places) has this interesting nugget for us](http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130102105144-332179-the-tsa-wants-to-be-everywhere-in-2013-here-s-why-we-shouldn-t-let-it?_mSplash=1): >Few people know that $105 million of their taxpayer dollars are going to fund 37 VIPR teams in 2012, whose purpose is to “augment” the security of any mode of transportation. They don’t realize that these VIPR teams can show…

    [Christopher Elliot (writing on Linked In of all places) has this interesting nugget for us](http://www.linkedin.com/today/post/article/20130102105144-332179-the-tsa-wants-to-be-everywhere-in-2013-here-s-why-we-shouldn-t-let-it?_mSplash=1):

    >Few people know that $105 million of their taxpayer dollars are going to fund 37 VIPR teams in 2012, whose purpose is to “augment” the security of any mode of transportation. They don’t realize that these VIPR teams can show up virtually anytime, anywhere and without warning, subjecting you to a search of your vehicle or person.

    Who runs the VIPR teams? Well, that would be the incredibly “reasonable” TSA. Yep, say it all together now: FUCK.

    It can’t be all bad though because I do believe this is how North Korea operates and I don’t recall ever hearing about a terrorist attack on North Korean soil.

  • Quote of the Day: Chuck Skoda

    “Apple is a leader in building devices that people use.” – Chuck Skoda

    “Apple is a leader in building devices that people use.”
  • ‘Apple’s QA Guys Are Sleeping’

    [Craig Grannell commenting on the latest round of Apple’s software not working because of date issues](http://reverttosaved.com/2013/01/04/do-not-disturb-apples-qa-guys-are-sleeping/): >Do Not Disturb failing to work is something that shouldn’t have happened, because someone should have remembered Apple’s previous failings with time-related features and rigorously tested it. That the feature did fail points to either a lack of engineers/testers…

    [Craig Grannell commenting on the latest round of Apple’s software not working because of date issues](http://reverttosaved.com/2013/01/04/do-not-disturb-apples-qa-guys-are-sleeping/):

    >Do Not Disturb failing to work is something that shouldn’t have happened, because someone should have remembered Apple’s previous failings with time-related features and rigorously tested it. That the feature did fail points to either a lack of engineers/testers at Apple, or a lack of giving a shit, and neither of those things is really acceptable.

    It’s hard to argue with Grannell here. That Apple’s response was a knowledge base article that included no apology is also bullshit. There’s some things really concerning about this entire mess — and it is a mess — that I want to point out:

    1. That Apple’s only response is a support article.
    2. That Apple feels it is acceptable to users to “wait it out” instead of issuing a fix — assuming, of course, Apple can fix this in a day or two.
    3. That yet another date bug slipped through Apple’s testing.
    4. That the general Apple tech-press has largely decided to give Apple a pass, leaving only the “usual” naysayers to their business.

    How is this problem so acceptable to Apple and to those that love Apple?

    [Apple has refused to comment](http://arstechnica.com/apple/2013/01/ask-ars-why-will-apples-do-not-disturb-bug-fix-itself-next-week/). That even Jim Dalrymple, the purveyor of calling bullshit, [offered no commentary](http://www.loopinsight.com/2013/01/02/do-not-disturb-will-fix-itself/). [That John Gruber made a small joke out of it](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2013/01/02/do-not-disturb) (granted at Apple’s expense, but still [less of a slap on the wrist than Google got](http://thebrief.io/2013/friday-january-4th/#google_gets_off_the_hook_in_ftc_antitrust_investigation)). [Even the Android loving *The Verge* didn’t jump down Apple’s throats](http://www.theverge.com/2013/1/2/3828300/apple-do-not-disturb-fix).

    What the hell?

  • American Internet

    [Susan Crawford has a great piece in Bloomberg about the sorry state of America’s fiber Internet plans](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-27/u-s-internet-users-pay-more-for-slower-service.html) (via [The Loop](http://www.loopinsight.com/2012/12/31/the-shoddy-state-of-u-s-internet-service/)): > Also in 2011, six Time Warner lobbyists persuaded the North Carolina legislature to pass a “level playing field” bill making it impossible for cities in that state to create their own high-speed Internet access…

    [Susan Crawford has a great piece in Bloomberg about the sorry state of America’s fiber Internet plans](http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-27/u-s-internet-users-pay-more-for-slower-service.html) (via [The Loop](http://www.loopinsight.com/2012/12/31/the-shoddy-state-of-u-s-internet-service/)):

    > Also in 2011, six Time Warner lobbyists persuaded the North Carolina legislature to pass a “level playing field” bill making it impossible for cities in that state to create their own high-speed Internet access networks. Time Warner, which reported $26 billion in revenue in 2010, donated more than $6.3 million to North Carolina politicians over four years. Eighteen other states have laws that make it extremely difficult or impossible for cities to provide this service to their residents.

    There should be little doubt in American minds that Cable companies are greedy and out to service themselves only. I’ve had a lot of run-ins with Comcast over shoddy service, and even worse customer service, but more troubling than an evil corporation is an evil corporation that hamstrings the government. Which is what the cable companies are succeeding at right now, and it’s bullshit.

    I think it’s a bit of a stretch to maintain that Internet access is as necessary as water or power, but I don’t think it is a stretch to say that lacking high quality Internet service significantly hampers innovation and a country’s ability to stay relevant in a global economy.

    Add fiber to the (long) list of things that America needs to get its act together on.

    Here in Tacoma, Washington we have Comcast, and [Click](http://www.click-network.com/Internet/tabid/73/Default.aspx). Click is actually run by the city and offers solid service with decent speed. When Click initially rolled out, any building that wanted to add their service had to install Click cable lines and jacks, because Comcast claimed ownership to the others. (Today I am told they have worked out this bullshit and share the lines. ) So I lived in one apartment that had two cable jacks right next to each other in every room. One was Click, one was Comcast, but by the time I moved in they agreed to share the jacks and thus one outlet actually didn’t work.

  • Quote of the Day: Marco Arment

    “But Google’s increasingly desperate push to cram Google+ down everyone’s throats hasn’t made Google+ any more relevant.” – Marco Arment

    “But Google’s increasingly desperate push to cram Google+ down everyone’s throats hasn’t made Google+ any more relevant.”
  • App Silos

    My [recent post on Dropbox versus iCloud](https://brooksreview.net/2012/12/linchpin/) sparked a [little debate on App.net](http://treeview.simon.geek.nz/home/thread/2187381#a2187381) (click the link below the last comment to show all comments) and in my inbox. The common thread that I have seen from naysayers — those who believe Dropbox will always be better than iCloud — is simply that access to the…

    My [recent post on Dropbox versus iCloud](https://brooksreview.net/2012/12/linchpin/) sparked a [little debate on App.net](http://treeview.simon.geek.nz/home/thread/2187381#a2187381) (click the link below the last comment to show all comments) and in my inbox. The common thread that I have seen from naysayers — those who believe Dropbox will always be better than iCloud — is simply that access to the file system is still needed. People believe that file system access is not only wanted, but necessary for *any* advanced computer user. I find this line of thinking short-sighted: Looking more at “the now” than “the future”.

    Dropbox is the best of the best right *now*, however, Dropbox is not likely the best for the future. Future technology is going to look more like iCloud than it does Dropbox — we know this already because tablets and smartphones are far more popular than computers and when is the last time you popped open Finder on your iPhone? This, understandably, worries many geeks.

    People don’t want to be tied to one app for a certain file type, stuck in these app silos where the data only exists within one app. This feels like a dictator telling us how we can use *our* devices and it understandably rubs advanced users the wrong way. Moreover the huge fear is that if we go the way of obscuring the file system, like it is in iOS, advanced users will be stuck in a world where we lack control over our own creations.

    You can see this pain right now by saving a PDF to iCloud in Preview on your Mac and then trying to retrieve that PDF on your iPad. You can’t retrieve it on your iPad because there is no Preview for iPad that can access that file. And even if you have PDFPen installed on your iPad, you still can’t access that PDF file. This is a legitimate problem.

    More frustrating still is that many users see this as restrictive and unnecessarily constraining a user to one single app. What if you want to write in ByWord on your iPad, Simplenote on your iPhone, and iA Writer on your Mac? The only way to “share” one file between the lot is with Dropbox, not iCloud.

    And while it’s up to Apple to solve the stupidity that is iCloud in TextEdit and Preview, the larger problem of obscuring the file system seems easily cured by Apple.

    The only thing that iCloud really needs is an iOS style “open in” dialog for transporting files around. Add that dialog to all iCloud enabled apps and I can’t see any need for Dropbox if you stay within Apple’s “world”. ((Meaning you use iOS and OS X only.))

    Users don’t need to see the file system as much as they just need to be able to open their files in any app that they wish. You could argue that you like folders, which mix file types, but I think it’s becoming clear that this is just not as necessary as many people *think*.

    Enter: [Plain Cloud](http://cookingrobot.de/plaincloud/).

    Plain Cloud is a little app that lists all iCloud apps with how many files each app is storing in iCloud. Click on an app and Plain Cloud opens the folder containing those files in Finder. Very simple.

    This doesn’t solve all problems geeks have with iCloud, but for users in between novice and geek, a tool like Plain Cloud actually makes iCloud *easier* to grasp and use than Dropbox. (Easier to understand too.)

    Here’s the iCloud workflow for typical users:

    1. Enable iCloud
    2. Open files from a dialog that pops up listing all the files you have made in that app.
    3. Saving is automatic.
    4. If you ever need access to a specific file outside of iCloud, open Plain Cloud.

    That’s an order of magnitude easier than the same workflow with Dropbox. Dropbox requires you to authenticate, select where you want the file saved, find that same location when you want to open the file, and choose the app to open the file with.

    Basically: Dropbox requires using Finder, and [Finder sucks](https://alpha.app.net/rands/post/2260591).

    iCloud requires that you use Finder via an “open” dialog, but that dialog is friendlier looking and better designed than Finder itself.

    The biggest shortcoming I see with iCloud is simply that it’s Apple only and yet I’m not sure how much that shortcoming matters. iCloud is a huge selling point for Apple if, and *only* if, it’s widely liked, which bodes well for users hoping things get better.

    I think the easiest way for Apple to appease those less than impressed with iCloud is to add the “Open in…” dialog to all iCloud apps and finally allow users to “share” iCloud documents between apps.

    This is not to say that Apple will change anything fundamental about iCloud. I don’t think we will see a move towards Dropbox-like ubiquity, but I do think Apple will make a few smaller tweaks that effect how apps interact with iCloud, which will greatly improve the service.

  • But These Ads are Pretty Ads

    John Gruber [makes a bold claim, while commenting on Sullivan’s post](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2013/01/02/the-dish): >DF, among [other](http://decknetwork.net/) notable examples, is living proof that advertising can be quick-loading, noticeable but un-distracting, and unrelated to the corrupting influence of pageviews. I hold Gruber’s site in very high regard, but his assertion that ads from The Deck are living proof of…

    John Gruber [makes a bold claim, while commenting on Sullivan’s post](http://daringfireball.net/linked/2013/01/02/the-dish):

    >DF, among [other](http://decknetwork.net/) notable examples, is living proof that advertising can be quick-loading, noticeable but un-distracting, and unrelated to the corrupting influence of pageviews.

    I hold Gruber’s site in very high regard, but his assertion that ads from The Deck are living proof of an ad that is “noticeable but un-distracting” is pure hyperbole.

    I reloaded that *Daring Fireball* article at least 50 times and grabbed screenshots of the page with every new ad shown — 14 in total. Of those 14 new ads, I tested each by looking at them one after another and I found that 7 pulled my eye immediately from the content to the ad. That’s not what I would call “un-distracting”. Fifty percent of the ads *were* distracting (albeit in a highly subjective test) — I think a better term for ads from The Deck would be: *less* distracting than any other ad on the web.

    The problem that publishers face is that ads *must* be distracting to be effective. That’s why I hope Sullivan succeeds: he’s going paywall without ads. I wish more people had the balls to do that.

    This is also where Gruber is getting tripped up with ads from The Deck: They are indeed great ads, mostly (there was one American Apparel ad that featured a nude woman only covered by a red bag — not offensive to me — but I’d be pissed if that was on my site) but no matter how great an ad looks, it’s still an ad. Ads are made to distract — even if just a little — it’s still a distraction.

    So here’s hoping 2013 is the year that content becomes king and advertising is shown the backseat, or better yet, the door.