Troy Hunt makes a great case for using 1Password (a tool I swear by). I particularly like all the detail he goes into on why you should take the time and the pain in the ass factor to do this kind of thing.
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The Only Secure Password Is the One You Can’t Remember
Troy Hunt makes a great case for using 1Password (a tool I swear by). I particularly like all the detail he goes into on why you should take the time and the pain in the ass factor to do this kind of thing.
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remacable
Liam Cassidy over at remacable was kind enough to interview me — we talked about a lot of things including geeking out on some software and time management stuff. Be sure to check it out and subscribe to his new site.
Liam Cassidy over at remacable was kind enough to interview me — we talked about a lot of things including geeking out on some software and time management stuff.
Be sure to check it out and subscribe to his new site.
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OmniFocus Perspectives Galore
This is a great rundown on how to create perspectives in OmniFocus, particularly how to create the ‘Today’ view so many people love. Very close to what I do. More than anything else this is a great way to learn more about perspectives.
This is a great rundown on how to create perspectives in OmniFocus, particularly how to create the ‘Today’ view so many people love. Very close to what I do.
More than anything else this is a great way to learn more about perspectives.
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The New York Times’ Paywall Explained Mathematically
Felix Salmon breaking down the cost of the NYT paywall in a mathematical formula: The message being sent here is weird: that access to the website is worth nothing. Mathematically, if A+B=$15, A+C=$20, and A+B+C=$35, then A=$0. Where ‘A’ is the website, what a great point.
Felix Salmon breaking down the cost of the NYT paywall in a mathematical formula:
The message being sent here is weird: that access to the website is worth nothing. Mathematically, if A+B=$15, A+C=$20, and A+B+C=$35, then A=$0.
Where ‘A’ is the website, what a great point.
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From the Archives: My PlayBook Review
Let’s not forget that I had an early prototype that I reviewed way back in September of 2010.
Let’s not forget that I had an early prototype that I reviewed way back in September of 2010.
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Flow: Task Management and Online Collaboration for Teams
I had the opportunity to beta test the web based task management system and its iPhone app and I have to say that if I wasn’t already so invested in OmniFocus it would be the task management system that I would be using. It has some great collaboration features that I think could make Basecamp…
I had the opportunity to beta test the web based task management system and its iPhone app and I have to say that if I wasn’t already so invested in OmniFocus it would be the task management system that I would be using. It has some great collaboration features that I think could make Basecamp obsolete for many teams.
It isn’t a strict OmniFocus replacement and that is good because I think for a lot of people OmniFocus doesn’t work. Flow though is now the app that I will recommend people start with when they are trying to get into digital task management.
The pricing is also very interesting: $9.99/mo or $99/yr. ((That’s according to Ian Hines, so it’s his ass if that info is wrong. I couldn’t get the site to load to put my eyeballs on the price. Though, I do trust Ian.)) I am glad they aren’t doing a free thing, but man this seems a bit steep.
(Also the site is being hammered right now and is running slow, which is never a good sign from a new user perspective.)
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BlackBerry PlayBook Price
According to the press release it will cost $499 for the 16GB WiFi only model, so kudos to them for being able to announce that. It is still not shipping and in the press release RIM announced a bunch of specs, including this gem: BlackBerry® Tablet OS with support for symmetric multiprocessing Now they are…
According to the press release it will cost $499 for the 16GB WiFi only model, so kudos to them for being able to announce that. It is still not shipping and in the press release RIM announced a bunch of specs, including this gem:
BlackBerry® Tablet OS with support for symmetric multiprocessing
Now they are just pairing random words with computer terms.
Oh, did I mention there is still no ship date? Because there isn’t.Scratch that there is a ship date for Canada of April 19th.
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Quick Takes on Five Apps (No. 5)
I’m back with the latest installment of the Quick Takes series where I look at five apps. ThinkUp App (free, web-server tool) ThinkUp is a social media insight platform — this may be the most confusing name ever. Basically you can connect certain social media accounts, like Twitter, and ThinkUp will crawl through that data…
I’m back with the latest installment of the Quick Takes series where I look at five apps.
ThinkUp App (free, web-server tool)
ThinkUp is a social media insight platform — this may be the most confusing name ever. Basically you can connect certain social media accounts, like Twitter, and ThinkUp will crawl through that data and present it in a meaningful way. For instance if I post a new link on Twitter I can see the retweets and replies to that tweet. I could also take that Tweet and embed the replies to it on any website I control — pretty neat. It is a free tool for now and is getting better all the time.
If you run a blog or are ever asking for feedback on Twitter this is worth your time to check out.
TouchPad (iOS universal)
TouchPad turns your iOS device into a trackpad that can control your Mac. I use it just about everyday to control an old Mac mini we have connected to our TV. It launches and connects very quickly and gives you a keyboard that also has modifier buttons (like CMD). It is a killer app for anybody who uses a Mac without a keyboard and mouse attached. Occasionally VNC clients fail to connect with my Mac mini, but I have never once had a single problem using TouchPad — I cannot recommend this app enough.
TestFlight (iOS Developer Tool)
If you have ever had to beta test an iOS app without TestFlight then you know how annoying it is. This may not be useful to many, but this service is a godsend for me and, frankly, I won’t test your app if you don’t use TestFlight.
MoneyWell (Mac OS X)
MoneyWell is a way to track your money. It is easy to use and easy to learn financial tracking and management. It is fast and cheap. Most importantly it has always made me feel like I am on control of not only the data, but of my finances. I love the way the app lumps charges into different buckets that you can define — thus allowing me to see just how much money I am spending on certain things (ahem — iOS apps). I used to be a big fan of iBank, but I have since switched to MoneyWell and I love it.
xScope (Mac OS X)
If you have ever tried to align something on you computer monitor then you have probably — at one time — pulled out a ruler and put it on your screen. It can be a pain and xScope luckily will solve all of that and much, much, more. I use the guides on a fairly regular basis to make sure that all the elements on the site are lining up just the way I want them to. What a handy little tool and on top of that the trail period is killer, it counts hours that you have used the app. Clever.
Note
One last thing, I am struggling to keep up with this series — so it would be a big help if you sent in any suggestions that you have for me to check out. Thanks!
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Archive Messages With a Single Keystroke in Mail.app
What a great use for FastScripts. Works as advertised too.
What a great use for FastScripts. Works as advertised too.
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AT&T-Mobile
Here are some great links for staying up to date on the AT&T acquisition of T-Mobile. Consumer Reports kicks it off with this tidbit by Paul Reynolds: For one, the FCC, among the key regulatory bodies that will assess the deal, has already expressed concern about the state of the wireless market, opting last year…
Here are some great links for staying up to date on the AT&T acquisition of T-Mobile.
Consumer Reports kicks it off with this tidbit by Paul Reynolds:
For one, the FCC, among the key regulatory bodies that will assess the deal, has already expressed concern about the state of the wireless market, opting last year to declare it not competitive. There’s also the recent example of the merger of cable giant Comcast and broadcaster NBC Universal. The deal received close scrutiny from regulators and, when it was approved, it was with what Consumers Union called “real strings” that “could help to limit anti-consumer, anti-competitive behavior.”
Over at The Wall Street Journal on the ‘Digits’ blog Jennifer Valentino-DeVries adds this to the mix:
The companies use different radio frequencies even though they have the same wireless technology, but they will “dual band” the two networks so that phones will work on both, they said.
That is an interesting tidbit and could really mean a better network overall for AT&T-Mobile customers in areas, like say, San Francisco.
Ed Oswald over at Technologizer adds:
While AT&T talked up the benefits to its own subscribers in the merger announcement, the real winners are the T-Mobile customers. With identical technologies (save for their 3G frequencies), almost immediately after the merger is approved those subscriber’s coverage area will increase several times over. (For T-Mobile subscribers, the biggest gripe is always coverage.)
Again this is a good thing and Oswald makes a great point about what T-Mobile gets even if the two can’t merge (lots of cash).
Om Malik thinks this deal is bad all around because the decrease in competition means that prices will likely rise:
T-Mobile USA has been fairly aggressive in offering cheaper voice and data plans as it has tried to compete with its larger brethren. The competition has kept the prices in the market low enough. This has worked well for U.S. consumers. With the merger of AT&T and T-Mobile, the market is now reduced to three national players: AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. Net-net, U.S. consumers are going to lose.
I can certainly see the danger in this happening, but I think that two large carriers with your odd-ball discount carriers should be enough to keep prices down. Should.
Ina Fried has a rather boring interview with AT&T President Ralph De La Vega — in which I couldn’t find anything worth quoting. It is worth mentioning though that he seems very confident that DOJ won’t block this. Interestingly he does state that this should help with a faster LTE roll-out — though color me skeptical on that one.
Lastly T-Mobile has a nice Q&A up for its current customers where they pour cold water on the wet dreams of nerds every where when they state:
Is T-Mobile USA getting the iPhone?
T-Mobile USA remains an independent company. The acquisition is expected to be completed in approximately 12 months. We do not offer the iPhone. We offer cutting edge devices like the Samsung Galaxy S 4G and coming soon our new Sidekick 4G.Or translated: not until we are officially called AT&T.
Overall we need to take the wait and see approach here. I am not at all worried about the DOJ blocking this merger, nor am I worried about pricing hikes or anything else. I think this will be a net-positive for every AT&T and T-Mobile customer. The only loser here is Sprint and man did they lose.
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Read & Trust Newsletter
As most of you may have noticed I am a member of the Read & Trust network. I love the guys in this network and we just grew by one today (welcome Marco Arment!) — the group is also launching a new premium newsletter for $5/mo. I am slated to write for it and it…
As most of you may have noticed I am a member of the Read & Trust network. I love the guys in this network and we just grew by one today (welcome Marco Arment!) — the group is also launching a new premium newsletter for $5/mo. I am slated to write for it and it is a weekly newsletter with each month has its own ‘theme’ that the writing will be centered around.
I have seen the design and I know the guys writing the content and I am happy to say I think it is well worth $5/mo for some of the stuff we are going to be putting out. This is exclusive content, so you won’t see what I post here, or anywhere else (hopefully).
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Go J Go Shirts
Stephen M. Hackett writes over at Forkbombr.net and is a great guy and talented writer. I consider Stephen a friend and someone who is always honest with me — beyond that Stephen has a son named Josiah that has a brain tumor Stephen and his family have been battling with. St. Jude Children’s hospital has…
Stephen M. Hackett writes over at Forkbombr.net and is a great guy and talented writer. I consider Stephen a friend and someone who is always honest with me — beyond that Stephen has a son named Josiah that has a brain tumor Stephen and his family have been battling with. St. Jude Children’s hospital has been treating Josiah and here is what Stephen has to say about St Jude:
St. Jude treats patients without regard of their ability to pay. That’s pretty cool. To put this into perspective, Josiah’s medical bills — after just 6 months — totaled almost a million dollars. After a year, he was at just over $2 million. Just stop and think about that. It’s pretty mind-boggling. Needless to say, St. Jude is an unbelievable blessing to families with children affected by diseases like Josiah’s.
To help give back, we’ve partnered with a local artist who volunteered to design a t-shirt. This is the shirt for the #GoJGo St. Jude Marathon team, but you don’t have to run to buy a shirt. You just have to be awesome. All proceeds go straight to St. Jude.
I think all of you are awesome enough to own one of these t-shirts and t-shirt weather is coming up quick.
Thanks.
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Raising the Bar
I have been struggling to write an iPad 2 review for everyone that can better summarize the iPad 2 than this tweet by Sean Silvius: @marcoarment I think we all feel the same way but I bet Apple makes more in covers than all their competitors do in tablets in 2011. It’s a nod to…
I have been struggling to write an iPad 2 review for everyone that can better summarize the iPad 2 than this tweet by Sean Silvius:
@marcoarment I think we all feel the same way but I bet Apple makes more in covers than all their competitors do in tablets in 2011.
It’s a nod to both the marketing machine that Apple has become and to just how damned good the Smart Cover truly is. The iPad 2 is most certainly better than the original iPad in every aspect. It is thinner, faster, lighter and solves the bulky cover problem — all while keeping the same battery life and price. Amazing. But that Smart Cover is the real winning prize that you get with the iPad 2.
There isn’t a whole lot that I can add to the iPad 2 discussion that you most likely have not already read, John Gruber does an excellent job summarizing the iPad 2 with this:
The iPad 2 is a solid second-generation iteration. Easier and more comfortable to hold, noticeably faster, equippable with foldable covers that are both literally and figuratively magnetic.
The Feel
Before the iPad 2 came out I wrote a longer piece about why I didn’t want to see a thinner iPad come out, in that piece I said:
I honestly believe that a thinner iPad will be much less comfortable to hold. Especially one with a flat back.
Well I have had the iPad 2 in my possession for quite a while now and I can say that I was, without a doubt, dead wrong about the above assumption. My worries were that a thinner iPad would be more difficult to grip and at the same time would be to sharp feeling on the edges. What I didn’t anticipate was that Apple has seemingly rid the iPad 2 of every single sharp edge. Where as on the iPhone 4 and the original iPad there are sharp angles, every edge on the iPad 2 has been eased and is very soft feeling.
The iPad 2 is a fantastic device to hold in your hand. It is better from an ergonomic standpoint in every single aspect than the original iPad. Even with the Smart Cover on, whether it is open or closed, the iPad 2 feels leaps and bounds smaller and lighter than its predecessor.
The flat back not only makes the iPad 2 easy to use when resting flat on a table ((Because for once it can actually rest flat on the table.)) but the flat back actually makes holding the iPad 2 for extended periods of time a true pleasure.
Unfortunately 1.3 lbs is still much too heavy and comfortable to hold while reading in bed without supporting the weight in some fashion — make no mistake, this is not “Kindle light”.
3G
Many people are making the case that there is no reason for most consumers to get the 3G iPad model and I made my case for why I went with 3g here where I said:
This is where the last factor comes into play: convenience. What is more convenient: having to pull out your iPhone and activate the hotspot feature, or just doing it all on your iPad. As someone who has had to effectively do that routine for almost a year now with my MiFi, I can tell you that there will be times that you won’t want to use your iPad when you could, because it is just too much of a hassle to get internet access. I want to eliminate that.
I want the future and the future is internet where you need it, when you need it.
I still stand by that and I don’t regret my 3G iPad purchase in the slightest. I have already used over 250mb of data and I continue to use the 3G radio at least 3-4 times a week — I am just not always at my house.
For most users I would tend to agree that the personal hotspot feature of the iPhone would be more than enough to suffice (especially given that it transmits GPS info as well), but for people who are truly on the go the 3G built in to your iPad will be a far better experience overall.
I have found the AT&T 3G service to be excellent, even while in Austin at SXSW the 3G on my iPad was comparable to the speed I was getting from my Verizon MiFi. I leave it on all the time and I really love the added convenience. One thing that I do need to report is that leaving the 3G on all the time will drain your iPad battery considerably faster. I have never had to charge an iPad as much as I have had to charge the iPad 2 — this is 100% attributable to the 3G radio as during the times I have turned it off battery life has been impeccable.
The only caveat to this is that if you live in a known AT&T black hole (New York and San Francisco) then you should probably think about the Verizon model.
Speed
The iPad 2 finally feels right. It isn’t that the original iPad was slow — it wasn’t — it is that the iPad 2 reaches a sweet spot of performance where the user no longer notices delays. The iPad 2 doesn’t feel fast, so much as it just feels right. So a Safari tab dropped out of RAM and now needs to be reloaded, that experience is fast and painless. You launch a game and you are in and playing in no time. Opening a link or PDF from Mail is seamless. Scrolling media intensive pages and documents (like The Big Picture) is smooth and fast, just like you would expect it to be.
That is the heart and soul of the iPad 2 — things are quicker than you expect them to be. They aren’t fast when compared to a standard notebook computer, but they are beyond what most expect — once you can surpass expectations then you get very happy customers and the iPad 2 does just that.
Camera Crazy
Again I had some opinionated thoughts on putting a rear facing camera on the iPad. Basically my thinking was that the camera wouldn’t be high quality (it isn’t) and would only do FaceTime and video (it does do stills) and that above all it would be pretty useless as a camera (again, it is).
It is a pretty useless camera — not only do you look like a complete idiot holding up the iPad to take a picture, but the shutter button is in one of the worst possible locations: dead center along the bottom. How are you supposed to hold a 1.3lbs device with one hand while you try and tap that button, all without shaking or moving the iPad? You can’t.
The video is what surprised me the most though — shooting video with the iPad still makes you look like an idiot, but man is it easy and nice to do — a better experience than you get with the iPhone 4. The video isn’t better, but the framing is. That is you can actually see what you are doing on the large, bright, iPad 2 screen, where as with most other video cameras you don’t get as clear of a picture.
I actually like shooting video with the iPad — as stupid as it makes me look.
That said the still picture quality is beyond terrible. The video quality is average. The FaceTime quality though is perfect for what FaceTime is. It is clear to me that these cameras are meant for FaceTime, but to appease the check list mongers they allowed the use of the cameras for video and stills — makes sense.
Wrap-Up
There is no logical reason to buy anything other than and iPad at this point. If you can afford to buy the iPad 2 then you are golden for a couple of years. If you can’t then go help a fellow geek out and get the original iPad for a heavily discounted price — the original iPad is still better than any other tablet on the market today (except that iPad 2) — the iPad 2 just took that bar and raised it higher — much higher.
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Smart Cover for iPad 1
Three magnets and one bottle of super glue to get a Smart Cover working on your original iPad — everything but the auto on and off works. Pretty neat. I would say though that if you do this you will want to keep the cover on at all times — nobody wants to see the…
Three magnets and one bottle of super glue to get a Smart Cover working on your original iPad — everything but the auto on and off works. Pretty neat. I would say though that if you do this you will want to keep the cover on at all times — nobody wants to see the magnets that you glued to the side of your iPad.
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Why the Quick Bar (“Dickbar”) Is Still So Offensive
Marco Arment: The Quick Bar isn’t offensive because we don’t want Twitter making money with ads, or because we object to changes in the interface. It’s offensive because it’s deeply bad, showing complete disregard for quality, product design, and user respect, and we’ve come to expect a lot more from Twitter. You actually need to…
Marco Arment:
The Quick Bar isn’t offensive because we don’t want Twitter making money with ads, or because we object to changes in the interface.
It’s offensive because it’s deeply bad, showing complete disregard for quality, product design, and user respect, and we’ve come to expect a lot more from Twitter.
You actually need to read his entire post.
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AT&T Agrees to Buy Deutsche Telekom’s T-Mobile USA Unit for $39 Billion
A couple of things: We don’t know if this means a merger, straight acquisition, or if T-Mobile with continue to operate as T-Mobile. It most likely means T-Mobile is no more and all its customers are now AT&T customers I think this is a good thing, not a bad thing. If indeed T-Mobile and AT&T…
A couple of things:
- We don’t know if this means a merger, straight acquisition, or if T-Mobile with continue to operate as T-Mobile.
- It most likely means T-Mobile is no more and all its customers are now AT&T customers
- I think this is a good thing, not a bad thing.
- If indeed T-Mobile and AT&T become one company, then it will make them the biggest wireless carrier in the U.S. (Wikipedia says AT&T is roughly at 95 million subscribers and T-Mobile is half that. Verizon right now is only a few million ahead of AT&T.) This matters in the consumer eye only and changes nothing about network performance.
I doubt the DOJ will have a problem with this, how can they if they are letting the Comcast and NBC merger go through. Also Verizon will be the reason there is no problem here. This is a warning shot over Sprint’s bow — man do they need to do something relevant.
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Quote of the Day: Steven Frank
“It occurs to me that Tumblr is also growing exponentially with no apparent income source. I should look for a new home, pre-dickbar.” — Steven Frank That is an interesting problem, but before we worry about this we really should worry if they ever will get to the point where they need to worry about…
“It occurs to me that Tumblr is also growing exponentially with no apparent income source. I should look for a new home, pre-dickbar.”That is an interesting problem, but before we worry about this we really should worry if they ever will get to the point where they need to worry about money. If they can’t get uptime issues solved, then there eventually (unfortunately) won’t be any users left. That would be a shame too, because Tumblr is a good platform.
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Episode 4 of the B&B Podcast: Pocket Protectors
Shawn and I talked about SXSW, writing and a few other random things. I want to extend a big thanks to our two sponsors, Typekit and Lithium 5.
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A Touch of Video
For better or worse I have never been a huge “video guy” — always into photography and never that much interested in motion photography. I have though over there years tried piecing together crappy video clips I have taken with various versions of iMovie. Even screencasts that I recorded resulted in a frustrating video editing…
For better or worse I have never been a huge “video guy” — always into photography and never that much interested in motion photography. I have though over there years tried piecing together crappy video clips I have taken with various versions of iMovie. Even screencasts that I recorded resulted in a frustrating video editing experience.
Frustrating because nothing was ever easy — a constant fight between what I see in my minds eye and what the software won’t let me do. Then comes the encoding and compressing and general software operations that will make your Mac into a makeshift George Foreman Grill.
All of this to say that I was rather skeptical about the viability of iMovie on an iPhone when the iPhone 4 came out. Sure enough, iMovie on the iPhone is a rather poor and imprecise experience. An exercise in masochism. Then Apple decided that iMovie on the iPad 2 makes a whole bucket of sense and I loathed having to give it a go.
I bought iMovie, opened it and looked around and then moved on. I knew I would have to come back so I could write something, but I wanted to wait for that moment when I actually had something to create — I can only film my cats so much before they start to get annoyed.
Down at SXSW I decided that I wanted to shoot a little video to show people what my “mobile” setup looked like. Instinctively I grabbed my iPhone to shoot the video, but quickly put it down and decided to shoot and edit the entire clip on my iPad. Something I had never attempted before.
In less time than it has ever taken me to record and edit a video I produced a short clip with a voice over added after the fact in no time at all. The iPad did the encoding and converting quickly and painlessly. Had I had full broadband speed internet the entire affair would have been but a blip in my day — instead thanks to too many nerds the network speed and subsequent upload to Vimeo was quit slow.
What I learned is this: editing video on the iPad is the only way to go. I can’t see a need for ever wanting to edit on my Mac again. iMovie for the iPad really hits a sweet spot and that sweet spot is called user experience. It offers a grand user experience. I think the iPad is really starting to find its spot in my life.
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AT&T Aggressively Moving Against Unauthorized Tethering
Richard Gaywood on how AT&T is going to start dealing with unauthorized tetherers: It goes on to state that users can either terminate their unauthorized tethering usage before March 27, or they will be automatically moved to AT&T’s DataPro plan, which includes tethering and costs an extra $20 per month. Really the only thing that…
Richard Gaywood on how AT&T is going to start dealing with unauthorized tetherers:
It goes on to state that users can either terminate their unauthorized tethering usage before March 27, or they will be automatically moved to AT&T’s DataPro plan, which includes tethering and costs an extra $20 per month.
Really the only thing that should surprise people is how long it took AT&T to crack down on this. Also, if you have unlimited data right now and AT&T moves you to DataPro, then you will loose that unlimited data plan for, well, ever.