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  • Adobe v. Apple Round 2?

    Nilay Patel in breaking down the important Mac App Store rules for non-developers has this little quip: Seriously, we can’t wait to see what happens when Adobe and Microsoft submit their application suites to this store. He can’t wait because both app suites have notoriously buggy programs in them (Word, Photoshop). It certainly will be…

    Nilay Patel in breaking down the important Mac App Store rules for non-developers has this little quip:

    Seriously, we can’t wait to see what happens when Adobe and Microsoft submit their application suites to this store.

    He can’t wait because both app suites have notoriously buggy programs in them (Word, Photoshop). It certainly will be interesting if Microsoft and Adobe even bother submitting. Though I can’t see how Microsoft would be OK with Apple’s Pages being in the store and not Word. Likewise for Photoshop and Pixelmator.

  • App Store for Mac highlights two major App Store flaws

    Should be interesting to see how Apple deals with upgrades in the Mac app store. The demos/trials part though is less interesting as I would assume it will work just like the iOS App Store where people will have ‘lite’ versions of the app that is free if they really want to get a demo…

    Should be interesting to see how Apple deals with upgrades in the Mac app store. The demos/trials part though is less interesting as I would assume it will work just like the iOS App Store where people will have ‘lite’ versions of the app that is free if they really want to get a demo software in there.

  • Thoughts on the Mac App Store

    Thoughts on the Mac App Store for N00bs Switching to a Mac is very easy – in my experience most people can fully adapt in just two weeks of normal usage, with 50% of all switchers feeling comfortable after just 10 days. That said the most difficult thing to explain to any Mac user is…

    Thoughts on the Mac App Store for N00bs

    Switching to a Mac is very easy – in my experience most people can fully adapt in just two weeks of normal usage, with 50% of all switchers feeling comfortable after just 10 days. That said the most difficult thing to explain to any Mac user is how to install a new app. There is more than one way to do it, but let’s assume a person downloads a new program from a website, here are the steps the must take:

    For .DMG Installation

    1. Double click the ZIP file (if there is one, skip if Safari auto-extracts for you)
    2. Double click the .DMG file
    3. If .DMG’s Finder window doesn’t come into the front, find that window
    4. Now sometimes you get instruction in this window, other times you don’t, but one of two things need to be done.
      1. Drag the app to your ‘applications’ folder
      2. Double-click the installer
    5. Now you are done.
    6. Except that you need to eject the .DMG
    7. Then delete the .DMG file

    For ZIP File Installation

    1. Double click the ZIP file (skip if Safari auto-extracts for you)
    2. Drag the Application to your ‘Applications’ folder or Double-click installer.

    The Problem

    None of these steps are obvious to new Mac users – none. The DMG method is the most complicated, yet most common method. It is so common because it is the only method that offers the developer a chance to tell the user how to install the application.

    I cannot tell you how many times I have heard new Mac users say these things:

    • “I installed a new program, but then I restarted my computer and it got un-installed, how do I keep that from happening” (They were launching the app out of the .DMG file)
    • “Oh that application is in my downloads folder.” (Zip file method and they left the app where it got ‘installed’)
    • “Oh it is right here, I dragged it to my desktop so I could open it.”

    What a headache all of these are for experience Mac users.

    The Mac App Store Will Help

    It will help, but not completely solve the problem. The Mac App Store will help make sure apps get in the right spot when they are installed, and help by putting the icon directly in the dock (according to the Demo). What the Mac App Store won’t do is fix the problem for all the developers that are not in the App Store.

    A Mac App Store will also help keep programs updated. A common thing that happens in my household is that I will ask why my Wife hasn’t updated a particular app to the newest version and she will say: “I ran Software Update.” She of course means that she ran Mac OS X’s software update, not the one for that particular app. And how is she, or any other new Mac user, supposed to know that Software Update is just for Apple programs?

    Don’t even get me started on uninstalling apps…

  • The Touch Gestures in Lion Look Like a Pain

    One thing that I noticed when Mac OS X Lion was being demoed yesterday was how difficult of a time the demo person was having utilizing the multi-touch gestures on the Magic Mouse. Take a look at the video from yesterday, you can clearly see that when he is trying to perform the swipe to…

    One thing that I noticed when Mac OS X Lion was being demoed yesterday was how difficult of a time the demo person was having utilizing the multi-touch gestures on the Magic Mouse. Take a look at the video from yesterday, you can clearly see that when he is trying to perform the swipe to the side to change to and from a fullscreen app he has to do it a couple of times to get that gesture to take. Not every time, just some times.

    It is also important to note that this is a guy who has theoretically spent a lot of time practicing this very gesture. The demo of Lion starts around the 1 hour mark in the video and at various times you can see him struggle. Now the problem is not with the multi-touch sensors in the Magic Mouse, but with the fact that the Magic Mouse itself moves – it is made to move. Gestures are ten times easier to perform on the Magic Trackpad or just the normal MacBook Pro trackpad. On the Magic Mouse though they are not quite that easy.

    Which all begs the question: if Lion is supposed to be all about more multi-touch and more iOS – why wasn’t the Magic Trackpad being used in the demo?

  • The MacBook Air Full Flash – Hardware Only

    I guess Apple decided to help everyone out and not make then have to install Click2Flash – instead they just ship the new MacBook Airs without Flash. I bet Adobe is pissed. I wonder if this is the direction Apple will take moving forward with 10.7 Lion?

    I guess Apple decided to help everyone out and not make then have to install Click2Flash – instead they just ship the new MacBook Airs without Flash. I bet Adobe is pissed. I wonder if this is the direction Apple will take moving forward with 10.7 Lion?

  • How the New 11-inch MacBook Air is Not the New 12-inch PowerBook

    Before the ‘Back to the Mac’ keynote kicked off today I lamented on Twitter that I really didn’t see the point of an 11.6” MacBook Air. To which Shawn Blanc responded: @BenjaminBrooks The 12” PowerBook is considered one of the favorite Apple laptops of all time. Though now we’re all used to big screens… Which…

    Before the ‘Back to the Mac’ keynote kicked off today I lamented on Twitter that I really didn’t see the point of an 11.6” MacBook Air. To which Shawn Blanc responded:

    @BenjaminBrooks The 12” PowerBook is considered one of the favorite Apple laptops of all time. Though now we’re all used to big screens…

    Which could not be more true, I had a 12” PowerBook (my first Mac actually) that I bought because the hardware was so good on that machine. Now though an 11.6” screen just seems silly, no? I can see what Shawn is getting at when he says “we’re all used to big screens” because at work I use a 24” Cinema Display and my MacBook Pro has a 15” screen. My MacBook Pro screen feels tiny when I use it.

    I think all of that is irrelevant though, there is certainly a large contingent of people that use small screen computers everyday without ever hooking up to a larger screen. And yes the new MacBook Air is an incredibly portable laptop by any standard – especially with the great battery life it has. The real thing that would keep me from ever buying an 11.6” MacBook Air is that I have a 10” MacBook Air already, it just happens to be called an iPad.

    Ok, Ok an iPad is not the same as a MacBook Air running OS X – I agree. But what I would use that tiny 11” MacBook Air for is the same thing that I currently use my iPad for. Consuming news and writing. Given that there is no reason for me to buy it – in fact all I need is a bluetooth keyboard / keyboard dock and I am set.

    The 13” MacBook Air though make a whole lot of sense to me – the screen is large enough in those and the power is to a point (with the upgraded processor and RAM) where it really makes a tangible difference.

    The Portable Executive

    Justin Pennington brought up this point on Twitter:

    @BenjaminBrooks If it really is 11” with 8-10 bat I’ll get some other members of the management team switched (I’m at 2/5 now including me).

    Ok I can buy that execs would really dig the 11” MacBook Air – but, and this is a big but, wouldn’t they rather just have an iPad with a nice desktop back at the office?

    Stephen Hackett posted this:

    The difference of course is all about software. For some people, iOS just doesn’t meet their needs. The new 11.6″ MacBook Air offers all of the features of Mac OS X in the smallest package ever. For people who need a full-blown computer that can go just about anywhere, the Air is an obvious choice. For everyone else, though, the iPad is really, really hard to ignore.

    Spot on. I could not word it better, and I am glad I caught this before I finished typing this post.

    Heir to the Throne

    For me the 11.6” MacBook Air is not the heir apparent to the 12” PowerBook that I so dearly loved. The 13.3” MacBook Air, that just may be the heir to the throne. Right now I have a 15” MacBook Pro 2.8ghz 6gb RAM and 240GB SSD HD – a very fast machine – I have been thinking for quite some time about getting a Mac mini for my office so I don’t have to lug the MacBook Pro to and from work. The MacBook Pro + iPad is a weighty combination.

    Guess what, if the 13” MacBook Air can run Photoshop/Aperture/LightRoom at a decent speed then I will buy one of those without thinking twice.

    The 11.6” MacBook Air for twice the price of an iPad does not offer enough of a productivity boost in my eyes. The 13.3” with the larger screen stands a chance to offer enough of a boost that the tradeoff from the 15” MacBook Pro may just be acceptable. Of course this is all assuming that I would get rid of my MacBook Pro, in all likely hood I will add the 13” and just keep it at the office, and on trips.

    Back when the 12” PowerBook was the kingpin you had the option of 12”, 15” or 17” PowerBooks. There was no iPad, or iPhone. That is what made the 12” so damned good – there was nothing more portable and more powerful than the 12” PowerBook. Now though that is not the case, many people just travel with an iPhone and have no problems. In fact the iPad would be perfect for travel if I had a way to edit RAW image files on it (LightRoom really). I don’t need a ton of image editing powers, I just need to be able to do what LightRoom can do (which is very powerful, not full blown Photoshop).

    That is the very reason I don’t think the 11.6” MacBook Air is the heir to the 12” PowerBook – there are far better portable options. The 13” though is not the direct heir, but pairing it with an iPad and you should have all you really need.

    Should.

    So who has the benchmarks to find out what these tiny things can do?

    Note: Having finished typing this up I am 90% sure that I could survive with just 13.3” MacBook Air – I am headed to the Apple Store as soon as they have them to play with.

  • FaceTime for Mac

    Go download your beta for the Mac now. [Updated: 10/20/10 at 1:33 PM] It will also ring your Mac even when the program is closed – most excellent.

    Go download your beta for the Mac now.

    [Updated: 10/20/10 at 1:33 PM] It will also ring your Mac even when the program is closed – most excellent.

  • Watch Apple’s Event Live

    I watched the last iOS event with Apple’s live streaming and it is quite impressive.

    I watched the last iOS event with Apple’s live streaming and it is quite impressive.

  • Thoughts on Stand Up Desks

    I recently set up a standing workstation at my office so that I could spend at the very least a few hours each day standing while I worked. I have only had this setup for a short time, but I wanted to share my thoughts on standing while working. A Bit of Background A year…

    I recently set up a standing workstation at my office so that I could spend at the very least a few hours each day standing while I worked. I have only had this setup for a short time, but I wanted to share my thoughts on standing while working.

    A Bit of Background

    A year ago I started getting a tingling numbness in my right thigh during the day. I could still walk and function but it drove me crazy, and was just the oddest feeling thing. I went to the doctor and he said that most likely I was pinching a nerve and told me that most people see this when they wear skinny jeans (I don’t). For the life of me I could not figure out what the cause was.

    Then I went away for a couple of weeks and was on vacation – the problem completely disappeared. This lead me to believe it was either my bed or my office chair or car that was causing the problem – everything else was the same while I was away. Through some trial and error I figured out that it was actually my desk chair at work. I changed to an old POS chair and the problem went away a day later. Amazing.

    I have a new chair on order which I am very excited about, but until I get that I had to change something about the way I worked. The old chair I am currently using doesn’t make my leg numb, but it certainly makes my neck sore (it pitches me too far forward while sitting).

    The Setup

    I work in what is more or less a cubicle at work, luckily though it is a modular system. I took a 24” x 60” section of the desk and elevated it to a height where my arms nicely rest on it when typing. The next challenge was to get my MacBook Pro screen up high enough so that I wasn’t craning my next too bad – for that I used my old trusty Griffin Elevator stand.

    This area is a completely different desk than where I normally sit – which is the biggest drawback. To go from sitting to standing I have to move my computer, keyboard, mouse, iPhone, iPad, and water to another desk. Luckily I have another charger that I can use for this location, but it is not the ideal setup.

    Why

    So the big question from everyone in my office has been: why? Why would I want to stand and work? Well the truth is I don’t really want to stand and work, it makes my feet tired. But I also want to do things to reduce my risk of a heart attack later in life. I posted a link about this a while back, but here is the pertinent info from Gretchen Reynolds at the New York Times:

    Men who spent more than 23 hours a week watching TV and sitting in their cars (as passengers or as drivers) had a 64 percent greater chance of dying from heart disease than those who sat for 11 hours a week or less. What was unexpected was that many of the men who sat long hours and developed heart problems also exercised. Quite a few of them said they did so regularly and led active lifestyles. The men worked out, then sat in cars and in front of televisions for hours, and their risk of heart disease soared, despite the exercise. Their workouts did not counteract the ill effects of sitting.

    When I read that I got worried. I spend bare minimum 8 hours a week in my car alone. So I easily go way over that 23 hour a week mark. I decided that standing while working is a small price to pay for a hopefully healthier heart.

    Lessons So Far

    • The desk height has to be right. I initially setup the desk far too low. For me the most comfortable height is one where my arms are bent to almost a 90° angle when I am typing.

    • Monitor height is also crucial, I have always had my monitor so that the top edge is just about one inch above my sitting eye height – this seems to be the agreed upon ergonomic monitor height and it really feels right. As I said above to accomplish this I am using a Griffin Elevator stand for my MacBook Pro.

    • Everyone in your office will want to know what the hell is wrong with you. I tell them the actual reason – that usually strikes some fear into them.

    • It is a lot more tiring that sitting is. My feet and legs get tired out and I want to sit back down. If you have ever been to conference or anything where you spend all day on your feet you know what I am talking about here. I don’t get tired to the point where I want to fall asleep, but it does feel like I have been more active during the day – and that is a good thing.

    • I bounce all around when I am typing. I don’t know if it is just that I can find a comfortable standing position, but I move all around when I work standing up. When sitting I tend to stay pretty still, but I guess my ADD comes out to play when I stand up.

    • When I first set this up I had the lofty goal of working like this from 1-4ish each day, basically for the rest of the time after I eat lunch. Fat chance. The first day I made it about and hour and a half before I gave up and sat down. It took about 3-4 days before I could stand for that entire time period.

    Going Forward

    This is certainly something that I want to continue to do from here on out. Ideally I would love to get one of those desks that allow you to raise and lower it electronically so that I could easily switch from standing to sitting – but that is far from being economically feasible right now.

  • MG Siegler Lays the Smack Down on Microsoft

    MG Siegler on Microsoft’s statement that perhaps the iPhone 4 is Apple’s Windows Vista moment: Total sales for Windows Phone 7 last quarter? Approximately 14.1 million less than the iPhone, Apple’s “Vista”.

    MG Siegler on Microsoft’s statement that perhaps the iPhone 4 is Apple’s Windows Vista moment:

    Total sales for Windows Phone 7 last quarter? Approximately 14.1 million less than the iPhone, Apple’s “Vista”.

  • An Update From Fraser Speirs on His Schools iPad Deployment

    Frasier Speirs: In class, we are seeing greater collaboration and sharing with iPad. The design of iPad directly lends itself to working together and collaborating – even without specific software support for networked collaboration. The iPad can be handed over to another pupil, turned around to show results and quickly connected to a classroom projector…

    Frasier Speirs:

    In class, we are seeing greater collaboration and sharing with iPad. The design of iPad directly lends itself to working together and collaborating – even without specific software support for networked collaboration. The iPad can be handed over to another pupil, turned around to show results and quickly connected to a classroom projector to share work with the entire class.

    It sounds like this iPad deployment is a huge success, it will be interesting to see if this takes off at all with other schools (I am thinking mainly U.S. public school systems). Google would be smart to start running trials with Android here in the U.S., hell it would be smart for HP and Apple to do it as well.

  • Tired of Gruber? Here Are 4 Writers you Should be Reading.

    On Twitter the other day Chris Bowler lamented: Have had the thought lately of unsubscribing from DF. Sacrilege, I know. But my time is sacred, and I don’t care much for business news. DF of course is Daring Fireball, John Gruber’s site. Gruber is no doubt an excellent writer, but most of the time he…

    On Twitter the other day Chris Bowler lamented:

    Have had the thought lately of unsubscribing from DF. Sacrilege, I know. But my time is sacred, and I don’t care much for business news.

    DF of course is Daring Fireball, John Gruber’s site. Gruber is no doubt an excellent writer, but most of the time he posts links to other sites. Lately it feels like a lot of those links revolve around the mobile industry and not just Macs. Which got me to thinking: besides Gruber, who else’s writing do I really enjoy?

    I was able to come up with four people right now:

    1. Shawn Blanc: Like Gruber, Blanc posts links. Unlike Gruber these links are only a few a day (if that many) and are really well curated. Blanc’s writing is also truly enjoyable. To get started with him I recommend reading his “Dairy of an iPad Owner” post. It is a review of sorts for the iPad, but it is just a great example of his writing. Blanc has an incredible ability to point out the non-obvious aspects of life while still inspiring me to do or try different things. He is the sole reason that I gave Yojimbo a go in the first place.

    2. Frank Chimero: Chimero has some very insightful and wholly inspirational posts. One of the most powerful blog posts I have ever read is his untitled post on advice to a graphic design student. That post compelled me to email the link to several of my friends and every one of them responded with thanks for sharing it. As far as I am concerned Chimero is a must read.

    3. Patrick Rhone: Rhone posts a lot of links on his Minimal Mac blog, but the guy has tons of “other” blogs as well. One of my favorite Patrick Rhone posts came recently and was titled “Great Expectations” what a great post on our constant struggle with the many communication mediums we have today. Rhone I my constant grounding force for not getting too ahead of myself and taking time to think about the overall picture, he is also a main driving force in my effort to minimalism my life.

    4. MG Siegler: Unlike everyone else on this list Siegler posts often and writes mainly about tech news for the TechCrunch blog. I am not sure what exactly I like so much about Siegler but I read every one of his posts. Perhaps it is that I always find myself nodding in agreement, or the fact that he too is a Knight Rider fan. One post that I loved in particular of his was titled “Android Is As Open As The Clenched Fist I’d Like To Punch The Carriers With” which from the title alone I love it.

  • Apple’s Retail Stores vs. Disneyland

    Take a look at this graph, insane.

    Take a look at this graph, insane.

  • Does the Angry Blue Bird multiply its mass?

    Rhett Allain on whether the Blue Angry Bird is more powerful if you expand it to the three little birds: Therefore, you will have more of an effect if you expand the blue bird before it hits something. There is unlikely to be a situation where you would be better off not expanding them. In…

    Rhett Allain on whether the Blue Angry Bird is more powerful if you expand it to the three little birds:

    Therefore, you will have more of an effect if you expand the blue bird before it hits something. There is unlikely to be a situation where you would be better off not expanding them.

    In all honesty this is a question that I had been wondering about.

  • Paperless Office Tips

    Back in my University days I used to start off each semester with the lofty goal of making that semester the point that I would go 100% paperless. Oh the dream of a paperless office has long been with me and many geeks a like. I was never able to achieve anything close to being…

    Back in my University days I used to start off each semester with the lofty goal of making that semester the point that I would go 100% paperless. Oh the dream of a paperless office has long been with me and many geeks a like. I was never able to achieve anything close to being paperless back then, I had no sheet fed scanner and too many professors that loved paper.

    When I graduated and started freelancing, again, I vowed to be paperless. Luckily I was able to be about 80% paperless at that point, but that was mostly due to a lack of work rather than any particular paperless skills I had. About a year after I graduated I formed my current company with yet again the same goal of being paperless.

    This time around though I knew it would be impossible to be paperless, I would be working in an environment that demanded paper copies be archived. So my goal was to be as paperless as I possibly could be, I am proud to report that I think I have reached an acceptable paperless to paper ratio.

    Some Tips

    I thought since I believe I have reached a nice balance that I would share some of my thoughts and tips on how to best implement a paperless environment.

    One Step at a Time

    Unless you are the only person in your office it is best to take things slowly. Don’t try to dump all the paper at once, focus on the more paper intensive task that you have and branch out from there. When I started my partners kept wanting to refer to paper leases and we would have to cull through these 30 page documents line by line searching for clauses. I scanned and OCR’d all of these documents one week, the next time we needed to access one I pulled it up on my computer while they searched the paper document. A split second later I had the answer while they were still on the second paragraph.

    This was the catalyst the created a snowball effect for my company. My partners immediately saw the value of being paperless – they now wanted to know how to best implement it elsewhere. I could have started anywhere in the company, but I picked the one thing that really annoyed everyone. Instead of going paperless being an uphill battle I made it a nice even grade.

    Scanners

    Once you make the decision to go paperless you need to get a scanner right away. Don’t buy anything that doesn’t scan sheet fed ((Meaning you can stack a bunch of papers to scan at once)), that doesn’t do automatic duplex ((Scans front and back of the page at once)) and that doesn’t have some color ability. My recommendation is the excellent Fujitsu Scansnap scanners, I bought one in 2005 and it has been flawless since then. ((I have had 3 computers in that same time))

    Fujitsu sells many versions, both Windows and Mac (it is very dumb that you can’t have one that works with both). They also make a ‘mobile’ line that is a bit slower but far more portable. I recommend getting the desktop version unless you honestly plan on traveling with your scanner – the mobile version is that much slower than the regular desktop version.

    Whatever you do don’t buy a scanner that will not automatically create a PDF out of multiple pages – you will be sorry if you do.

    Note Taking

    Here is the biggy, I am not talking about taking notes during meetings or classes – that is much easier to do now that laptops, cell phones and iPads are a staple of meetings rooms. What I mean is that you need to create a system for jotting down those little things that pop up: a phone number someone tells you, an image size you need to remember, so on.

    I used to do this with an OmniOutliner document, I would create one for each day. This quickly became annoying and rarely got used. What I have come to find is that this is a part of my life where it is not possible to go 100% paperless, I can only get it to about 50%. What I did manage to do though is to reduce the amount of paper hassle I had by 80% or so.

    The first part is to start using the excellent Notational Velocity that syncs back to Simplenote. If you are using Windows try out ‘Notes’ which is coming along nicely as a Notational Velocity replacement for Windows users. I use this to create quick notes that I need to jot down, but only those notes that feel right to jot down on a computer.

    For all other notes I write them down in a notebook. Now I used to just keep Post-it notes at the ready, then blank sheets of paper, then a Moleskin. What I found was that by using a large notebook, tucked just out of reach I am able to reduce the amount I want to write versus type and all the notes stay organized. With the added benefit of being able to rip out a page to hand to someone, yet they all stay organized and hidden away.

    Currently my notebook is an excellent Whitelines Wire A5 Squared Notebook, paired of course with a Pilot G2
    (I use the 0.7mm because when I write I like to be bold about it). I keep the note book folded open to a blank page at all times ready to go.

    (A side note about Whitelines – I use this paper because I find the lack of structure in a blank un-ruled page annoying. I also find scans of lined paper annoying. Thus the Whitelines paper when scanned leaves no visible lines to be seen, while giving me lines as a guide. Truly great paper.)

    Ubiquitous Access

    The one thing that I ran into almost immediately was the people were not able to access our local file server once they were out of the office. I never thought we might want this when I set it up, but it came up right away. The complaint was that with actual paper files they could take stuff with them, never mind the fact that people never did take these files home.

    After a lot of workarounds over the years I have finally found a great solution with the cloud storage service Egnyte. Using Egnyte we now store everything online and a local copy is backed up nightly to our server at the office. They offer iOS apps and WebDAV access (with versioning) so I am able to get everyone access to anything at any time.

    This has turned out to be a blessing, it used to be that people would print out stuff when they were leaving for a meeting. Now they just login and download whatever they need when they are in or out of the office. The added bonus is that our paper/printer bills have gone way down.

    Business Cards

    Don’t accept them and try not give them out. Honestly.

    My typical response when someone hands me a business card is to ask that they also shoot me an email with their info, because I lose business cards far to often. If you have an overly complicated email address, or you really want their contact info offer to shoot them the email.

    This does two things, gives you a way to reduce paper and gives you an immediate connection with the person (the email chain has started with no pressure). I do this all the time and most people respond very positively because then they know that the contact info is received and not lost.

    Faxing

    Again just don’t accept them. Really.

    Alas in my business we need to able to accept faxes, some people just refuse to catch up with the times. We have an eFax account setup that costs less that $20 a month and gives us a local fax number and all of our faxes get PDF’d and emailed to us. We can also send a fax just by sending a PDF in an email to a special address. Pretty slick and works flawlessly in the past 3 years that we have been doing it.

    Sketching

    There are some great iOS apps out there (Adobe Ideas) that allow you to sketch on the iPad and iPhone. It is going to be hit and miss, some people will prefer it and others will hate it. I love doing it, I am not very artistic so I don’t mind doing it on the iPad – the iPhone though is not so great for sketching.

    If you can’t bring yourself to do it your best bet is to stick with paper and either use a notebook to keep all sketches together or to scan each sketch and archive it on your computer. I keep every sketch I do, whether it is digital or analog so that I have a reference if I need it (you would be surprised how often that may happen).

    Signing Documents

    For a long time I had an vector graphic of my signature saved as a TIF file on my computer, and I would just insert it into any document that need a signature. Then I created a ‘dynamic stamp’ out of it in Adobe Acrobat Pro so that I could just stamp it on in there. Now though it is far easier and faster to use a little program for Macs called Autograph that allows you to use the trackpad on your Mac to sign PDFs and the like.

    I don’t know of a Windows version of this software, but if you do please shoot me the link. I have been using it for a few months now and really like the workflow better.

    Somethings Just Aren’t Ready Yet

    Having said all of this, the most important thing to remember is that not everything can go paperless right now. There is not efficient way for me to save all of our accounting documents in a paperless way. There are ways to do it, but none that are cost and time effective.

    Like wise with other things I have tried in the past. What really helps getting non-tech people to embrace paperless solutions is to make sure that the solutions are easier and faster than the analog counterpart. If you can’t do that then you will never be able to convince them to go paperless.

    As Office Space taught us people hate Fax Machines and Printers, eliminating the need for those has made my partners very happy and more willing to embrace new paperless methods that I introduce.

    I also took some time to create an Amazon Store of the products I mentioned above. Over time I will add things that I find helpful so be sure to check back. Find the store here.

  • Yojimbo 3

    Now with a 100% more iPad support. Free upgrade for Yojimbo 2 users and $20 upgrade for older users. iPad support is read only for now (hoping for more later) and the app costs $9.99 for the iPad. Very nice.

    Now with a 100% more iPad support. Free upgrade for Yojimbo 2 users and $20 upgrade for older users. iPad support is read only for now (hoping for more later) and the app costs $9.99 for the iPad. Very nice.

  • Complete Transcript of Steve Jobs from the Oct 18th Earnings Call

    Jobs was very frisky on the call, luckily Macworld did something about Macs and transcribed the call. Good job Macworld. It is well worth the read.

    Jobs was very frisky on the call, luckily Macworld did something about Macs and transcribed the call. Good job Macworld. It is well worth the read.

  • More Steve Jobs Quotes About 7-Inch Tablets

    Brian X. Chen has compiled all of Steve Jobs’ quotes pertaining to 7-inch tablets from yesterdays earnings call. Bottom line: Apple is not making a 7-inch tablet.

    Brian X. Chen has compiled all of Steve Jobs’ quotes pertaining to 7-inch tablets from yesterdays earnings call. Bottom line: Apple is not making a 7-inch tablet.

  • Steve Jobs Calls 7-Inch Tablets ‘Dead on Arrival’, Says 10-Inches Minimum

    Steve Jobs according to Mac Rumors: There are clear limits to how close elements can be on the screen before users can’t touch accurately. We believe 10-inch screen is minimum necessary. I called that.

    Steve Jobs according to Mac Rumors:

    There are clear limits to how close elements can be on the screen before users can’t touch accurately. We believe 10-inch screen is minimum necessary.

    I called that.

  • Screw you Microsoft

    Could you be any more annoying than this: I started the install from Microsoft Auto-Update, you can’t even close it for me? Why the hell do I need to close Safari – that is just as annoying as having to restart my computer would be. The Microsoft Word being open one that, that is totally…

    Could you be any more annoying than this:
    Screen shot 2010-10-18 at 1.33.10 PM.png

    1. I started the install from Microsoft Auto-Update, you can’t even close it for me?
    2. Why the hell do I need to close Safari – that is just as annoying as having to restart my computer would be.
    3. The Microsoft Word being open one that, that is totally on me.