Top Posts

Leica Sofort 2June 13, 2024
Grand Seiko SBGX261February 23, 2023

Recent Articles

  • App Review: Pocket

    Taking a look at Pocket as my new read later app.

    *The membership for 2018 is shifting a bit, to include posts which are not strictly iPad Productivity Reports. There will still be at least one member post per week, however it won’t always be a specific iPad post.*

    I mentioned a few weeks back that I was in the market for a new read later app. I have a real need for something more robust than Safari Reading List as it’s proven to be too basic.

    You must be a member to read this article.

  • The GORUCK GR3 First Look Preview

    I didn’t order one of these because it looks massive, but if you don’t like to pack light, and still want to fit it all in a bag. This is probably a good option. Either way, so,e interesting design choices in it.

    I didn’t order one of these because it looks massive, but if you don’t like to pack light, and still want to fit it all in a bag. This is probably a good option. Either way, so,e interesting design choices in it.

  • Reading Your Critics

    John Gruber: I feel like it keeps me on my toes to read the comments from people who don’t like Daring Fireball. I used to read every comment someone made in reference to my site, by way of seeing an incoming link in my analytics and heading over to the source. I’d still do that…

    John Gruber:

    I feel like it keeps me on my toes to read the comments from people who don’t like Daring Fireball.

    I used to read every comment someone made in reference to my site, by way of seeing an incoming link in my analytics and heading over to the source. I’d still do that if I had analytics to work from. It’s invaluable to see that commentary and downright painful to read it. (If you do link to the site, never be shy about sending me the link, even if it’s in disagreement with me.)

  • Confessions of a Digital Nazi Hunter

    Yair Rosenberg on Twitter shutting down he bot he co-created which pointed out neo-nazis who were impersonating other people: The real threat, apparently, was not these trolls — who today continue to roam the platform unchallenged — but our effort to combat them. Absurd.

    Yair Rosenberg on Twitter shutting down he bot he co-created which pointed out neo-nazis who were impersonating other people:

    The real threat, apparently, was not these trolls — who today continue to roam the platform unchallenged — but our effort to combat them.

    Absurd.

  • Alexa, Where Art Thou?

    MG Siegler talking about his comfort and like of Alexa devices, has this to say about Siri: Yes, I could ask Siri to do this as well. But, well, that’s not the relationship I have with Siri. Our relationship is more about pulling up random facts about a city when we’re out and about, walking…

    MG Siegler talking about his comfort and like of Alexa devices, has this to say about Siri:

    Yes, I could ask Siri to do this as well. But, well, that’s not the relationship I have with Siri. Our relationship is more about pulling up random facts about a city when we’re out and about, walking around.

    It should come as no surprise to anyone that I loathe Alexa devices. I don’t want one in my house, and if I showed up to a hotel room with one — I’d promptly unplug it. Same goes for a Google based device, or Facebook — these companies don’t have my privacy in their best interest. I question Apple’s HomePod too.

    But I don’t get the non-use of Siri here. Hang on, let me step back first.

    I’ve been around Alexa devices, used them enough, to know exactly what you get from them. I find them annoying at best. “ALEXA!” They aren’t overly smart if you ask me.

    Neither is Siri.

    But, Siri is always there. On your iPhone/iPad with a simple “Hey Siri” command. What’s more is that it’s tied to my voice on my devices. It’s not uncommon for there to be 2-3 iOS devices in a room at once in our house, and for one of my wife or me, to shout “hey Siri” to set a timer/remind/whatever. And the right device is the only one to respond.

    Why would you prefer Alexa over that?

    I don’t get this love of Alexa at all.

  • Steinhart Ocean One Vintage Military

    This is my favorite watch, and what I wear daily.

    When I wrote about my search for a new watch, I can honestly tell you that my search started with this watch, and I ended up buying this watch despite trying to convince myself of many others. This watch pays homage to a mil-spec Submariner which Rolex only made a few dozen of — today those sell for over $150,000. So, given that, at about $450 this watch is a steal, and it has better water resistance ratings than the original Rolex.

    (more…)

  • iOS X

    John Gruber, in a footnote about the iPhone X gestures and navigation coming to iPads: As for how the iPhone X-style Face ID/no-home-button experience will work on iPad, it’s unclear to me whether Apple has already thought this all the way through. Why, for example, did Apple just this year introduce a new small-swipe-up-from-the-bottom gesture…

    John Gruber, in a footnote about the iPhone X gestures and navigation coming to iPads:

    As for how the iPhone X-style Face ID/no-home-button experience will work on iPad, it’s unclear to me whether Apple has already thought this all the way through. Why, for example, did Apple just this year introduce a new small-swipe-up-from-the-bottom gesture for the iPad to show the new Dock, when the iPhone X suggests that a small swipe up from the bottom is the future of getting back to the home screen?

    That swipe up in the iPad would be a disaster to lose. It’s so convenient and fast, it would be, hard to go back. I can see two scenarios here:

    1. iOS further splits with the iPad lineup retaining some sort of multi-swipe cruft to maintain the productivity values of what we currently have, while also allowing for swipe to go home.
    2. The home screen as we know it dies.

    The first option seems too obvious and is a cop out. But the second, seems to line up with rumors of widgets/live tiles coming to the home screen. What if the home screen isn’t where you start, but rather is merged with the Today and the Lock Screen?

    Swiping up to multi-tasking on an iPad could then show a home screen to switch to, as if it is another app. The more I use iOS 11 on my iPads, the less I need the home screen at all, it is almost a waste of, I don’t know, but a waste nonetheless. So too is the today screen which goes unused by me on my iPads.

    And this would work nicely too with Face ID on iPads. Tap to wake up, while looking at the screen your lock screen morphs into a hybrid today-notification center. Then when you unlock, if you haven’t tapped something there, you pick up where you last left off, or worse case, in the multi-tasking chooser which is far more powerful and useful than the home screen has ever been. The only thing missing then is a dedicated spotlight button.

    Personally, I can’t wait to see where Apple iterates in the iPhone X.

  • How Facebook’s Political Unit Enables the Dark Art of Digital Propaganda

    Vernon Silver, and Sarah Frier: Facebook has embedded itself in some of the globe’s most controversial political movements while resisting transparency. Since 2011, it has asked the U.S. Federal Election Commission for blanket exemptions from political advertising disclosure rules that could have helped it avoid the current crisis over Russian ad spending ahead of the…

    Vernon Silver, and Sarah Frier:

    Facebook has embedded itself in some of the globe’s most controversial political movements while resisting transparency. Since 2011, it has asked the U.S. Federal Election Commission for blanket exemptions from political advertising disclosure rules that could have helped it avoid the current crisis over Russian ad spending ahead of the 2016 election, Bloomberg reported in October.

    Unless, and until, Facebook shuts down it’s bullshit “Global Government and Politics” team — or perhaps substantially changes who and how the team works with politicians — you should not believe a word Facebook says about anything as it relates to politics. Facebook embeds itself with politicians with nearly zero care for whom they work with.

    In short: they have helped to put a lot of people in power, who have then gone on to kill a lot of people once they came to power.

  • The Evolution of an Accidental Meme

    In yesterday’s link I mentioned a poster I saw, this is the link to the story behind that. Thanks to Tony.

    In yesterday’s link I mentioned a poster I saw, this is the link to the story behind that. Thanks to Tony.

  • Merry Last Christmas, Jack Dorsey.

    Mike Monteiro: Jack, and to an extent Twitter’s pet porg Biz Stone, have always believed that absolute free speech is the answer. They’re blind to the voices silenced by hate and intimidation. The voices that need to be protected. There’s this photo, in a children’s doctors office I saw once, where it said “equal”. The…

    Mike Monteiro:

    Jack, and to an extent Twitter’s pet porg Biz Stone, have always believed that absolute free speech is the answer. They’re blind to the voices silenced by hate and intimidation. The voices that need to be protected.

    There’s this photo, in a children’s doctors office I saw once, where it said “equal”. The image for equal was three kids of very different heights looking at a baseball game from the back of the stands. All of them standing on, say, a one foot tall step. Only the tallest kid could see perfectly, the middle somewhat, and the shortest not at all. And yet, this is equality, one foot for all.

    Next to this image is another frame titled “fair”. In this frame the tallest kid still has the one foot step, the middle a two foot step, and the shortest a three foot step. This is inequality, as the shortest gets more help, but we all agree this is fair, because the one who needs less help, gets less help, and the one who needs more help gets more help.

    What’s equal is not often what’s fair. These words are not the same, and too often companies hide behind the guise of “equal” and pretend that this means fair. That’s bullshit.

    Twitter, Facebook, and other social networks believe in equality above all else because it’s the easiest way to cop out. You can’t be wrong if you treat everyone the same, right? This is ideal, but not reality. The reality is that there are some who need more help at times than others.

    How users are treated in social networks generally gives the taller set of steps to the biggest users, the very users who do not need the help. While at the same time digging a hole for those who do need steps. This is the problem with a business needing “attention” and “engagement”, above all else, because they are not motivated to make the system a good system for users and the world. They are motivated to do what they need to do to make money, they would argue to stay in business, to later change the world.

    Bullshit.

    Don’t trust any of them, they have every intention to do something world changing later, without realizing they’ve already fucked the world now. And all the while, no idea what or how they will change the world later. Sounds cool, bro, but maybe fix what you’ve already done?

  • Brief Note on Packing Cubes for GR1s

    Quick packing cube note for GR1 users.

    I’ve been asked a ton about the new GORUCK Packing Cubes. Since I have both I figured I’d share some initial thoughts. All pictures are taken with the cubes in a 21L GR1, the 26L will just have more room at the top of the bag.

    (more…)

  • 5 Out of More Than 100: Ulysses 12.2 Now Available

    Rebekka: This has now been fixed, and here’s how we fixed it: We will now try to out-smart the operating system, by doing educated guesses on when, exactly, a user might not want to use Smart Punctuation at all. For example, we now auto-disable Smart Punctuation within code blocks, and we prioritize paragraph tags such…

    Rebekka:

    This has now been fixed, and here’s how we fixed it: We will now try to out-smart the operating system, by doing educated guesses on when, exactly, a user might not want to use Smart Punctuation at all. For example, we now auto-disable Smart Punctuation within code blocks, and we prioritize paragraph tags such as “divider”, so that the system can’t naively interfere. Let’s see how that works out in the long run.

    Yess. Finally.

  • Alteryx S3 leak leaves 120m American households exposed

    While we are on the topic of stupid: Default security settings for S3 buckets usually allow only authorised users to access the contents; however, UpGuard reports the bucket was configured via permission settings to allow any AWS “Authenticated Users” to download its stored data. What’s that mean you ask? Authenticated users are any user that…

    While we are on the topic of stupid:

    Default security settings for S3 buckets usually allow only authorised users to access the contents; however, UpGuard reports the bucket was configured via permission settings to allow any AWS “Authenticated Users” to download its stored data.

    What’s that mean you ask?

    Authenticated users are any user that has an AWS account.

  • Apple addresses why people are saying their iPhones with older batteries are running ‘slower’

    Basically, all kinds of stupid from both sides.

    Basically, all kinds of stupid from both sides.

  • Scientists wake up to coffee’s benefits

    Good news: Drinking three to four cups of coffee a day is associated with health benefits across a range of diseases and conditions.

    Good news:

    Drinking three to four cups of coffee a day is associated with health benefits across a range of diseases and conditions.

  • Some First Impressions

    A quick look at some items I’m testing right now.

    As we head into the new year, I have quite a few items I am currently testing, which I doubt that I’ll be ready to review for a while. Instead, here’s some previews and first impressions of items I’m testing.

    (more…)

  • iPad Productivity Report — 12/18/17

    A smattering of things from membership housekeeping to writing, to new iPad Pro hardware wants.

    This is going to be the last “report” of the year and I’ll resume on January 1st, 2018 — I want to thank all of your for being a member and reading these weekly reports. This has been a fun challenge to push for this year.

    This week I have a smattering of things for you: new site feature, membership update, a look at my morning paper, some thoughts on OLED, my thoughts on iA’s new typeface for writing. Let’s get to it.

    You must be a member to read the rest of this article.

  • Zuckerberg Is Coming After Our Kids. This Worries Me

    Anita Ramasastry: Facebook says it will not advertise to children within the app or sell any data it collects to advertisers. There are also, at present, no in-app purchases offered. Note that they don’t say they won’t collect data at all, which would be something that people who wanted to protect kids would do. Just…

    Anita Ramasastry:

    Facebook says it will not advertise to children within the app or sell any data it collects to advertisers. There are also, at present, no in-app purchases offered.

    Note that they don’t say they won’t collect data at all, which would be something that people who wanted to protect kids would do. Just that they won’t sell it. I’d assume, those kids sign up for proper Facebook later, they release the flood gates on that data.

  • Uber Engaged in ‘Illegal’ Spying on Rivals, Ex-Employee Says

    Mike Isaac reporting: Uber is facing at least five separate federal investigations, including at least one over a software tool called “Greyball,” which the company created to evade law enforcement in cities around the world. It is also facing an investigation into whether the company broke the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act for bribery overseas, a…

    Mike Isaac reporting:

    Uber is facing at least five separate federal investigations, including at least one over a software tool called “Greyball,” which the company created to evade law enforcement in cities around the world. It is also facing an investigation into whether the company broke the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act for bribery overseas, a claim Mr. Jacobs made in his letter.

    But sure, tell me again why you prefer taking an Uber over a Lyft.

  • GORUCK Rucker versus GORUCK GR1

    Taking a look at the Rucker as an alternative to the GR1.

    As I wrote about, my GR1 started to smell terrible from all the working out with it, so I decided it would be worthwhile to get a dedicated workout GORUCK. Naturally, I went with a Rucker as this is specifically what they are designed for.

    A Rucker is essentially a GR1 without the laptop compartment, without the internal MOLLE, but added strap to secure a ruck plate as well as a hydration bladder retention strap. Basically, this is the bag you want to get if you intend to never carry a laptop, you ruck, or you want to hike.

    (more…)