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Leica Sofort 2June 13, 2024
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  • Bradford Guardian Knives

    These are some amazing fixed blade knives.

    Originally, I was going to post these as separate reviews, but I think they work best together. So be warned that this is three reviews of three knives, all of the same heritage from Bradford Knives.

    Bradford’s Guardian line of fixed blades knives are available in four sizes, here I look at the 3, 4, and 5 series of knives. These range from a small everyday blade to larger survival blades. Each of the three blades are among the best fixed blade knives I’ve ever used.

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  • Interview with Ev Williams about Medium

    I can’t imagine why anyone would publish on Medium after reading this. My take aways from the interview: They are still not sure how to pay writers. They don’t believe all writers should be paid. They will keep changing their minds until something works. The risk here is: what if you want to be paid,…

    I can’t imagine why anyone would publish on Medium after reading this. My take aways from the interview:

    1. They are still not sure how to pay writers.
    2. They don’t believe all writers should be paid.
    3. They will keep changing their minds until something works.

    The risk here is: what if you want to be paid, but Medium doesn’t let you? Right now you may not care, but what if you get to the point some time in the future where you want to be paid? Your platform choice should never limit that.

  • The Acquired Taste of Fucking Up

    Andy Rubin, explaining how exposing customer emails to other customers is really hard for him to personally face and own up to: Being a founder in an intensely competitive business means you occasionally have to eat crow. It’s humiliating, it doesn’t taste good, and often, it’s a humbling experience. As Essential’s founder and CEO, I’m…

    Andy Rubin, explaining how exposing customer emails to other customers is really hard for him to personally face and own up to:

    Being a founder in an intensely competitive business means you occasionally have to eat crow. It’s humiliating, it doesn’t taste good, and often, it’s a humbling experience. As Essential’s founder and CEO, I’m personally responsible for this error and will try my best to not repeat it.

    Why is it so hard for people with massive egos to actually apologize without making it about themselves? Never mind, my question answered itself.

  • Learn Ulysses

    I took some time this morning to run through Shawn’s new Learn Ulysses course and it’s really well done. This gives you a great foundation for starting to use the only writing app you’ll ever need.

    I took some time this morning to run through Shawn’s new Learn Ulysses course and it’s really well done. This gives you a great foundation for starting to use the only writing app you’ll ever need.

  • New Membership Options

    A quick note to let you know I’ve changed the way memberships on the site work ever so slightly. The changes are: There is no more monthly plan option. All plans come with a 7 day free trial. When you sign up you still need to enter a credit card, but you will not be…

    A quick note to let you know I’ve changed the way memberships on the site work ever so slightly. The changes are:

    1. There is no more monthly plan option.
    2. All plans come with a 7 day free trial. When you sign up you still need to enter a credit card, but you will not be billed for 7 days. If you cancel before the 7 day period is over, you won’t be charged, otherwise charges will commence at that time.
    3. There’s now a quarterly plan option, it’s the same price as monthly ($4/mo), but billed every 3 months instead at $12 per quarter.

    For Current Monthly Members: Nothing will change for you if you have a current monthly plan, but if you let that plan expire, you will not be able to select the plan again.

    There’s many reasons for this change, but the most simple is that I wanted to give someone incentive to check out the members content for free, but the tradeoff for that free look is that I am asking for a longer commitment to being a member.

    Thanks again to everyone who is currently a member, I’ve got a lot of great stuff planned for the rest of the year.

  • Bunch of Stuff (video)

    You must be a member to view this video.

    You must be a member to view this video.

  • Natural Deodorants

    I know, but bear with me here for a bit.

    Ok, hang on now. I know you’ve stuck with me through reading about a lot of random shit, and this seems like yet another. But, this is actually not about anything healthy for you as a person, as much as it is about my beloved Merino Wool shirts. You see, most non-natural deodorants tend to clog up the fabric on merino near the arm pits, and thus reduce performance.

    So after a lot of reading and research, it seems that using a natural, non-bar, deodorant causes your merino to not only last longer, but perform better. And that’s a way better selling point if you ask me. But I also don’t want to stink, so in the name of science I’ve tried a few natural deodorants which perform well with Merino to see if they can actually — you know — keep the stink at bay.

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  • iPad Productivity Report — 8/28/17

    A smattering of iOS annoyances.

    Diving into the Apple Pencil, picture-in-picture on iOS 11, and lastly why doesn’t my iPad pause audio when I get a call? So yeah, lots of nitpicking of iOS this week.

    You must be a member to read this article.

  • Why Men Don’t Believe the Data on Gender Bias in Science

    Alison Coil: Given the enormous amount of data to support these findings, and given the field in question, one might think male scientists would use these outcomes to create a more level playing field. But a recent paper showed that in fact, male STEM faculty assessed the quality of real research that demonstrated bias against women…

    Alison Coil:

    Given the enormous amount of data to support these findings, and given the field in question, one might think male scientists would use these outcomes to create a more level playing field. But a recent paper showed that in fact, male STEM faculty assessed the quality of real research that demonstrated bias against women in STEM as being low; instead the male faculty favored fake research, designed for the purposes of the study in question, which purported to demonstrate that no such bias exists.

    Her conclusion as to why this is, is so embarrassingly on point.

  • Things 3

    The todo app for real people.

    For the majority of the life of this site, I’ve been a staunch OmniFocus user. Detailed and meticulously maintained systems for doing. I didn’t have, nor did I want, a list — I wanted platform from which I launched my projects.

    That’s a fancy way of saying I scheduled time — I made tasks — for managing all my other time and my other tasks.

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  • Wading Through AccuWeather’s Bullshit Response

    John Gruber: The accusation comes from Will Strafech, a respected security researcher who discovered the “actual information” by observing network traffic. He saw the AccuWeather iOS app sending his router’s name and MAC address to Reveal Mobile. This isn’t speculation. They were caught red-handed — go ahead and read Strafech’s original report. AccuWeather is not…

    John Gruber:

    The accusation comes from Will Strafech, a respected security researcher who discovered the “actual information” by observing network traffic. He saw the AccuWeather iOS app sending his router’s name and MAC address to Reveal Mobile. This isn’t speculation. They were caught red-handed — go ahead and read Strafech’s original report.

    AccuWeather is not only a shitty weather app, but a shitty company. I use Hello Weather, and here’s hoping they aren’t pulling shady shit. And the fact I don’t know that, and Apple doesn’t, highlights a real problem Apple needs to address.

  • Woom Bikes

    I am very confident this is the best bike you can buy a kid learning to ride a bike.

    Let me start by saying: these bikes are for young kids and they are really expensive. But, there’s a reason I am writing about them: they are absurdly good.

    I think my daughter was 3 or 4 when we got her a bike. It was a Hello Kitty bike we snagged from Target, a while later we got my youngest a bike at 3, a Minnie Mouse bike from Target. These run somewhere around $100. They are heavy and basically like the bikes I had growing up. In other words, they are what I think of, when I think of “kids bike”.

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  • Eno Billow Air Lounge

    A really fun, portable hammock like thing, that will have you cursing when you try to inflate it.

    I snagged an ENO Billow Air Lounger from REI during a sale, and took it with me camping with 5 young kids and three dads. I wanted to snag a hammock, but then I realized how potentially dangerous that would be as I had visions of kids flipping out of a hammock on the trip, so I stuck with this — it’s basically a ground hammock.

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  • iPad Productivity Report — 8/21/17

    Looking at Files.app for iOS, and an update on my password app search.

    This week I update you on my search for a 1Password replacement and talk about what Files.app really means for iOS. Or at least what it should mean.

    You must be a member to read this post.

  • Subscription Attrition

    Some thoughts on subscriptions, stability, money, and scalability of the problem.

    I’ve been running this site as a “member” supported site since July of 2012. That’s what I call my subscription based, paywall model, a member-site. I’ve tried a lot of different methods to what I charge for, over the years, so I know a thing or two about subscriptions. I’m not selling software, but the consumer mindset on most any recurring payment is similar across the aisles. I’m sure Amazon could tell you some amazing stories about people being unwilling to use ‘Subscribe and Save’, but we are going to have to wait awhile for that TED talk.

    When I first started thinking about subscriptions, I had to try and guess at how many people would actually pay for something they previously got for free. I had no clue how to start this guess — there’s basically no good method. Page views and unique visitors seemed like a bad place to look, as did followers on social media. So instead I went to RSS subscribers. I figured they were among the more interested and loyal people. I had about 12,000 RSS subscribers at the time.

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  • An Interview with Louis Rossetto, co-founder of Wired

    Louis Rossetto, in an interview with Om Malik: I don’t mean, in a Silicon Valley sense, “making a better world” as part of a business plan. If people believed and acted like the relationships they have and the actions they do can directly make things better, the world would get better. I truly believe that.…

    Louis Rossetto, in an interview with Om Malik:

    I don’t mean, in a Silicon Valley sense, “making a better world” as part of a business plan. If people believed and acted like the relationships they have and the actions they do can directly make things better, the world would get better. I truly believe that. It’s this micro decision-making level of individuals that matters the most.

    Great interview, with a ton of insights on the world today. Well worth the read.

  • The new Ulysses subscription plan is a wonderful idea

    David Hewson: For some reason the internet has encouraged us to place little value on the things we use, even the ones we rely on heavily day to day. It’s not just software. Books have been discounted and devalued in many places to the point where the people who write them get a pittance in…

    David Hewson:

    For some reason the internet has encouraged us to place little value on the things we use, even the ones we rely on heavily day to day. It’s not just software. Books have been discounted and devalued in many places to the point where the people who write them get a pittance in return for their work. Apps have been driven down to price points where people buy them casually, never use loads of them, then wonder why the things don’t get fixed or improved then disappear a few years down the line.

    He hits on a great point: buying ‘casually’ as he puts it is a huge issue. Things you buy causally, you tend not to care about, until you have good reason to care about them. This is why I’ll continue to beat the drum: raise your fucking app price. If you want to have fewer people complain about paying for your app, raise it beyond a price where people buy it casually.

    The prime example of this is Omnigroup.

    I’d say the bottom end price should be $24.99.

  • Triple Aught Design Recon RS Jacket

    One of my favorite jackets for cool, not cold, weather.

    Months ago I set out to find a good jacket for summer/spring and days where I need a light layer on top, but nothing wind/water/insulating, just something to toss on. I wanted something which wasn’t typical cotton, and I stumbled on Triple Aught Design’s Recon RS jacket. It’s a Nylon-Cotton blend which is quite popular in technical minded clothing arena, with a overall military look to it.

    I picked up the ME Green color, but also ordered a “Deception” which I returned as it was too large. The Green is a much better color for me, as Deception was overall too dark (but a very cool color). I’ve been using this jacket for a few months now, both at the coast, and camping.

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  • Subscription Software

    Matt Gemmell: The important point is that, if you’re able to readily switch to a different app when your current one changes its payment model, then… do it. Just vote with your wallet, and don’t worry about it. To write a pissy review of an app you liked yesterday, in an attempt to vengefully damage…

    Matt Gemmell:

    The important point is that, if you’re able to readily switch to a different app when your current one changes its payment model, then… do it. Just vote with your wallet, and don’t worry about it. To write a pissy review of an app you liked yesterday, in an attempt to vengefully damage their business, is pretty reprehensible, right? It’s like giving one star on Amazon because the delivery was late. Don’t be a child. Move on.

    See also his rules for deciding on whether a subscription is worth it on an app by app basis. I love subscriptions, but only for the apps I get the most use out of. I don’t pay for a lot of apps because I don’t need or use them. I’d love for others to be subscription so I can more readily try them out, without feeling like I pissed away $20 on something which ultimately didn’t work out.