A nice update to one of the more popular forked versions of Notational Velocity. If you’re running a previous version of Brett’s nvALT you won’t see this update in software updates; you have to download manually. If you’re not running this version of NV, you should check it out, there is some nice added functionality.
Month: April 2011
Membership Update
Six weeks ago I announced that I was taking the site full time and that to make it happen I would be offering a membership to the site. There was a month-long membership drive with the goal of promoting membership sign-ups before I started my first day as a full-time writer for shawnblanc.net. (Which was yesterday, by the way.)
Here is a quick update on where things stand as of today.
For starters, I’m sure you will be delighted to know, the membership drive was a success. There are two benchmarks I have for the membership subscription base:
- There is the minimum number of members which is needed simply to cover the necessities of life and the hard costs of running this site.
- There is an ideal subscriber base which would cover the additional expenses now equated with publishing this site full time.
Up until yesterday the income I got from this site was all “extra” income. I had a full-time job and didn’t need the income this site was generating. The Fusion ads and RSS sponsorships covered the hard costs (primarily hosting and my internet service provider) and then what was left over I used to pay for software, hardware, and the other things I write about here.
But now that I’ve quit my full-time job, the income this site makes has a new priority: food and shelter. Or, put another way, the RSS Sponsorships help me buy food to eat instead of software to write about.
Thankfully, the membership numbers have gone above that minimum level needed for me to sustain this site as my full-time gig. Moreover, people are still signing up — every day the membership base grows a little bit more. (Thank you!)
Once the membership numbers reach my ideal goal I will be able to budget for the purchasing of software and hardware as needed, and even set aside enough funds for things such as traveling to Macworld in 2012. I try to run a tight and frugal operation, but at the same time being involved in and writing about the design- and tech-savvy community isn’t exactly a free ride.
All this to say that the lights in my office will stay on, my internet service will not be disconnected, and if I skip lunch one day it’s likely out of forgetfulness rather than necessity.
I cannot express how very grateful to have this opportunity. I get to work from the comfort of my own home, keep my own schedule, and be involved in the things which I love and am passionate about. Not to mention I get to write for and interact with fine readers such as yourselves all day long. Thank you for helping make this a reality.
Regarding the Membership Drive Giveaway
For those of you who signed up for a membership during the membership drive, all the emails have been sent out to the winners. They were sent to the primary email addresses in your PayPal account, so if you don’t check that email often, you may want to.
There were 84 prizes in total, worth over $2,000. Many, many, thanks to all the writers, designers, developers, and friends who donated to the membership drive:
- Jorge Quinteros
- First & 20
- Brett Kelly
- Fusion Ads
- Michael Lopp
- Cameron Moll
- Idea Cafe
- Red Sweater Software
- Icon Resource
- Ryan Irelan
- Realmac Software
- Pixelmator
- Flux
- Sky Balloon Studio
- Attachment Tamer
- Flare
- Due App
- Clyppan
- TrackTime
Another Shameless Plug to Sign Up for a Membership if You Haven’t Yet
Membership subscriptions are still available and will be indefinitely. Membership to the site is just 3 bucks a month — like a good cup of coffee — and includes some very cool members-only perks. Primarily that you’ll be supporting the full-time writing and growth of shawnblanc.net, and you’ll get access to Shawn Today, the daily, members-only broadcast.
And, what the heck? So long as we’re at it… Another fantastic way to support this site is to sponsor the RSS feed. Sponsoring the feed is a win-win-win situation: you get your product or service promoted to a large audience of design- and tech-savvy readers, the readers in turn get to discover something new they may have not known about, and I get to put food on the table.
Tron: Legacy Reconfigured Soundtrack →
Speaking of Tron: Legacy, there’s a remix version of the original soundtrack and it just went on sale today. The original is, of course, fantastic (as Roger Ebert says, “It might not be safe to play this soundtrack in the car.”)
I’m listening to the Reconfigured album as I type this and it’s pretty great. Though it has hints of, and elements from, the original it is more like its own album than a “remix” of the original.
The Reconfigured album is available on iTunes or Amazon.com but is 2 bucks cheaper on Amazon right now.
Designing the Terminal and More in ‘Tron: Legacy’ →
One of the visual effects artists who worked on Tron: Legacy:
I take representing digital culture in film very seriously in lieu of having grown up in a world of very badly researched user interface greeble. I cringed during the part in Hackers (1995) when a screen saver with extruded “equations” is used to signify that the hacker has reached some sort of neural flow or ambiguous destination. I cringed for Swordfish and Jurassic Park as well. I cheered when Trinity in The Matrix used nmap and ssh (and so did you).
Great Interview with Joshua Blankenship on Method & Craft →
From CorelDRAW tyro to Design Director.
Where Technology is Secondary →
Kyle Baxter, talking about Apple’s new iPad advertisement:
[Apple is] trying to build an entirely new type of device where, for the first time in the history of computers, technology is secondary to what it does.
The Daily ‘Shawn Today’ Episodes are Free to Everyone All This Week →
There is now a dedicated landing page for Shawn Today. This page serves two purposes:
- A lot of members want to tell their friends about Shawn Today but don’t know where to send them (since the RSS feed is private). This landing page is the perfect place to link to when talking or writing or tweeting about Shawn Today.
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Many non-members have asked if I’d ever consider doing a trial membership in order to get a sample of what Shawn Today is like. By having some of my favorite past episodes available on this landing page it gives potential members a way to check out the broadcast.
Moreover, all this week the episodes of Shawn Today are freely available to everyone. It’s not just the members who have helped me get to this point and so I wanted to invite everyone into the behind-the-scenes fun that is the daily broadcast called Shawn Today.
If you head on over to the dedicated landing page you’ll find a few past episodes, today’s show, and it’s where the rest of this week’s episodes will be published to.
The B&B Podcast Episode 6: Wonderful People →
Ben and I talk about the Mac OS X desktop and all the personal preferences that go with it. Such as Dock placement, Menu Bar icons, and more. We also share the stats from a survey we had on Twitter asking you guys what your Desktop preferences are. And episode 6 is sponsored by Instacast and Screens.
The Read & Trust Weekly Premium Newsletter →
The Read & Trust network is a small band of writers who read and endorse one another’s writings. And we’ve just launched a weekly newsletter.
Each edition of the newsletter is a single, long-form piece written by one of the members. The content will be exclusive to the newsletter only, meaning each of us contributing are writing something unique just for the newsletter. A subscription is $5/month, and the first one goes out tomorrow.
[Sponsor] ReadMore by Navel Labs →
Do you have a stack of books to read, but can’t find the motivation? Or you want to dig into that classic novel you tell everyone you want to read but are afraid you won’t finish?
Just as athletes or apprentices crave feedback on the way to mastery, ReadMore helps you understand your reading habits and encourages you to keep reading. Previously featured on the front page of the iOS App Store, ReadMore tracks your reading sessions, holds notes, predicts, gently prods, and more! Check out the demo video of this great app.
Read more, and read smart!
Great Expectations
What do you write as the very first post on the first day of your new job as a full-time writer? I have no idea.
Ever since I can remember I have wanted to be a writer. And now that I actually carry that title it doesn’t fully seem legitimate.
C.S. Lewis, Jane Austen, Robert Louis Stevenson, Ernest Hemingway — they were writers. I, on the other hand, feel like just a guy who writes. Of course a guy who writes is, by definition, a writer. But where the aforementioned greats were ones who had such a wonderful command of words, I on the other hand always feel like I’m guessing.
Alas, Clive, Jane, Robert, and Ernest are no longer with us to answer the question when you wrote, did you feel in control or were you just guessing?
But if you ponder it for a moment, you can’t help but think that maybe they were shooting in the dark, too. And when you think of it like that, well then, you start to realize that perhaps it’s not so much about being a Good Writer as it is about being a Passionate Writer.
Writing should be about standing behind your work and truly caring about what it is you have to say. If you happen to be good with words then congratulations. Dispassionate beautiful prose, however, is still dispassionate. Or, as Anatole France put it, “a tale without love is like beef without mustard: insipid.”
Emotion, honesty, truth, passion. These are the backbones of writing. And these are the very things that can be the hardest to put into our writing. I often find myself caring more about how I say things than what I am saying. The how and the what are certainly important, but not equally so.
I can get more concerned about using too many semicolons than I do about putting my heart into every sentence. Because I can’t get criticized over a semicolon. Well I can, but so what, right? There are rules and guidelines for style that I can refer to in order to justify or correct my semicolon usage.
But when we put our heart into something and get criticized for it, that hurts. And so, in a way, we shy back a bit and we put just enough of ourselves into our writing to give it a hint of breath and no more. Or we shy away from emotion altogether and focus solely on other factors to make our writing garner attention.
Passion and emotion have always been my motivation for writing. I am a passionate person — we all are — and writing is one of the ways I’ve found to express those emotions. I’d like to get better at it, and slowly I am learning a little bit more every day.
And then there are the moments when words utterly fail me. Such as now, when I try to express the gratitude and excitement and nervousness I feel as I begin this new journey of writing full time. This is something I never saw coming that morning in Colorado over six years ago when I started that Blogspot account and wrote that first blog post talking about my vacation.
Today, as I write this, I’m sitting in the same place I usually sit when I write an article for shawnblanc.net: my office. Writing this article feels no different than the hundreds of other articles I’ve written over the years. But now, in this moment, the expectations are greater…
There are my own expectations of what will I publish today? What will come tomorrow and the next day and the next day? These are not just expectations of what the site itself looks like and what gets published to it, but also how I spend my time on the back end. A few thousand words published to the site can represent dozens of hours of work.
Secondly are the expectations of the readers and the members. Now that my full-time job is to publish this website, what does that mean to you? Only you know. I have tried not to think about it too much, but that is easier said than done. For years I’ve always tried to keep just a couple people in mind when writing here. But now that the economic success of this site hinges in no small part on the continued growth of a strong membership base, there is that sudden pressure to write for all of you at once.
You and I both know that is not a recipe for success. My goal is to simply keep on doing what I have been doing for the past four years. I have no plans to reboot this site, change its focus, or change what I’ve been doing so far that got me to this point. Though the pressures and expectations are new and different I am intent on staying steady.
The only thing that has drastically changed is that I now have many more hours in the week to devote to publishing this site. Which means the only difference you should notice is an increase in consistency and quality. I have many ideas that I am looking forward to starting on over the next few weeks and months, and I am very much looking forward to iterating, improving, and generally upping the overall awesomeness of this site.
Some of you have been here since the very first post. Some of you are brand new. And I am grateful that you chose to show up, sign up, and go on this journey with me.
Thank you,
— Shawn
‘Tron: Legacy’ Available on Tuesday →
On opening night for Tron: Legacy some friends and I watched the original, then went to the theatre and saw the midnight showing in IMAX 3D. It was stunning.
This Tuesday it’ll be available, and right now you can pre-order on Amazon. There’s a version that comes with four (four!) formats of the movie: Blu-Ray, Blu-Ray 3D, DVD, and digital. It’s only $30 right now (which is 40% off list), and it ships for free.
I don’t own too many movies in plastic media, but the visuals and audio on Tron: Legacy are so fantastic this is one film I certainly want to own on Blu-Ray. Pick it up via this link I’ll get a small kickback from Amazon.com.
Create Flow with OmniFocus →
I’d like to take a minute to thank Kourosh Dini for sponsoring the RSS feed this week in order to promote his amazing ebook, Create Flow with OmniFocus.
I switched to OmniFocus over six months ago, and though my natural disposition is towards apps which are simple and have a low barrier of entry, the more I use OmniFocus the more I love it. OmniFocus is an app worth learning and using because the return on the back end is well worth the investment.
I have my own copy of Create Flow with OmniFocus, and it is hands down one of the most exhaustive and detailed resources for OmniFocus that I have seen. If you are at all intimidated by OmniFocus, or even if you are already using it daily and want to learn more about it, I highly recommend Kourosh’s ebook.