David Sparks’ fine review of OmniOutliner for the iPad:
OmniOutliner is not a simple port of the Mac OS X app. Instead, it is a ground up, outlining application built around the iPad’s strengths (and weaknesses).
David Sparks’ fine review of OmniOutliner for the iPad:
OmniOutliner is not a simple port of the Mac OS X app. Instead, it is a ground up, outlining application built around the iPad’s strengths (and weaknesses).
CalendarBar is a unique way to keep track of your events. It shows a list of upcoming events and tasks in your menubar where it’s easy to access from any application. CalendarBar supports Facebook, iCal, and Google Calendar so you can keep track of all your events with ease.
No other to-do list app does all 3 of these things as well as OmniFocus does.
Many thanks to ICONGOODS for sponsoring the feed this week. These guys have some new “softwear apparel” t-shirts that look great. The shirts feature the well-designed and minimal Glyphish icons by Joseph Wain — I especially like “Joe“.
And if you use the discount code “SHAWNBLANC” at checkout you’ll get an additional 20% off.
Episode 11 of The B&B Podcast. Ben and I talk about fighting and cloud-synced music.
Darrell Etherington at GigaOM:
The threats accuse devs of patent infringement regarding Apple’s in-app purchase mechanism, but the patent holder appears to be targeting independent developers individually instead of going after Apple itself.
Hopefully Apple steps up to help their 3rd-party developers. In the meantime, as Marco suggests, the rest of us can buy pCalc to help James Thomson out.
Joe Posnanski is one of the best sports writers in America. He moved to Kansas City in 1996 to write for The Star. Now Joe writes for Sports Illustrated and is moving back to North Carolina with his family. This post talking about his past 15 years is just the sort of writing that I most enjoy by Joe: full of humor and stories.
Username autocomplete, the ability to “clone” a view into its own window, and other things. Federico Viticci has all the details.
Though I don’t get these guys’ version numbering, one thing is for sure: the Alfred team is not leaving any gas in the tank while developing this app. They are working hard to build the fastest, easiest-to-use, and most-feature-rich application launcher for Mac there is.
The latest beta (which is about to be submitted to the Mac App Store?) now includes global hotkeys, and global hotkeys are great. It’s a feature of Quicksilver that I used all the time but that LaunchBar does not have. So when I switched to LaunchBar in 2009 I wrote a few AppleScripts and now use FastScripts to run certain triggers and launch certain apps globally.
I personally am still using LaunchBar and FastScripts, but Alfred could go toe to toe with them now. It’s a very good app. and if you’re not already in a relationship with an application launcher then I’d easily recommend Alfred.
I’m getting ahead of myself here, but if I had to sum up what I see as the main difference between Alfred and LaunchBar it’s that Alfred appeals to a broader range of nerds, and LaunchBar appeals to a smaller range of persnickety power users.
Aaron’s advice about how he wrote his 100,000-word novel and what hurdles he had to overcome sounds almost identical to how I write my long reviews and the hurdles I face when doing them.
Oh, the places you’ll go in a custom-built jet suit!
Compared to six months ago, when doing personal computing people are using their desktops less, their laptops less, and their iPads more. More charts from Business Insider’s survey results here.
It looks like Twitter for iPhone, the screenshots are of it running in Mobile Safari on the iPhone, but surely it’s meant for Android tablets:
This web app allows us to provide a high-quality and consistent Twitter experience on high-end touchscreen devices – whether or not an official Twitter application is available. It was built from the ground up for smartphones and tablets […]
Because: (a) the only native Twitter client for Honeycomb right now is TweetComb, and apparently it’s not very good; and (b) who on iOS is using the web app and not the native app?
[UPDATE: Because of the recent Blogger outage, the original link is broken. I’ve updated the link to simply point to the Twitter blog homepage.]
On the homepage of a weblog, when you’ve scrolled to the bottom of the recent posts displayed but before you get to the footer, what should you see?
Most commonly you’ll find a link for “previous entries” or “older entries”. A link that takes you to Page 2 of the site. And page 2 is always the same format as the homepage.
There are some unique dynamics to weblog design. You’re designing for three groups of people:
Regular readers tend to hang out at the top of the site or in the RSS feed. Since they are tracking with the weblog they are up to date with what’s been written lately. In fact, many regular readers may not even visit the site and read only from their feed reader.
Familiar readers who check in occasionally are likely to only peruse and read what’s on the homepage. They come to the site, look to see what’s new that they haven’t seen since last time, and then move on.
New readers are actually most likely showing up for the first time onto a permalink page because they got to your site via a link or a search result to something specific. From there, if they like what they’ve read, they’re likely to read more articles or click to the home page and see what is happening.
And so, when someone (who is most likely a new visitor) has scrolled to the bottom of the recent posts on the homepage, before they get to the footer what should they see?
Is a link to Page 2 the best option? I don’t know; the advantages and disadvantages vary based on the site.
Advantages of having a link to Page 2:
Disadvantages of having a link to Page 2:
Some of the work I am most proud of may not have been in the past few weeks or even months. Someone browsing page by page may never get to what I am most proud of.
I wanted to see how other weblogs handle pagination navigation. I took screenshots of the bottom of the homepage of 31 different weblogs to compare how they’ve implemented pagination navigation, if they’ve implemented it at all.
I chose sites that are run as a traditional blog, meaning the most recent posts are at the top of the page and usually where several posts are shown at once. I also chose sites that are published by people who (most likely) have thought through this sort of thing for their site.
Of the 31 sites, 19 had some sort of “older entries” style pagination navigation and 12 had something else.
Weblogs with pagination navigation: Kottke.org, Jason Santa Maria, TechCrunch, Jeffery Zeldman’s Daily Report, dooce, Seth Godin, Andy Ihnatko, 43 Folders, Cameron Moll, Panic Blog, Liz Danzico, The Hickensian, Simplebits, The Brooks Review, I Love Typography, swissmiss, This is my next…, Waxy.org, and 37signals.
Weblogs with something other than pagination navigation:
Since the inception of this site I’ve had the common link to Page 2. I am now testing something new here: I replaced the link to Page 2 with links to recent articles, interviews, and reviews instead. I’ve also increased the number of articles and links that appear on the home page to 25 total.
The goal is to offer the best choice for the reader, based on what I, as the publisher of my site, consider to be the most valuable. Is a link to Page 2 the best way for a reader to continue exploring my site, or would they be better served by discovering the articles I’ve written and am most proud of? 1
Honestly, I’m not sure yet. Though I do think that if I only ever wrote articles it may be a different answer.