Mike Isaac wrote this article for Wired last week about the growing trend from tech companies to just get a product out the door as soon as possible and then ship software updates later in hopes to improve the usability of the device.

Personally, if it’s a matter of trade-off, I would rather have a device that had less fanciness and features in exchange for speed and reliability and consistency in what it does do. Because if there are features missing altogether (like the quintessential example of copy and paste on the early versions of iOS) then it is easier to settle the issue that you cannot do that. But having a device that is feature rich yet buggy and inconsistent is like a constant annoyance.

Ship Today, Update Tomorrow

David Pogue reports that last night’s software update to the Kindle Fire makes a lot of the maddening software issues less balky:

Sure enough: the home screen “carousel,” a rotating shelf that holds all of your books, magazines and movies, now stops on a dime when you want it to. It takes only one tap to open something instead of several frustrating ones. When you do tap something, it opens faster and more fluidly. Page turns are smoother, especially in magazines.

Dwight Silverman also noticed an improvement:

I dropped [the software update] onto my Kindle Fire review unit and noticed an immediate improvement in the device’s responsiveness.

I don’t have a Kindle Fire, so I can’t say one way or the other if the update is actually as impressive as it sounds. The only other “eye witness” to the Fire’s speed improvements I found was this comment by “00QuantaMeister” on Mashable.

Kindle Fire Software Update

iPhone Coffee Apps

Search the iTunes app store for “coffee” and you get over 700 search results. On my iPhone I have 7 coffee apps installed: 4 of them have similar functionality, 3 of them are unique from the others, and only 1 gets used on a regular basis.

Affogato

Affogato is designed by Visioa, an iOS development studio based in England. The app is, more or less, an encyclopedia of coffee terms, types, and brews with the relevant descriptions and overviews. There are not many specific details directly related to how to brew a specific type of coffee. Rather, Affogato is primarily an informational app. Though some of the explanations of different drinks include an overview of what that drink’s generic recipe is.

Decaf Sucks

Decaf Sucks is a social network-type of app, where users can (a) post suggestions and reviews of local coffee shops; and (b) find local coffee shops based on other peoples’ reviews.

The idea is great. In reality, however, I have not found any real-life benefit from the app. In part because I am already aware of all the local coffee shops that Decaf Sucks recommends to me here in Kansas City. Also, when I have gone out of town the app has not had enough reviews for where I’m at to be able to recommend a local coffee shop to me. I’ve found that a question to my Twitter followers will yield more suggestions about where to go.

CaféTimer

CaféTimer is nothing more than a 4-minute timer with a picture of a French Press. I love the simplicity of it: launch it and the timer starts. But I would love to see a few options to add different timers. I, for one, do not brew a pot of French Press coffee every day. Usually I brew my AeroPress, and sometimes I brew my siphon pot. Neither of these brew for 4 minutes.

And so, if I just want a quick coffee timer, my stove’s timer is usually the quickest. Though I do also use Siri.

The Other Four Coffee Apps

There next 4 coffee apps are very similar to one another, and their primary function is providing brew recipes, timers, and detailed information on how to brew various types of coffee.

When I think of a coffee app, these are the types of apps I think of.

These are coffee apps that tell me the proper ratio of coffee grounds to water for the various types of brewing methods. Ratios are important because with them you can brew 8 ounces of coffee just as successfully as 32 ounces. And if you’re brewing with a new type of method, detailed recipe-based apps like this give you a good starting point.

Intelligentsia

This app is done in conjunction with the well-known Intelligentsia coffee roasters and brewers. The app features a list of types of coffee beans, detailed instructions for brewing various types of coffee, and a timer.

The list of coffee beans is basically a catalog of their coffee offerings. With information on the bean, the roast, its origin, and more. I’ve never used this part of the app.

The timer is just that. It has pre-determined times based on the type of brew method you are using. You can select your brew method and then start your timer. The brewing methods section is great if you are learning a new way to brew some coffee. The provide detailed and illustrated instructions for Cafe Solo, Pourover, Chemex, Cupping, Siphon, and french press.

If you’re just learning about these various brewing methods and need beginner-level instructions for how to prepare the coffee and the tools, then the Intelligentsia app is a great resource. However, after that initial instruction the app becomes less helpful in providing information for branching out how you brew your coffee.

Coffee Timer

The app “Coffee Timer!” is a reference app for setting the appropriate ratios of coffee grinds to water and for timing your brew. It comes default with settings for french press, siphon, chemex, popover, AeroPress, and the clever
dripper
.

Though I like the clever drawings on the front of the app’s home screen I find the actual coffee-brewing page of the app difficult to adjust, especially on the fly as a task that you may be adjusting a little bit every day. But I do like that you can save your own recipes for various types of brewing methods, such as your single-serving french press and your family-sized french press or your extra-strong AeroPress and your regular-strength AeroPress.

Bloom

Similar to the app “Coffee”, Bloom also offers a list of coffee-to-water ratios and timers for various brew methods. It has the same six methods as “Coffee” does, but with Beehouse instead of AeroPress.

You can add your own recipes to the list, duplicate current ones unto creating your own, and even share those recipies via email, Twitter, or MMS. I created a recipe for AeroPess and Bloom was smart enough to assign an AeroPress-looking icon next to my new recipe. I made up a randomly-named recipe called “Shawn’s Fave” and Bloom gave it a more generic coffee bean icon. I made a recipe for “Drip” and Bloom gave it the same generic bean icon.

I like the simplicity of Bloom’s interface for a specific coffee brewing recipe in that it displays the coffee and water weights, the bloom and brew times, and has a timer ready to go all on the same screen.

However, what I do not like is that all information for custom recipes has to be entered in manually. There is no way to assign a ratio. Rather, you must manually adjust the coffee-to-water recipe. And therefore: (a) you need a different app to figure out the proper ratio: and (b) you can’t adjust your coffee recipe on the fly.

Brew Control

My favorite of the whole lot of coffee apps is Brew Control. As someone who is already familiar with all my coffee tools, I have found Brew Control to be the most easy to use for my daily coffee brewing.

It is extremely simple to set the proper measurements for a brew method. It supports both weight (in grams) and volume (in ounces) for the coffee and the water. My mind thinks in ounces of water, but my scale thinks in weight.

I use Brew Control by first deciding how much coffee I want to brew and setting the water dial in ounces. Then I translate that to grams, and I have my coffee and water ratios. Adjusting the ratio is easy as well.

I don’t know about you, but I brew my coffee a little bit different every day it seems like. And so I highly value the ability to tweak my recipe on the fly.

Brew Control has pre-defined recipes/ratios and timers for AeroPress, Auto drip, Chemex, espresso maker, pour over, french press, and siphon. You cannot add new brew methods to the list, but you can customize each current one as you see fit.

My only nit with Brew Control is the UI design. It could use a bit of polish, but only around the edges because the way the app’s design and functionality are built in is actually quite clever. Or, in other words, I love the dials.

Of all the coffee apps I have, Brew Control is the only one I use regularly. And for coffee nerds with iPhones, this is the only one I’d recommend spending a few bucks on.

iPhone Coffee Apps

Amazon said yesterday that they are selling over 1 million Kindle devices per week. But they gave no hint as to the breakdown.

Marco Arment looked at his affiliate links since the beginning of October, and sees the Kindle 4 being the top selling Kindle in his circle of the Web. So I did the same, and looked back at my affiliate links for both shawnblanc.net and Tools and Toys.

This is how the Kindle sales break down for my neck of the woods:

Kindle Sales Breakdown

Where Marco sees a huge lean towards the Kindle 4 (the device that he recommended), I see a huge lean towards the Kindle Touch (the device that I recommended). But we are both seeing that the Fire is a poor seller comparatively.

Kindle Sales Numbers

24 Hours with a Galaxy Nexus: First Impressions

Verizon loaned me a new Galaxy Nexus. This is the first Android Device I have used for longer than 5 minutes. I’ll write a more detailed review of the phone along with my thoughts on Android in the next week or two once I’ve spent more time with the device. But for now, here are a few things of note.

  • The 4.65-inch screen is enormous. This phone is too big for me to operate comfortably or easily with just one hand.
  • The 4G LTE is crazy fast.
  • Notification Center on Android 4 is better than on iOS 5.
  • There are no great Twitter clients on Android.
  • The keyboard’s “autocorrect bar” is very handy.
  • This is what my current Home screen looks like.
24 Hours with a Galaxy Nexus: First Impressions

Rasmus Larsen:

Super AMOLED Plus ensures perfect detailing and text reproduction. Super AMOLED shares sub pixels making text appear fuzzy.

The Galaxy Nexus has a Super AMOLED display (no plus). I’ve been using a review unit that’s on loan from Verizon, and the display on the Galaxy Nexus is nice, but it’s not Retina display nice. On the Nexus small text looks crisp and colors are bright, but if I hold it up close to my eye it is easier to make out the pixels than on the iPhone 4/4S display.

(Via Doug Stephen.)

The Difference Between a Super AMOLED Display and a Super AMOLED Plus Display

SublimeVideo is an online service that lets you upload videos and embed them as HTML5 videos that fall back to Flash if HTML5 isn’t supported (usually the opposite is true). They now have a free plan that lets get unlimited plays, video lightboxes (where the video pops up over the web page when you click on a thumbnail), and more. The only “catch” of the free video player there is a simple “SublimeVideo” badge in the bottom-right corner.

I’ve been using Vimeo for the few and far between times I post video to this site, but in the future I’ll be giving SublimeVideo a shot.

(Via The Industry.)

SublimeVideo is Now Free

Joshua Blankenship:

The discovery opportunities that exist for Twitter as a product and for me as a user are vastly under-served. […]

The #discover results could be almost any randomized content and it would be exactly as relevant to me as the current offering. How do you sit on that much data about your users, ignore it, and serve up Chachi instead? How is that not a massive, wasted opportunity? Why do you ship a product that doesn’t address it?

On Discovery & the Social Graph