Here’s a Safari extension that, you guessed it, cleans up crufty URLs:

Things being removed include:

  • Google Analytics parameters (utm_source=, utm_medium, etc.)
  • Youtube related parameters (feature=)
  • Partner tracking stuff for NYTimes, Macword, CNN, CBC Canada and The Star

It removes them just one second after the page has been loaded, so those sites that insert all that cruft for analytics purposes still get the data. (Via Michael Schechter.)

Related: How to disable FeedBurner from uglifying your clean URLs.

Safari Extension: Clean URLs

Daniel Bogan was kind enough to have me on his awesome nerdy interview site, The Setup. Savvy readers may notice that I replied to his interview questions before the new iPad came out and before my Das Keyboard arrived. Otherwise, everything you ever wanted to know about my software and hardware rig is right there in all its nerdy glory.

My Setup

My thanks to Viper Comics for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. Earlier this week I read through the first chapter of World War Hack and it’s a lot of fun; I really am looking forward to finishing it.


Inspired by true events, World War Hack is a graphic novel that tells the story of how the U.S. Government gathers top computer hackers from around the country, under the guise of a hacking competition, to unknowingly help solve a pressing national security crisis. Little does the government know that eighteen-year-old hacker, Wyatt Dyer, is both the cause and solution to their crisis.

As a special for the readers of shawnblanc.net, you can preview the first full chapter online for free. Pre-order before May 6 and you’ll also receive free shipping.

Sponsor: ‘World War Hack’

Timothy Collins, the one who called into the Vergecast a few weeks ago and shared his very clever theory on how Apple could pull off a 4-inch iPhone, writes more about how he came about his theory:

I came up with this “theory” from thinking, using logic, and simply what I want from a new iPhone, mixed with what I thought Apple would want from a new iPhone.

I think Timothy is right in his assumption that, if Apple were to bust out a 4-inch iPhone, it very well may do so without changing the physical dimensions of the current iPhone in any direction. And wouldn’t that be something just like Apple? — introducing a new form factor without designing a new form factor. Though, as we’ve discovered from the new iPad, if Apple is going to compromise to solve an engineering enigma, they will compromise on size and/or weight first.

Timothy Collins on His 4-inch iPhone Theory

About once or twice a year I need to re-stock my pen supply. This time around, I added one of these Platinum Preppy fountain pens to my order per Brad Dowdy’s review. I’ve never used a fountain pen before, and this one is pretty great. It’s not the sort of pen I’d use on a daily basis; even though its an ultra-fine tip, it’s still puts down a much thicker line than I prefer. I did, however, use it to sign all my tax forms — it seemed fitting to use a fountain pen for such a task.

Along with my order, I also added a couple of the Zebra Sarasa 0.4mm pens per Gruber’s recommendation. The Zebras are nice, but the Signo DX 0.38mm is better.

The Platinum Preppy Fountain Pen

From the archives of The Atlantic Monthly, here is James Fallow’s review of the $4,000 Processor Technology SOL-20 from 1982:

These four machines, and the yards and yards of multi-strand cable that connected them, were the hardware of my system. The software consisted of a program called The Electric Pencil, with a manual explaining the mysteries of “block move,” “home cursor,” and “global search and replace.”

I skip past the day during which I thought the computer didn’t work at all (missing fuse) and the week or two it took me to understand all the moves The Electric Pencil could make. From that point on, I knew there was a heaven.

What was so exciting? Merely the elimination of all drudgery, except for the fundamental drudgery of figuring out what to say, from the business of writing. The process works this way.

When I sit down to write a letter or start the first draft of an article, I simply type on the keyboard and the words appear on the screen. For six months, I found it awkward to compose first drafts on the computer. Now I can hardly do it any other way. It is faster to type this way than with a normal typewriter, because you don’t need to stop at the end of the line for a carriage return (the computer automatically “wraps” the words onto the next line when you reach the right-hand margin), and you never come to the end of the page, because the material on the screen keeps sliding up to make room for each new line. It is also more satisfying to the soul, because each maimed and misconceived passage can be made to vanish instantly, by the word or by the paragraph, leaving a pristine green field on which to make the next attempt.

Absolutely fantastic.

I was just one year old when Fallows wrote his review of the SOL-20. In 30 years from now will our kids look back and read iPad and iPhone reviews with the same sense of antiquity and novelty that I felt as I read Fallow’s piece?

‘Living With a Computer’

Quite a few improvements and additions to my application launcher of choice. Particularly:

When entering a web search, Command-Return can now be used to create the URL that represents the query rather than actually performing the search.

and:

Enhanced browsing functionality: Shift-Left can be used to show the contents of the selected item’s parent folder. This is especially useful while browsing an application’s recent documents.

Pro tip: You can subscribe to the LaunchBar nightly builds via the app’s preferences under Update → Show pre-release versions.

LaunchBar 5.2

A new app by Owen Voorhees, a 14-year old iOS developer living in Chicago:

LogMyRun is for runners who want a simple way to keep a log of their runs.

Read more about Owen on this Inc.com profile done nearly 3 years ago when he made his first iPhone app (at the age of 11) — “Nothing’s impossible if you don’t know it’s impossible”.

LogMyRun

Manton Reece on what iCloud is, and isn’t, good for:

For iOS backups and iTunes Match, iCloud is fantastic. For private, app-specific data that doesn’t make any sense away from a single developer’s native Mac and iOS apps, it’s also excellent. There’s no question that using Macs, iPhones, and iPads today is a significantly better experience thanks to iCloud.

But there are two fundamental limitations in iCloud that make it inappropriate for a bunch of syncing uses:

  • No way to access it from other platforms or web apps.
  • No way to share data between apps from different developers.

Agreed. And a prime example is iOS/Mac text editors. I’ve actually found that using iCloud to sync my document in Byword (though it’s cool) is not my preference. I use Dropbox because: (a) the workflow which OS X requires an app to go through to save a document to iCloud is a bit tedious; (b) iCloud documents don’t show up in LaunchBar’s recent documents list; and, most importantly, (c) documents synced via iCloud are only available in Byword.

iCloud vs. The Web