Great overview of some easy ways to encrypt your computer’s hard drive and your public internet usage (such as when you’re at a coffee shop).

Also, Ben’s hypothetical worst-case scenario for a total 1Password breach is smart. In fact, I do exactly what he recommends: my primary and secondary email passwords, as well as my Dropbox password are each unique and strong passwords which are easy enough for me to commit to memory. All others are who knows what.

Encrypting Stuff

Andrew Kim:

Last week, I went to a Microsoft Store and bought a Nokia Lumia 920. I frequently say that Nokia has some of the best looking phones in the market today and have also publicly shown my admiration for Windows Phone. However, these things have never convinced me to switch perviously. So the question is, why now?

Well, it’s iOS 7.

Andrew has now had his Windows phone for about a week, and he shares some of the differences (good and bad) between the hardware and the software.

It’s an interesting move. iOS 7 is certainly polarizing. I wonder how many others, will, like Andrew Kim, switch to a different phone and OS, or else just hold out and refuse to update their current device to iOS 7.

Last year there was a holdout of people who didn’t update from iOS 5 to 6 because of the issues with Apple’s Maps app. But in that scenario the remnants at least had a light at the end of the tunnel: the hope and expectation that Google would release their own maps app. And Google did.

With iOS 7, however, there is no “light at the end of the tunnel” for those who don’t like the new look.

Switching From an iPhone to a Lumia

Casey Liss considers that maybe the new-to-iOS 7 swipe-left-to-right-to-go back gesture is a hint at a forthcoming bigger iPhone.

Maybe.

But a bigger iPhone certainly isn’t needed to appreciate the new gesture. If you’ve used an app like Riposte that already implements that gesture, you know it’s more than just an easier way to go back without having to strrreeeetch your thumb up to the Back Button.

Swiping to go back feels natural. After using Riposte for a while, the gesture had become one of those I found myself using in many other apps — similar to how I was always trying pull to refresh in apps that didn’t even support it, I’ve begun swiping right to go back in apps that don’t support it.

And now, on my iOS 7 test device, I’m using the gesture all over the place. Aside from Control Center, it may be my favorite new feature in iOS 7.

Swiping to Go Back

Tokens is a Mac app for managing App Store promo codes.

Tokens gets promo codes from iTunes Connect, creates shareable URLs for each code and notifies you once they’re redeemed.

The first step to getting your app noticed is inviting bloggers to try it. Promo codes let you give away free copies of your app, but unfortunately they’re laborious to create, awkward to redeem and impossible to track.

With Tokens you create a code with one click and bloggers can redeem it just as easily. By naming the token you can tell who has tried your app and follow up with them. You can also reuse any unredeemed codes before they expire.

Tokens is available now at usetokens.com/syndicate. Shawnblanc.net readers get a special 20% discount until July using this link.

* * *

My thanks to Tokens for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. Sponsorship by The Syndicate.

Sponsor: Tokens for Mac

Contemplating the iOS 7 Adoption Rate

Apple has stated that 93-percent of active iOS users are on iOS 6.

That’s fantastic. It’s great for us users because it means almost all of us are on the latest and greatest version. And it’s great for developers because it means they can have their apps support the latest APIs without fear of losing the vast majority of their potential customer base.

Based on some publicly available info from Apple, James Dempsey (Via Matthew Panzarino) put together this chart showing which iOS devices will be able to update to iOS 7 this fall. (You could preemptively add the new iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and iPad mini that will all (presumably) be announced and ship this fall with iOS 7 pre-installed.)

Note that there are two devices on Dempsey’s chart that can currently run iOS 6 but won’t be able to run iOS 7: the iPhone 3GS and the 4th-generation iPod touch.

The question is: of the 93-percent of active iOS users who are on iOS 6, how many of them are using a 4th-generation iPod touch or iPhone 3GS, and thus won’t be able to update to iOS 7 this fall?

It’s certainly not a majority, but also likely non-trivial.

Which means it’s a tricky line for 3rd-party developers to walk while considering updating their apps for iOS 7. As a developer, you want to adopt the newest APIs and technologies and go “all in” with the latest iOS version. But you don’t want to abandon your customers who are on older versions of iOS. And the alternative of having 2 versions of the same app (one that is iOS 7-only, and one that is for iOS 6) can be a nightmare on many levels (logistics, marketing, customer support, etc.).

However, Apple is pushing iOS 7 as the biggest deal since the original iPhone OS. And I’ve talked to many developers who are getting the hint and strongly considering making brand-new versions of their apps which are “all in” on iOS 7, or else they’ve got an aggressive plan to turn their current app into one that requires iOS 7 as soon as they can.

Certainly the ease of use for all the current iOS 6 devices to update to iOS 7 via an over-the-air update will fuel adoption rates. And there will be a flood of new devices shipping this fall with iOS 7 pre-installed.

So the questions in my mind are about the short-term iOS 7 adoption rate be? And how long will it take iOS 7 to be running on more than 90-percent of active iOS devices?

I’ve got a guess, but I’m still working the math out.

Contemplating the iOS 7 Adoption Rate

Thomas Brand is running in the St. Jude Memphis Marathon to raise money for St. Jude on behalf of Josiah Hackett, the son of my good friend Stephen Hackett. St. Jude is an incredibly generous hospital that has paid for over $2,000,000 worth of brain cancer treatment, allowing Stephen and his family to get vital medical coverage debt free.

Like last year, Anna and I are once again donating towards Brand’s marathon goal. All donations go directly to St. Jude so they can keep on helping children. I hope you’ll consider donating as well.

Go J Go

Rdio Radio

The latest update to Rdio’s iOS app includes Song Stations:

Start a station based on any song to hear more from that artist and other related artists.

It’s basically like Pandora — you pick a song you like and then Rdio does the rest. But you can chose to play songs from only the artist you selected, or you can play songs from related artists as well.

Rdio’s Song Stations are powered by The Echo Nest, which boasts over one trillion data points regarding their known songs, artists, and customer base of music providers (such as Spotify and Twitter Music).

I listen to Rdio most of the day, but the Auto Play feature that kicks in when an album or playlist is over usually stinks at picking songs I actually want to listen to at the time they come on. Because Auto Play is basically just a shuffle of my entire collection. Which means, say I’m listening to a John Mayer album, and when it’s over the instrumental version of Montell Jordan’s “This is How We Do It” will come on (I don’t even know how that song made its way into my collection in the first place). Not exactly what you’d expect to hear next, is it?

Yesterday and today I’ve been listening to the new Song Stations and so far, compared to Pandora, they’re hit and miss. Pandora’s algorithms are second to none — when I set up a station in Pandora I almost always get nothing but good picks. It’s still my preferred way to listen to jazzy Christmas music.

I’d love for Rdio to incorporate a setting for Song Station so that when I’m done listening to an album, Rdio would use that artist as the basis for auto playing the next songs. Thus keeping in the same audio stream as opposed to just a random shuffle from my whole collection.

Rdio Radio

Some great thoughts on iOS 7’s new look and apps, and he nails it at the end regarding Apple’s seemingly non-existent aversion to leaving things behind.

Also, I like Chuck’s comment on the new Siri:

The biggest win here are tie-ins to device capabilities like “turn on bluetooth” or “increase brightness” that we saw during the keynote. It makes Siri feel more like the voice behind your phone, not just another feature.

Agreed, and I love that this is the direction they’re going. One of my favorite tidbits seen in the new Notification Center is the natural language overview of your day regarding weather and events, as well as tomorrow’s events. Presumably that information is being parsed and the sentences are being written with the same technology behind Siri’s conversational tone.

Chuck Skoda: A Week With iOS 7

When I ran the in-house design team for the International House of Prayer we worked in an open office. Seventeen people and their desks with no cubicles or walls. We loved it because it was open and refreshing and you felt connected to the team. And it worked because we honored a rule of no talking, and no interrupting other people at their desk.

Everyone had iChat (back then it wasn’t yet called Messages) open and if you needed to talk to someone, even if they were in the desk next to you, you’d send them an instant message. And if their iChat status was set to “away” then it meant they were busy and in the zone and you would just have to hold your horses for a bit.

In short, if you spend any amount of time using the Mac’s Messages app (R.I.P. iChat) for conversing with peers and/or co-workers, then Chatology is for you. Because a lot of useful, helpful, and random information gets shared and this app makes it a breeze to find those past chats and/or whatever links or files where passed. You can even filter your searches to only show chats with images or links.

Like Ben wrote in his review, Chatology isn’t for everybody, but those who could use it are going to love it.

Chatology