Don Melton, recently retired, and now writing for his brand new website:
Ten years ago this month, my secret Web browser team at Apple became the “Safari” team — less than 30 days before we debuted the product on January 7, 2003.
Don Melton, recently retired, and now writing for his brand new website:
Ten years ago this month, my secret Web browser team at Apple became the “Safari” team — less than 30 days before we debuted the product on January 7, 2003.
Recently I’ve read a few new articles about scaling back from Twitter and RSS. This is a common theme, especially amongst the group of bloggers I follow. And I’m glad that it’s a common theme because things like scaling back, clarifying our goals, identifying distractions, and the like are all moving targets.
There is no set-it-and-forget-it because small distractions are always creeping into our lives. It’s a constant battle to keep even a modicum of focus and creative breakthrough as a part of our daily lives. But it’s a battle worth fighting.
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Patrick Rhone, “What is Enough?”:
I’m convinced that a successful life is largely driven by balance and moderation. […]
We all have a center of balance that is unique, different from everyone else. My center of balance is different from yours. My daughter’s, from mine. As she walks the wire, hands out, wobbling to and fro, this is what she is in search of. As she gets older, this process might become easier, faster, with less wobble, but it will never end. No matter how good she becomes, she will always need some device to assist her — arms stretched, a long pole, a racquet or fan. Even the Flying Wallendas, perhaps the greatest wire act to ever perform and a family team stretching back 10 generations, still wobble and use devices to maintain their balance.
Frank Chimero, “Digital Jubilee”:
The Jubilee offers a way out of oppressive expectations, even if they are our own. This year, I’m practicing a digital jubilee by archiving my inbox, deleting my RSS subscriptions, and unfollowing most everyone on Twitter. These, of course, will fill back up as time passes, but now I have a recurring way to purge. Practices like these have been coined “declaring bankruptcy” by the digital lifestyle blogs, but I think the phrase misrepresents the practice. Cleaning the digital slate is not a practice of giving up. It is one of self-forgiveness.
Yours truly, in an interview with Matt Alexander:
I’ve never felt that technology itself was too entwined in my life, though I have gone through seasons where I feel the need to slow down or step away. But that could be true for any and all hobbies or distractions. There are people who admit to spending too much time wrenching on the car, or too much time golfing, or whatever it may be.
Technology, gadgets, and the like are not bad in and of themselves, it’s us who need self-control to live balanced and purposeful lives.
Adam Brault: “I quit Twitter for a month and it completely changed my thinking about mostly everything.“:
I used to believe that time was the most important thing I have, but I’ve come to believe differently. The single most valuable resource I have is uninterrupted thought.
Paul Graham, “Maker’s Schedule, Manager’s Schedule”:
But there’s another way of using time that’s common among people who make things, like programmers and writers. They generally prefer to use time in units of half a day at least. You can’t write or program well in units of an hour. That’s barely enough time to get started.
When you’re operating on the maker’s schedule, meetings are a disaster. A single meeting can blow a whole afternoon, by breaking it into two pieces each too small to do anything hard in.
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For a maker, uninterrupted work time is valuable because it allows us uninterrupted thought. Large blocks of free time so we can focus, freely (or not so freely, because, well, you know how it goes sometimes).
But when we interrupt our own time with habitual checking of email, Facebook, Twitter, et al. then it’s like having micro meetings all day long.
Unfollowing everyone, unsubscribing from everything, and setting up auto-responders in our email seem mostly seem like band-aid fixes. They help in some regard (I’m trying something similar myself with Twitter) but underneath the problem is still there. Yes, apply the band aid, but that alone does not mean the “problem” is “healed”.
Because it comes down to our own choices. Are we going to spend our time the way we want to or not? Are we going to do the work we say we want to do or not? Intentions are dandy, but real men get to work.
John Gruber:
…one recurrent theme I see in nearly every single “how I write on the iPad” story is Dropbox. It’s the linchpin in the workflow. Scary, because Dropbox is outside Apple’s control. Scary, because if not for Dropbox, many of these people would not be using their iPads as much as they are. Scary, because Apple’s iCloud falls short of Dropbox.
Agreed. I wouldn’t be able to use my iPad a “laptop replacement” nearly as easily if not for Dropbox. But I rarely ever use the actual Dropbox app. Rather, most of the apps I use sync with my iPhone and Mac via Dropbox. Byword, Writing Kit, 1Password, TextExpander, and DropVox. Just to name a few.
If you’re going to write in the browser, this is how to do it.
My thanks to Today Weather for sponsoring the RSS feed this week. It’s a new iPhone weather app built by the same guys behind Agenda, which I consider one of the best iPhone calendar apps out there. And right now, Today Weather is on sale for just a buck in the App Store.
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Today Weather is a beautiful, gesture-based weather app for the iPhone.
Your weather needs change. Usually, you just have to understand what’s happening now but sometimes you need to plan ahead.
With Today, you can very quickly:
Weather conditions are handcrafted and the icon looks great on your Home screen.
For a limited time, Today Weather is just $0.99 in the App Store.
Thomas Brand:
Only once in my life have I owned the best of anything. That was on June 29th, 2007, the first day the original iPhone went on sale.
Alfred has always been an aggressively developed app, and the work being put into Alfred 2 looks fascinating and brilliant.
Related: I interviewed Andrew Pepperrell last fall to see what his Mac Setup was and how he goes about developing Alfred.
This week is Ben’s and my final show for 2012. We did the old-school format for this episode: casual conversation that goes closer to an hour rather than under 30 minutes. It was a fun show, and topics this week include Noah teething, Amazon Prime, OmniFocus, App.net and scaling back on Twitter followers, Time Magazine’s top 10 gadgets of the year, and more.
URL scheme tricks courtesy of Federico Viticci.
Thomas Hawk (via Cameron Moll):
This morning Flickr is rolling out a brand spanking new Flickr iPhone app and it is that good — really, really, really, really mind blowingly fantastic good. It not only smokes every other previous mobile version of Flickr it smokes every other mobile photo sharing app on the market today.
I wouldn’t go so far as to say it smokes every other mobile photo sharing app on the market today (it clearly took a lot of cues from Instagram), but it is a great app, and for any even semi-regular Flickr user it’s a breath of fresh air. Here’s hoping the iPad version is next.
I signed up as soon as I heard about this, and got access about a day later. It’s fantastic. Not only can you add a to-do item from any app that supports email, but you can share this email address with someone you trust (spouse, assistant, etc.) and they can send an email with a to-do item that will drop right into your OmniFocus inbox.
The brand-new version of 1Password for iOS is here and it’s wonderful. Not only is it a massive design overhaul that looks significantly better than the previous version, but it’s far easier to navigate and has a new Favorites tab for your most-accessed stuff. It’s on sale for half-off right now. If you have 1Password on your iPhone/iPad, you’re nuts if you don’t upgrade. And if you’re not using 1Password, why?
Wow. Flickr has come blazing back on the scene with a huge update to their iPhone app. And what an update it is.
Since getting the E-PL5, I’ve been using Flickr quite a bit more. I’ve long had the Flickr iPhone app and the past version was less than okay, and certainly nothing to write home about. Not to mention it was slow — loading images, recent activity, or just about anything took ages.
But the new app. Well, it’s incredible. It’s significantly faster and quite a bit more fun than the previous Flickr app. And that’s the understatement of the hour.
As someone who has been a paying Flickr Pro user for several years, I am ecstatic to see that someone over at Yahoo is taking Flickr seriously. I hope this new iPhone app is a sign of things to come and that the future holds significant updates to the website, iPad, and Android. And I hope the updates will beget an increase in regular activity, because I’d love to see Flickr rise to relevancy again.
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With today’s new app, Flickr has proven they are taking themselves seriously, and that they aren’t going to continue to ignore mobile:
The emphasis on mobile-friendly discoverability and interaction is great. Flickr needed this type of iPhone experience in 2007. What’s interesting is the app’s massive focus on taking and uploading iPhone photos.
I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of pro photographers cried out in terror as millions of filtered photos overrun one of their last bastions of community.
Flickr’s legacy reputation is as a social network and portfolio site for enthusiast and professional photographers. But the iPhone has been the most popular camera on Flickr for quite a while. It’s silly to ignore the iPhone, but just because it’s the most prolific camera on Flickr, doesn’t mean it represents Flickr’s best users.
It will be interesting to see if Flickr differentiates between “pro” photo uploads and “on-the-go” iPhone camera uploads. But can they? Who’s to say iPhone photos are a lesser version of photography? There are photographers who take far better photos with their iPhones than some folks do with their 5D. An expensive camera and a copy of Lightroom do not a good photographer make.
Maybe this is their first step in reinventing themselves for the mobile age. Perhaps their game plan is simply to do all they can to get as many people using the service as possible. I say let the users chose who to follow and what to post, and let Flickr focus on empowering us to discover, follow, favorite, and shoot as much as possible.
Give your iPhone some Christmas cheer. Photos shot and cropped by yours truly. Click each one for full-size, or download them all in a zip.