I’ve already preordered one; I used my iPhone 4S-friendly Glif all the time. (Works great with the Joby GorillaPod, by the way.)
Now just waiting for an iPhone 5-friendly olloclip (which they say is on the way).
I’ve already preordered one; I used my iPhone 4S-friendly Glif all the time. (Works great with the Joby GorillaPod, by the way.)
Now just waiting for an iPhone 5-friendly olloclip (which they say is on the way).
Dan Moren:
So, instead of just bellyaching over Maps’s shortcomings, how can you help improve the quality of information? Easy: Report problems to Apple as you encounter them. It only takes a little longer than composing a 140-character complaint, and it’s an investment in a better Maps in the future.
For my own home town I rarely use maps. And in my light usage of the iOS 6 maps app over the past few months I didn’t notice any shortcomings in its data. However, while in Dallas last week, the Maps app couldn’t find my hotel. In fact, it couldn’t even find the address of the hotel. I had to call them and get directions over the phone (gasp!).
I’ve since reported the missing location via the Maps app and will continue to report problems I come across.
Ben Johnson’s got a nice little overview of some of the more clever animations found in some iPhone apps. These little touches are exactly the sort of thing that make iOS so great. I’ve always thought Tweetbot (and Convertbot, especially) are prime examples of apps that add fun little animations to take things over the top.
And though it’s rarely mentioned, I think sound effects can also be a key component of a highly-polished app. Of course not everyone has the sound up on their iPhone.
Here’s one more Circles-related link. Something I got to see first-hand during the weekend was a new web service called Tagboard. My long-time and good friend Sean Sperte is one of the co-founders and was at Circles Conference, so I asked him to give me the run down of what exactly Tagboard is all about.
In short, Tagboard does live, real-time searches of hashtags across social networks. (Currently Twitter, Instagram, app.net, and Facebook with Flickr and others in the pipe.)
During the conference all the tweets and ‘grams posted using the #Circles2012 tag were aggregated in realtime on this Tagboard search page.
What Glassboard is for group communication during special events, Tagboard looks to be for event-centric conversations. I know Sean and his co-workers have more in mind than this, but for me I see Tagboard as a great app for things like family reunions, friend get-togethers, conferences, and the like. Because not only does it collect all the activity happening across multiple social networks, but then it’s there for archival purposes if you want to go back to it and archive or save some of the links, quotes, pictures, etc. All you have to do is get everyone to agree upon a common hashtag and Tagboard does the rest.
Dude’s got skills.
This past weekend I was in Dallas for Circles Conference. It was a fantastic event filled with equally fantastic speakers. Of course, the highlight for me was the time spent in-between the sessions spending time with the other attendees. (Isn’t that the highlight of all events like this?)
The biggest personal takeaway for me was something Noah Stokes said. Talking about his design shop, Bold, he said that 20 years from now he wants to be working on his company, not in it.
That rings true for me too. In 20 years I don’t expect that writing shawnblanc.net will still be my full-time gig. But I love the tech and design community, and I love contributing to this space.
In the average 9-5, climbing up the corporate ladder is already laid out. Showing up and doing good work will often lead you to the next step in your job because the company has already laid out what progress and promotions look like.
However, for those of us who run our own businesses (or have aspirations to) there isn’t necessarily a “career path” to follow. Not only is the destination something we have to define for ourselves, so too is the path to get there. Maybe success looks like sustaining the work we are doing today, but maybe it looks like something different.
And so, on my flight back from Dallas I found myself pondering what decisions I need to make and what steps I need take now that will begin leading me to the place I want to be in 20 years.
Horace Dediu:
[W]e have a situation of over- and under-supply (or over- and under-demand) simultaneously because the product is misallocated.
Faruk Ateş compares the iPhone 5’s opening weekend sales against the top 3 opening weekend records for movies as well as the all-time grossing movies (even adjusting for inflation). (Via Horace Dediu.)
Dave Caolo reviews some of the improvements to the Reminders app. This is an app that I never use because it’s so difficult to navigate unless it’s through Siri. It’s nice to see that setting time- and location-based reminders has gotten far more simple (but still not as simple as using Checkmark).
My thanks to Karbon for sponsoring the RSS feed this week to promote their awesome, newish iPhone app, Scratch. Scratch is one of the 3 apps in my iPhone’s Dock. It launches quickly and is great when you just want to jot a thing down and not think about where to jot it down. Scratch lets you act on that text (like send it to Simplenote, or email it, or whatever) or you erase it if it was something temporary. Anyway, I’m a big fan and this $3 app that’s already been updated for your iPhone 5.
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Great ideas need to be captured immediately. Scratch for iPhone cuts through the barriers of note taking and gives you a clean slate to get your idea down fast. You don’t have to come up with a title or navigate a long list of notes. Just open Scratch, type, and worry about it later. Scratch remembers everything so you don’t have to.
Once you’re ready to work with the note, Scratch gives you the options you need to move the text where it belongs: Dropbox, email, your favorite text editor or just about anywhere else.
This week on The B&B Podcast, Ben are I were joined by Ryan Cash, former marketing director at Marketcircle and founder of Snowman, makers of the iPhone reminders app, Checkmark.
We talked with Ryan about his transition and motivation to go from working for a medium-sized company to starting his own indie iOS dev shop, the challenges of building and shipping an iPhone app, and more. All in less than half an hour.
Remember in 2010 when Apple held an iPhone 4 Press Conference as an answer to the “Antennagate” hubbub?
After his presentation, Steve Jobs was joined by Tim Cook and Bob Mansfield. They all sat on barstools at the front of the room and had a Q&A with the press in attendance. John Gruber asked if any of them were using cases on their iPhones. All 3 of them held up their iPhones to show no case. Steve even demonstrated how he uses his phone (by holding it using the infamous “death grip”) and that he has no reception issues.
What these guys also showed was that they’re using the same phones we are. Three of the top leaders at Apple sitting in a room full of writers and broadcasters, and everyone’s got the same phone in their pockets.
We like to think that Cook, Mansfield, Ive, Schiller, Forstall, and the rest of the gang are walking around with private versions of the 2014 iPhone and its corresponding (though surely buggy as all get out) version of iOS 8.
Everyone knows Apple is an extremely organized and forward thinking company that puts a lot of thought and energy into the planning and testing of its future products. But Apple is also riding on the cusp of its production and engineering capabilities.
After Apple announces and demoes the latest iOS at a WWDC event, most developers wait for the first few rounds of updates to ship before installing the iOS beta on their main devices. And it’s far more likely that the hardware prototypes for the next iPhones are locked away in some design vault, and the software roadmap for the far-future versions of iOS is still mostly on the white board. Meanwhile the folks at Apple are using the same daily driver iPhone and the same operating system you and I are.
Today, right now, we’re using the same mobile operating system with the same apps as the guys in Cupertino who dream this stuff up and make it happen.
And it seems to me that there are several things in iOS 6 which reveal just that. This version of iOS is not full of any one amazing new jaw-dropping feature that will have our minds spinning. Instead it’s filled with dozens of little things that will get used by real people ever day. And it will make our lives a little bit nicer and a little bit easier.
Things like Do Not Disturb mode, and the slide-up options you can act on when you get an incoming call, and VIP emailers, are all things that were thought up by guys who uses this device day in and day out and says to themselves, man, I’m tired of always declining phone calls when I’m in a meeting, texting the person back, and then forgetting to call them when I’m done with my meeting. (Or, perhaps, man, I am tired of getting text messages from my crazy uncle at 2 in the morning, but what if my mom calls and it’s an emergency?)
With that said, here are a few of things in iOS 6 that I am most glad about:
The browser tabs you have open on all your devices are now shared via iCloud. Had a website open on your Mac but then had to jet out the door, no problem. You can open it right back up from your iPhone or iPad.
If your Mac is running Mountain Lion, click the cloud icon in Safari and you’ll see the list of tabs open on your iPhone and iPad. And from your iPhone or iPad, tap the bookmarks icon in Mobile Safari and the drill down into the iCloud Tabs bookmarks folder.
Another one of those features that is so simple and obvious, and yet has a significant impact on the day-to-day usability of our phones. You can activate Do Not Disturb mode from the Settings app.
You can turn it on and off manually (like Airplane mode), and you can set it to automatically start and stop at pre-defined times. (Not unlike Glassboard or Tweetbot allow you to set sleep options for when you do not want to get a push notification.)
To fine tune your Do Not Disturb schedule, and who you’re willing to allow to get through, drill down through the Settings App → Notifications → Do Not Disturb.
This has become my main “show off” feature.
When a friend asks me what’s cool about the new iPhone software I ask them to call me. Then I demo the slide-up menu for incoming calls and watch as they “get it” instantly. We’ve all been in that situation — whether it be a board meeting, dinner, a movie, or whatever — where we have to decline an incoming call from a friend or colleague. This is a feature that makes perfect sense and makes you scratch your head a bit about why it took so long to get here.
We were all doing it out of habit anyway. Now it actually accomplishes something.
I have worked in places were emails are sent like text messages. I often would get an email asking for me to come to a spontaneous meeting that was starting in 5 minutes.
Or how many times do you watch for that email from your boss or assistant or whomever? There are whole conferences centered around the idea of how checking your email every 5 minutes is a massive productivity killer (and it’s true). But that doesn’t mean the fact remains: a lot of workflows and company cultures are still very much dependent upon people being near-instantly-reachable by email.
VIP emails — and, more specifically, the way iOS (and OS X) are helping us to set them apart — are a great example of how iOS is becoming increasingly usable in real life.
I mean, finally, right?
After 4 years worth of App Store, some Home screens (including the one on the iPhone that’s sitting here on my desk) are getting unwieldy. There are apps I know I have, but I don’t know where they are. For those I have no choice but to use Spotlight to get to them, but say I want to move them to a more prominent spot?
Now when you use Spotlight to launch an app, if it’s in a folder Spotlight will tell you the name of that folder.
This is one more (of what feels like a) bandaid fix towards a better way to launch and mange apps.
Siri is becoming the way of “ubiquitous capture” on the iPhone. It’s the quick-entry popup of OmniFocus on the Mac. Assuming Siri can connect to the servers, she is the fastest way to get sports scores, directions, set a timer, log a reminder, and now launch an app that’s not on your first Home screen.
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The mobile phone industry has is no shortage of impressive, whizbang features which sound great and make fun ads but which rarely get used by real people in their day-to-day lives.
The niceties shipping as part if iOS 6 are great because they’re the sorts of little things that will play big, unsung roles in our everyday lives.
Yesterday I was a guest on Brett Terprstra’s new show, Systematic. Brett is just an awesome guy, and I had a blast talking with him. This is the first time on a podcast I’ve talked at length about martial arts. We also talked about blogging, how I got into doing this gig full-time, working from home, faking it, and sleeping.
This is a really nice review.