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

MG Siegler:

Mobile is not only the future of personal computing, it’s the most personal form of computing. It’s a machine you’ll have with you during all the most important moments in your life. That’s the opportunity here.

If you haven’t guessed by now, I’ve been fiddling with Path for the past view days. I downloaded it on Sunday in order to check out the UI and UX of the app which we’ve been hearing such great things about, and while using it the app “clicked” for me. It get the point of it and how it could fit in to my life. I’ve been using it for the past few days and am very much impressed with the way the app looks and works. I don’t know if I’ll continue to use it long term, but I am very glad that I at least took the time to try it.

MG Siegler on Path

My thanks to OmniGroup for sponsoring the RSS feed this week.


You have goals — use OmniFocus to reconstruct fragments of ideas or projects into actionable steps to complete those goals.

Move the responsibility of remembering daily tasks from your brain to OmniFocus — gather everything into the Inbox for later review, and then organize those bits into folders, projects, actions, and contexts.

OmniFocus is as simple or advanced as you decide to make it, and available on Mac, iPad, and iPhone with free cloud sync. Move past mere task management and get things done with precision.

Read more about OmniFocus here.

[Editor’s Note: I am a huge OmniFocus fan. I have been using it for over a year and a half, and I highly recommend its entire suite of Mac, iPhone, and iPad apps.]

Sponsor: OmniFocus

Matt has had his for several weeks and no trouble whatsoever. My first one, after its battery was first fully recharged, stopped holding a charge for longer than a couple days. So Jawbone sent me a new one a few days ago and the battery hasn’t yet needed to be recharged so I don’t know if my second unit is defective or not yet. But, goods and bads aside, perhaps the most telling thing for me is this: I’m not wearing it right now.

Matt Alexander’s Review of The Jawbone UP

Social Apps

A quick survey of my iPhone’s first two Home screen reveals 47 apps. Nineteen of them have a social component, a social network or their own, and/or are connected to a pre-existing social network:

  • Stamped: Has its own mini-social network where you “stamp” things you like and see what others are stamping.

  • Instagram: Has its own mini-social network, and it connects to Twitter, Facebook, and Flickr, where you take pictures of things and apply cheesy filters to them.

  • Tweetbot: A fantastic app for Twitter.

  • Flipboard: Connects with Twitter and Facebook to show you incoming articles and to allow you to share articles you find.

  • Twitter for iPhone: I use Tweetbot as my Twitter app, but I do like the Connect tab in Twitter that shows all interactions and not just mentions.

  • Path: Has its own mini-social network where you can share all sorts of things.

  • Words with Friends: The name says it all.

  • Gowalla (R.I.P.): Had It’s own mini-social network and connected to Twitter and Facebook; it allowed you to “check in” at locations and see where other people were checking in.

  • Ego: Tells me my Twitter stats, etc.

  • Rdio: Has its own mini-social network where you can share what music you are listening to and have collaborative playlists.

  • UP: The Jawbone UP app has its own mini-social network of “teammates”.

  • Decaf Sucks: Ties in with Twitter and allows you to post reviews of local coffee shops and find local coffee shops near you.

  • Goodfoot: Connects with Gowalla (R.I.P.) to suggest places to eat that are nearby.

  • Birdhouse: A notepad for Twitter.

  • Reeder: Connects with Twitter so I can tweet about an article I read that I liked.

  • Instapaper: Has it’s own mini-social network so I can see what articles my Instapaper friends have liked, and it also connects with Twitter so I can tweet about articles I read.

The iPhone has some native apps with have a social, sharing component:

  • The iPhone Camera app: Using the Twitter integration of iOS 5, you can post your photos to Twitter.

  • Email: Allows me to send notes and letters and pictures and movies to my friends and family members who also have an email address.

  • Messages: Allows me to send a text or multi-media message to my friends and family members who have a cell phone.

Apps like Rdio, Reeder, Instapaper, Flipboard, and Instagram are not social networking apps at their core. They primarily serve another purpose, such as listening to music, reading, or taking pictures. But in many ways these apps are enhanced by their social elements because people like me enjoy sharing ideas and moments of our lives with our friends and network of peers. And we enjoy seeing what others are sharing.

Social Apps

For writers, business leaders, designers, developers, and anyone else who works primarily with their mind, taking time out to just think is so vital. No doubt, if you’re reading this, you know what I mean. And so Jacob Gorban’s post isn’t exactly a revelation. But it’s better than that. Because Jacob is actually doing it. He’s actually taking time out to think.

In the past 9 months since going full time with this site, taking time out of my week and/or day to be away from the computer and the RSS feeds and the hustle and bustle of the Internet has been one of the most difficult and yet important disciplines of my job. Like Jacob, I also try to take time out on Mondays.

It’s easy to forget that, as a writer, you don’t have to have your fingers on the keyboard to be doing your job. Sometimes your best work is only realized when you are away from the very place where that work will later be put onto the page.

Thinking Time