Speaking of iPhone apps, Quotebook is also new and also lovely. I have always stored quotes in Yojimbo, but this little iPhone app is just great.
Take Five on the Mac →
A very cool iPhone app that I never used (simply because I rarely listen to music on my iPhone) is now a very cool Mac app that I actually do use.
Jeffrey Zeldman’s Awesome Internet Design Panel from SXSW Interactive 2011 →
Some great discussion on web publishing.
Three Writers, Three Ways →
The SXSW panel where Jim Coudal, Michael Lopp, and John Gruber talk about writing:
Three different writers will walk through the same set of slides and explain their approaches to getting started, editing ideas, figuring out how to get unstuck, and understanding when they’re done. Part improv and part preparation, this presentation will give you three totally different and unexpected perspectives regarding the art of writing.
I love hearing the different perspectives and quirks of other writers. Especially when it is from guys whose writing I enjoy and learn from as much as these three’s.
Flash required. But there’s a direct link to the MP3 version of the talk, and here’s the PDF of the slides.
22Slides →
A new service from Resen for creating and hosting your portfolio site.
Addicted to Media →
Liz Dwyer, writing for Good:
Researchers asked 1,000 students at a dozen universities in ten countries on five continents to abstain from any kind of media consumption—no TV, no smartphone games, no Twitter or Facebook, and no instant messaging—for 24 hours, and then write about how they felt. A majority confessed that they actually couldn’t complete the challenge.
Independent Writing vs Newspapers →
Shawn, who publishes The Carton, has some great points on the growing shift towards the indie writer. Not just in regards to writers going indie, but also in regards to us, the reader, tracking with individual writers over the larger news conglomerates:
Finding a good writer has become more about the authors writing and less about which company they are working for. For example, I follow Andy Ihnatko because I heard him on MacBreak Weekly and I continue to subscribe to his articles because of his writing and intense command of comedy. I don’t follow him because he writes for the Sun Times.
We are just now on the cusp of this change. Or, as Mandy Brown wrote so eloquently last week:
It’s impossible to recognize a tipping point until it’s behind you, but I suspect that we may be able to look back and see something shift right around now—see the point at which the way we read broke ranks with the way the news is made. We are no longer monogamous readers, loyal to a single source; rather, we read voraciously, looking for patterns, teasing out the things that matter to us, making connections, and then (often) writing about them ourselves. We are consumers of news, not The News.
Examples of the Kindle’s Screen Saver Ads →
Some of the special offers seem pretty nice. $10 for a $20 Amazon.com gift card for example is great if you regularly shop on Amazon.com. But some of these are just plain old 3rd-party ads. (Via Josh Puetz.)
Remove the gloss from your site’s Apple Touch Icon →
Nice tip. (Via Ben Brooks.)
The Special Offers Kindle →
Amazon is selling a version of the Kindle Wi-Fi for $25 off (18%), but it comes with “special offers”. The special offers only show up on the screensaver or as banner ads on the home screen — they do not interrupt the reading experience. Or, put another way, they are passive rather than intrusive.
At first it sounds like you’re getting a measly $25 discount for the “privilege” of “getting” to look at ads on your Kindle. However, reading about it a bit more about the special offers actually doesn’t sound like too bum of a deal.
Basically, it looks like you’ll be getting coupons and discounts that work on Amazon.com as well as relevant ads that you can opt in to seeing. In a way it sounds as if you’re buying a Kindle with a built in Gold C coupon book.
But if that’s the case, then why not charge more? Probably because nobody would buy it. And then the other obvious question is why not give it away for free if it’s going to be ad supported? Probably because Amazon wouldn’t be able to keep up with demand.
10,000 Hours to Pro →
Speaking of how it takes 10,000 hours to become an expert, this is a great article about Dan McLaughlin who is putting Malcolm Gladwell’s theory to the test. Dan quit his job in 2009 to learn golf and try to become a professional golfer:
There are more than 27 million people in this country who play golf. There are 125 permanent spots on the PGA Tour. Smith has told Dan the odds of him earning one of those spots are astronomically long. He picked golf, Dan says, because he wanted something not impossible but close. He grants that there’s a “99 percent chance I’m not going to become a PGA golfer.” But that’s not the point.
“Basically,” he told the people at the conference, “what I’m trying to do with this project is demonstrate how far you’re able to go if you’re willing to put in the time.”
Creativity Requires Significant Work →
Michael Hyatt, CEO of Thomas Nelson, giving advice to writers:
If you are a true creative, the work won’t scare you. Embrace it. There really aren’t any shortcuts, despite what you may hear. The only thing standing between you and your dream is hard work and persistence.
Most of us “know” this already, but it’s nice to hear it again from time to time.
Is Your Site Missing its Custom WebClip Icon?
When I open up Reeder on my iPad I am always reminded by how many websites do not have a WebClip Bookmark Icon.
Fortunately, setting up a custom WebClip Bookmark Icon is quite easy. Here’s how:
- Create a 129×129-pixel png image titled
apple-touch-icon.png
- Upload it to your website’s root folder:
http://example.com/apple-touch-icon.png
-
That’s it.
This png
file is the image that Reeder will use when listing your site in the feeds folder. And this is the image that iOS will use as the icon when saving your site as a web clip to the Home screen.
So why 129×129? Because that’s the size Apple uses. However, the exact size that the icon should be is debatable. Mine is actually 158×158 pixels (left over from when Nathan Borror suggested that size in 2008). Jeffery Zeldman’s is 120×120 pixels, Marco Arment’s is 128×128 pixels, and 5by5’s is 144×144 pixels, for example.
And, so long as we’re on the subject, here are four of my favorite WebClip Icons. Left to right it’s Zeldman, Blankenship, Kottke, and Van Damme.
Coldplay’s Strawberry Swing Video →
My goodness, I love this music video.