This week we have one of the most detailed and interesting sweet setup interviews to date:

I’m Charlie Smith. I’m a record producer, instrumentalist, composer, and arranger. I work out of Studio Nels in Seattle. My partner, Robb Davidson, designed and built this place from the ground up. It’s a special place. We both feel lucky to be able to make records at our own studio.

We do all sorts of things at Nels. We make records with great artists, ranging from synth-pop to jazz to hip hop and more. We also do advertising work and a lot of radio production work with our other partner, Bart, at Bart Radio.

The Sweet Setup of Studio Nels

Finally, a calendar app for iOS that is a real tool, not a toy.

Appoint 2.3 is primarily aimed at people with busy schedules and little time. The app’s clever auto-completion engine prefills information based on past events. That means less typing in favor of a few, quick swipes. Awesome.

  • Enter time naturally (“9-12am”, “1:30pm”), even in international locales

  • Discover scheduling conflicts and resolve them in a tap

  • Drag & drop to reschedule or duplicate events

  • Powerful search and filter functions in any field, and any view

  • Works with iCloud, Google, Exchange, or any service supported by iOS

Appoint sports professionally designed color palettes that fit in beautifully with iOS 7 — or you can create custom themes yourself. Version 2.3 just released.

* * *

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

Sponsor: Appoint: the calendar that works for you

On this week’s episode of The Weekly Briefly, I talk about how and why I got into mirrorless cameras in the first place, why I upgraded to the new E-M10 from the E-PL5, my initial review of the E-M10, and more.

Brought to you by two very cool sponsors:

The Weekly Briefly: Photo Mojo

A sad announcement:

Today brings some sad news: Editorially is closing its doors. The application will remain available until May 30, at which point the site will go offline. We encourage all users to export their data.

We’re proud of the team and tool that we built together and incredibly thankful that so many of you were willing to give it a try. And we continue to believe that evolving the way we collaborate as writers and editors is important work. But Editorially has failed to attract enough users to be sustainable, and we cannot honestly say we have reason to expect that to change.

Editorially was one of the most impressive and helpful pieces of software I’ve had the privilege of using in a while. It has became an indispensable tool for myself and the team at The Sweet Setup, and we are going to miss it sorely.

Mandy, Jason, and the whole Editorially team should be incredibly proud of the quality product they built. It’s unfortunate the application wasn’t able to build the traction and user base needed to grow into a sustainable business.

Editorially is Shutting Down on May 30

Kidpost is photo and video sharing for parents. You connect your social networks where you’re posting photos and videos (Flickr, Facebook, Instagram, etc.) and then once a week Kidpost rounds up the photos of your kids and sends an email out to the friends and family who aren’t necessarily following you on the social networks where you’re posting the photos.

It’s still in hyper-private beta and will be launching this Spring. I am seriously looking forward to it (as are my boys’s grandparents).

Kidpost

iPad: Air or mini?

Both iPads are an awesome compromise.

One of them (the iPad Air) has the bigger screen, and chances are it’s light enough. While the other (the iPad mini) is hyper-portable and light, and chances are its screen is big enough.

It’s easy to acclimate to either iPad. After a few days you’ll wonder why it was ever such a dilemma of a choice in the first place. When I’ve used just the iPad Air, I acclimated to its size and weight even though the iPad mini is nicer. And, conversely, when I used the iPad mini, I acclimated to its smaller screen even though the iPad Air’s bigger screen is nicer for some tasks.

I bought both an iPad Air and an iPad mini when they came out. I planned to use them side by side for about one month to see if I could come to a clear conclusion about “which was really the best”. I assumed it would take just a few weeks to see the obvious choice of which one I was partial to.

Boy was I wrong.

I’ve been using both iPads side-by-side for three months now and, well, I prefer them both. They are both favorites.

When I switch back and forth, after using the iPad mini for a while, the iPad Air feels almost comically large. But then, after using the iPad Air for a while, picking up the iPad mini feels almost tiny.

But, most of the time I find myself preferring the iPad mini. When reaching for an iPad around the house, I grab the mini. The mini goes with me when I’m traveling with my laptop. And I bring the mini when I don’t expect to need an iPad for anything but want to bring one anyway just in case.

There is only one cut and dry scenario in which I prefer the iPad Air: and that is for writing (with or without a bluetooth keyboard). But, yet, writing accounts for maybe 10-percent of my iPad usage. And using the iPad mini for writing is not exactly a horrible experience.

I have no reason to keep them both. (Well, I guess it’d be nice to have a day iPad and a night iPad.) And so I’m going with the iPad mini. And thus my recommendation to anyone on the fence: get the iPad mini, you’ll love it.

iPad: Air or mini?

Ticci:

I started using the iPad as my primary computer out of necessity while I was stuck in a hospital bed for three weeks, but, with time, I realized that I was enjoying the freedom granted by the iPad’s intrinsic portability. And if my iPad needs to be portable, I find the iPad mini to be a compromise that’s just right: smaller but not too small, a big screen that’s not too big, and the same iOS apps of the larger iPad.

Federico Viticci’s Retina iPad mini Review

Ben Bajarin:

What is fascinating about what is happening with tablets is that consumers may not be choosing them as a PC replacement. In fact, I am certain this is not the case for most consumers, at least not yet.  They are choosing them for the very reason that Microsoft wants to mock them for.  They are choosing tablets because they primarily want to use them for consumption and entertainment.  Tablets are easy to use and they have fun and relax while using them. But what happens when they realize they can also use them for more productivity and creativity tasks? What happens when they realize the tablet is capable of the tasks they used to depend on their PC for?  What happens when they become aware, as I did, that a keyboard option (if you need it) can actually start serving their basic computing needs? What happens when they realize the touch interface and the software built for it is actually easier to use? Will they start doing more with this tablet? I believe the answer is yes.

I keep coming back to this thought regarding the power and usefulness of the iPad as a PC: it rests not so much iOS itself so much as it does in the 3rd-party apps. We don’t need a more powerful and feature-rich version of iOS as much as we need a sustainable marketplace for people to make apps like Diet Coda, Editorial, OmniFocus, PDF Expert, et al.

Update: Federico Viticci points out on Twitter that it’s a bit of chicken-or-the-egg scenario:

Sustainable marketplace needed, but more of those apps can’t happen without new features for devs. The hoops that Editorial and PDF Expert have to go through for basic stuff like file exchanging make devs lose time == money.

Agreed. As iOS gets more advanced features, functionalities, and APIs, it will make the development process more efficient. However, even with advancements in iOS, envisioning and building an app like Diet Coda will still take substantial effort and skill. And, I hope the 3rd-party developers will always be pushing the bar upwards of what sort of apps are capable of running on iOS. If Apple brings a solution to the basic stuff like file exchanging, what will be the new hoops that developers chose to go through in order to innovate for their app?

If 3rd-party devs stop innovating, stop pushing the boundaries, and stop going through hoops, then that’s when we know there’s trouble for the future of iOS as a thriving platform for personal computing.

What Kind of a Computer Is That?