Speaking of app recommendations and The Sweet Setup, we put together an amazing list of our all-time favorite iOS games. Just in time for your holiday vacation. Enjoy.

P.S. Some folks have asked me which games, out of this list, are my personal favorites. I haven’t played them all, but I can heartily recommend Machinarium and The Room if you like mystery/puzzler games; and Mage Gauntlet and Kingdom Rush HD if you like fun, addictive action-y games. Kingdom Rush is probably my all-time favorite iOS game.

These Are a Few of Our Favorite Games

Oliver Reichenstein gives a lot of behind the scenes explanation for Writer Pro’s workflow (Note, Write, Edit, Read) structure. The first section — Workflow — is worth a read even if you’re not interested in Writer Pro. There’s some great thoughts and insights into the process of writing, and I love how Writer Pro is trying to build with that.

I’ve been giving Writer Pro on Mac and iOS a spin since it came out earlier this week. And it’s impossible to deny that the software is as well designed as it is opinionated. You may not like the decisions the iA team made in building Writer Pro, but it’s clear those choices were carefully considered.

Regarding Writer Pro

Jared Sinclair

It’s common knowledge that there are too many apps on the App Store, with no reliable way of discovering the good ones.

The App Store’s shortcomings in regards to worthwhile recommendation and discovery is one of my primary motivations behind The Sweet Setup. But with hundreds of millions of device users and 1,000,000+ apps out there, that’s a level of scale The Sweet Setup will just never reach. Jared’s idea for an App Store-centric social network that would allow you to follow people and see the list of currently-installed apps on their devices is a great idea.

Solving the App Store Discovery Problem With App Playlists and Good Taste

If anyone is going to list out the similarities between a brand new Mac and an old one, you know it’s going to be Stephen Hackett:

Apple’s new Mac Pro looks like a stunning machine. Small and quiet, yet insanely powerful, the new computer makes every other desktop for sale today look and feel ancient. However, when I think about the new Mac Pro, I can’t help but think of one of my favorite Macs in recent history: the Power Mac G4 Cube.

On the new Mac Pro and the Power Mac G4 Cube

Ben Brooks, in our latest review on The Sweet Setup:

We slogged through seventeen different PDF apps to try and find the one PDF app that would change your life — well, at least change your iPad usage. And the best PDF app for managing, editing, and reading PDFs on your iPad is PDF Expert 5 by Readdle. PDF Expert is delightful and easy to use, it offers the fastest PDF reading experience, it works with many syncing services, and it has the most robust toolset available on the iPad.

PDF Expert is a truly fantastic app, and is a great example of how the iPad can take certain tasks which can be cumbersome or complicated on a Mac and make them easier on a touchscreen device. For example, want to merge two PDF documents into one? Just tap, hold, move, and drop — it takes 3 seconds.

The Best App for Managing, Editing, and Reading PDFs on Your iPad

First Thoughts on Writer Pro for iOS

The iPad makes for a fantastic writing device.

A cup of hot coffee, my bluetooth keyboard, and my iPad makes for one of my favorite ways to write. The one-app-at-a-time mentality along with the relatively difficult way to switch between apps (when compared to the Mac’s CMD+Tab) make iOS a pretty good “anti-distraction writing enviroment”.

Moreover, there are some truly exceptional writing apps for the iPad.

Over the years I’ve spent a lot of time with a lot of writing and note-taking apps. The ones that have stood out to me the most?

  • Simplenote (which I don’t really use for long-form writing, but I do use often because I have lots and lots and lots of notes in there).
  • iA Writer: For whatever reason, I never got into iA Writer all that much (neither on the iPad, iPhone, or Mac). Mostly because, as silly as this may sound, it didn’t have a “night theme”.
  • Byword: What I use on the Mac for all long-form writing.
  • Writing Kit: I used this app for quite a while because of its built-in web browser and several other nifty features.
  • Editorial: the iPad markdown writing app that changed the world.

Now, I am, of course, writing this text in Writer Pro on the iPad. It just came out a few hours ago and so naturally I can’t say too much about it yet. But iA Writer has a well-deserved fantastic reputation, and this new version of the app — Writer Pro — promises to take things to the next level. And, clearly, it does.

Is Writer Pro a significant upgrade from iA Writer? Absolutely.

Writer Pro has all the simplicity and charm of its predecessor but now applied to the whole workflow of writing process — from idea to done.

What’s special about Writer Pro is its obsessive focus is on the writing process. There are four “sections” your documents can be slotted in to: Notes, Writing, Editing, Reading. Each section has its own typeface and cursor color. The “Writing” section is, more or less, what the whole iA Writer app used to be.

This is an organization structure I could get behind. I follow this concept loosely already by keeping all of my notes and ideas in Simplenote and all of my “currently writing” articles in Dropbox (where I use Byword on the Mac and Editorial on the iPad). No other app that I know of has this sort of persnickety focus and structure.

So, after poking around and doing some typing, do I find Writer Pro awesome enough to pull me away from my current apps? It’s early to say, but I don’t think so…

I have three quibbles:

  • Unfortunately, Writer Pro on iOS has no auto-markdown completion, nor markdown syntax highlighting.

  • Secondly, there is no document storage option like iA Writer had (in iA Writer on iOS you could chose iCloud or Dropbox for document syncing). Writer Pro syncs with iCloud or nothing. Which means your documents are sandboxed into the app. And there is no export option to get out all the documents at once. (You can email individual documents out of the app.)

And, from what I can tell, if you use iCloud document syncing for both iA Writer and Writer Pro, the two apps do not have access to one another’s files. But, since Writer Pro on the Mac can access documents you have in Dropbox, if wanted to use Writer Pro on your Mac you could keep it in sync with iOS apps that have access to Dropbox (such as Byword, Editorial, etc.).

  • Third, when writing in Writer Pro with a Bluetooth keyboard (as I am now) the custom keyboard row does not persist at the bottom of the screen. And so to get access to the custom Editing and Syntax highlighting buttons you have to bring up the entire soft keyboard, tap your options, and then dismiss the soft keyboard.

Update: Anton Sotkov points out that the keyboard shortcuts in the Mac app work on iOS as well.

Update 2: The Writer Pro team told me via Twitter that many of these issues will be gone in future updates. I understand that you’ve got to draw the “1.0 line” somewhere, and I have a lot of appreciate for opinionated software like iA Writer and Writer Pro.

Is Writer Pro an impressive, beautiful, and useful piece of software? Absolutely. Is it going to find a place in my iPad writing workflow? I don’t think so.

First Thoughts on Writer Pro for iOS

John Dickerson:

We all know how to spot the obsessives. They’re blocking views at concerts as they hold up their phone to capture distant singing blobs of blurry light onstage. They text and drive, putting other people at risk, or they’re the ones at dinner who photograph every course change.

These people are a chore.

I can’t remember where I stole this phrase from, but I very much like the idea of “work-life boundaries” rather than “work-life balance”. Because it’s all life, isn’t it? The same could go for “connected-disconnected boundaries” instead of balance. Checking Twitter at the stop light doesn’t mean you’re too connected, it means you have unhealthy boundaries.

It’s one of the reasons I like Day One. Because with Day One I can toss photos and text tidbits in there, as well as long-form stuff — it’s great for capturing the moment, as Dickerson is talking about, without broadcasting to a social network. And, finding stuff in Day One is far easier than finding something in my Twitter or Instagram archives.

It’s Possible to Use Social Media Mindfully

Rob McGinley Myers also has some excellent thoughts on Apple’s latest ad, Misunderstood.

During lunch, I showed the commercial to my wife, Anna. Our first reactions were both along the lines of: Gosh, I don’t want to let my kids grow up to be reclusive teenagers addicted to their phones like that.

But, as Rob points out, what if the teenager in the commercial was instead walking around with a DSLR or reading a novel or writing/drawing in a journal?

The iPhone can be any of those things and more, so why do we look at someone face down in their phone differently than someone immersed in a book? Because if they’re anything like me, they’re not reading on their iPhone, they’re checking Twitter or something.

That’s the double-edged sword of the iPhone that Meyers brings up, and also I think that’s the turn Apple is playing with its commercial: We are moved by the kid who is actually creating something for his family (and not playing Candy Crush). But also, as parents, we feel that we’re not alone in the “kids and technology” battle — other families with iPhones and iPads are facing the exact same scenarios, questions, and concerns that we are…

The commercial gives us hope that our kids — who are growing up in “an iPhone generation” — will use their devices to make something that’s awesome and beautiful instead of getting even more hooked on Candy Crush and Instagram than we, their parents, already are.

Misunderstood or Double-edged?

Ben Thompson has a great take on why Apple’s new holiday iPhone ad, Misunderstood, is so great:

What make this ad so powerful is that it is so, so real. Oh sure, the perfection of the recording and the happy coincidence of the grandparents having an AppleTV is perhaps not so plausible, but the idea of a teenage son being disconnected, yet ultimately, deep down inside, still caring, will touch the soul of parents — and young adults — in a way few ads ever will.

Ben Thompson on ‘Misunderstood’

Kyle is a fantastic photographer. He and nine other mobile photographers went to Israel for a week to document their travels for the Israel Ministry of Tourism and the non-profit called Stand With Us. His interview here on the VSCO Journal has some great photos from the trip and some behind-the-scenes info about the trip. You can see more of Kyle’s Israel photos on his Grid page.

I talk a lot about how much I like my fancy-pants mirrorless camera, and here guys like Kyle are taking incredible shots with their iPhones. Proof that tools and rules, in and of themselves, do not an artist make.

VSCO Cam Interview with Kyle Steed

Alexis Madrigal:

The Stream represents the triumph of reverse-chronology, where importance—above-the-foldness—is based exclusively on nowness. […] And now the Internet’s media landscape is like a never-ending store, where everything is free. No matter how hard you sprint for the horizon, it keeps receding. There is always something more. […]

And now, who can keep up?

If you have a Facebook account, Twitter account, Instagram account, Pinterest account, ADN account, and/or an RSS reader, then you’ll appreciate this article.

2013: The Year ‘the Stream’ Crested