November 21, 2014
Written by Dave Mark
A while back, I posted this on the BlackBerry/Samsung alliance:
Fantastic idea. It further legitimizes the concept of an enterprise/consumer product partnership and gives enterprise managers a valid alternative to IBM and Apple. And by valid, I mean, who in their right mind would choose Samsung/BlackBerry over Apple/IBM? Where’s the beef in the Samsung/BlackBerry alliance? Certainly not with the malware riddled Android.
This New York Times article calls out a specific piece of malware, but there appear to be many others:
A particularly nasty mobile malware campaign targeting Android users has hit between four million and 4.5 million Americans since January of 2013, according to an estimate by Lookout, a San Francisco mobile security company that has been tracking the malware for about two years.
Lookout first encountered the mobile malware, called NotCompatible, two years ago and has since seen increasingly sophisticated versions. Lookout said it believes, based on attempted infections of its user base of 50 million, that the total number of people who have encountered the malware in the United States exceeds four million.
That’s what I mean by malware-riddled.
Written by Dave Mark
That’s the new tag line for the Apple Store’s front page. That text is against a background of two kids surrounded by shadowy, soft-sided fantasy. One object in the picture stands out: a hard-sided, rounded rectangle.
Beautiful work.
November 20, 2014
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Like most things on the Web, Dropcaps have been done poorly over the years, but perhaps a new CSS property will help.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
But for type lovers, WatchKit contained a nice little surprise: a folder containing 23 different variations of the Apple Watch system font, the first one Apple has designed in-house in almost 20 years. Even better, that typeface finally has a name: San Francisco.
I really like the typeface.
Written by Shawn King
Boston Globe:
More than 6 feet of lake-effect snow was dumped in the Buffalo, N.Y., area over the last few days with reports of more on the way. Storms closed a 100-mile plus section of the New York State Thruway, and the US National Guard has been called in to help dig out.
Some amazing photos included in this story. Being from Canada, I’ve experienced these kinds of snow falls when I was a kid – it was a lot of fun then but as an adult, I’m glad I don’t live somewhere I’d have to deal with this on a regular basis.
Written by Shawn King
Wired:
There’s no way to anticipate the emotional impact of leaving your home planet. You look down at Earth and realize: You’re not on it. It’s breathtaking. It’s surreal. It’s a “we’re not in Kansas anymore, Toto” kind of feeling. But I’ve spent a total of 55 days in space, over the course of five missions for NASA, and I’ve learned that being out there isn’t just a series of breathtaking moments. It’s a mix of the transcendently magical and the deeply prosaic. It can be crowded, noisy, and occasionally uncomfortable. Space travel—at least the way we do it today—isn’t glamorous. But you can’t beat the view!
When I was a kid, I wanted to be an astronaut. Hell, I still do.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Tina Roth Eisenberg finds some really interesting things.
Written by Dave Mark
More trouble for Sorkin’s homage to Steve Jobs. I do hope this film gets made, does not get butchered. [h/t Stu Mark]
Written by Dave Mark
When the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus were first released, the PaintCode app folks put together this web page to demystify the various screen sizes and pixel configurations. Great stuff.
But Ole Begemann was not satisfied with that stock analysis. He dug deeper, using a closeup camera rig to take pictures of the iPhone 6 Plus screen doing its downsampling magic. Pretty pictures, and he published all his code on GitHub for folks who want to try this themselves.
Written by Dave Mark
Know anyone that uses a remote webcam or baby monitor so they can keep an eye on things while they are not at home? You might want to pass this along.
It’s chilling to think that someone in Russia has access to a webcam placed in a child’s room. Ironic that that device was placed there for safety’s sake.
This past July, the European Commission asked both Google and Apple to implement changes to the way they sell “free” games that contain in-app purchases. Yesterday, Apple unveiled a design change that addresses this ruling.
The first thing you’ll notice is the change from “FREE” to “GET”. Where an app with no upfront cost used to be marked with the word “FREE” instead of a price, it is now marked with the word “GET”. This is not a perfect solution (FREE is a price, GET is an action), but it does the job and I suspect it’s something we’ll stop noticing pretty quickly.
The problem is one of nomenclature. What should Apple call the list of free apps if they can’t use the word free? Apps formerly known as free? A list labeled “Get Apps” would just be confusing.
Apple’s current approach is to leave the word FREE as a list label, with a tiny “In-App Purchases” under the GET price rectangle.
My 2 cents: This all feels very forced. It lacks elegance. Presumably, it is a reaction to the European Commission ruling, a change Apple was forced to make and not a purposeful design implementation.
Could this be the tipping point that brings out a total redesign of the App Store or, perhaps, a stopgap solution put in place because a broader solution was not ready for the masses?
Written by Dave Mark
From Intel’s site:
The Code For Good Campaign will help support Code.org, CodeClub, and GirlsWhoCode globally to educate, inspire, and equip the next generation of developers with the computing skills they need to pursue 21st century opportunities.
Retweet any of the tweets on the page (here’s one of them) and you’ve done your part.
November 19, 2014
Written by Jim Dalrymple
This kind of stuff is amazing and unacceptable.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’ve seen a lot of people misunderstand what a prototype is. I should send this link to them.
Yesterday, John Gruber posted an article on which mobile devices Daring Fireball users were viewing his site with. I thought it was very interesting—interesting enough to take a look at what devices The Loop readers were using. Here’s what I found in Google Analytics:
Device | % of Mobile Total |
---|
All iPads | 31% |
iPhone 5/5S/5C | 23% |
iPhone 6 | 15% |
iPhone 6 Plus | 5% |
Older iPhones | 3% |
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Interesting article from Jacob Gube.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
The report notes that Beats will continue to be a paid service and will likely be rebranded under the iTunes umbrella. The move could come alongside the launch of the Apple Watch, with users able to push Beats music from their iPhones to the wearable device.
This makes perfect sense to me.
Written by Shawn King
On this episode, Jim and I talk about Uber, the Mac’s “Second Act”, how to learn to play guitar and what effects pedals are!
Sponsored by lynda.com (Start learning something new by visiting lynda.com/thebeard and get a FREE 10-day trial where you can access all of their 2,400+ courses), Animoto (use code AMPLIFIED at checkout and you’ll get 10% off a new Pro Annual subscription), and Backblaze (Click the link to get a two week free trial and then it’s just $5/month per computer for unlimited backup, and it backs up fast).
Written by Jim Dalrymple
FoundSounds is a unique new mobile app blurring the line between a social network and a collaborative art project. The premise is simple: if you find a sound you like, record it and share it with the world. Recordings are geotagged, and you can browse them by scrolling through a timeline or exploring a map. You can also construct sound collages that create intriguing sonic geographies. If enough sounds have been recorded in your area, consider taking a sound walk, which allows you to listen to recordings made near you. Walking past a concert venue would allow you to hear previous performances from that location, while passing by a new building would trigger the sounds of its construction. The vision of FoundSounds is to create a space where people can listen to sounds they might not normally hear. FoundSounds costs $9.99, the same as the price of an album in iTunes. FoundSounds is available on the iOS app store now.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Answer some questions and The Grid will not only build a site for you, it will also adapt with you. I have no idea if this works, but I can’t wait to try it out and see how it does.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’ve looked at a lot of blogging/Web site platforms over the years, but I’m really impressed with Barley. There is no admin area, so everything is done on the page itself—you just start typing and it becomes a new post. Very slick platform.
Written by Shawn King
The Guardian:
Their name might sound a bit ominous, but the 1,500-strong gang…is a long way from the Hell’s Angels. They’re called the blood bikers: men and women all over Britain who dedicate a few evenings a week to transporting hospital deliveries across the country as stand-ins for the daytime professionals. They are all volunteers, and in 2013 they responded to around 35,000 urgent requests from hospitals, saving the NHS hundreds of thousands of pounds. They take everything from blood and platelets to medicine and breast milk.
Great story about how volunteers on motorcycles transport medical supplies around Britain. Reminds me of another great organization called “Riders for Health” who do something similar in Africa.
Written by Shawn King
Narrative:
In 1976, America turned 200 and cities around the country planned bicentennial celebrations. Twinsburg, a suburb of Cleveland, turned the event into double the reason to celebrate by dedicating one day of its bicentennial celebration to twins. Thirty-seven sets of twins attended that first celebration. The world’s largest gathering of twins and multiples still attracts around 2,000 sets the first weekend of every August.
What a weird, cool place that would be in August.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’m reading this book right now and I’m really enjoying it. Interesting to note that Jony Ive does the Foreword.
Written by Dave Mark
John Hodgman, from his blog, commenting on the story about an Uber VP suggesting digging up dirt on journalists:
I’m know he’s very sad and I know Uber is very sad. But to my mind, the only honorable (and SMART) move for himself, and the company he claims to be proud of is: resign, already. That he couldn’t, and Uber couldn’t take the hard next step and fire him, is baffling to me.
If this isn’t a fireable offense, are there any? Can Uber make ANY hard decisions? Or worse, would they only fire a person who had less wealth and prestige within the industry? What if one of their drivers made comments like that to a reporter? Or an intern?
[h/t to Stu Mark]
Written by Dave Mark
John Gruber dug into Google Analytics to get a sense of the percentage of Daring Fireball readers on an iPhone 6 vs iPhone 6 Plus vs other models. Terrific idea, good read.
Written by Dave Mark
Since Apple’s release of WatchKit yesterday, developers of all stripes have been digging through the SDK, trying to get a sense of what you can and can’t do. There’s a gold rush feel to it all, mirroring (in a much smaller way, perhaps) the excitement that surrounded the release of the original iPhone SDK.
Part of the analysis centers on the question of the OS at the center of Apple Watch. There’s some conjecture that Apple Watch runs iOS because the WatchKit UI elements are subclasses of UIKit classes. On one hand, reuse of elements of the UIKit framework isn’t the same thing (to me at least) as running the same OS.
On the other hand, it’s certainly not an unreasonable conjecture.
Good post by Jake Marsh, pulling all this together.
Written by Dave Mark
Twitter has long maintained a searchable index of recent tweets, about a week’s worth of tweets updated in real time. But they’ve now adopted that indexing technology to allow you to search from a database of every tweet ever sent, starting with this one.
To read about the technology behind this new index, click here.
Far more interesting is Twitter’s advanced search page. Take it for a spin.
As an example, use the date fields at the bottom to search from March 21, 2006 through April 30, 2006 (a span of 40 days) for the word pizza. To move back a year at a time, click in the date field, then click the date at the top of the popup. Click again to move back a decade at a time.
This search should yield 11 tweets, not including the promoted tweet. If you search for pizza between Jan 1 through Jan 7, 2007 (a span of 7 days) you’ll get 28 hits. Not particularly scientific, but it is interesting to see the growth of Twitter. If and when Twitter opens this up as an API, would be interesting to build an app that maps search terms over time.
November 18, 2014
Written by Jim Dalrymple
No new features, but this is one of the best apps ever made.