April 1, 2014
Big day for iWork. The updates can all be downloaded from their respective App Stores.
iWork on the Mac
– Delete, duplicate, and reorder sections using the page navigator in Pages v5.2
– Set margins and create headers and footers in print setup in Numbers v3.2
– Enhanced presenter display options and new transitions including Droplet and Grid in Keynote v6.2
iWork for iOS
– Improved support for bi-directional text in Pages v2.2
– Progress indicator for calculations in Numbers v2.2
– New remote feature lets you control slideshows on other devices in Keynote v2.2
iWork for iCloud beta
– New “view only” setting lets you share documents you want others to view but not edit
– Updated design in document editor
– Open documents directly from iCloud Mail
Such a great song. I’ve been listening to it over and over.
The first single from Zakk’s upcoming album, “Catacombs of the Black Vatican,” which will be released on April 8.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Lots of great Mac games here from Aspyr.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Jim Dalrymple and Dan Benjamin talk about the evolution of a small business, making things you like instead of what the audience wants, wearable tech, guitar modeling vs. the real thing, and more.
Written by Dave Mark
From Microsoft’s MSDN blog:
Consistent with our previously announced commitment to match Amazon on prices for commodity services, we are cutting prices on compute by up to 35% and storage by up to 65%. We recognize that economics are a primary driver for some customers adopting cloud, and stand by our commitment to match prices and be best-in-class on price performance.
First Google announced their price cuts, then Amazon followed suit. Took a while, but that third domino finally fell.
Welcome to the cloud commodities market.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Has it been another year again?! Because, really, reading the work of these pundits, it seems like it’s been a lot longer. But catalog the atrocities we must! For history must know … that … uh …
Ladies and gentlemen, the Macalope.
Written by Dave Mark
If you know the difference between the Apple A6 and the A7, and if the term ARMv8-A means anything to you, then this read will likely bring you great joy. Anand Lal Shimpi is one smart guy.
Written by Dave Mark
So very great. From The Verge’s post:
There’s one particularly interesting shot around two minutes into the video that shows Obi Wan Kenobi being run through by Darth Vader’s lightsaber. In Lucas’ cut of Episode IV, the blade passes through an ethereal Obi Wan; in the early shot, it rips through his cloak, leaving a trail of fire and the aging Jedi’s upper body hanging in the air as his lower body slumps to the floor.
[Via The Verge]
Your first clue that something is amiss is the hair. The hair and the music. Oh, and the electronics. WiFi? What’s that?
Written by Dave Mark
Slide Rule is a terrific resource, a collection of online courses of all stripes.
Education is changing, with great educators from around the world increasingly putting their amazing courses online. We believe we are in the early days of a revolution that will not only increase access to great education, but also transform the way people learn.
SlideRule is our way of contributing to the movement. We help you discover the world’s best online courses in every subject – courses that your friends and thousands of other learners have loved.
Many of the courses are free, some are gathered from places like Lynda.com and have an associated fee. If you have any interest in moving into a new field or just stretching yourself, spend a few minutes to browse the course catalog. Some great stuff here.
Written by Dave Mark
For the UN’s International Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action taking place on April 4, New Museum in New York City will host an exhibit that uses iBeacons to simulate a virtual minefield and let anyone experience the danger of land mines.
Fantastic use of iBeacons.
March 31, 2014
Written by Shawn King
Time:
If you wanted to pick a single date to mark the beginning of the modern era of the web, you could do a lot worse than choosing Thursday, April 1, 2004, the day Gmail launched. Scuttlebutt that Google was about to offer a free email service had leaked out the day before. But the idea of the search kingpin doing email was still startling, and the alleged storage capacity of 1GB—500 times what Microsoft’s Hotmail offered—seemed downright implausible. So when Google issued a press release date-stamped April 1, an awful lot of people briefly took it to be a really good hoax. (Including me.)
Gmail turned out to be real, and revolutionary. And a decade’s worth of perspective only makes it look more momentous.
I still remember getting that Google press release and thinking, “This is the stupidest April Fool’s Day prank ever.”
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Speaking as an amateur photographer, I think Allyson Kazmucha did a great job with this comparison. Looking at the pics, I don’t think the panoramas were a tie—the iPhone 5s won that.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Johnny Cash is one of the best ever. I wish I could have met him.
One of Elton’s best songs.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
This is so incredibly cool.
Written by Shawn King
VintageZen:
I’ve collected print ads from Apple, from their earliest days in the late 1970s to the present, which illuminate their continued focus on simplicity in design. In the first part of this two part series, I’ll look at Apple’s first twenty years of advertising.
We often think about Apple’s TV commercials when we talk about their advertising but for many years, it was all about print ads. How many of these do you remember?
Written by Dave Mark
Satya Nadella formally names Scott Guthrie as EVP of Cloud and Enterprise, Phil Spencer boss of all things Xbox, and Stephen Elop, former Nokia CEO, as EVP Microsoft Devices Group.
Written by Shawn King
TechCrunch:
Late last night, a tweet was spread far and wide showing that a DMCA notice had blocked a file from being shared on a Dropbox user’s account. What was going on? Was Dropbox suddenly doing something sketchy? Were they suddenly lurking around their users’ folders, digging for copyrighted material hiding amongst personal files?
Nope. The system is neither new, nor sketchy. It’s been in place for years.
You may have seen the original tweet fly around on the weekend. As is often the case, if you wait – rather than Chicken Little panic – someone comes up with a good explanation for the “offence”.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
EverWeb is the all new, drag and drop website builder for OS X that combines the ease of use of Apple’s discontinued iWeb with the power features Mac users need to create professional websites. EverWeb requires no coding or technical skills and can create beautiful websites that work on desktop and mobile devices.
EverWeb supports e-commerce websites and one-click publishing to get your website online instantly.
Try a free demo copy of EverWeb and start building your website today!
Written by Jim Dalrymple
This argument has been going on for a long time and I always find it interesting.
Written by Dave Mark
Eat24 is a food delivery service, with a pretty sizable following on Facebook. All that is about to change.
From the Eat24 blog:
Dear Facebook,
Hey. It’s Eat24. Look, we need to talk. This isn’t easy to say since we’ve been together so long, but we need to break up. We’d love to say “It’s not you, it’s us” but it’s totally you. Not to be rude, but you aren’t the smart, funny social network we fell in love with several years back. You’ve changed. A lot.
Eat24 spent years accumulating fans and likes on Facebook and is so upset with changes Facebook is making, they are deleting their entire Facebook presence.
From the linked re/code article:
The crux of the problem lies in a number of changes Facebook is making to its News Feed algorithms, according to recent reports, that when implemented will drastically reduce the number of people who will see a marketer’s posts.
Instead, it’s a way to shift marketers over to actually forking over cash to Facebook by paying to promote their posts to their thousands — or in some cases millions — of followers.
Both the blog post and the re/code article are fascinating reads. They each touch on the issue of Facebook being a huge battleship making a very slow change in direction, from accumulating followers to reaping revenue.
As with any major change, there will be breakage. If Facebook’s new algorithms and revenue model provide value, Facebook will succeed. If not, Facebook will either find a better path or will slowly fade in significance.
Written by Dave Mark
New York Times:
Some features in Samsung devices that Apple objects to are part of Google’s Android operating system, by far the most popular mobile operating system worldwide, running on more than a billion devices made by many manufacturers. That means that if Apple wins, Google could have to make changes to critical Android features, and Samsung and other Android phone makers might have to modify the software on their phones.
Given the incredible complexity of bringing a new Android OS to market, and the glacial adoption rates, this could be crushing. But I suspect the change will either be delayed to death, or be solved in a cross-licensing or financial arrangement.
Steve Wozniak is such an incredibly nice, down-to-Earth person. This happened a few years ago, but the video was just put up on Saturday.
A few years ago, Steve and Janet Wozniak came to town to help us have a little fun with our kid Emma. Emma’s dad met them around the back of the block to give them Emma’s new iMac, and then they drove back around and rang the doorbell to deliver it…and shocked the heck out of Emma and her sister (who as Apple fankids immediately knew who he was) and friends (who only knew of him from “Dancing With The Stars”). Little sister Elizabeth got the iPod Touch as a “one more thing,” and Janet shot the video.
Steve’s known to be quite the practical joker, and it was very kind of him and Janet to spend the time to do this…and make a great memory for all of us.
He gave permission to put this up. We all hope you enjoy it.
Her reaction starts at about 2:30 in. Just a nice thing to do. You rock, Woz!