August 9, 2013
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Thanks to Auto Adjust for sponsoring The Loop’s RSS feed this week. Auto Adjust is a photo rescuing app for iPhone and iPad designed to fix photos as fast and as pain free possible. Contrast stretching, levels, curves, color correction, and noise reduction are right at your fingertips without having to dig through menus and popovers. There are no “Projects” or photo libraries that are stuck in the app. Photos are saved to your camera roll and photo stream at their original size with all EXIF and metadata preserved.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
The DOJ is looking a lot like the paranoid conspiracy theory guy that lives down the street.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Macworld’s Jon Seff has some recommendations for apps that can help you get the most out of iTunes.
Written by Peter Cohen
Zakk covers the classic Bill Withers R&B hit “Ain’t No Sunshine.” Really beautiful version of this tune.
Available for sale on iTunes, btw. Off the upcoming double live album “Unblackened,” due out in September.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Today we’re introducing an updated ad experience we think is more attractive for users and more effective for advertisers.
Oh thank you, thank you Google, I really wanted ads in Google Maps.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Shawn Blanc has a great article on how he recently self-published his new book, including the tools he used and the problems he ran into. Worth a read.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Speaking of Benedict Evans, here’s another great post looking at Amazon’s profits, or lack thereof.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Some interesting numbers from Benedict Evans.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Five major U.S. publishers objected to the Justice Department’s proposal to limit Apple Inc.’s influence in the electronic-books market, saying it would effectively alter their existing settlements with the U.S. government.
It’s like a giant soap opera.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
After reading this review, I’m left with a “ho-hum” feeling.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Something has to be done with these guys to stop them permanently.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Mackie introduced a new line of mixers, new loudspeakers and studio monitors. I’ve been using 1640 Mackie mixers for years and they still work great in my studio. I also have a set of the Mackie SRM450 loudspeakers that I’ve been using for years and they have never failed me. I’ve never used their studio monitors, so I don’t know about those. However, considering I blew up my 8-inch studio monitors a month or so ago, I may give these a try at some point.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Jim and Dan are joined by Peter Cohen the other half of The Loop to discuss AMBER alert disruptions, The Newton’s 20 year anniversary, PDAs as the predecessor to the MacBook Air, the sale of the Washington Post to Jeff Bezos, and more.
Sponsored by Hover (use code DANSENTME for 10% off), Squarespace (use code DANSENTME8 for 10% off), Shutterstock (use code DANSENTME8 for 30% off), and Igloo.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’ve been watching Barley for the past few months and I’m impressed with what I’ve seen. The company provides an inline editor, so you don’t need experience in coding to build a Web site. They provide unlimited storage, hosting and templates to get you started.
August 7, 2013
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Great article by Horace Dediu looking at Apple and Amazon.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Amazon, Kobo and Sony are petitioning the Federal Communications Commission to permanently exempt e-readers from certain federal accessibility laws for the disabled, arguing that e-readers are barebones devices designed for a single purpose: reading text.
The petition is interesting because it argues that e-readers’ value lies in the fact that they are inherently limited devices and that any non-reading functions they include, like experimental web browsers, are “rudimentary” and not very useful. Amazon, Kobo and Sony say that if they were forced to comply with FCC regulations and make e-readers fully accessible to people with disabilities, the essential nature of the devices would change, making them more like tablets, more expensive and, overall, less useful for their express purpose.
Okay, admittedly your products suck balls, but to go against implementing accessibility is wrong.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I’ll be speaking at SecondConf this year, closing out the conference on the last day. If you’re attending, bring your instrument because we’ll be having a jam session too.
What a great version of this classic song.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
An illustration project by David Navarro
Great illustrations of some of the most famous guitars of all time.
If you can’t understand this then your an idiot.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I spent a few hours today beginning to mix drums on a new project. I’ve always loved the Teletronix LA-2A, so today I used it in a number of situations, including the Mixbus. It sounded incredible. Universal Audio has the best emulations of the original hardware units because they make the hardware units. What it does is so subtle, but very pleasing.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I agree with Joe, I’d love to see the Post get back to that old style journalism. Clearly they need to still compete with the newer, quicker news items, but mixing it with some investigative journalism would be welcomed by everyone.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
Peter Cohen:
An anniversary of sorts quietly passed us this weekend: Saturday, August 3rd, marked the 20th year since Apple began selling the Newton MessagePad, its then-groundbreaking tablet device with handwriting recognition. While the device was never hugely commercially successful, its development, creation and sale inevitably, inexorably lead us to where we are today, a “Post PC world” dominated by touch-sensitive smartphones and cellphones. The Newton’s influence can even be felt in Apple’s Mac line, with products like the MacBook Air.
I still remember the first time I saw one of these.
Written by Jim Dalrymple
I must say, that was very good.