June 7, 2012

Dave Caolo:

I recommend using a simple four-step process to get your electronic mailbox as close to empty as you can, every day.

I know what Dave says makes sense, but I work in exactly the opposite way. I have email in my inbox dating back many years and have no problem finding anything, at any time.

With the way search works in OS X and in Apple’s Mail app, I can search individual emails by just using a few keywords — that simple method has rarely let me down. I just mark messages I need to do something with as unread and move on with my day.

Granted, that’s probably not the most efficient way to do things, but I’ve tried to be more organized with email in the past and it took more time than it was worth.

The bonus is that I always know where all of my email is.

Matt Brian:

Virgin Mobile USA will offer the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S with unlimited data and messaging plans through Sprint’s Beyond Talk plans, starting at $30, and will be available three separate tariffs.

Impressive.

Unfortunately, Airfoil Speakers Touch can no longer receive audio directly from other iOS devices or iTunes.

I’m glad to see that the app is back, but it’s disappointing that Apple admits the developer did nothing wrong and yet they still have to remove functionality.

June 6, 2012

CNET:

While the Intel representatives wouldn’t allow us to hold the unannounced device or talk about in-depth specs, we were able to pry out some information.

How, and in what goddamn world, is that a ‘Hands On’?

Dan and Jim discuss next week’s WWDC, the LinkedIn password leak, MacBook Air copycats, and much more!

Sponsored by Appsfire, Squarespace (coupon code DANSENTME6), and Hover (coupon code DANSENTME for 10% off).

Massive Greatness:

What Google actually unveiled today is their own vulnerability in the space. Beyond a few tiny leaks, no one knows what Apple’s mapping product will be like. Google has by far and away the best mapping product on the planet. But they still felt the need to hold this meaningless press conference today. That’s fighting down, not up. And it’s a big mistake because it conveys the opposite of what Google was trying to convey: concern, not confidence.

Even before today’s non-event, I had been thinking more about Apple’s move into mapping. When the news broke, everyone knew it was a big deal, but I actually still think it’s being underplayed. It could be a massive deal.

Robert Falck gives his thoughts on iOS 6. Good article, I liked reading this one.

Alan Duke for CNN:

Science fiction author Ray Bradbury, whose imagination yielded classic books such as “Fahrenheit 451,” “The Martian Chronicles” and “Something Wicked This Way Comes,” has died at 91, his publisher said Wednesday. Bradbury “died peacefully, last night, in Los Angeles, after a lengthy illness,” HarperCollins said in a written statement.

Very sad, albeit inevitable, news. Bradbury’s career spanned more than 70 years, and the prolific author wrote books, screenplays, teleplays and short stories. He was a huge influence on generations of science fiction writers – and will remain so for many years to come.

Nathaniel Beard, of the world’s premier beard-faced band The Beards, has hit back at Victorian top cop Ken Lay who wants to ban beards and ponytails. Mr Lay is facing an investigation into whether his campaign to defoliate the entire police force is a breach of human rights.

Get ’em beard-faced Aussie.

Lex Friedman:

Two stories about potential user data leakage at the networking company trickled out late Tuesday and early Wednesday. One suggested that the LinkedIn iOS app may leak personal data from your calendar to the LinkedIn website; the second report indicates that a Russian hacker may have posted 6.5 million LinkedIn passwords on the Web.

I guess a little bit of security is too much to ask for.

Now the CEO feels that regardless of what AT&T (cough… Stephenson) wants, the company might have to start offering data-only smartphone plans in the distant future to compete with other cellular providers in coming years.

The grip of big telcos is loosening.

Dwight Silverman:

During Airtime’s launch event, Parker and Fanning said they wanted to recapture the excitement and energy of the popular AOL chat rooms of the 1990s – which strikes me as a dubious goal at best – but still provide some safety for users.

There was nary a mention of Zune, an existing Microsoft music and movie service, at the E3 event where Xbox Music was announced. But afterward, a Microsoft spokeswoman, Melissa Stewart, confirmed that the Zune brand is going away so Microsoft can use the better-known Xbox brand for its entertainment services, including its online video service.

Xbox is one Microsoft product that I do like.

Two slots just opened up for the balance of June on our advertising network, The Deck. We’ll do a nice price for an advertiser who can pull the trigger quick.

This is the ad network used by The Loop.

June 5, 2012

Today, consumers, businesses and schools use Google Apps to get stuff done from anywhere, with anyone and on any device. Quickoffice has an established track record of enabling seamless interoperability with popular file formats, and we’ll be working on bringing their powerful technology to our Apps product suite.

Mat Honan for Gizmodo:

If you have a Facebook account, you’ve likely seen your dull friends post some version of a “privacy notice” there recently. The idea is that posting it as your status will somehow prevent Facebook from, well, doing the things Facebook does with your information. It’s nonsense. Don’t be that person.

I’m astonished at how many people who ought to know better have fallen into this trap. It’s ridiculous magical thinking that repeating some incantation will save you from the big, bad government robots and others who want to do you harm.

You gave away your privacy rights the second you signed up for a Facebook account. If it’s really that big a deal to you, cancel your account and delete all the information therein. And wake up, and realize any time you’re not paying for something (and even sometimes when you are), you are the product that’s being sold – to advertisers and anyone else capable of paying the service provider for your information.

That goes for Facebook, that goes for Google, that goes for a lot of online services, and no legalese sounding bullshit you’ve posted to your wall is going to change that.

Donating your old discs to CDSweep will help advance cutting-edge scientific research into the causes and treatment of autism and provide the fast-growing number of affected individuals with the gift of hope. You can even request that your CDs be digitized and sent back to you as MP3s for free.

Mike Rose:

Nuance isn’t yet saying anything specific about iOS integration for Dragon ID — “We aren’t providing details yet, but we’re in discussions with several of the top OEMs,” was the word via the company’s PR rep.

As Mike said voice login isn’t new, but this could be interesting.

The Atlantic:

Of all the noises that my children will not understand, the one that is nearest to my heart is not from a song or a television show or a jingle. It’s the sound of a modem connecting with another modem across the repurposed telephone infrastructure. It was the noise of being part of the beginning of the Internet.

Thanks to Daring Fireball for the link.

TBWA/Chiat/Day’s Lee Clow, the advertising genius behind the “Think Different” and “1984” advertisements, sums up his relationship with Steve Jobs.

Stay up-to-date on the Euro Cup 2012 matches, with goals, team rankings, player stats and more on your iPhone.

Bought it.

TIME:

…In 1992, nobody had a PDA. That’s Personal Digital Assistant, in case you’ve forgotten, and even though nobody had one, lots of people were talking about them. Apple CEO John Sculley had coined the term in the keynote speech he made at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on January 7. He announced that Apple would release PDAs–pocket-sized information devices, easier to use than a PC and selling for under $1000–in 1993.

Twenty years ago this week, on May 29, 1992, Sculley spoke again at another CES, in Chicago. This time, he didn’t just talk about PDAs. He brought one with him. It was a Newton, a prototype of the device which Apple planned to start selling in early 1993. Actually, Apple had multiple Newtons on hand that, which was good: The first one it unveiled on stage had dead batteries and didn’t work. Using a second unit, Steve Capps, one of Newton’s creators, showed how you could use it to order a pizza by moving topping icons onto a pie and then sending out a fax. In 1992, that was show-stopping stuff.

Newton’s were the must-have geek toy of the Nineties. It may not seem like it now but they were amazing for their time.

Sakthi Prasad for Reuters:

TiVo Inc countersued Cisco Systems Inc in a court over alleged infringement of four patents relating to digital video recorder (DVR) technology, days after Cisco filed a lawsuit against TiVo to void those same patents.

Remember when Steve Jobs called Blu-ray a “bag of hurt?” That’s nothing compared to the legal morass DVR technology is turning out to be.

Edvard Pettersson and Joel Rosenblatt for Bloomberg:

Apple Inc. (AAPL) was denied its renewed request for a ban on U.S. sales of Samsung Electronics Co.’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet computer while the case is still before a federal court of appeals. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, said yesterday that she doesn’t have jurisdiction to issue a preliminary injunction because the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington hasn’t issued a mandate yet. The judge said Apple can renew its request once the court in Washington issues its ruling.

Dain Miller takes a look at the differences and misconceptions of UI and UX.

iPad is killing the competition

The popularity of Apple’s iPad shows no signs of slowing down, according to a recent survey by market research firm ChangeWave.

According to the firm’s May survey of 2,893 consumers, the iPad is still the tablet that an overwhelming majority of consumers plan to purchase. Of the respondents that plan to purchase a tablet in the next 90 days, 73 percent said they would buy an iPad.

The next closest competitor is the Amazon Kindle Fire with 8 percent intent to purchase and Samsung with 6 percent intent to purchase. No other company registered more than 3 percent of intent to purchase, according to ChangeWave.

The survey also noted the diminishing strength of the Kindle Fire after its initial release and surge.

AC/DC’s Thunderstruck on an iPad

Impressive.

June 4, 2012

Congrats to Marco on broadening the market for an app I use everyday on iOS and my Mac.

Josh Lowensohn:

Oracle has filed a legal complaint against Lodsys — the company that’s taken aim at app makers on Apple’s iOS, Google’s Android, and other technology platforms for infringing on its patents — with the hopes of invalidating them.

Go Oracle!

Shawn King and Macworld’s Lex Friedman talk about Mac App Store sandboxing.