post

Quick Hands On With OSX Lion

Messing around with Lion. So far so good.

Mission control might actually get me to use spaces and dashboard more than I currently do.

I’m going to reserve judgement on Launchpad since I am a huge fan of LaunchBar. That said I could see using it for apps I don’t use on a day to day basis since I can’t remember them all by name. Maybe as a multiple dock replacement

Finder has received some love with AirDrop integration and file arrangements in views (types, modified dates, app creators, size, labels,et al)

Full screen view feels odd as it’s a kiosk or windows paradigm, but I could easily see using it to stay focused. One thing at a time right?

Looking forward to upgrading in about a month once the dust has settled, all the upgrade woes are known, and all my apps are Lion friendly.

Hardware sidenote, I’d never played with the Bluetooth Magic Trackpad and I do like it more than a mouse – it needs more gestures though.

post

Kindle: There Ain’t No Stoppin’ It Now

Kindle will win and the reasons why are plentiful.  It may have to share the pie with other players but those will only be small slices. 

I’ve posted before on a platform based reason why Kindle will win but if you missed it, here it is:

Then there’s the obvious advantage that Amazon has due to its status as the premier online retailer for reading materials. 

The thing that sealed it for me is the genius of the product team and how they keep rolling out incremental features or UX that actually makes the core product better and not more cluttered of confusing.  If you’ve ever made anything you know just how hard that can be. 

Sure having it available on all desktop and mobile platforms makes all the sense in the world. 

Making the text reflow nicely across those devices? Great.

Having your reading library and current position in each of your books automatically sync across all of your devices?  Pure magic.  

Adding bookmark/dogears, highlights and notes and having those sync too? Awesome. 

This morning while reading Brad Feld’s “Do More Faster” I went back to reread a couple paragraphs and noticed a line that was underlined/hyperlinked.  I didn’t remember the link being there last week when I originally read that chunk nor did I highlight it myself. I also figured that I was on the subway and not online so it couldn’t work right?  Turns out it was a sentence highlighted  by most readers of the book.  In essence they’re passively crowdsourcing potentially important bits of the book I was reading. Genius. 

The sentence in question?:
“It is said that with knowledge workers, the best employee is 10 times more productive and impactful than the average employee.”. Amen to that.

Oh, and yes, you can turn off the feature. 

post

Cutting through Inbox noise with Apple Mail & Addressbook Smart Folders & Groups

Even taking into account the weird IMAP/Exchange refreshing bug¹ , Apple Mail’s smart folders are a great way to quickly filter your inbox.  That said, there’s one option missing that’s always irked me: if the sender is in your Address Book.  Believe it or not, it exists as a mail rule option but not in smart folders. Go figure.

So, here’s a quick fix: 

Open Address Book and create a new smart group – I called mine “In Address Book”.  Then as criteria set it to “Card”  ”created after” and select a date in the past that predates your oldest entry, January 1st 1990 worked for me.  You can confirm that it worked if the total contacts in both your All Contacts and “In Address Book” group are the same.

Now, the smart group will auto update whenever you add new contacts and always reflect the most current subset.

Then in Mail, create a new Smart Folder, I called mine “In Addressbook”, and as criteria, select “Sender is Member of Group” and choose “In Addressbook” group.  Make sure it matches messages that match all of the following conditions.

Now that smart folder will display only the emails from people in your addressbook.  Helpful to quickly get a lay of the Inbox land.

I would also suggest adding additional rules to not display Sent mail, spam, or known entities that generate a lot of mail but aren’t that critical.

Note 1:
The bug I have noticed is that my Mail Smart Folders sometimes don’t update properly until I go back and select the actual inbox which triggers a refresh.  That’s as well as I can describe it, and why I use my Smart Mailboxes for focusing on groups of email rather than living in them.

post

Skyfire: Spinning a Potential Disaster into a Great Story While Creating Demand and Urgency in the Process

I just read a post (below) about how Skyfire “sold out” in the Apple App Store.  I was clearly taken aback because how is it possible that a digital product could sell out.  As you can read below demand for their app clearly out stripped the “supply” of their infrastructure.

In case you don’t know what skyfire is, it’s an alternative browser for iOS that allows you to play flash by transcoding it on the fly into a non-banned format stream. Pretty nifty.
When they do start releasing more batches, users will no doubt jump on the chance to buy it before it “sells out” again, thus creating more demand and urgency in a possibly repeating cycle.  Bravo. 

From the Skyfire blog:

Skyfire for iPhone has been received with unbelievable enthusiasm. Despite our best attempts and predictions, the demand far exceeds our initial projections.

The user experience was performing well for the first few hours, but as the surge continued, the peak load on our servers and bandwidth caused the video experience to degrade.

Thus we are effectively ‘sold out’ and will temporarily not accept new purchases from the App Store.  We are working really hard to increase capacity and will be accepting new purchases from the App Store as soon as we can support it.

We are very grateful for the demand. Within 5 hours, Skyfire for iPhone became the top grossing app, the third highest paid app overall and the top application in the Utilities category. Wow!

Please bear with us as we bring our capacity in line with the incredible demand – stay tuned.

Thanks, Robert.

post

Best thing I’ve seen come out of @foursquare in a long time. ‘Bout time & congrats