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Wed, 21 May 2025 15:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/penaddict/666 http://relay.fm/penaddict/666 Diametrically Opposed 666 Brad Dowdy and Myke Hurley It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? clean 3583 It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? This episode of The Pen Addict is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code PENADDICT. Pen Chalet: Check out this week's special offer, and to get your code for 10% off. Links and Show Notes: Support The Pen Addict with a Relay Membership Submit Feedback The Paradox of Choice - Wikipedia New Product Testing Day! Opus 88 and Kolo Fountain Pens, iA Writer and Cortex Sidekick Notebooks - The Pen Addict - YouTube Notebook – iA ARAVEAL-FS|Fine Papers|TAKEO 8 Years! — Mountain of Ink Ink Review #2771: Van Dieman's Standing Ovation — Mountain of Ink Notsu To-Do List Cards and Case Review — The Pen Addict Sidekick Pocket – Cortex Brand Who killed the Copic Marker?... - Jazza - YouTube Pilot Juice Up + Heralbony Multi Pen – Instagram Pilot Juice Up Multi Pens | JetPens Heralbony F
Wed, 21 May 2025 15:15:00 GMT http://relay.fm/penaddict/666 http://relay.fm/penaddict/666 Brad Dowdy and Myke Hurley It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? clean 3583 It's a paper-centric episode this week, mostly following-up on last week's discussion. Which products did Brad and Myke agree on, and which ones saw them take opposing sides? This episode of The Pen Addict is sponsored by: Squarespace: Save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code PENADDICT. Pen Chalet: Check out this week's special offer, and to get your code for 10% off. Links and Show Notes: Support The Pen Addict with a Relay Membership Submit Feedback The Paradox of Choice - Wikipedia New Product Testing Day! Opus 88 and Kolo Fountain Pens, iA Writer and Cortex Sidekick Notebooks - The Pen Addict - YouTube Notebook – iA ARAVEAL-FS|Fine Papers|TAKEO 8 Years! — Mountain of Ink Ink Review #2771: Van Dieman's Standing Ovation — Mountain of Ink Notsu To-Do List Cards and Case Review — The Pen Addict Sidekick Pocket – Cortex Brand Who killed the Copic Marker?... - Jazza - YouTube Pilot Juice Up + Heralbony Multi Pen – Instagram Pilot Juice Up Multi Pens | JetPens Heralbony
Oliver Reichenstein ist ein fundierter Kritiker der künstlichen Intelligenz. Er hält die von KI generierten Bilder für Kitsch. Er hält es sogar für ein Risiko, diese Bilder überhaupt zu verwenden, weil sie eine ernsthafte Arbeit entwerten könnten. KI würde alles glatt bügeln, und auch Texte erhalten durch ChatGPT und andere Sprachmodelle eine immer gleiche Marketing-Tonalität. Reichenstein rechnet mit einer Gegenbewegung, bei der das rohe Design und die imperfekte Anmutung wieder einen Wert bekommt. Sogar Rechtschreibfehlern kann er etwas abgewinnen: Die beweisen nämlich, dass ein Mensch kommuniziert und keine KI. Aber eine Bedrohung für Künstlerinnen, Fotografen und Journalistinnen ist die KI trotzdem – oder nicht? Gibt es Grund für Panik oder ist Gelassenheit angebracht? Über diese Fragen spricht Matthias mit Oliver Reichenstein in der heutigen Folge des Nerdfunks. Das Gespräch war auch die Grundlage für ein Interview im «Tagesanzeiger». Doch hier gibt es die ausführliche Fassung, in der Reichenstein auch über seine Erfahrungen bei der App-Entwicklung berichtet. Reichenstein hat nämlich eine der erfolgreichsten Schweizer Apps entwickelt: iA Writer ist eine Textverarbeitung, die sich auf die wesentlichen Funktionen konzentriert. Sie hat ab 2010 diverse Trittbrettfahrer auf den Plan gerufen und der Marktdown-Bewegung wesentlichen Schub verliehen. In dieser Sendung erzählt er auch davon: Wie er bei Apple in Cupertino vorstellig wurde und dort einen der schlechtesten Ratschläge überhaupt erhalten hat. Oliver Reichenstein, geboren 1971, studierte Philosophie in Basel und Paris. Nach einer Anstellung als Berater zog er 2003 nach Tokio, wo er die Agentur Information Architects gründete, die Websites für Medienunternehmen gestaltet. Er hat unter anderem das Erscheinungsbild von «Tages-Anzeiger», «Die Zeit» und «The Guardian» geprägt.
You have no idea how stuffed this episode recording was—disaster around every corner. Huge thanks to Martin for salvaging it all into an actual episode! A new One Prime Plus member has entered the chat! Unannounced Trivia Corner is back! (Andrew and Martin are sooo excited). Apple finally made a toothbrush and Jason bought one! Courage. Just what kind of /guy is Andrew? Using Apple Podcasts? All notes can always be found here (https://listen.hemisphericviews.com/112)! PSA: Arcadia June 2024! 00:00:00 Arcadia June 2024!
Wed, 24 Apr 2024 15:00:00 GMT http://relay.fm/penaddict/612 http://relay.fm/penaddict/612 Who Knows What A6 Is? 612 Brad Dowdy and Myke Hurley Brad and Myke talk about several new products this week, including Pilot finally sending the Clear 823 out into the rest of the world. Brad also loses his mind on paper size marketing. Brad and Myke talk about several new products this week, including Pilot finally sending the Clear 823 out into the rest of the world. Brad also loses his mind on paper size marketing. clean 3228 Brad and Myke talk about several new products this week, including Pilot finally sending the Clear 823 out into the rest of the world. Brad also loses his mind on paper size marketing. This episode of The Pen Addict is sponsored by: Pen Chalet: Check out this week's special offer, and to get your code for 10% off. Kanilea Pen Co: Choose your Aloha today! Links and Show Notes: Support The Pen Addict with a Relay FM Membership Submit Feedback Retro 51 Pan American Airlines Tornado Rollerball Pens – Pen Chalet London Pan Am Poster Japan Pan Am Poster Clear Pilot Custom 823 Collection – Pen Chalet Pilot Custom 823 Fountain Pen Review — The Pen Addict Blue Moana Mau Loa Fountain Pen - Kanilea Pen Co. Blue Moana Fountain Pen - Kanilea Pen Co. iA Writer in Paper iA Notebook Preorders Bullet Journal Pocket Drehgriffel Nr. 1, Black - Gel pen with black ink - Bullet Journal Edition - LEUCHTTURM1917 Bullet Journal “The Pen” Review — The Pen Addict Drehgriffel Nr. 1, Forest Green - Gelpen with black ink Getting ready to film a “little” Japanese stationery haul video – sugarturtlestudio – Instagram You Can Only Keep One | Rachel's Reflections Wabi-sabi - Wikipedia Platinum #3776 Galaxy Starlight | PenSachi Platinum Limited Edition Preppy Wa "The 2nd" Fountain Pens – Pen Chalet Kawaii Sticky Note Flags — Enigma Stationery Uni Jetstream 3 Color Ballpoint Multi Pen - 0.38 mm - Tr
Krzysztof Kołacz to człowiek o wielu twarzach: podcaster, voice marketer, dziennikarz technologiczny, biegacz i miłośnik kawy.Od lat zajmuje się marką Apple, ucząc jak wykorzystywać technologię, aby nam służyła. Prowadzi podcast i newsletter „Bo czemu nie”, a w wolnym czasie biega maratony i podróżuje po świecie. To człowiek pełen pasji i energii, który zaraża swoim optymizmem i chęcią życia. W rozmowie ze mną dzieli się swoimi doświadczeniami z pracy zdalnej, biegania i tworzenia treści. To doskonała okazja, aby poznać jego historię i zainspirować się do zmiany swojego życia.Ten odcinek jest dla każdego, kto:Chce dowiedzieć się więcej o cyfrowym nomadyzmie i jak żyć bez stałego adresuInteresuje się technologią i gadżetami AppleLubi biegać i marzy o pokonaniu maratonuChciałby zacząć pisać bloga lub podcastSzuka inspiracji do zmiany swojego życiaW wywiadzie Krzysztof Kołacz opowie m.in.:Gdzie pracował w podróży?Gdzie trafił na studio podcastowe, stojące po środku pól ryżowych?Dlaczego nie lubi nazywać siebie „cyfrowym nomadą”?O spotkaniu cyfrowego nomady miliardera?Dlaczego Marek Kamiński mógł sobie pozwolić na pieszą pielgrzymkę do Santiago de Compostela?Czy można przeprowadzić się do autobusu szkolnego i zwiedzać nim świat?Jakie są wady cyfrowego nomadyzmu?Dlaczego nie każdy może zostać „cyfrowym nomadą”?O czym jest Newsletter „Bo Czemu Nie”?Czy woli pisać, nagrywać audio, a może tworzyć wideo?Jak zaczęła się jego przygoda z pisaniem?Dlaczego lubi publikować swoje teksty na Substack?O czym teraz najbardziej lubi pisać?Jak wygląda jego rutyna pisarska?Jak wygląda jego tygodniowy proces twórczy jako podcastera i blogera?Jak osiągnął 4-godzinny dzień pracy?Dlaczego inwestuje w sen?Ile godzin śpi maratończyk?Dlaczego jest „psychofanem” lotnisk?Jak ogranicza dostęp do siebie i korzystanie z mediów społecznościowych?Jakich urządzeń używa do pisania?Dlaczego lubi pisać w aplikacji IAwriter?Jak publikuje swoje treści?Jak automatyzuje swoją pracę dzięki technologii Apple?Jakiego sprzętu używa do nagrywania podcastów w drodze?Jak nagrywać podcast tylko iPhonem?Dlaczego podcasty montuje aplikacją Ferrite?Co sądzi o korzystaniu z mediów społecznościowych w pracy twórców?Jakie platformy do pisania uważa za godne uwagi?Jak zarabia na pisaniu?Dlaczego jest wdzięczny osobom znajdującym błędy w jego pracy?Jak rozpoznać treść stworzoną przez AI?Ważne linki: https://boczemunie.pl/Ten epizod powstał dzięki Patronkom i Patronom z Patronite.pl, którym bardzo dziękuję za wsparcie mojej pracy!
Power of Ten is a show about design operating at all levels of zoom, from thoughtful detail to changes in organisation, society and the world, hosted by design leadership coach, Andy Polaine. While every app rushes to add an AI assistant, iA Writer's Oliver Reichenstein asks, "Why should I bother reading what you haven't written?" Here he talks tells about the deep thinking behind the latest version 7 of IA Writer and the new feature that dims the text you paste from AI tools, keeping track of what is yours and what isn't. SHOW LINKS OLIVER iA - https://ia.net iA Writer - https://ia.net/writer iA Presenter - https://ia.net/presenter Writing with AI - https://ia.net/topics/writing-with-ai Oliver on Mastodon - @reichenstein@mastodon.net iA on Mastodon - @ia@mastodon.net ANDY Website: https://www.polaine.com Newsletter: https://pln.me/nws Podcast: https://pln.me/p10 Courses: https://courses.polaine.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/apolaine/ Mastodon: https://pkm.social/@apolaine YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@apolaine
Eric Bowers is a Mortgage Lender and is also writing a novel in his spare time. In this episode we dive into how he uses the iPad Air 5th generation as his computer to manage his work. Some of the apps discussed include: iA Writer, Tot, Amazon Workspace, Shortcuts, Cardhop, Fantastical, OmniFocus 4, Focus, Linea, OmniOutliner, MindNode, Pcalc, Day One, Triode, OmniPlan, OmniGraffle, Ivory, and Mercury Weather. This episode is sponsored by Glisten. Glisten is the "Good Listen" podcast app for Language Learners. It's all you need to immerse yourself in a language, on the path to becoming fluent. Learn more at www.glisten.ist. Download Glisten now for iPad, iPhone, and Apple Watch. Coming soon to Apple Vision Pro. Early episodes with chapter markers are available by supporting the podcast at www.patreon.com/ipadpros. Early episodes are also now available in Apple Podcasts!Show notes are available at www.iPadPros.net. Feedback is welcomed at iPadProsPodcast@gmail.com.Links:https://www.bowersvoice.comhttps://techhub.social/@eabowersChapter Markers:00:00:00: Opening00:01:03: Support the Podcast00:01:51: Eric Bowers00:05:28: Current iPad Setup00:07:25: Mortgage Lending00:09:39: Air vs 11" Pro00:13:02: Apple Pencil00:14:57: How do you use the Mac?00:16:20: iA Writer00:16:58: Tot00:19:37: Amazon Workspace00:22:32: Shortcuts00:27:04: Cardhop00:29:29: Changing task managers?00:34:40: Contexts00:36:07: OmniFocus 400:37:39: Sponsor: Glisten00:39:34: Fantastical00:44:30: Focus app00:47:11: Time tracking00:47:53: Linea00:50:10: OmniOutliner and MindNode00:52:19: Cellular Data00:53:17: Mail app00:55:31: Pcalc00:56:07: Day One00:57:19: Triode00:58:28: Writing the book01:00:39: Final output on iPad?01:02:03: Book Cover Art01:02:58: Audio recordings01:04:34: Print01:06:59: Synopsis01:07:33: BowersVoice.com01:07:52: OmniPlan and OmniGraffle01:10:46: Ivory01:11:19: Mercury Weather01:12:12: Mastodon01:13:10: Closing Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Microsoft's £2.5 billion investment in AI infrastructure and skills in the UK, iA Writer's new authorship feature, and research papers on Universal Self-Consistency for Large Language Model Generation, One-step Diffusion with Distribution Matching Distillation, and QMoE: Practical Sub-1-Bit Compression of Trillion-Parameter Models. Contact: sergi@earkind.com Timestamps: 00:34 Introduction 01:59 Boost for UK AI as Microsoft unveils £2.5 billion investment 03:30 iA Writer can now track what you or ChatGPT wrote 05:35 Extracting Training Data from ChatGPT 06:53 Fake sponsor 08:56 Universal Self-Consistency for Large Language Model Generation 10:44 One-step Diffusion with Distribution Matching Distillation 12:42 QMoE: Practical Sub-1-Bit Compression of Trillion-Parameter Models 15:09 Outro
In questa puntata Roberto e Filippo riprendo il tema diel "secondo cervello" e di come gestire la conoscenza e le informazioni in digitale e se e quando ha senso farlo. Sarà uno sguardo d'insieme ed un approfondimento rispetto alla puntata 39. Note episodio A2 ep.73 - Gestione della conoscenza personale (ripresa) Puntata 39: PKM – Personal Knowledge Management (http://a2podcast.it/39) Tutto è nato dalla mia lettura del libro“ Il tuo secondo cervello” di Tiago Forte (https://amzn.to/45qlVq1) Poi, per questa OfficeHour, ho ripreso in mano le sottolineature ed appunti del libro “Come prendere appunti intelligenti” (How to take smart notes) (https://amzn.to/3pYpJhW) Le leggi delle mappe mentali PKM L'hype dei PKM Il vantaggio di ragionare la gestione della conoscenza Traslocato Recuperato e buttato infiniti blocchi di appunti presi a mano Alcuni risalenti all'università Gestione delle conoscenze personali Per chi è? Per tutti La conoscenza pratica Come si cucina Come si crea un mobile Intellettuale Dell'avvocato Perché la memoria non basta? Sono sempre stato un ottimo ascoltatore Sempre studiato poco Ma ascoltavo a lezione MA Troppa informazione = rumore Ricordare ≠ comprendere / capire Prendere appunti / note A scuola Analogico Digitale Che cos'è? Gestione Organizzazione Strutturazione Conoscenza Comprensione Personale Quel che ci interessa A cosa serve? A pensare meglio … Cosa non esaminerò? Programmi specifici Eventualmente futura OfficeHour Se te lo stai chiedendo Uso uno strano miscuglio di Obsidian (https://obsidian.md/) iAWriter (https://ia.net/writer) Syncthing (https://syncthing.net/) + MöbiusSync (https://www.mobiussync.com/) Il “primo” cervello Concentrarsi prima sulla memoria e concentrazione Cal Newport (https://calnewport.com/) I palazzi della memoria Joshua Foer (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Foer) L'arte di ricordare tutto (https://amzn.to/467pbX0) Semplificando al massimo Il nostro cervello si è evoluto per la memoria spaziale Cacciatori raccoglitori Ricordare = conoscere Parallelo pro e contro 4 metodi in parte differenti Mappe Mentali BrainStorming Collegamento idee Secondo Tony Buzan (https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Buzan) Con le mappe mentali si può fare tutto Scrivere a mano e disegnare Strutturazione organica e non lineare del pensiero e delle idee Pensare in modo visuale Colorate Utilizzo della memoria spaziale Il super potere dell'uomo La versione “digitale” Permette di spostare velocemente i rami della mappa MA fattibile anche con il metodo analogico Trucco penne cancellabili Link ad Amazon (https://amzn.to/3OCW7Bg) Link a risorsa da cui ho rubato il trucco (https://youtu.be/xP3oC9RWitk?t=150) Contro Gli appunti / le note non sono centralizzate in un unico contenitore Più difficile “riciclare” le idee Cucinare le idee Sistema ciclico Di accrescimento delle idee Meno strutturato MA più flessibile più olistico Partire per tempo Pensiero laterale Link Cucinare (in digitale) le idee (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/blog/2016/4/3/cucinare-in-digitale-le-idee?rq=cucinare) Cucinare le idee A2 podcast (https://a2podcast.fireside.fm/20) Mac Power Users n. 82 (https://www.relay.fm/mpu/82) Secondo Cervello Finalizzato ai progetti Creazione / realizzazione di qualcosa CODE Catturare Organizzare PARA Sistema di produzione Progetto Aree Risorse Archivio Distillare Sintesi progressiva Evidenziare Sottolineare Sintetizzare Mantenere nella nota tutte e 3 le fasi per avere possibilità di zoomare a piacimento Ovviamente avere il link alla fonte, qualunque essa sia Lavorare in modo incrementale Un po' alla volta, quando c'è tempo o si rivede un appunto Esprimere Divergenza Farsi trasportare dalle idee Convergenza Focalizzare La D e la E Ovvero Tecniche per scrivere concentrati Arcipelago delle idee Il ponte di Hemingway Ridurre la portata Più formalizzato che lo Zettelkasten (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zettelkasten) Zettelkasten Cattura idee Elaborazione / evoluzione delle stesse Collegamento delle idee Creazione delle idee Nato nel mondo analogico Convertito nel mondo digitale Metodo indipendente dalla tecnologia Dove ci potete trovare? Roberto: Mac e architettura: mach - dot - net.wordpress.com (https://marchdotnet.wordpress.com/) Podcast settimanale Snap - architettura imperfetta (https://www.spreaker.com/show/snap-archiettura-imperfetta) Filippo: Avvocati e Mac punto it (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/) Ci sentiamo tra 2 settimane.
National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) starts tomorrow, so Rosemary Orchard and Mikah Sargent share some of the best apps to make your NaNoWriMo a true success! Storyist 4 Scrivener Ulysses iA Writer Streaks iThoughts - Mind Map MindNode - Mind Map & Outline Terminology Dictionary News Here's what Apple really means when it says 'shot on iPhone' iOS 17.2 fixes Wi-Fi slowdowns and connectivity issues, Apple says Belkin debuts new 15W 2-in-1 BoostCharge Pro MagSafe stand with Apple Watch fast charging Shortcuts Corner Elaine wants a way to name timers using Shortcuts Palle needs help creating a "Good Morning" Shortcut that includes more information for calendar events. Feedback & Questions CJ reminds the hosts about a great feature in Apple Maps: Custom Guides. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Best Scary Halloween Wallpapers for iPhone in 2023 Mikah's App Cap: Samsara Room Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: mylio.com/TWIT
National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) starts tomorrow, so Rosemary Orchard and Mikah Sargent share some of the best apps to make your NaNoWriMo a true success! Storyist 4 Scrivener Ulysses iA Writer Streaks iThoughts - Mind Map MindNode - Mind Map & Outline Terminology Dictionary News Here's what Apple really means when it says 'shot on iPhone' iOS 17.2 fixes Wi-Fi slowdowns and connectivity issues, Apple says Belkin debuts new 15W 2-in-1 BoostCharge Pro MagSafe stand with Apple Watch fast charging Shortcuts Corner Elaine wants a way to name timers using Shortcuts Palle needs help creating a "Good Morning" Shortcut that includes more information for calendar events. Feedback & Questions CJ reminds the hosts about a great feature in Apple Maps: Custom Guides. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Best Scary Halloween Wallpapers for iPhone in 2023 Mikah's App Cap: Samsara Room Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: mylio.com/TWIT
National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) starts tomorrow, so Rosemary Orchard and Mikah Sargent share some of the best apps to make your NaNoWriMo a true success! Storyist 4 Scrivener Ulysses iA Writer Streaks iThoughts - Mind Map MindNode - Mind Map & Outline Terminology Dictionary News Here's what Apple really means when it says 'shot on iPhone' iOS 17.2 fixes Wi-Fi slowdowns and connectivity issues, Apple says Belkin debuts new 15W 2-in-1 BoostCharge Pro MagSafe stand with Apple Watch fast charging Shortcuts Corner Elaine wants a way to name timers using Shortcuts Palle needs help creating a "Good Morning" Shortcut that includes more information for calendar events. Feedback & Questions CJ reminds the hosts about a great feature in Apple Maps: Custom Guides. App Caps Rosemary's App Cap: Best Scary Halloween Wallpapers for iPhone in 2023 Mikah's App Cap: Samsara Room Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: mylio.com/TWIT
Marc Palmer is the developer of Captionista. He is also the iOS UI Developer of the Concepts app. In this discussion we discuss how he uses Swift Playgrounds, his favorite iPad apps including iA Writer, Working Copy, Notion, LumaFusion, Final Cut Pro, GarageBand, and Logic Pro. We touch on his work at Concepts and dive deep into his awesome captioning app, Captionista, that just hit version 1.5. Bonus content and early episodes with chapter markers are available by supporting the podcast at www.patreon.com/ipadpros. Bonus content and early episodes are also now available in Apple Podcasts! Subscribe today to get instant access to iPad Possibilities, iPad Ponderings, and iPad Historia! Show notes are available at www.iPadPros.net. Feedback is welcomed at iPadProsPodcast@gmail.com.Links:http://marcpalmer.nethttps://captionista.apphttps://concepts.app/https://iosdev.space/@marcpalmerChapter Markers:00:00:00: Opening00:01:58: Support the Podcast00:02:37: Marc Palmer00:05:58: Current iPad Setup00:09:09: Your relationship to iPad?00:10:40: Playgrounds00:11:34: Apple Developer app00:13:05: iA Writer00:14:34: Working Copy00:17:33: Notion00:19:51: LumaFusion and Final Cut Pro00:27:10: GarageBand and Logic Pro00:32:03: Swift Playgrounds00:36:10: Concepts00:39:28: Captionista00:41:03: What about the iPad do you love?00:50:36: Captionista00:54:17: Where did the idea for the app come from?01:00:05: Manual transcription vs AI01:05:38: Styling the subtitles01:07:35: Watermarks01:09:16: 3D Captions in visionOS?01:11:31: Caption Sync01:13:51: "sub" cards01:16:45: Version 1.501:21:00: Apple Pencil Hover01:23:56: iPad vs iPhone?01:25:55: Roadmap?01:29:02: Anything we haven't covered?01:32:00: More info?01:34:20: Closing Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Willkommen zu einer neuen Folge von UX Heroes! Dies ist der zweite Teil von meiner Session mit Oliver Reichenstein. Wenn ihr also den ersten Teil noch nicht gehört habt, holt ihr das am besten jetzt nach! Oliver Reichenstein ist Gründer und Direktor von iA, der Designberatung mit Sitz in Tokio, Zürich und Berlin. Er hat in Basel und Paris Philosophie studiert und arbeitete nach seinem Abschluss für eine Bandagentur. Im Jahr 2003 zog er nach Japan und gründete iA, wo er versucht, die Punkte zwischen Design und Philosophie zu verbinden. In dieser Episode spreche ich mit Oliver über den schmalen Grat zwischen Unfreundlichkeit und Einfachheit im Design und wie er dieses Thema in der Produktentwicklung angeht. Außerdem diskutieren wir die 10 Thesen für gutes Design von Dieter Rams und wieso ihn billige und primitive Kopien seiner Apps so quälen. (02:00) Dieter Rams 10 Thesen für gutes Design(06:30) Die Verbindung zwischen Design und Philosophie(13:30) Die Geschichte hinter dem iA Writer(23:00) Fantasielose Kopien von iAs Designs Olivers Links iA WebsiteiA WriteriA Presenter Ich hoffe, ihr fandet diese Folge nützlich. Wenn ihr auch die nächsten Folgen nicht verpassen wollt, abonniert UX Heroes doch auf Spotify, Apple oder eurem Lieblingspodcaster - ihr könnt uns dort auch bis zu 5 Sterne als Bewertung dalassen. Wenn Ihr Fragen oder Feedback habt, lasst uns doch eine Sprachnachricht auf ux-heroes.com da und wir beantworten sie mit etwas Glück in einer der nächsten Folgen. Ihr findet ihr mich auf LinkedIn unter Markus Pirker. Bis bald bei UX Heroes. UX Heroes ist ein Podcast von Userbrain.
What happens when Andrew, Jason and Martin record at a different time of day? Well, someone submits a handwritten topic and craziness ensues.
Andrew and Jason are joined by special guest Scotty J, Shortcuts specialist and co-host of the podcast Nested Folders! He shares his tech experience and boosts representation of the Northern Hemisphere! Meanwhile, Martin interrupts the conversation from afar with a weird collection of stories... Missing Man Formation 00:00:00 Two years of this show!?
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
Earnings Learnings 2022, Windows 11 22H2 review, Sound Schemes Microsoft earnings Microsoft reported that it earned a net income of $16.7 billion on revenues of $51.87 billion in the quarter ending June 30. Microsoft discloses Teams usage numbers. This was the first time MSFT has missed on earnings since 2016 - and it adjusted its guidance in June too. Windows 11 Paul reviewed Windows 11 22H2 and found lots of little improvements... but also little in the way of addressing feedback. Also, let's recap the new servicing and Windows 12 rumors. Windows 10 22H2 is also coming with no new features. Microsoft Edge adds disk caching compression with v102. Microsoft 365 Microsoft now blocks external VBA macros by default. Ignite is coming October 12-14. It's a hybrid event with a few in-person venues worldwide. Dev The next .NET Conf will focus on .NET MAUI Power Platform now has over 7 million MAUs Xbox Microsoft speeds Xbox Series X|S boot time by 5 seconds. Tips and picks Tip of the week: Get to Sound schemes as quickly as possible App pick of the week: iA Writer Enterprise pick of the week: Windows 11 onboarding and deployment kits Enterprise pick No. 2 of the week: Office 2016 and 2019 users: Mark your calendars Beer Pick of the week: Hill Farmstead Charlie Hosts: Leo Laporte, Mary Jo Foley, and Paul Thurrott Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com Check out Mary Jo's blog at AllAboutMicrosoft.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: tanium.com/twit newrelic.com/windows itpro.tv/windows use code WW30
De vermissing van hacktivist en privacy-expert Arjen Kamphuis kwam in augustus 2018 in het nieuws. In 2019 concludeerde de Noorse politie dat het om een noodlottig kano-ongeluk ging, maar het lichaam van Kamphuis is nooit gevonden. Vrienden van de cyberveiligheidsexpert zetten nog altijd grote vraagtekens en lopen met onbeantwoorde vragen. Ze vertellen hun verhaal in de Videoland-serie Ze Weten Alles Van Je. De echte vrienden van Kamphuis spreken met de fictieve journalist Nadia, die dieper in de zaak duikt. Met Ancilla van de Leest, een van die vrienden, spreken we over de serie en over de crowdfunding die is gestart voor nieuw onderzoek naar de vermiste Kamphuis.Tips uit deze aflevering:App: iA Writer 6. Eén van de meest simpele maar complete schrijf-apps voor het digitale tijdperk. Iedereen die iets schrijft dat vooral digitaal ontstaat, zou iA Writer eens moeten checken. Het had al een heerlijke focus-modus en geweldige integratie met Markdown, voor makkelijk linken. Nu kun je ook wikilinks gebruiken: Wikipedia-achtige links om je eigen bestanden makkelijk aan elkaar te linken. Zo klik je makkelijk naar een nadere tekst, zonder die tekst onoverzichtelijk te maken. De nieuwste iA Writer is er voor Mac, iPhone en iPad en kost 50 euro.Serie: Obi-Wan Kenobi. De volledige serie staat inmiddels op Disney+ en laat zien hoe Obi-Wan veranderde in Ben, en wat hij verder uitspookte in zijn onbekende jaren op Tatooine. In deze aflevering bespreken we kort wat we van de serie vinden.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On iOS Today, Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard share some apps and tips to write smarter with your iPhone and iPad. Notes with Quick Notes Drafts Obsidian - Connected Notes Scrivener iA Writer Ulysses Pages with Mail Merge News Apple Updates Pages, Numbers, and Keynote With new features Chrome wants to take over your iPhone passwords Today at Apple session showcases making GIFs with Keynote Shortcuts Corner Tom would like a shortcut that sets the phone to mirror the screen to an Apple TV and launch an app Mikah wants a shortcut that will pull text from a specific document in the Notes app App Caps Rosemary: MusicSmart - Liner Notes Mikah: Tech News Weekly on Apple TV Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 eightsleep.com/ios nomadgoods.com/IOSTODAY
On iOS Today, Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard share some apps and tips to write smarter with your iPhone and iPad. Notes with Quick Notes Drafts Obsidian - Connected Notes Scrivener iA Writer Ulysses Pages with Mail Merge News Apple Updates Pages, Numbers, and Keynote With new features Chrome wants to take over your iPhone passwords Today at Apple session showcases making GIFs with Keynote Shortcuts Corner Tom would like a shortcut that sets the phone to mirror the screen to an Apple TV and launch an app Mikah wants a shortcut that will pull text from a specific document in the Notes app App Caps Rosemary: MusicSmart - Liner Notes Mikah: Tech News Weekly on Apple TV Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 eightsleep.com/ios nomadgoods.com/IOSTODAY
On iOS Today, Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard share some apps and tips to write smarter with your iPhone and iPad. Notes with Quick Notes Drafts Obsidian - Connected Notes Scrivener iA Writer Ulysses Pages with Mail Merge News Apple Updates Pages, Numbers, and Keynote With new features Chrome wants to take over your iPhone passwords Today at Apple session showcases making GIFs with Keynote Shortcuts Corner Tom would like a shortcut that sets the phone to mirror the screen to an Apple TV and launch an app Mikah wants a shortcut that will pull text from a specific document in the Notes app App Caps Rosemary: MusicSmart - Liner Notes Mikah: Tech News Weekly on Apple TV Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsors: itpro.tv/twit promo code TWIT30 eightsleep.com/ios nomadgoods.com/IOSTODAY
In this episode, Erik and Kris share a repository of over 400 open education tools. Our co-hosts also discuss recent tech and education news including "the next Google", the pros and cons of using technology to improve education, SQLi vulnerabilities in higher ed institutions, new online learning entrepreneurs, and smartphones vs science. The app of the month is iA Writer.SHOW NOTES:Tools:*Innovations in Scholarly Communication by the University of Utrecht*List of 400 open education tools*TabulaNews articles*DKB: The Next Google*Entrepreneur: 5 edtech trends that will change learning between now and 2030*Brookings: The promise and perils of new technologies to improve education*VentureBeat: 35% of educational institutions have a SQLi vulnerability*Financial Times: The new online learning entrepreneurs*Cal Newport blog post: Smartphones vs. ScienceLearning opportunities*University of British Columbia: Program for Open Scholarship and EducationApp of the month:*iA WriterCONTACT:Website: edtechexamined.comEmail: hey@edtechexamined.comTwitter: @EdTechExaminedTEAM INFORMATION:Erik Christiansen, Co-Founder & Co-HostWebsite: erikchristiansen.netTwitter: @egchristiansenBlog: tech-bytes.netKris Hans, Co-Founder & Co-HostWebsite: krishans.caTwitter: @KrisHans Market Grade: marketgrade.comChristopher Hoang, Audio Producer & Sound EngineerWebsite: chrishoang.ca
Bienvenidos y bienvenidas a un nuevo episodio de Haciendo Cosas: un podcast para hacedores de cosas, gente que tiene ideas e internet en su mesa de trabajo. Hoy vamos a hablar de un caso de éxito, nuestro. Y es que resulta que nos hemos vuelto influencers en Twitter con un hilo que ha hecho que la cuenta de Víctor (@victorcmn) haya conseguido más de 5.000 seguidores. Vamos a contarte qué hemos aprendido de la experiencia y también algunos patrones sobre por qué triunfan los hilos que hemos aprendido. Vamos, que hemos venido a hablar de nuestro hilo. ⭐️Episodio patrocinado por Unancor.com⭐️: la mejor web para otorgar visibilidad a tu proyecto online Utiliza el código ‘haciendocosas' para conseguir un 15% extra de dinero cuando deposites saldo. El punto de partida y datos clave Víctor empieza a usar Hypefury tras no usar Tw nada Programamos un hilo que ya estaba en la cabeza desde hace meses (primera lección, pagar ayuda a moverse) El hilo iba de herramientas para escribir al hilo del programa de IA Writer Métricas: - 5 millones de alcance - 12.000 RTs - Más de 500 respuestas - 46.000 me gustas - Más de 5.500 seguidores nuevos - Más de 800 a la cuenta de @Haciedocosas_ - Más de 1.000 visitas en un día Doblar los oyentes del podcast +600 suscriptores a la news Tierra B Ofertas de empleo Gente pidiendo cursos Entrevistas A tope de amor Por qué triunfó Era un tema masivo (mucha gente escribe) Era un hilo práctico Usuarios poco tecnológicos: no des las cosas por hecho Estructura del primer tuit: -Se apela a quien va -Se dice el dolor y se dice que se ha corregido -Se dicen que son herramientas Similar a persuasión: identificación, problema, solución y cómo alcanzarla (en este caso pasando por el hilo) Esto es lago raro de narices triunfar a la primera Ciclos del tuit:Sale, sube a 30 RTs en 4 horas -Sube a 200 a las 6 horas aprox (pensar que igual llego a los 1.000 seguidores) -Me voy al cine, salgo y tengo 1000 RTs y más de 1.000 seguidores ganados -Día siguiente: más de 3000 RTs (Latam) y seguidores empiezan a subir -Le siguen dos días de explosión -Días 4 y 5 ya de bajada pero siguiendo subiendo Otras consideraciones y caras B ¿Cuánto habrán vendido los de IA Writer? Hay hate hasta para esto No tener algo que vender Ser influencer quita tiempo ¡Hasta la semana que viene, nos vemos Haciendo Cosas!
Aufreger der Woche: Sophie wurde von Corona wie aus dem Nichts überrascht und krächzt selbst nach 3 Wochen ab und zu immer noch vor sich hin +++ Sven muss ebenfalls wegen Corona sein von langer Hand geplantes Wochenende überdenken Neues aus Cupertino: Apple-Event „Peek performance“ am 8. März: Was wir erwarten … iPhone SE 3? iPad Air 5? Neuer iMac? Oder gar ein Mac mini (mit M1 Pro)? Abschweifung: Einkaufen mit Payback +++ Video zum Thema Schlange-Stehen: Stay in Queue Aus der Redaktion: Sophie stellt die Frage: Wie arbeiten die Kolleg:innen in der Redaktion eigentlich? Sebastian nutzt iA Writer, den Brave-Webbrowser und das LanguageTool +++ Stefan schwört auf Ulysses als Schreibumgebung. LanguageTool findet nicht nur Tippfehler, sondern gibt auch Tipps in Sachen Stil – diesbezüglich springt mir auch OpenThesaurus öfter einmal zur Seite. Alfred gewährt dabei schnellen Zugriff auf Nachschlagewerke und andere Tools, etwa DeepL und OpenThesaurus. +++ Sven nutzt ebenfalls iA Writer, das LanguageTool, OpenThesaurus und für Übersetzungen DeepL +++ Sophie schreibt mit OneNote und nutzt LanguageTool und zeichenzähler.de +++ Ergänzung zur Textkorrektur: Duden Mentor Hörer:innen-Feedback: Fabian zu Screenshots und Threema +++ Kai zu geteilten Kalendern Apps: Sebastian hat sich nach langer Zeit mal wieder Fantastical angeschaut. Hardware: Peak Design Mobile: Das bessere MagSafe +++ Putzt so sauber, dass man sich drin spiegeln kann: Der Saug-Wisch-und-bringt-den Müll-raus-Roboter Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra +++ Hyperice Hypervolt 2: Perkussionstherapie der Muskeln Streaming & Gaming: Durchgespielt: Horizon Forbidden West, das „Zelda für Erwachsene“ (Sophie steckt noch mittendrin) +++ Angespielt: Scheitern als Konzept mit Elden Ring +++ Ab sofort im Game Pass (und via Game Pass Ultimate auf Mac, iPhone und iPad): Microsoft Flight Simulator +++ jeen-yuh: Eine Kanye West Trilogie auf Netflix +++ Diener des Volkes bei ARTE +++ Against the Ice auf Netflix +++ Heute neu: Star Trek: Picard Staffel 2 bei Amazon Prime, Pieces of Her bei Netflix, ab Samstag Beforeigners Staffel 2 in der ARD-Mediathek Danke fürs Zuhören. Abonniert „Schleifenquadrat“ gerne im Podcatcher eurer Wahl (außer Spotify), hinterlasst uns ein paar Sterne und kommentiert die Folge bei Apple Podcasts!
Bienvenidos y bienvenidas a un nuevo episodio de Haciendo Cosas: un podcast para hacedores de cosas, gente que tiene ideas e internet en su mesa de trabajo. Hoy hablamos de una herramienta que nos ha hecho escribir mucho más rápido frente al ordenador, pero antes... Este podcast es para ti si... compraste bitcoin en la parte cara y has tenido que vender en la caída. En nuestra comunidad... Un lujo como siguen saliendo temas y entrando nuevos perfiles
Come potete sostenerci Se volete supportare il podcast vi chiediamo con il cuore di fare una recensione su Apple Podcast. In questo fase iniziale tante recensioni ci permetteranno di essere visti da più persone possibili. Se volete sapere come fare una recensione trovate a questo link (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/podcast/itunes). Potete anche scriverci a scrivi.a
https://www.zettlr.com/https://obsidian.md/Si buscas un manual de escritura te recomiendo este genial y entretenido libro de Stephen King, ¡es esencial! https://amzn.to/3FkOpUE
Hallo und herzlich Willkommen zum KREWKAST! Ein wöchentlicher Podcast mit viel Gelaber über die KREW, Technik, YouTube, Abenteuer und vor allem was Julian und Felix so interessiert. 00:00 Begrüßung 00:53 iA Writer 11:07 e-Mail ist veraltet 15:10 Formel 1 Finale 21:55 Wagyu Burger Experience 31:22 Neues Oppo Find N 41:13 Cybertruck Scheibenwischer geleakt 59:10 Kommentar: Kritik an Julian für die Allwetterreifen 1:09:30 Kommentar: Volles Potential des iPads zu nutzen 1:18:40 Kommentar: Meinung zur Zulassung vom Autopiloten bei Mercedes 1:32:38 Kommentar zum Investment- Podcast -------------------------------------------------------------- Hier sind wir sonst noch im Internet vertreten: Youtube Hauptkanäle: Felix: http://www.youtube.com/felixba Julian: http://www.youtube.com/owngalaxy Twitter: Felix: http://www.twitter.com/felixba Julian: http://www.twitter.com/julianvoelzke Instagram: Felix: http://www.instagram.com/felixba Julian: http://www.instagram.com/julianvoelzke Falls ihr euch fragt, wo wir unsere Hintergrundmusik her haben - schaut hier vorbei: ⇨ http://share.epidemicsound.com/plDDT * -------------------------------------------------------------- * = Bei allen Links, welche mit einem Stern gekennzeichnet sind, handelt es sich um Affiliate-Links. Dies bedeutet, dass ich eine geringe Provision erhalte, wenn du über diesen Link einkaufst. Vorteil dabei ist, dass sich der Preis für euch nicht erhöht und ihr meine Arbeit damit gleichzeitig unterstützen könnt.
Feld meet Feld! Wait, what? There is another Feld? There is indeed! Jodie joins us to set the record straight on Martin, give Andrew someone to talk finance with, and be an all-round fun person to chat with! Somehow we talked about cereal as well... You never know what to expect on guest days! Introducing Jodie 00:00:00 Hi, Jodie!
We round up our favorite iPadOS apps, give a one year review of AirPods Max, and compare Apple Music Replay to Spotify Wrapped. Follow our hosts @stephenrobles on Twitter @Hillitech on Twitter Sponsored by: Bespoke Post: Get 20% off your first monthly box when you sign up at: boxofawesome.com and enter the code appleinsider at checkout. MasterClass: Buy one annual MasterClass membership and get a second annual membership for FREE when you visit: masterclass.com/appleinsider The Prisoner Wine Company: Get 20% off and FREE shipping in time for the holidays when you visit: theprisonerwinecompany.com/appleinsider VPLS Managed Services: From growing businesses in need of IT support, or large companies in need of security and expert consultation, VPLS can help. To learn more, visit: vpls.com/goit Support the show Support the show on Patreon or Apple Podcasts to get ad-free episodes every week, access to our private Discord channel, and early release of the show! We would also appreciate a 5-star rating and review in Apple Podcasts Links from the show Classical Musicians Review AirPods Max - YouTube Don't get Spotify FOMO - here's how to get your Apple Music Replay playlist Jack Dorsey steps down as Twitter CEO, Parag Agrawal named as new head Payment giant Square changes name to Block, shifts focus to blockchain Apple unveils the winning apps and games in its App Store Awards 2021 iPad app recommendations Ferrite Recording Studio GoodNotes 5 forScore Twitterrific: Tweet Your Way iA Writer Drafts Text Case Any Buffer Picsew - Screenshot Stitching Apple Frames Shortcut Affinity Photo Affinity Designer CARROT Weather Noir - Dark Mode for Safari Minecraft Notability Shortcuts Adobe Lightroom: Photo Editor Jump Desktop (RDP, VNC, Fluid) Pixelmator Canva: Design, Photo & Video GarageBand Bear FANTASIAN MindNode - Mind Map & Outline Keynote Momentum 1Password - Password Manager Vidimote for Safari Hyperweb PiPifier Portal - Immersive Escapes Weather Gods LumaFusion Microsoft MyHub PS Remote Play MARVEL Strike Force: Squad RPG Spike Email - Mail & Team Chat Evernote - Notes Organizer Procreate Pocket Craft - Docs and Notes Editor Vectornator: Design Software AppHouseKitchen – Mac Software for the Gourmet PeakHour 4 - Simple and beautiful network performance AdGuard — World's most advanced adblocker 1blocker More AppleInsider podcasts Subscribe and listen to our AppleInsider Daily podcast for the latest Apple news Monday through Friday. You can find it on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or anywhere you listen to podcasts. Tune in to our HomeKit Insider podcast covering the latest news, products, apps and everything HomeKit related. Subscribe in Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or just search for HomeKit Insider wherever you get your podcasts. Podcast artwork from Basic Apple Guy. Download the free wallpaper pack here. Those interested in sponsoring the show can reach out to us at: steve@appleinsider.com
De eerste Bright Podcast in ruim anderhalf jaar die weer volledig in onze podcaststudio is opgenomen. Dat vieren we met een heleboel onderwerpen, van Apple Watch Series 7 tot Netflix en van AR-brillen tot speed-pedelecs.Tips uit deze aflevering:App: Halide, de camera-app voor iOS, heeft in zijn nieuwste versie 2.5 de mogelijkheid gekregen om macro-foto's te nemen. Werkt natuurlijk het beste op een iPhone 13, maar op oudere iPhones werkt het verrassend goed. Net als Apple zelf gebruikt Halide de ultragroothoeklens, maar dan ingezoomd en met een focuspunt dat heel dicht bij de lens ligt. En dan kan je dus ineens bovenop je onderwerp gaan zitten en scherpe foto's maken.App: Matter wil de ultieme reader zijn voor nu. Voor alles wat je onder ‘lees later' schaart: artikelen, Twitter-threads, nieuwsbrieven en meer. Een soort Pocket meets Instapaper meets iA Writer (maar dan voor lezen). Gratis app, in eerste instantie alleen voor iPhone en iPad.Boek: Een Smerige Waarheid, een boek over Facebook, geschreven door journalisten Cecilia Kang en Sheera Frenkel. Het verscheen deze zomer, maar is nu dus weer mega actueel.Film: Slag om de Schelde, de oorlogsfilm al snel na bioscooprelease op Netflix komt, vanaf deze vrijdag namelijk. De film speelt zich af aan het einde van 1944. In het Zeeuwse Walcheren vechten de geallieerden tegen de Duitsers. In de film kruisen de paden van een jonge Nederlander die voor de Duitsers vecht, een Britse piloot en een Zeeuws meisje dat in het verzet zit.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
John's new daily writing challenge, Rambo's continued deep dives into Bluetooth and local networking, and initial impressions of Apple Music Spatial Audio. Also, what might the future of technologies like Objective-C and Combine look like, given this year's WWDC announcements? Download MP3 Hosts Gui on Twitter: @_inside John on Twitter: @johnsundell Links Brazilian cuisine Swedish “fika” Customizing how an external Swift type is encoded or decoded MultipeerKit “Made for Spatial Audio” on Apple Music Shadow of the Tomb Raider Create ML Carbon What Swift's new concurrency features might mean for the future of Combine SwiftUI's new pull-to-refresh API iA Writer Publish Splash Ulysses Subscribe 🟣 Apple Podcasts🟠 Overcast🟢 Spotify If you have any feedback about the show, feel free to reach out on Twitter or send us an email.
WWDC preparations, the challenge of building features that rely on wireless communication between devices, Apple’s latest accessibility announcements, and another semi-deep dive into Swift’s Result Builders feature. Sponsored by WALTR PRO for Mac: Make it easy to transfer virtually any file (in any format) to your iPhone, iPad, iPod and now, HomePod. Get 30% off now. Sponsored by Pillow: Pillow is an all-in-one sleep tracking solution to help you get a better night’s sleep. Download it from the App Store today. Download MP3 Hosts: Gui on Twitter: @_inside John on Twitter: @johnsundell Links AirBuddy Bonjour Multipeer Connectivity The unofficial WWDC app for macOS Apple’s Developer app WWDC by Sundell & Friends The RSS feed for WWDC by Sundell & Friends NetNewsWire iA Writer Apple’s accessibility press release Dark Noise UINavigationBar Result builders Plot’s ComponentBuilder John’s write-JavaScript-in-Swift experiment Subscribe: 🟣 Apple Podcasts 🟠 Overcast 🟢 Spotify If you have any feedback about the show, feel free to reach out on Twitter or send us an email.
Se volete supportare il podcast vi chiediamo con il cuore di fare una recensione su Apple Podcast. In questo fase iniziale tante recensioni ci permetteranno di essere visti da più persone possibili. Se volete sapere come fare una recensione trovate il link nelle note dell'episodio (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/podcast/itunes). Potete anche scriverci a scrivi.a@a2podcast.it 1. Un po' di storia Il markdown (https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/) nasce da un'idea di John Gruber di DaringFireball (https://daringfireball.net) e con li cotributo di Aaron Swartz (morto suicida). Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown è uno strumento di conversione da testo a HTML per gli scrittori del web. John Gruber introduzione al markdown (link (https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/)) Gruber all'epoco aveva iniziato a scrivere il proprio blog e non c'aveva voglia di scrivere tutto in HTML (altro linguagigo di markup alla base del web). Così pensò di implementare (aiutato poi da Swartz che dei due è il vero programmatore) un interprete Perl per scrivere in modo semplice e solamente testuale i suoi post del blog che poi, grazie allo script Perl, venivano convertiti in formato HTML e pubblicabile poi sul web. La caratteristica peculiare del markdown è che il testo scritto in questo formato è facilmente leggibile da qualsiasi persona che non lo conosca. I file .MD sono dei semplici file TXT ovvero di testo semplice che sono alla base di qualsisasi sistema informatico. Gruber ha posto le base agli elementi di base (vedremo dopo quali sono) poi ha reso il markdown open e gratuito. Nel tempo, soprattutto nel mondo Apple di cui Gruber è una voce e commentatore importante, l'utilizzo di questo formato si è ampliato a dismisura. In particolare con l'avvento degli iPhone questo tipo di formato e le applicazioni che lo rendevano più semplice hanno resto la scrittura sugli smartphone prima ed i tablet di Apple molto più semplice. Wikipedia italiana (https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown) Nel tempo, tuttavia la “semplicità” del markdown ha dato poi il là ad altri formati tra cui degni di nota: Multi-markdown (https://fletcherpenney.net/multimarkdown/) di Flatcher Penney Markdown di GitHub Pandoc (che usa Filippo quotidianamente per lavoro … ma questo meriterebbe una puntata a parte …) Ora non è solo possibile creare con il markdown della pagine web ma, praticamente, qualsiasi cosa da PDF, si usa anche in Todoist e molte altre applicazioni Obsidian. 2. Le caratteristiche Perché il markdown è qualcosa che, se non lo conoscete, dovreste conoscerlo? Semplice: imparare a scrivere in markdown richiede pochi minuti (per le regole di base) Altamente portatile (multipiattaforma) Sincronizzazione in un lampo (file di testo di pochi kb) Universale (possibile convertire facilmente da e per markdown) 3. Le regole di base Fare riferimento per la spiegazione Pagina di Daringfireball sulla sintassi del markdown (https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax) (in inglese) Markdown: Guida Completa 2019 (https://informaticabrutta.it/markdown-guida/) di Informatica brutta (in italiano) Markdown: guida al linguaggio di mark up (https://www.html.it/articoli/markdown-guida-al-linguaggio/): di HTML.it infarcita di pubblicità e tracciamenti … ma ben fatta. Markdown: guida al semplice linguaggio di markup (https://www.ionos.it/digitalguide/siti-web/programmazione-del-sito-web/markdown/) Elementi principale del markdown: Intestazioni (i titoli di ) grassetto e corsivo (c.d. enfasi) link immagini Paragrafi Elenchi: puntati e numerati Citazioni Codice Se volete provare markdown editor (https://markdown-editor.github.io), applicazione web. 4. Le applicazioni Un file in markdown può essere letto comodamente in Notepad (https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blocco_note) su Windows o TextEdit (https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/TextEdit) su macOS … tuttavia esistono svariate applicazioni gratuite e non che fanno molto di più. Drafts (https://getdrafts.com) (consigliatissima fa molto di più di utilizzare il Markdown) nvALT (https://brettterpstra.com/projects/nvalt/) Servizi per macOS di Brett Terpstra (https://brettterpstra.com/projects/markdown-service-tools/) Ulysses (https://ulysses.app) iAWriter (https://ia.net/writer) 1Writer (https://1writerapp.com/) Bears (https://bear.app/) gli sviluppatori sono italiani ByWord (http://www.bywordapp.com/) Zettlr (https://www.zettlr.com/) (che Filippo usa per preparare le scalette): caratteristiche carine il folding (il ripiegamento) dei vari livelli di intestazione, conversione trasparente attraverso Pandoc in altri formati (docx e PDF in primis) Typora (https://typora.io/) Obsidian (https://obsidian.md/) Roby workflow: icloud per i file di testo condiviso tra Per mac MacDown (https://macdown.uranusjr.com) Per iOS Blockquote https://apps.apple.com/it/app/blockquote-markdown-editor/id1396620426 Notion https://www.notion.so (https://www.notion.so/product?fredir=1) Dove ci potete trovare? Roberto: Mac e architettura: (https://marchdotnet.wordpress.com/)marchdotnet.worpress.com Podcast settimanale Snap - architettura imperfetta (https://www.spreaker.com/show/snap-archiettura-imperfetta) Filippo: Avvocati e Mac punto it (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/) Ci sentiamo la settimana prossima.
Brittik and Aravind get together to talk about Aravind's recent purchase iA writer and how they consume/read newsletters. Brittik also shares a tip he uses to make his girlfriend happy ;) Links iA Writer Mailbrew Hosts Aravind Balla Brittik Basu Learning Curve Podcast
Kourosh Dini is a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and productivity expert. He is the author of an excellent book on how to take smart notes using DEVONthink, a personal information management tool. In this conversation, we discuss smart note-taking and how DEVONthink can help us work more effectively. Show notes Kourosh Dini Being Productive Taking Smart Notes with DEVONthink by Kourosh Dini How to Take Smart Notes by Sonke Ahrens DEVONthink Zettelkasten Niklas Luhmann Evernote Notion Roam Research macOS Finder Craft Markdown BBEdit iA Writer Typora Scrivener Keynote Ulysses OmniFocus Some show notes may include Amazon affiliate links. I get a small commission for purchases made through these links. Read the transcript Jorge: Kourosh, welcome to the show. Kourosh: Thanks so much for having me, Jorge. Jorge: Well, I'm so glad that you are able to join us. For folks who might not know you, can you please tell us about yourself? About Kourosh Kourosh: Sure. Most of my work is I'm a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. And I work with clients, I see patients and do some medication, but also do a lot of talk therapy type work. I've also developed into a writer: I write about task management, I write about taking notes — basically things that involve trying to do things that feel meaningful, trying to do good work. And, throughout my life I've also been a piano player, musician; I like to tinker around with sounds. It's a lot of fun and I've yet to stop. And I can add one more: I enjoy video games. So all of that together is whatever I am. I guess that's how I introduce myself. Jorge: Well, that's great. I reached out to you because of the productivity side of that formula. I have been using a tool called DEVONthink for a couple of years. And it wasn't until I read one of your books called Taking Smart Notes with DEVONthink, that the tool really clicked for me. And I'm hoping that we will get into productivity and more particularly note-taking. The book, like I said, it's called Taking Smart Notes with DEVONthink. What are "smart notes"? Note-taking systems Kourosh: What are smart notes? You know, I take the title from, Sonke Ahrens's book, which was How to Take Smart Notes. And he had based it on the Zettelkasten approach; this idea of having individual notes that really captured a single idea that would then link to other notes. Which in turn would link back and based on this approach that the sociologist — Luhmann was it? — that put together this analog system of note cards. And then Sonke Ahrens had translated that into these digital versions. So, smart notes, I think encapsulates a lot of different ideas that come from that very simple process. Again, the simple process is: You have a single note that has maybe a single idea to it, and then you connect that to other notes. And what makes it smart, I think, is where you start to reflect on those notes. How you start to develop them over time, how they start to argue with each other in time, because what you've written now is different than what you've written in the past, and you start discovering things. It's not so much the notes themselves, so much as the effect they have on you, I suppose. Jorge: I remember when I was in school, I would take copious notes of what the teacher was saying. And I would try to transcribe things verbatim, you know, and I would always be behind the words that were coming out of the teacher's mouth. And later on, when I was in professional context — in meetings — I would also try to take notes of what was being said in a meeting, right? And I was not trying to be verbatim at that point but trying to summarize on the fly. And I'm saying that because I think that for many people, the idea of notes evokes this notion of just writing down the things that you're hearing or seeing in the environment. But what I'm hearing from you in this concept of smart notes is slightly different, no? Kourosh: Absolutely. I mean, I came from the same sort of process of taking notes that, maybe I wouldn't write it down verbatim, but I would just try to write down whatever I could when I was in class, similar to what you're describing. But then the issue is that — at least when I was doing it — I wouldn't have a destination for it beyond maybe an exam or the thing that I was assigned to. Maybe do homework with or something like that. Because it wasn't embedded in the system that I was developing for myself — just this idea of having my own thoughts and connecting them — it didn't really prompt me to clarify my thoughts and so in that sense, the relationship that one has with their writing, or the relationship I had with my writing, changed significantly once I started to develop a system that was my own. Jorge: When you say 'system,' I'm thinking it's not just a repository of things. It's also composed of processes and ways of making the ideas actionable somehow. Kourosh: Absolutely. You want the ideas to be able to come to you when and where they are useful to you and you want them to stay out of the way otherwise. And to do that isn't that hard from using a system where you just... you link to things that are meaningful and to any particular note. But then as you develop that, the hard part is where you start looking at what these notes are saying and how they might be different. The perspectives that these notes have on the same object, whatever it is you're exploring, you might start thinking, "one of these has got to be wrong." Or "maybe these are both pointing at the same thing and there are different ways of looking at it, and how do I reconcile that?" Whether it's my own thoughts from the past or some other authors ideas. So, when you try to achieve the sort of coherency between your ideas, that's I think what I'm referring to when I say 'system' — that when you do that, you're trying to achieve a coherency of meaningful ideas within yourself because you're trying to understand it and build on it at the same time. Jorge: And this coherency is something that before using tools like DEVONthink I would do inside of my head, right? Again, by writing on a sketchbook, but I was limited to what was on my mind. And the system that you're describing, at least as I've built my own, based on the things that I read in your book, is a system that augments my mind in that it takes these ideas out of my head, puts them in what is really a database, ultimately, that allows me to easily find relationships, that would not be as discoverable otherwise. Is that a fair description of it? Kourosh: Absolutely. Yeah. Once you put it down — once you've written it in a way that's easily accessible — then the work of having to hold it in your head is relieved. So, you can actually do the other work of thinking on top of that. You can build on top of those ideas much more easily. Why DEVONthink? Jorge: So there are several systems... several tools let's say so that we don't confuse folks by over using the word 'system.' There are several tools that can be used to implement such a thing. I was in a discussion a couple of weeks ago with friends who were talking about migrating from Evernote and they were considering Notion. Or another one that we hear about a lot these days is Roam Research. And I'm wondering, why DEVONthink? Kourosh: You're right. There are quite a number of note-taking apps and new ones coming up all the time. DEVONthink... so I've been using it for several years already. Now it's been probably at least a decade that I've been using it. When I first approached it, I was kind of using it as a Finder equivalent, just throwing things in there. And there were little bits that had some benefits to it. Like, I could link to anything in it and-it was a strong, good, robust link. It wouldn't break down like some of the Finder ones and the alias function, which in DEVONthink is called 'replicant' also was more reliable. It was good. But I didn't use it too much beyond that. And then once I started to do notes, certain functions in DEVONthink became much more apparent and powerful. So probably the biggest example is the AI. One of the things that distinguished DEVONthink I think head and shoulders above just about any other a note-taking app is this AI. And at first, I thought of it more as a gimmick. I didn't think of it as very useful. You know, you throw a bunch of PDFs in there and maybe one of them it would say, "Hey, what about these other PDFs? Are they useful to you?" And, I said, "Okay, yeah, that's nice." But when I started to take these notes, and when I started to organize it myself, that's where the AI started to, I guess, rest on my own organizing process. So, now when I write something down, let's say in some particular niche of psychoanalytic thought, or maybe I'm writing about, you know, I've been interested in; structure of stories, I write some small nuance of that. Suddenly in the sidebar it shows me a handful of ideas that I've already written that could be related. And it's not that it's just taking the same words or something. It's not just saying, "Oh, I've mentioned the title of this somewhere else." It seems to go through this process of thinking about the relationships of the words together in such a way that it feels meaningful. It feels like... like if I start writing about character, then I discover ideas from stories and how characters are built on story, but I can also have it present things about defense mechanisms that might be more relevant than psychoanalysis. And suddenly I can think about these two very different approaches to the idea of character and see where they overlap, how they go together. And, you know, oftentimes I might think of these sorts of associations myself, but it's very nice to have the system say, "Hey, these are other things you've written that may not seem directly relevant — you may not think of them immediately — but hey, you might think that they're relevant." And very often they are. And it's just so lovely to have that. So, that's one — I'd say impressive to me — reason to stick with it, but there's others. I mean, I can throw any file in there. I can have audio files. I can have image files. And there are tools that work with these within DEVONthink, as well as the files are directly accessible by anything else. It's not just, I can export them. You know, I can do that. But I can also open a particular file at any point with any app that would work with it. So, a text file... I have half a dozen note editors that whichever one I feel like working with because one's better than the other at something... I can do that. Save it and jump to another one very quickly. And they're all sitting happily in DEVONthink where I may have tagged it, I may have linked it to who knows what else as well as multiple databases. So, anyway, I can talk about that too. Point is, there's a good number of reasons why, to me it just reigns supreme in terms of these note-taking apps. I will say that there are some of these other apps do things that DEVONthink doesn't. Such as, you mentioned, Roam. Another one that's come out recently is Craft, where you have these, blocks, these block references. And DEVONthink does not do that. I've tried them out, and I continually stumble on myself, trying to make them work. So maybe that's part of my issue. But in the end, I've found that I very much value a simple text file. There's something about it that feels more paper-like, that feels more direct. And I don't mind rewriting if I need to, though I don't actually find myself doing that very often. So, in the end, DEVONthink really is the powerful tool for me. Jorge: I haven't played with Craft, but I did play a bit around with Roam. And when I hear you talk about blocks, I think that what you're referring to — and I just want to be clear on it for myself — is the ability to treat elements of a note or a document that are more granular than the note or the document itself... treat them as individual entities that you can point to and manipulate somehow, right? Kourosh: Exactly. Yeah. That each line can be changed, adjusted, can be referred to — some of them in quite powerful ways. And you can have combines and you can have images placed there and you can drag and drop them around. And yes, refer to one particular line in a particular note, from any other note. Jorge: And the trade-off there to your point when you're talking about the paper-like experience and also DEVONthink's ability to host files that are openable in other applications. I think that one of the trade-offs there is portability, right? In that if you have a system that lets you deal with elements more granular than the document, all of a sudden you develop a dependency on that system. Kourosh: Absolutely. Yeah, no, once you do that, you're somewhat fenced in. Even if you can export it. Even just psychologically, you get connected to that system. I would rather have a tool that lets me manage the things I work on external to that tool. You know, if I have a bunch of nails, I don't want to have a certain brand of hammer that only works with those nails. Jorge: Right. And to illustrate for folks listening in one of the things that I learned from reading your book, was how to deal with the notes that I'm taking in DEVONthink as markdown files, right? Markdown being this markup language that works on plain text files. And I can use BBEdit, which is my text editor of choice, when working with DEVONthink think files and there's this portability that happens not just... not just portability of the entire set of notes, but even when working day to day with the thing. It encourages you to somehow use other elements that you're more comfortable with, or that may do a better job than DEVONthink itself for whatever task you're trying to do, right? Kourosh: Yeah, absolutely. I think that's exactly it. Like if you like BBEdit, it's fantastic. You know, I like iA Writer, is one. I like type Typora is another. I can jump between a number of them and just, they all work. Kourosh's workflow Jorge: I'm wondering about your workflow when taking notes. When you were describing it, you were talking about discovering DEVONthink's AI, surfacing links to notes that you had taken previously. You also talked about PDFs. Are those PDFs of things that you yourself have written or PDFs from third parties, journals, stuff like that? Kourosh: Both. Whenever I find a journal article, for example, that I want to add to the system, I'll add it to a folder titled 'Reference.' And I might even put that into sub folders that it relates to. Or anytime I complete some major project that I'm writing, even if it's based on stuff that I've done within DEVONthink — the notes that I've written there — then that complete article that I've written is now a reference that I can use. And I'll add that to DEVONthink. I think actually now that you mention it, I think that's the other part of DEVONthink that I didn't mention that I really liked a lot is moving from notes to completion, to a complete something. I know it's a little tangential to what you just asked, but I was able to take, you know, about 30,000 words of notes — over 300 notes — about... you know, as I was writing about, ADHD and the psychodynamics of it. And I read a bunch of papers. I imported them, about six papers to start. Followed their references, went to about a dozen, had maybe 20-30 sitting there that maybe I didn't read deeply, but at least a dozen that I did. And I was able to take those 30,000 words, 300 notes, drag them into Scrivener. In Scrivener I could, play with the corkboard there and arrange them nicely, you know, in the sort of bottom-up organization, where I discover, "Oh, this kind of goes here, this kind of goes there," and, figure out a good flow of where the words would go. And how I could... how can I lead the audience? And, in the end, I edited it down to about 18,000 words, which turned into a four-session lecture. And it wasn't hard. It was enjoyable to go through that process. You know, to discover along the way as I created this final piece. Which then I took as a PDF, and actually as a Scrivener document, and put it into my references so I could connect to it and link to it again, further, in DEVONthink. Jorge: The way that I'm hearing that workflow works is that DEVONthink is the system where the knowledge is stored in a way that allows you to easily surface connections with other pieces of knowledge that might have fallen off the table or been something that you collected a while back. But then the actual process of creating a new work based on those connections happens in another tool. Is that right? Kourosh: If I'm creating like a final piece of something? Yes. Like if I'm aiming for whatever the medium is, it's going to be outside of DEVONthink. So, if I'm thinking of a Keynote presentation, I'll use that. If I'm thinking of a long form text, probably I'll be using Scrivener, but absolutely the consumption, digestion, working-through of knowledge and the accessibility of my ideas, all happen in DEVONthink. Jorge: Yeah, I'm asking because that's something that I'm struggling with myself. I'm always facing the question, should I keep writing this note in DEVONthink or do I need to move it to Ulysses? Which is the... it's what I use instead of Scrivener, it's the more, kind of long form thing. Or should I do this one in BBEdit? And it, it feels like part of the deal that comes with a powerful complex tool like DEVONthink is that by opening up so much choice, it does become a little complex in that you have to make choices about what you're going to do and where. Kourosh: I would divide it as... like, I have a sense or a feeling of what I want my DEVONthink database then notes to do... like it's a search of knowledge. It's a development of knowledge. It's a growth. And, if I feel like the words have a destination, let's say a post or something like that, I might... I like the idea of a singular idea as being a note, you know? Trying to get each note to have a single idea. And as long as I have the single ideas represented in my database, DEVONthink, then I can take any of them and weave them together into something longer form elsewhere. So, if I start writing something and I'm wondering, "should I start writing this elsewhere?" The only thing I have in mind is, "well, are the ideas represented in my database?" And if they are already well then, that's great, then I don't need to edit for some flow between the ideas necessarily, that might be more aligned with whatever its destination is. And that's when I might take it out. And if I discover new things as I write that, then, you know, I'll throw them into the inbox and DEVONthink can work on them later. Tagging Jorge: One issue that I wanted to discuss with you, and it's just because it's something that I'm using right now, an aspect of DEVONthink that I'm using right now, and I wanted to touch on it because I'm finding it incredibly powerful and feel like it's something that folks would appreciate hearing about. Like you're saying, I'm working on something right now where I have a final destination in mind, in this case, it's a set of Keynote presentations. And what I'm using DEVONthink for is making these connections between ideas and discovering connections that I might not have been aware of before. And I, like you were describing, I've collected a lot of my own notes, a lot of PDFs, bookmarks to websites and I've been tagging those things as I import them or create them in DEVONthink. And then I have set up smart... I don't remember the right terminology, but it's like the equivalent of 'smart agents' in DEVONthink that surface the items in the database that have that particular tag. And what that's allowed me to do is to very quickly discover these relationships that I have been slowly accumulating over time and — there's a question here, I promise! — The question here has to do with tagging as an activity that you do at the moment of capture versus tagging as something that you do at the moment of reflection. Because my ability to surface those items is going to be dependent or greatly improved by having good tags. But sometimes when I'm in a hurry, in the moment, I might tag something with one or two tags, but that might not be rich enough to describe the full utility of this idea, right? And I'm wondering if you have suggestions or thoughts about this relationship between bottom-up tagging in the moment versus the more reflective structure that happens when you circle back to add meaning to things. Kourosh: Yeah. So, most of the way you described it, I think it's similar to way I might do it, which was: If I have a particular project or something that I'm working on, and there are notes, ideas, that are related to it, I might give it that particular tag. The second way you described it is I might tag something with multiple tags and those multiple tags may not fully describe everything about it. That second way I avoid. Any tag that I have, I've made it a principle for myself to have a very clear purpose. I think it's often approached... and I don't know if I'm misinterpreting, please let me know. But I think it's often that tags can be approached as like, "Well, I'm going to add everything that comes to mind about it." Like, it's used associationally, and then hopefully you'll be able to discover that later on in some association with whatever. But I've very rarely found that to be helpful to me. So, instead — and that's maybe partially because I've come to rely on the AI in DEVONthink — that I would much rather just have... Let's say I'm working on the ADHD idea. I have a tag just for that — in the psychodynamics of ADHD, that was one tag. And everything that related to it, got that tag. And then later on, I realized there were certain ones that I thought would be important to have and I'd forgotten to tag them. So, I created a smart rule that said, "search for everything that has the phrase either 'ADHD' or maybe the phrase 'concentration', or whatever it was, and also does not have that tag." And I was able to search through and then, "Okay, these are the ones that need to be tagged." Okay. So, then I go ahead and tag them. And then once I have them all tagged, now I have all those notes. And that's where I can grab them all, drag them into Scrivener and do whatever I want with them. Anyway, the one question you'd said was, "Do I tag it before or after, as it enters, or later on?" I'm not sure it matters. I think, whatever... when you realize that it's a part of your project, that's a good time. You know, I work to have it so that everything's within the notes and not in, PDFs or scraps or webpages. Once I've fleshed out all my thoughts and now, they're all notes that are interlinked, that's a great time to move it on. But yeah, I would avoid the kind of associational tagging. At least that's the way I've done it. Being deliberate Jorge: If I might reflect that back to you, and just as a way of starting to wind down the conversation, it feels to me just from hearing you describe it, and from my own experience, that systems like DEVONthink are most useful when they're used purposefully, where it's not like an arbitrary dump. We used to have this term: a junk drawer app, right? Like, where you just dump stuff. And it doesn't feel like that's what this is. This is really a purposeful thinking tool. And if you bring purpose to it, you're going to get a lot out of it. Kourosh: Absolutely. I will embarrassingly say, though, I do have a database in DEVONthink that functions as a junk drawer. So, I'm not immune to it. But the database of my notes? That is very deliberate. There's another database, which is a bunch of websites of "I found something funny," or "there was a nice joke," or "there's some social-something happening." And that just... I have an organization in there, but I have yet to figure out what I'll do with that organization. So, it's a junk drawer. But I don't get much out of it unless I'm doing it like I do my notes. The notes? That's where it becomes powerful. Jorge: My dream is for the junk drawer aspect of this system to serve up serendipity somehow. Kourosh: Sure! You could make that happen, now that I think of it. What you could do is you can have your notes database open, and then you have also the junk drawer database open, and then as you're working, consider also — see also — all that... brings anything to mind from in DEVONthink. It'd be an interesting experiment. Jorge: Well, I'm going to try that out. I frankly didn't even know that that was a thing. I thought that databases were separate. Kourosh: Yeah, you can do it. I'm pretty sure you can. Now that your question and I'm like now 95% instead of a hundred percent certain! I have to go double-check now. But I'm pretty sure you can do that. Closing Jorge: Well, fantastic. This has been such a pleasure talking with you about this, and I feel like we could keep geeking out on this. Where can folks follow up with you? Kourosh: Sure. I have a couple of sites. One is beingproductive.org and that's where you'd find the things that I write about in terms of productivity, in terms of note-taking. I write about the use of the task manager OmniFocus and I also write about just being productive in general, without any tools. What does that mean? And then if you're interested in more of my you know, other interests like music and games and psychiatric type things, that's at my... just my name, which is: kouroshdini.com. Which is a kouroshdini.com. And that links to basically everything that I do. Jorge: Well, great. I'm going to include links to all of those in the show notes. Thank you so much for being with us today. Kourosh: Thanks so much for having me. I really enjoyed our talk here.
Rosemary and Mikah explore apps that help you create, organize, and edit documents on iOS. On this week's iOS Today: Document apps: Files, Pages, Notes, Documents by Readdle, Keep It, iA Writer, Drafts, Ulysses News: Apple is reportedly working on a top-of-the-line virtual reality headset. Apple has an interactive (and incredibly expensive) Valentine's Day gift guide. The release candidates of iOS 14.4 (along with tvOS, watchOS, macOS, and iPadOS) are here, and iFixIt tears down the AirPods Max. Listener feedback: A great story about a responsive app developer, Rosemary's automotive Bluetooth setup, fixing audio issues on iOS, and troubleshooting HomePod stereo pairing and home theater audio. Rosemary's App Cap: Fig Discourse Mikah's App Cap: Agree Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: casper.com/iostoday - promo code: IOSTODAY
Rosemary and Mikah explore apps that help you create, organize, and edit documents on iOS. On this week's iOS Today: Document apps: Files, Pages, Notes, Documents by Readdle, Keep It, iA Writer, Drafts, Ulysses News: Apple is reportedly working on a top-of-the-line virtual reality headset. Apple has an interactive (and incredibly expensive) Valentine's Day gift guide. The release candidates of iOS 14.4 (along with tvOS, watchOS, macOS, and iPadOS) are here, and iFixIt tears down the AirPods Max. Listener feedback: A great story about a responsive app developer, Rosemary's automotive Bluetooth setup, fixing audio issues on iOS, and troubleshooting HomePod stereo pairing and home theater audio. Rosemary's App Cap: Fig Discourse Mikah's App Cap: Agree Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: casper.com/iostoday - promo code: IOSTODAY
Rosemary and Mikah explore apps that help you create, organize, and edit documents on iOS. On this week's iOS Today: Document apps: Files, Pages, Notes, Documents by Readdle, Keep It, iA Writer, Drafts, Ulysses News: Apple is reportedly working on a top-of-the-line virtual reality headset. Apple has an interactive (and incredibly expensive) Valentine's Day gift guide. The release candidates of iOS 14.4 (along with tvOS, watchOS, macOS, and iPadOS) are here, and iFixIt tears down the AirPods Max. Listener feedback: A great story about a responsive app developer, Rosemary's automotive Bluetooth setup, fixing audio issues on iOS, and troubleshooting HomePod stereo pairing and home theater audio. Rosemary's App Cap: Fig Discourse Mikah's App Cap: Agree Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: casper.com/iostoday - promo code: IOSTODAY
Rosemary and Mikah explore apps that help you create, organize, and edit documents on iOS. On this week's iOS Today: Document apps: Files, Pages, Notes, Documents by Readdle, Keep It, iA Writer, Drafts, Ulysses News: Apple is reportedly working on a top-of-the-line virtual reality headset. Apple has an interactive (and incredibly expensive) Valentine's Day gift guide. The release candidates of iOS 14.4 (along with tvOS, watchOS, macOS, and iPadOS) are here, and iFixIt tears down the AirPods Max. Listener feedback: A great story about a responsive app developer, Rosemary's automotive Bluetooth setup, fixing audio issues on iOS, and troubleshooting HomePod stereo pairing and home theater audio. Rosemary's App Cap: Fig Discourse Mikah's App Cap: Agree Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: casper.com/iostoday - promo code: IOSTODAY
Rosemary and Mikah explore apps that help you create, organize, and edit documents on iOS. On this week's iOS Today: Document apps: Files, Pages, Notes, Documents by Readdle, Keep It, iA Writer, Drafts, Ulysses News: Apple is reportedly working on a top-of-the-line virtual reality headset. Apple has an interactive (and incredibly expensive) Valentine's Day gift guide. The release candidates of iOS 14.4 (along with tvOS, watchOS, macOS, and iPadOS) are here, and iFixIt tears down the AirPods Max. Listener feedback: A great story about a responsive app developer, Rosemary's automotive Bluetooth setup, fixing audio issues on iOS, and troubleshooting HomePod stereo pairing and home theater audio. Rosemary's App Cap: Fig Discourse Mikah's App Cap: Agree Hosts: Mikah Sargent and Rosemary Orchard Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/ios-today. You can contribute to iOS Today by leaving us a voicemail at 757-504-iPad (757-504-4723) or sending an email to iOSToday@TWiT.tv. Sponsor: casper.com/iostoday - promo code: IOSTODAY
Dabble Writer https://app.dabblewriter.com/account/billing https://nulis.io/tree/h348u5q Dabble es como Wavemarks o Scrivener. Outliner segmentado por capítulos, borradores, escenas. Retos de escritura. De pago: 10 Euros /mes (la opción mediana) Simple Note, el IA Writer versión light https://app.simplenote.com/ Más parecido a IA Writer descafeinado, a la izquierda los ditintos docs y a la derecha la ventana de escritura. Tienen un historial de versiones, ¡muy interesante! Wavemaker, el Scrivener en la Nube https://wavemaker.cards/ ----- EL MEJOR Y GRATIS CON APP Es un Scrivener, en versión puramente web, sincronizado con Drive, o versión local para Android. Es un outliner Tiene tarjetas de personaje, de escenas, de lugares Disponen de abundantes ejemplos Timeline tool para escribir la línea temporal de un relato. Modo challenge (reto de escribir palabras) Distintos modos de exportación del documento Recomendado por Chulilla https://www.notion.so/ Asus Chromebook Flip, la máquina versátil: https://amzn.to/2BU38u0 Escucha mis podcast en Spreaker: https://www.spreaker.com/user/vidasenred
Have you ever wondered what it takes to make a podcast? What the steps are? This week, I'm going to walk you through my process, step by step. I'm going to give you a better understanding of what it takes to make a podcast, take some of the mystery and scariness out of podcasting, and give you actionable steps to follow to make your own podcast. Couple quick updates to this episode: I now use MP3 chapters instead of writing time stamps for each paragraph. My show is also now hosted on Simplecast, so my workflow has gotten a lot faster/easier. Want the cheat sheet? Here's an updated PDF of my podcast production workflow. Key Takeaways: Post-production seems to be the most difficult and time consuming part of podcasting. Fortunately, it's also the easiest to outsource. Consider hiring an editor or assistant to take care of it for you. If you don't have much free time to invest in your podcast, keep it simple. Share something valuable in 3-10 minutes. Mind mapping is a great creative exercise that helps me capture all the things I want to talk about related to my topic. Create presets and templates for your tracks and use them every week. Be ruthless about editing both before and after recording. Creating an email newsletter for every episode can be time consuming, but it's important if you want to build an list of people that you can sell to later down the road. Don't be afraid to share your older episodes on social media. Grab a takeaway from the episode and post it with a link to the episode. In this episode I'm going to walk you through my entire podcasting process, but I want to start with a question from a listener. Emily Carlton asks: How long did your entire process take when you first started, and how long does it take now? In what areas have you become more efficient to save time? When I first started, each episode was taking me around 5-10 hours (sometimes more). It feels like it takes less time now, but not by much. The time it takes to produce a podcast depends on the format and how much work you want to put into it to make it awesome. If you're ok with your episode being a little on the short side, if you don't want to super detailed or lengthy episode notes, then you could probably record and publish an episode in an hour or two. A few things that saved me a lot of time: Learning how to edit quickly in Logic Pro X, how to save plugin settings as defaults, and how to create channel strip and project templates. The Three Parts of Podcasting: Preperation, Recording, and Post-Production My podcasting process can be broken down into three parts; Preparation, Recording, and Post Production. Preparation includes things like researching what people are interested in learning about, coming up with topics, researching those topics, and writing an outline for the episode. Recording is making sure your audio gear is setup, connected and ready to go, then hitting record and doing the show (and live streaming if that's a thing you do). Post-production is editing the audio file (or files, if you have guests or co-hosts), bouncing it out to an MP3 file, tagging the file, writing show notes, uploading those things to the website for publishing, creating the email newsetter, then promoting the episode on social media. What's the Most Time Consuming Part of Podcasting? Robert Guzzo asks: Can you estimate the percentage of time & effort you devote to each: preparation, recording, post-production & publishing? I'm asking more for an estimate on which parts of the process take the most time–does prep take up the majority of the overall effort for an effort, or is post-production the biggest slice of the pie? You can either do the bulk of the work up front or later in post-production. For example, when I'm doing solo shows, I write out almost the entire show before I record it. Then I don't have as much work on the editing or the show note writing section. If I'm doing an interview, I have an basic outline but I don't know what's going to be said, so I write the show notes afterwards. It's very time consuming but that's just how it goes. As I told Robert in the chat before the show, it depends on when you want to do the work. If you do more work up front, the post-production work of writing show notes will require less time. Pre-Production There are three main parts to pre-production: Choosing a topic for the episode Mindmapping (brainstorming) Writing the outline 1. Choosing a Topic Choosing a topic involves a lot of research. When searching for topics for my show, I'm asking myself: What questions have people been asking? What do I wish I knew when I started? What haven't I taught about yet? What are the basics? What are common mistakes that people make? Daniela asks: How much writing do you do in preparation for a podcast episode? I like to write out between 800 and 3000 words for my episodes. That takes me between 20 and 45 minutes to read out loud. You don't have to do long episodes, though. Short shows can be just as valuable, and many people even prefer short podcasts. Longer shows take more time and effort, so plan accordingly. If you don't have much free time to invest in your podcast, keep it simple. Share something valuable in 3-10 minutes. 2. Mind Mapping Alex Kelerman asked: What goes into writing an outline for your podcast? Do you just use bullets for the main ideas and develop things live, or do you go in depth? I like to create the structure of my outline in a mindmapping app called Mindnode ($29). I start off with the main topic in the middle and add any sub-topics (the main points I want to discuss). Then I go one level deeper and write out my basic talking points (bullet items). You can view an example of what that looks like here. Mind mapping is a great creative exercise that helps me capture all the things I want to talk about related to my topic. I talked more about this process in episode 17: Using Great Outlines to Keep Your Listener's Attention. While I'm mind mapping, I'm also doing research online to see what other people have written about the topic, just to make sure I don't miss or forget anything. It often sparks new ideas or uncovers gold nuggets that I can then bring into the show. 3. Writing the Outline Once I'm happy with my mind map outline, I export the text into a writing app called Typed. I like Typed, but there are many great writing apps including IA Writer, Ulysses, NVAlt, and Sublime Text. Since I do all my writing in Markdown, I like these apps because they play nice with Markdown, but you could write in any text editor. So I export the text from Mindnode and put it into a new text document in Typed, then I start writing. I start with the intro; how I'm going to introduce the episode to my audience. Then I move on to filling in details related to my main points. I dedicate an hour or two (sometimes more) every week to writing, but I often spread it out into 3-4 different writing sessions. Show Time (Recording) I stream live every Monday, so I review my show notes about an hour before showtime. I'll often jump in the seanwes chatroom to see if anyone has any questions that I can answer in the show. You can do this yourself: Jump on Twitter or Slack and ask your audience if they have any thoughts or questions related to your topic. This can spark some great conversations and give you more things to talk about during your show; it also gives your audience a sense of participation. After reviewing the show notes, I start preparing for recording. I turn off any streaming services (Dropbox, Backblaze, Google Drive) that might be hogging bandwidth. I make sure all my gear is ready to go, then do a test recording to make sure everything is working as it should be. I turn notifications off and silence my iPhone, then I hit record (very important) and start the show. After I'm done recording, I hit stop and save the file (very important). Post Production There are five sections to my post-production workflow: Editing and mixing Writing show notes Bouncing, tagging and uploading the MP3 Creating the featured image for the show notes page Admin work (creating the post in WordPress, uploading the show notes, creating and sending the Mailchimp email newsletter) Post production seems to be the most difficult and time consuming part of podcasting. Fortunately, it's also the easiest to outsource. Consider hiring an editor or assistant to take care of it for you. Want to get your post-production work done faster? Check out epsiode 15: 7 Tips to Make Podcast Post Production Easier. Want to hire a podcast editor? Check out episode 8: 10 Things to Know Before Hiring a Podcast Editor. 1. Editing I open up my Logic project and I apply presets that I've made for the tracks. In most cases, I already have plugins setup and configured for vocal tracks. These presets are called Channel Strip Settings. Create presets and templates for your tracks and use them every week. I adjust EQ and compression if needed, add the intro and outro music, then edit the show. Editing includes removing umms and other filler words and cleaning up any long pauses or mistakes. I used to do an editing pass before starting to write the show notes, but lately I've been editing while writing show notes. I found that it saves me a little bit of time. Be ruthless about editing both before and after recording. 2. Writing Show Notes I open the text document that I used for my outline, and start working to turn my outline into something that looks more like a blog post. I add TimeJump links to the beginning of each paragraph so that people can go to the time in the audio player that corresponds with that section of the show notes. Update: I no longer add TimeJump links, but I'm still using Markdown. I wrote more about my new process for creating show notes here. As I'm listening and writing show notes, if I notice any additional things in the recording that need to be edited, I'll take care of it. 3. Bouncing the File After editing and show notes are done, I bounce (export) the audio to an MP3 file. I export the audio file in stereo at 128kbps. I tag the MP3 file with the proper metadata using an app called Tagr. Tagr costs $10 but it's faster than using iTunes to add the neccessary information to your MP3. I've also got a cool text shortcut that uses Keyboard Maestro to automatically fill in the information, but I'll have to do a screencast on that later. Afer tagging, the MP3 file is ready for uploading to my hosting service (Simplecast). 4. Creating the Featured Image I create a featured image for the episode using Sketch (you could use also use Photoshop or Pixelmator. My featured images are 1600x800px, just a simple colored background with a little texture, and the type is our brand font, Le Monde Courier. I export the image as a JPG, then use an app called ImageOptim to reduce the size of the file (so it loads faster). Update: I no longer create custom features images for episodes. I probably should though. 5. Upload and Schedule the Episode in Simplecast Update: When I first recorded the episode, my show was hosted on a WordPress site. It is now hosted on Simplecast, so I'll share instructions for that here instead. Publishing a new episode in Simplecast is easy: I simply enter the title, upload the MP3 file, add the episode summary and episode notes, then save and schedule the draft. You can see the step here if you'd like. I usually proof-read the post and fix any formatting, spelling, or grammatical errors before publishing or scheduling an episode. 6. Mailchimp Email Newsletter Update: I'm not sending email newsletters currently either. I use Mailchimp to send emails for every episode to my email list. If you haven't started an email newsletter for your podcast yet, I recommend it. For my email newsletters, I upload the featured image, copy the description from the beginning of my show notes, then add the takeaways and highlights. I close each newsletter with a personal note about the episode. Creating an email newsletter for every episode can be time consuming, but it's important if you want to build an email list of people that you can sell to later down the road. 7. Wrapping Up After I finish the email newsletter, I'm almost done. This is when I start celebrating because I know I'm getting close to the finish line! I double check everything, look over my process list to make sure I didn't forget to do anything. I schedule the blog post and email newsletter, and then I'm done! After the episode goes live, I post a link on Twitter. I try to give the audience a taste of what I'm going to talk about in the episode, and I also include the featured image. Quick tip: Don't be afraid to share your older content on Twitter. Grab a takeaway from the episode and post it with a link to the episode. Q&A Robert Guzzo and Aneeqah Naeem asked: Do you have any tips for streamlining the podcasting process to make it more efficent? I was thinking about this, and I can't remember ever eliminating any steps from my process. If anything, I've added more steps. There are a few apps I use that save me time. Text Expander is great, it allows you to type a couple keys and then some replacement text gets dropped in. So for example, instead of having to write out http://thepodcastdude.com, I can just hit ‘tpd, and Text Expander will turn that into the URL. If you aren't using Text Expander yet, you should be. Another great time saver has been using templates in Logic. I have templates for projects, templates for channel strips, and I've even customized the default settings for my commonly used plugins. I talked more about time saving tips in episode 15, so go check that out if you haven't yet. I've found that the more you do something, the easier it gets. The first dozen podcast episodes are hard because the process is new. Once you become familiar with it, you don't have to think about it and it becomes muscle memory. If you are pressed for time, make your show shorter. I was listening to an audiobook last week called Pitch Anything. In this book, author Oren Klaff describes how most people's attention span only lasts around 20 minutes before needing to be “reset”. There's no reason why you couldn't make a show shorter than 20 minutes. Like I always say, just make it valuable. Cool Stuff to Check Out: Recommended Gear: https://kit.com/thepodcastdude Podcast: https://thepodcastdude.simplecast.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/thepodcastdude Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/thepodcastdude Successful Podcasting: http://successfulpodcasting.com Simplecast Blog: http://blog.simplecast.com/