Podcasts about pinboard

A board, usually cork, for pinning notices to

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Best podcasts about pinboard

Latest podcast episodes about pinboard

The ProcrastiN8r Podcast
Lvl 13: Procrasti-logging (Top 10 Ways to Write Content for Your Niche Without Even Trying)

The ProcrastiN8r Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 38:56


**One of the best ways to ignite your own cozy FIRE is to live life as a lazy digital nomad. And all you need to do is browse the Internet and type things on your keyboard. We're lighting a FIRE the easy way on the ProcrastiN8r Podcast 2 weeks ago (lvl 11. I said 10 but it's 11 and I'm too lazy to re-record the whole thing) we talked about how to FIND your niche. Today we're looking at.... Top 10 Ways on  how to WRITE CONTENT for your niche...with as little effort as possible Without further ado, let's BURN...right into it You can't just blog to everybody! Blogging to everybody is blogging to nobody. Find. Your. Niche. NEWSJACKING (or as I call it “Procrasi-logging) involves finding a relevant trending topic and repurposing it for your own blog 10. Look at Your Competition AppSumo Look up a topic, then see the top articles related to that keyword View social media share stats for Facebook, Twitter, and Reddit as well as Total Engagement. Evergreen score (how long after it's published is it still being shared?) Take a look at magazine websites (headlines, images, language/slang used) Subscribe to top content creators in your niche. To find blogs, get an RSS Reader like Feedbin, Feedly, Inoreader, or Flipboard Listen to podcasts. Watch YouTube and Twitch. 9. Read the News Search Google News for a topic related to your niche and look at the top articles. Go to a site like AllTop or Reddit to find topic specific news (niche specific) Look at an article, video, or podcasts as if you're in the room talking to them in a conversation. What can you add to the conversation? What insight is missing? Can you add a joke or something funny? 8.See What People Are Talking About and How They Are Engaging RedditList Type keyword related to niche, find relevant subreddits You could look at the official Reddit as well to find But Redditlist includes Subscriber rank (compared to other subreddits) and subscriber growth. Reddit list does NOT include all subreddits. Search relevant hashtags on Twitter, groups or Pages on Facebook, Pins on Pinterest, stories and posts on Instagram. See which posts are getting the most engagement and what type of emotional reaction the commenters are having. Write content that purposely sparks that emotion in your language (anger, sadness, joy, laughter, fear, etc.) Look at the comments of what people are saying on reddit, blog posts, and news sites. Pay attention to what's happening in the conversation. Are there points you agree with and could build upon with your own spin or maybe something you disagree with. 7. Find Out What People Are ASKING About What do people in your niche want to know? What are some common problems or concerns? Attend Livestreams and Webinars. Take notes not only on the content itself but What are people asking? What kind of comments are they saying? Look at FAQs of sites within your niche  and build content answering them in your own words. (eg. There might be “How do I get rid of background noise like fans in my audio?” on a software like Audacity or Adobe Audition or “How do I promote my brand on Facebook” on a site related to online marketing or “How do I receive dividends?” on a stock exchange site/app) 6. Always C&P Participate in forums and Reddit discussions yourself. Comment on FB posts, YouTube videos, Instagram photos. Answer questions on Quora, ehow, or Yahoo Answers. Amazon and other shopping sites are great if your niche is more product focused; you can look at the reviews and asked questions. Copy and Paste your own comments into a note taking app like Evernote, Microsoft OneNote, Dropbox Paper,  or Google Keep. Tag it with relevant tags and give it a title so you'll remember the gist of what you're saying at a glance. Include a link to the comments. Color code it to make it easy to find in the future Remember: it's important to ALWAYS copy & paste your comment BEFORE you even post it, maybe even create a note first and copy it from there. Because if someone deletes your comment or their post  or changes the privacy settings or blocks you (or shuts down the website altogether if it's a forum/blog), it's gone FOREVER. You can't necessarily rely on the Web Archive.org. Keep your own records of the thing you say online related to your niche. You'll thank me later. 5. Save It For Later Take advantage of Pinterest's “secret boards” to collect ideas for blogs or craft projects in the future Similarly, you can save links, images, and videos on FB's Save for Later feature. You can change your privacy settings for a specific post you create so “Only You” can see it then just save it for later. You can Save Reddit posts and comments. Save articles you find on the web & you plan to re-write or read/comment on with the click of a button  using a bookmarking app like Evernote Webclipper, Pocket, Pinboard, or Instapaper. You can also just use the built-in bookmarking feature in your browser, since nowadays you can signin to Chrome or FireFox or Edge or whatever and sync your bookmarks and history across multiple devices. 4. Chat it up! In your daily life, you talk to your friends and family about the things you like. Take note of the points made in the conversation or use the recording app on your phone. The note apps (google Keep, etc) also allows to save voice notes. Or heck, record the conversation (with permission, don't be a creep) on your phone. Start a forum topic and see where the discussion leads. Repurpose it for a blog post. When you reach enough notoriety and level of trust and authority, people will come to you with questions on social media. Actually reach out and talk to people. Hit them up in their DMs. Note the type of questions they're asking you. And if you're not established as a source of authority in your niche yet: Find people that are. Interview guests. Record it then transcribe it, using the autotranscibe tool Scribie. All you do is ask questions and they give answers. You don't even have to know anything. 3. Share It Write a quick blurb about a video or photo or infographic and share it as a post You can even re-word top rated comments already said on other sites. This is one of the laziest ways to create content. Find something already being liked and shared then make a comment similar to one that's also being liked/upvoted/gilded in your blog post. 2. Rinse & Repeat it Find a way to recycle old content, dig it back up and make it look a bit different by re-wording it. This works well if your in a niche that requires advice. You'll find yourself repeating the same advice over and over again. But that's okay, our brains learn from repeated information and stimuli. Use an online thesaurus to get suggestions for alternative words to use in your writing. You can also take a specific quote from an interview and do a deep dive/analysis of it. All that is is rewording what the person said in several different ways. The only thing you are doing is taking previously written or spoken words and rearranging them or replacing them with similar words. You simply express the content using different vocabulary. See what I did there? 1. Go Behind the Scenes Show pictures of your office, recording setup, gear, etc. Show things from your personally life (the game you're playing, the movie you're watching, the pizza you're eating, etc.) You should only do this on occasion. The site is about your niche and not your personal diary. 0. Talk about what you already talked about but do it a bit different Self explanatory. You get the point now. What to Avoid Writing: Verbatim (word for word) Fake News (unless that's your niche) Sounding boring How to Find Your Niche the Easy Way I said this episode was Lvl 10, but it's actually Lvl 11 and I'm too lazy to re-record and fix it. Meh whatever. You'll figure it out. Get Free Images for Your Blog: FreePik NeedPix**

Side Project Spotlight
#77: App Monetization Strategies

Side Project Spotlight

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 63:03


The Trio are inspired by a PhillyCocoa Slack discussion to venture back into the world of modern app monetization strategies. What options does a budding indie developer have for making money on the App Store? Along the way, we highlight many great examples of apps employing a variety of strategies and innovative monetization techniques. ## Topics Discussed - App Monetization Strategies - Paid Upfront - Procreate Apps - https://procreate.com/procreate - Things 3 - https://culturedcode.com/things - Games (sometimes) - Free + ads / consumables - Many games - Dividend Calc (Kotaro's old app!) - https://tomatoboy.co/dividendcalc - Fav10 (Kotaro's other old app!) - https://tomatoboy.co/fav10 - Duolingo (free + ads OR subscription) - https://www.duolingo.com/ - Subscriptions - Slopes - https://getslopes.com/ - Overcast - https://overcast.fm - Fantastical - https://flexibits.com/fantastical - Sketch - https://www.sketch.com - Innovative Examples - OmniFocus - https://www.omnigroup.com/omnifocus - Nebula - https://nebula.tv - Pinboard - https://pinboard.in/ - Pixquare - https://www.pixquare.art/ - Experiment with pricing / sales - Final Thoughts - Wrap-Up / One More Thing - Happy Scale - https://happyscale.com/ Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.

Hemispheric Views
116: Fifty Free Hours!

Hemispheric Views

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2024 34:00


Have you heard the good word about America (Australia) Online!? Is Jason in the guy bucket now? Andrew spent money! Can you even believe it!? Pasta follow-up. A listener enters the chat. Andrew forces a counter chat, and it works out! Using Apple Podcasts? All notes can always be found here (https://listen.hemisphericviews.com/115)! AOL Is New and Improved! 00:00:00 AOL (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AOL) ☎️ CompuServe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CompuServe)

Do By Friday
Maggie Haberman's Toilet

Do By Friday

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 92:52


This week's challenge: Watch Friday Night Baseball.You can hear the after show and support Do By Friday on Patreon!----Edited by Quinn RoseEngineered by Cameron Bopp----Show LinksJohn Darnielle Wants to Tell You a Story | The New YorkerMalcolm Gladwell's attack on working from home is nonsenseThe Social Life of Paper | The New YorkerDr. John Ioannidis Exposes the Bad Science of Colleagues - The AtlanticPublication bias - WikipediaMerlin Mann on Twitter: "I think this thought daily…Exclusive: See the Trump toilet photos that he denies ever existedWelcome to Pinboard—Social bookmarking for introverts!The Conversation #27 - Merlin Mann and Jeff Veen on HuffdufferReconcilable Differences #37: A Useless Angle for Swordfighting - Relay FMReconcilable Differences #42: The Punching in Me - Relay FMReconcilable Differences #86: Horse's Feed Bag Full of Food - Relay FMHomePass for HomeKit on the App StoreHeart of Your Home BundleInstapaper - WikipediaUnder the Radar - Relay FMHow to watch live MLB games for free on Apple TV+ | Macworld(Recorded on Wednesday, August 10, 2022)Next week's challenge: rediscover Pinboard.

Hemispheric Views
062: Stick to the Stationery!

Hemispheric Views

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 56:38


Your hemispheric hosts are joined by Anthony Agius from online newsletter The Sizzle, who explains his work and the importance of different news sources in tech. Not to mention, we properly announce the winner of Arcadia June 2022 and Andrew shares his advanced theory for improving your chances of finding a soulmate. ✍️

Vikasietotila
Kuukausitilaus voitti mikromaksut

Vikasietotila

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 50:44


Raha kiinnostaa podcastaajia niin paljon, että he ovat päättäneet pyytää ohjelmansa kuulijoita maksamaan show'sta. Mistä moinen röyhkeys ja onko sillä tavalla jo ehtinyt rikastua? (No ei.)Ensin kuitenkin keskustellaan siitä, miksi kukaan maksaisi mistään digitaalisesta hyödykkeestä enemmän kuin sentin, mihin katosivat kertamaksut, mitä ihmettä oikein ovat mikromaksut ja onko niitä kenties jo olemassa.Mikäli pidät podcastista ja haluat tukea sen tekijöitä rahallisesti, suuntaa Supporting Cast -sivullemme.VinkitPanun softavinkki: BitwardenKarin lukuvinkki on The Long Tail: When A Famous Theory Got (Almost) All WrongMateriaalitVikasietotila: Digitaalinen kauppa on vuokraamista (9/2016)Roam ResearchVannevar Bush: As We May Think (1945)Proton-palveluiden hinnoittelu ja bundleAmazon Primen sisältämät palvelutPinboard: New Pricing Policy (2014)A request for Pinboard old-timers (2021)Nick Szabo: Micropayments and Mental Transaction Costs (pdf)CNBC:n juttu Applen maksuaikapalvelustaMatias Pietilä: (Huvitti äsken ajatus, että potkulauta on mahdollista vuokrata pariksi minuutiksi, mutta lehtijuttu on niin painavaa tavaraa, että ei pysty.)Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Vikasietotila
Kuukausitilaus voitti mikromaksut

Vikasietotila

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 52:28


Raha kiinnostaa podcastaajia niin paljon, että he ovat päättäneet pyytää ohjelmansa kuulijoita maksamaan show'sta. Mistä moinen röyhkeys ja onko sillä tavalla jo ehtinyt rikastua? (No ei.) Ensin kuitenkin keskustellaan siitä, miksi kukaan maksaisi mistään digitaalisesta hyödykkeestä enemmän kuin sentin, mihin katosivat kertamaksut, mitä ihmettä oikein ovat mikromaksut ja onko niitä kenties jo olemassa. Mikäli pidät podcastista ja haluat tukea sen tekijöitä rahallisesti, suuntaa Supporting Cast -sivullemme. Vinkit Panun softavinkki: Bitwarden Karin lukuvinkki on The Long Tail: When A Famous Theory Got (Almost) All Wrong Materiaalit Vikasietotila: Digitaalinen kauppa on vuokraamista (9/2016) Roam Research Vannevar Bush: As We May Think (1945) Proton-palveluiden hinnoittelu ja bundle Amazon Primen sisältämät palvelut Pinboard: New Pricing Policy (2014) A request for Pinboard old-timers (2021) Nick Szabo: Micropayments and Mental Transaction Costs (pdf) CNBC:n juttu Applen maksuaikapalvelusta Matias Pietilä: (Huvitti äsken ajatus, että potkulauta on mahdollista vuokrata pariksi minuutiksi, mutta lehtijuttu on niin painavaa tavaraa, että ei pysty.)

Vanishing Gradients
Episode 8: The Open Source Cybernetic Revolution

Vanishing Gradients

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 65:57


Hugo speaks with Peter Wang, CEO of Anaconda, about what the value proposition of data science actually is, data not as the new oil, but rather data as toxic, nuclear sludge, the fact that data isn't real (and what we really have are frozen models), and the future promise of data science. They also dive into an experimental conversation around open source software development as a model for the development of human civilization, in the context of developing systems that prize local generativity over global extractive principles. If that's a mouthful, which it was, or an earful, which it may have been, all will be revealed in the conversation. LInks Peter on twitter (https://twitter.com/pwang) Anaconda Nucleus (https://anaconda.cloud/) Jordan Hall on the Jim Rutt Show (https://www.jimruttshow.com/jordan-greenhall-hall/): Game B Meditations On Moloch (https://slatestarcodex.com/2014/07/30/meditations-on-moloch) -- On multipolar traps Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Here_Comes_Everybody_(book)) by Clay Shirky Finite and Infinite Games (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_and_Infinite_Games) by James Carse Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action (https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/governing-the-commons/7AB7AE11BADA84409C34815CC288CD79) by Elinor Olstrom Elinor Ostrom's 8 Principles for Managing A Commmons (https://www.onthecommons.org/magazine/elinor-ostroms-8-principles-managing-commmons) Haunted by Data (https://idlewords.com/talks/haunted_by_data.htm), a beautiful and mesmerising talk by Pinboard.in founder Maciej Ceglowski

Me. I Am. A Memoir. The Meaning of 'The Meaning of Mariah Carey'

Posh and Fab look into the Mariah Carey memoir, The Meaning of Mariah Carey, for the last time, as they wrap up their look at Mariah's photo album, which somehow involves singing cats, swimming twins and far too many sung Poshnaptions. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Me. I Am. A Memoir. The Meaning of 'The Meaning of Mariah Carey'

Over two episodes Posh and Fab jump back into the memoir, to look at the fifty-nine photographs in the pages of The Meaning of Mariah Carey, all of which get a ridiculous Poshnaption, and accompanying jingle. Part one features Addie the Parmesan Nazi, Nanna Della Reese and some sharp cheekbones. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Teaching in Higher Ed
Open Education as a Way of Being

Teaching in Higher Ed

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 38:17


Alan Levine and Bonni Stachowiak start a conversation about open education as a way of being on episode 405 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast. Quotes from the episode You have to find and develop your personality. -Alan Levine I like to model being imperfect. -Alan Levine For me, openness has always been an attitude and a way of being. -Alan Levine Resources Mentioned Zencastr Zoom MIT - Open Courseware Initiative How to explain open educational resources to students, in terms of the value of college? - Loïc Plé Why does he do it and please never stop. - Terry Greene “How do you guide people into the most appropriate level/literacy for the moment, and get them started? - Joe Murphy What the SPLOT is that? Jon Udell Hamburger Menu on NetNarratives website Alan Levine's shower interface photos on Flickr Remi Kalir Annotated 13 Ways of Looking at a Sticky Note Jeffrey W. McClurken Mike Caulfield's SIFT Check Starter Course Bonni's YouTube playlist: SIFT (Four Moves) Episode 399: Satire from McSweeney's Julie Cadman-Kim replies to a question about if her fantastic article is available in audio form CogDog's Pinboard.in digital bookmarks Gold Medal Ribbon ice cream Alan's treat for Bonni on Twitter posted at 2:08 pm on Feb 18, 2022 OEG Voices Podcast

Memetic Hazard
memhazs05e0003: Vitamin Dominic

Memetic Hazard

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2021


Don't forget to review and subscribe and follow us on Twitter! Also, read Adam's blog and Josef's blog. This week, we talk about: Old ThinkpadsWindows 2000Blake's 7All the 7s LOST'Cult' mediaEight Days A Week panel ft. MorrisseyDiscussion TVCzechoslovakian post-punkThe Eternal NowThe Base Pleasure Of ReadingThe Based Pleasure Of Reading RSS SuspensionAdam's Art (see above)Dream RevelationUniversity of AustinAdam's article on Internet Doing SomethingGin & Tonic & JuiceMEMETIC POWERTom toot on bearishThe bullbear-hawkdove planeNeurodiverse MemoriesCompensatory MechanismsConversations With Myself, With OthersSasha Chapin Marie Kondo articleLegibility vs correctnessTake Vitamin DDom Cum Go On MemhazThank You Scott JoplinAccordion ChatPrince Andrew MugReese's JacketNerd Fashion Meta-PodcastList Of Podcast GenresI couldn't find the CAU episode on fascination with failure but you should listen to it all anyway tbh.Nonsensical EffortI also couldn't find that article I referenced about a guy trying to make his Youtube take off at the expense of everything else in his life. It's a shame, I remember it being quite real? Trawled my Pinboard and tried a lot of googling but it's not made itself apparent :(People no-one watch on Twitch articleTerry Davis

Dice Fiends
S7:E5 The Extra Planar Coalition: Zi'zak's emotional pinboard

Dice Fiends

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 57:21


Kivra and Hopper were able to prevent Mechanicus from arriving with the enemy fleet in tow, Embrae and Lorick blew up the supply depot, now it's Zi'zak's turn to disable the AA guns and carve a path of destruction through the battlefield. But she also has to contend with the Ominous tidings of mercenaries bearing the same name as her old clan.Thanks to @KeylligraphyInk for the logo design. The tracks used in this episode are Enemy Spotted by Jess who you can find on twitter @oneshotminiboss and Cursed Intro by Rafael KruxFind Us Online:Twitter: www.twitter.com/dicefiendsDiscord: https://discord.gg/j54FrbhTwitch: www.twitch.tv/thedicefiendsCast and Crew:- GM(Goro Majima) : Eric - Embrae: Mak- Zi'zak : Jess - Lorick: Lillie- Hopper: Nick- Kivra: Theo About Us: Welcome to Dice Fiends, we are an actual play podcast that runs games in over a dozen systems with a rotating and diverse cast of players. But one thing's for certain: whether we're powered by the apocalypse or grabbing as many d6's as we can hold in shadowrun: We're fiends for the sounds of rolling dice. You can find us every Wednesday on Itunes, Spotify, or wherever you get good podcasts. 

Reimagining the Internet
Maciej Ceglowski Wants a Smaller Internet for a Better World

Reimagining the Internet

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 35:05


Maciej Ceglowski is not just the founder of one of the indie web's success stories — the modest yet long-running subscription bookmarking service Pinboard — but a prolific commentator on the world the Internet is helping to create. This week, we're thrilled to chat with Maciej about reimagining not just the Internet, but the stakes that the people using the Internet are responding to.

The Informed Life
Patrick Tanguay on Newsletter Curation

The Informed Life

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2021 29:16 Transcription Available


Patrick Tanguay is a self-described "generalist, synthesist, and curator of eclectic ideas." His weekly newsletter, Sentiers, surfaces deep posts about highly relevant topics and provides insightful commentary and ideas. In this conversation, we discuss the tools and methods that enable his curation and sharing process. Show notes @inervenu on Twitter About Patrick The Alpine Review Sentiers RSS Instapaper INFORMA(C)TION newsletter MailChimp Pinboard Delicious WordPress Eleventy Readwise Obsidian Pocket What is a static site generator? (Cloudflare) DuckDuckGo rsync cron Bear Markdown The Informed Life episode 54: Kourosh Dini on DEVONthink DEVONthink Keep It EagleFiler Grant for the Web GitHub Some show notes may include Amazon affiliate links. I get a small commission for purchases made through these links. Read the transcript Jorge: Patrick. Welcome to the show. Patrick: Thanks! Glad to be here. Jorge: I'm very excited to have you on the show. I've been subscribed to your newsletter for a while and always find insightful links and information there. So I'm very excited to talk with you. For folks who might not know you, would you mind please, introducing yourself? About Patrick Patrick: Sure. Thats always a... it probably shouldn't be, but it's always a bit of a hard question to answer. I've started using "generalist" which I kind of resisted doing for awhile, but that's ... like my Twitter bio is "Generalist, Synthesist and Curator," and that's probably the best description. I've worked in a number of fields, and I realized a little while ago that the red thread connecting everything, was that I always ended up figuring stuff out and explaining it to others. Even when I was a front-end web developer, it was often the fact that I could explain to the client, and if I was working with others, explain across their disciplines. Like, of course the actual craft, if you will, of the front end was of course part of the contract, but kind of the selling point or that people would refer me to was the fact that I could explain it and kind of make sense of what we were going to build. And then that transferred into a print magazine, "The Alpine Review," and I liked doing that so much that even though we closed it down or put it in a deep freeze, I try to recreate that experience with my newsletter. Jorge: I love the three terms: generalist, synthesist and curator. It reminds me of a phrase that I believe was coined by Stewart Brand to describe Brian Eno. He said that Eno is a "drifting clarifier." Patrick: Whoa! That's nice. Jorge: And your trajectory here reminds me of that. Yeah, Sentiers is the newsletter I was referring to when we kicked off the conversation. Tell us a bit more about that. What's the newsletter about? Sentiers Patrick: There's kind of the... the official description and the real description. The real description would probably be, "anything that Patrick finds interesting." The kind of official description is, "exploring technology and society, signals of change, and prospective futures." Which... like, "technology and society." Technology permeates so much of the world in a growing number of areas that you end up being able to talk about anything if you look at technology very broadly. And "signals of change." There's so many things changing that that also brings you to many topics. And I try to — more and more — to make sense of it with an eye to where we're going or where each topic might be going. Each field. But Sentiers is French for "paths," and the path is taking more importance in the curation in the last year or so. Jorge: I don't know if this distinction is emphasized in the French: I see "path" as a distinction to something like a road, right? Like where a path is more emergent. Patrick: Absolutely. Jorge: Is that a part of this? Like when I say that you're detecting signals for change, that to me implies that you're not dictating the path, you're somehow seeing it emerge. Is that fair? Patrick: Yes, absolutely. And I use, for example, as many of the people I read and learn from, I use future in plural — "Futures" — because they're always guesses at where things might be going or sometimes guesses that you're wishing for that direction, sometimes because you're dreading a certain direction. But there's definitely always different potentials. And one thing that I should have paid more attention before, but I'm paying more attention to now, is also the diversity of voices. So, some futures that we look at are already someone's present. Like climate change. In the Western side, we're starting to feel it, but some other people have been feeling it for years. Some technologies... so there's also that, someone's utopia is always someone else's dystopia. So, to always try to listen to a greater diversity of voices — and necessarily, as you do so, you realize that there's multiple potential directions and futures and paths. Picking the signals Jorge: How do you pick up the signals that you write about? Like, what are you paying attention to that leads you to elucidate the path? Patrick: It's layers. Layers upon layers of people I've discovered through the years, or publications. It's usually more individuals than specific publications. I've used Twitter. I think I'm user 6,000- something of Twitter. So I've been there for a while and using RSS for even longer. So, it's, adding and replacing people as I go and feel, "okay, this person is... I realize now, was too naive about technology or too positive" or, on the contrary, "this person has evolved in their thinking and introduced me to this other person." And so I try to build this network, I guess, of people I'm listening to. And also using The Alpine Review before and Sentiers now to a lesser degree perhaps, but to introduce myself to those people and then to also pick up on their networks and be part of the discussions and get a better feeling for what's going on. And then, being... I was going to say "too curious" — but being very curious about a number of topics, and adding them to the number of things I follow. Jorge: That brings me to another question I had for you, which is this idea of spotting signals for change and another idea that I think is implicit in that, which is kind of spotting patterns, right? Like in order to detect change, we have to somehow be aware of the trajectory of something or the pattern of something, or having a sense for the context. You've hinted at the fact that you've been doing this for a while; like you said, you were an early Twitter user and you've been following things like RSS. And I would imagine that you have a way not just of detecting signals, but also of building a corpus of ideas somehow, that allows you to keep track of those patterns. That allow you to spot the signal from the noise. And first, I was wondering if that was the case and if so, if you could share with us what that looks like. Patrick: It's the case and it's been more purposeful in the last few years. It used to be, I guess, just piles of magazines when I was selling computers before starting the web. And then when I started doing web development, a series of bookmarks and bookmarks, and then quickly blogging, which then... it's only recently that I've been specifically taking notes to refer to later. Originally, the notes were more blogging publicly, and then as you write something, it sticks in your mind. And so for a while, the library was mostly in my mind and in the blog. And then as... I guess it's starting with The Alpine Review, as we needed to collaborate and to keep track of whom we wanted to include, it needed to be more documented. And then, yeah! Then Sentiers becomes a great... often even for some clients, I'll just first go through the archives of the newsletter and re-find everything I've found before and compile it in a different way or see new patterns. And now more recently with the new website, the goal is to integrate the website with my note taking and my reading in Instapaper often and kind of having the information flow more directly so that I can take more notes more easily. And I was going to say, "trust my brain a little less," but I guess it's more expand my — augment — my brain more purposefully. Personal knowledge management Jorge: I actually wanted to find out more about that because as someone who publishes a newsletter myself, I have found myself doing what you're talking about here, which is thinking, "oh, I remember writing about that in my newsletter. And where was that?" And I send out my newsletter through MailChimp, which creates a web version for each issue of the newsletter and that is published elsewhere, right? Like it's in a different place than my regular website, so I can't search for it using the same search engine and it's almost like suddenly I have this separate set of information that I need to refer to. And I have the sense that you've recently made changes specifically to the relationship between content on your newsletter and content on your website. Can you tell us more about that project specifically? Patrick: Sure. Well, one of my interests that isn't often in the newsletter, but that is an ongoing interest is with PKM or "personal knowledge management." And finding ways to find again. Because I think people trust search engines a lot, but it's hard to search Google for, "this guy I remember seeing on Twitter was talking about this thing." So, I try to make the haystack smaller, and the longest going tool I have is using Pinboard, the bookmarking service that Maciej Ceglowski started after Delicious started.... I'm going back — just a lot of people won't recognize those tools. But one of the interesting things of Pinboard is that if you're a paying member, it archives the pages. So, first of all, you don't lose something you've bookmarked that suddenly disappears. And also you can do a full text search of only what you've bookmarked. So, to me, that's a much smaller haystack to search and I'll often find things through there quicker than trying to find it again with a search engine. But that wasn't linked to my note taking. So, when I write the newsletter, I write it to the text file in Markdown, and then I convert it to HTML and put it in MailChimp. So, when I say that I searched the archives of the newsletter, it was always the text files that I have on my computer. So, often to look for something, I would look at the bookmarks and I would look at the newsletter. So, now I've tried to connect all of those things. The website used to be in WordPress, and now I've built it with Eleventy, which is a file based system. So it's not a database anymore, it's just, again, a bunch of text files. So without going into the details, or too much of the technical details, the interesting part is that the website now is a bunch of text files on my computer. And then when I want to publish a new version, it basically crunches that into an actual website and I just put it online. And it's... first of all, it's much, much quicker for readers. It's also much lighter. Because I'm trying be mindful of bandwidth and server usage because so many of those are using "dirty" electricity. So it's good if you can save on that side. But the first reason was that it's text files on my computer. now when I'm searching, everything is together. You tell me if I'm going too much in the weeds, but the other change is that now I'm using Readwise — readwise.io. And that allows you to connect the things you've highlighted in various places. And recently it started offering a sync with the text editor I'm using, which is Obsidian. So now... for years and years, I've been reading either in Pocket or Instapaper, two apps I think a lot of your listeners probably use. Now everything I highlight in there goes through with Readwise and straight into my notes, which don't necessarily make it on a website, but now it's... so there's more of a direct flow of everything I've read and the chunks I found interesting all end up in text files locally and can be oriented towards the website. Details about Patrick's setup Jorge: I'm hearing you say this and thinking, not only do I want to get into the weeds with you on this stuff, but, uh, I I'm afraid we're not going to have enough time to get as far into the weeds as I would like, because you've touched on several things that I've been exploring myself. I have been contemplating making this very same move that you're describing — going from WordPress to what is often called a static site generator. And for many of the same reasons you're pointing out here, I would love to have my site as text files — as Markdown specifically, which I use as well. And I recently posted about this on Twitter and a lot of folks came back to me recommending Eleventy, so it's one that is very much on my radar. I'm wondering about what you might lose by doing such a transition. And I can tell you two things that I'm aware of, that I would lose for my own instance. One is that WordPress provides a pretty good site search, which I don't believe static sites have. And the other is, WordPress provides the ability for me to preschedule posts. So, I can write something and say... say on a Monday morning and leave it so that it's published on a Tuesday afternoon, right? Are you dealing with those in any way? Is that an issue? Patrick: Yeah. Those are pretty much the two issues. You've hit the two issues directly. The search, of course people can be unhappy and not tell me, but I haven't had any people telling me that they miss the search engine. Although I did include one, but it's... it basically searches DuckDuckGo, by specifying my website. And so it gives a result only on the website. It's been working pretty good. There are a couple of solutions to do web searches on a static website. But it mostly ends up being work done on the client's side. So, in the reader's browser and so I haven't implemented that yet. The scheduling is more of an issue than I thought because like my newsletter goes out at 6:00 AM every Sunday. And I try to have it online exactly at the same time as the email goes out for people who want to read it online and share it. So that's... it connects to the biggest issue, which is... it's a lot more technical to run a site like that than it is to run WordPress. WordPress, you can just go on wordpress.com and create a blog and even have it on your own domain and you have nothing to do basically, other than use the interface, which is very broadly known already. A huge number of people have used it for themselves or at work or somewhere else. And so this is... it's harder. But I figured out the way. It's like, I'm actually... I'm getting back from vacation and there's one going out on Sunday, and it's going to be the first one using the new automation to put it online at 6:00 AM. It's basically, it's... it's going back to the command line. It's having rsync and a cronjob running on the server. That could probably be done some other ways, but I found that that's actually... because the way I've built the new version is that my newsletter is usually four or five featured articles that I have a summary and comment on. So each of those has been split, so each newsletter has become at least five chunks — five notes. And I might issue 184, so it can take a while to transfer the whole thing. So automating it that way is a timesaver. Jorge: That's very encouraging. And I'm kind of desperately trying to make more time to experiment more with these things because I do find very appealing the idea that at the other end of this, you end up with this more consolidated, personal knowledge management base that you use... you used that phrase, PKM, right? And, I find the idea of having it as a set of text files on my file system very compelling. You touched on Obsidian, which is another tool that I've been recently migrating to. I am using Readwise and I was not aware that they had enabled Obsidian sync, so I'm very excited. Now I'm like thinking... it's like the moment that we hang up here, I'm going to go experiment with that. Patrick: I think it's been active for like five days. So it's a really, really new feature. Obsidian Jorge: That's amazing. I was using it with Roam, to sync my highlights from Kindle and Instapaper and all these other things, sync them over to Roam. But, it's very exciting to hear that they've enabled Obsidian sync. How are you using Obsidian? I'm curious. How does it play into this workflow? Patrick: I'm hoping to transition completely to it. Right now, I 've used Bear for a few years, which is also in Markdown, but it's very visually polished, so it's fun to use and it syncs between phone and iPad and laptop. And it's Markdown that can be exported in Markdown, but when it's stored, it's not Markdown. It's in a proprietary database. So that was one of the things that kind of bugged me. Although I would have kept using Bear if not for Obsidian and the fact that it's pure text and you can actually open any folder with Markdown files. Open it in Obsidian and it becomes a bunch of notes and you can do back linking between the notes so that... because we often use links, but only in one direction. So, when you get to the destination, the destination doesn't display in any way where you came from, unless you're staying on the same website, then there's an indication. But if you're going from site to site, you don't know. And you don't know who else might have linked to that same page. And so with backlinks or bidirectional links would be another term, then you know at least within the corpus of your notes, which links to which -which has been in Wikis for forever, and which we even had on blogs 15 years ago with trackbacks which is coming back now with digital gardens which is kind of a personal Wiki. And Obsidian supports that. And I found a way to have them work in Obsidian and when their live on my website in the same way. And so, I'm still using Bear because it's kind of my reflex to go to those files and client notes and articles in the works are all in there, but I'm trying to switch more and more of them to Obsidian which is so far a great surprise because it's very modular. There's a hundreds of plugins, and so far I haven't seen it slow down. I've been wary of activating too many but so far it's super fast. So, I'm very encouraged, up to this point, and the advantage is of course, is that I have nothing to do if at some point they start... or they stop developing it. The app is local, the files are local... everything keeps working. Jorge: This idea of digital gardening is something that I am very interested in and we had earlier this year another guest on their show, Kourosh Dini, talking about the use of a tool called DEVONthink, which is designed for this type of personal knowledge management. And I mention it because DEVONthink too allows you to monitor folders on your computer and it indexes them and builds... it uses an artificial intelligence engine, and I don't know the details of how this works, but it uses AI to spot relationships between pieces of content in your computer. And I have been using Obsidian. My Obsidian folder with Markdown files, I'm indexing it with DevonThink. So building this bridge between the stuff that I have in Markdown there with things like PDFs and bookmarks and all this other stuff, and it just feels like... for me, it feels like my little personal knowledge management system, which has been scattered for a long time, is finally starting to come together with these more open tools. It's really exciting. Patrick: Yeah. It's... I was going to say the less exciting thing is the fact that we have to go back to old formats to get back that open function. Like Markdown files have been around forever and they're text files, which has literally been forever for computers and PDF is also a very old standard. But it's great to have that. I wasn't aware of that function by DEVONthink so I'm going to have to try it. I've actually... I've been doing some cleaning of stuff on my computer and I've been putting PDFs in Keep It and I've actually grabbed again, some old email archives that I'd archived to make the mail app snappier again. And I've put them in EagleFiler, which are both kind of... they both do the same thing you were explaining about DEVONthink, which is they do some search optimization and tagging and stuff, but the files remained in the finder and just on the Mac file system. So, but maybe I'm... after doing the cleanup, I'm just going to have to switch over to DEVONthink or add DEVONthink, because basically since it's indexing existing folders, that's the duty of it, you could have 10 applications doing different work on the same files. Jorge: Yeah, that's what I'm finding as well. I've stopped obsessing with the idea of trying to bring everything together into a single homogeneous system and more trying to find tools that are open about the data that they use so that you can get different perspectives on your information. And I can relate to this challenge you were talking about — the challenge of migrating stuff that you've had in more proprietary formats for awhile. We're coming close to the end of our time together — unfortunately, because there are so many more weedy areas of this that I would like to explore or with you. But I'm wondering what the future holds for what you're doing with Sentiers and how you see your system evolving. Evolving the system Patrick: Well, one of the main reason I was able to spend time doing that was that I used a grant by Grant for the Web, which is a project by the Interledger Foundation. We do web monetization. And a lot of the words they use sound like blockchain, but it's not actually. It can be related to the blockchain, but it's not. And they're basically developing a standard that they want to be accepted by the W3C, to be able to stream money to the website where you're spending time. And so the way I presented the project is that I'm already somewhat monetizing. I don't like that word that much, but that's... with memberships, paid memberships, but the archives and that's the case for most anyone doing those kinds of like... another word I dislike but the "creator economy." Often, their archives just fall by the wayside. So, that was a way of keeping the archives evolving and accessible and useful for readers and having the web monetization work underneath and possibly be a new revenue stream. And the other reason is that by making it text files, they can be on GitHub. And that's kind of... a lot of people have spoken about it with digital gardens, but not many have actually opened it. And I haven't found a way yet to do it — a way I'd be satisfied with. But potentially having people participate in the notes and appearing on the website would be something interesting that could be done with GitHub. And so the goal is to... it's kind of a forcing function for myself to note things beyond just highlighting in articles which then become notes that don't necessarily make it in the magazine because they're not necessarily interesting to read in themselves, but they can be super useful as you're browsing through different notes and adding context to something and adding to the topic. So, growing the notes, making it potentially a revenue source. The nice thing about this system is that if people are spending a lot of time, it means it's useful for them. So then it's a great way to transform it into a source of revenue because you're not forcing anything. They're just using it then. And then potentially bring in people on... I don't know if it would be specific contributors? If it would be a way of, for example, you and I joining some of our notes, or something else that's not... that's kind of on the roadmap, but not planned yet as to how it would happen. But that's another of the ways I hope to use it. Closing Jorge: That all sounds so fascinating. I would love to check in with you sometime in the future when this stuff has developed more just to see how that is going. But for now, where can folks find out more about you and follow your work? Patrick: The simplest is the newsletter, which is santiers.media. So sentiers.media. Or @inevernu on Twitter. And on the Sentiers website you can subscribe, and you can also look at what we've been talking about. So, how the notes connect together and so far, it's a lot, the existing archive. It hasn't been digital garden-ized as much as I would've liked, but I'm adding to it constantly. So yeah, those are the two... and I write the articles about monthly. So there's the newsletter, but there's also some articles to read. Jorge: Fantastic. I will post links to all of those things in the show notes. I want to thank you for being here and thank you for your work because like I said, I learn a lot from the work that you're doing. So thank you for sharing it with us, Patrick. Patrick: Thanks! Thanks for saying that and thanks alot for inviting me! It's been fun. It's always fun to discuss what you've been working on. It's sometimes bring us a different perspective as you're answering. So, it's always useful. Jorge: I hope that we can do it again sometime. Patrick: Sure.

Software Defined Talk
Episode 325: Nothing says Enterprise like a function key

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2021 64:22


This week we discuss TriggerMesh going open source, the new Enterprise Mac and Honeycomb raising VC . Plus, will Matt become a TikTok influencer…? Rundown Introducing TriggerMesh Open Source (https://www.triggermesh.com/blog/introducing-triggermesh-open-source) Cockroach Labs Announces CockroachDB Serverless (https://www.infoq.com/news/2021/10/cockroachdb-serverless/) The Enterprise of the MacBook Pro macOS Monterey Release Candidate Undoes Safari Changes, Reintroduces Old Tab Design (https://www.macrumors.com/2021/10/18/macos-monterey-reverts-safari-changes/) HDMI Port Limitations (https://twitter.com/tapbot_paul/status/1450166030446235650) Apple innovators do it again with $19 'Polishing Cloth' (https://mashable.com/article/apple-polishing-cloth) Apple's new 140W charger can fast charge a lot more than just your MacBook Pro (https://www.theverge.com/2021/10/19/22734233/apple-140w-macbook-charging-brick-gan-usb-c-pd-3-1-third-party-chargers) Funny Tweet Storm of Apple Event (https://twitter.com/Pinboard/status/1450146483030749184) Steven Sinofsky on Apple (https://twitter.com/stevesi/status/1450255227945242628?s=21) How Honeycomb Is Using $50M in New Funding to Bring Observability to All (https://www.honeycomb.io/blog/series-c-funding-bringing-observability-to-all) Expensify builds a SQLite Database from their S-1 (https://twitter.com/craig_tracey/status/1450459102975565829?s=21) Yes, there's a market for Excel influencers on TikTok (https://www.protocol.com/workplace/productivity-app-influencers) Relevant to your interests Welcome to Dagger.io (http://dagger.io/) Microsoft shutting down LinkedIn in China (https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-58911297) How Windows NTFS finally made it into Linux (https://www.theregister.com/2021/10/13/how_ntfs_finally_made_it/) GitLab jumps 22% in its Nasdaq debut after code-sharing company priced IPO above expected range (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/14/gitlab-jumps-in-nasdaq-debut-after-pricing-ipo-above-expected-range.html) Elastic to buy 'continuous profiling' startup Optimyze (https://www.zdnet.com/article/elastic-to-buy-continuous-profiling-startup-optimyze/) Slackers of the World, Unite! (https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2021/11/slack-office-trouble/620173/) Amazon To Allow Employees To Work Remotely Indefinitely (https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/amazon-to-allow-employees-to-work-remotely-indefinitely-7573211.html) Google bets on the cloud breaking up (https://www.ft.com/content/ab36b9e2-00e0-469c-9388-fa034f9bfd63) The replacement for Google Reader? (https://twitter.com/__apf__/status/1446503789586894850?s=20) Why a Key Google Cloud Product Ended Up Generating Less Than 0.1% of Revenue (https://www.theinformation.com/articles/why-a-key-google-cloud-product-ended-up-generating-less-than-0-1-of-revenue?utm_source=ti_app) Fully-local simulator for Cloudflare Workers (https://github.com/cloudflare/miniflare) The Largely Untold Story Of How One Guy In California Keeps The World's Computers On The Right… (https://onezero.medium.com/the-largely-untold-story-of-how-one-guy-in-california-keeps-the-worlds-computers-on-the-right-time-a97a5493bf73) Expensify Announces Filing of Registration Statement for Proposed Initial Public Offering (https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20211015005640/en/Expensify-Announces-Filing-of-Registration-Statement-for-Proposed-Initial-Public-Offering) Programming languages ranked by how much electricity they use: (https://twitter.com/mit_csail/status/1450135081226489857?s=21) Yes, there's a market for Excel influencers on TikTok (https://www.protocol.com/workplace/productivity-app-influencers) IBM shares drop on weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/20/ibm-earnings-q3-2021.html) Facebook is planning to rebrand the company with a new name (https://www.theverge.com/2021/10/19/22735612/facebook-change-company-name-metaverse) ****- Amazon cloud storage challenger Backblaze files to go public (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/18/cloud-object-storage-company-backblaze-files-to-go-public.html) Snowflake Launches A Media Cloud, As It Builds Out Programmatic Services (https://www.adexchanger.com/platforms/snowflake-launches-a-media-cloud-as-it-builds-out-programmatic-services/) Twilio delves more deeply into marketing with new tool built on $3.2B Segment acquisition (https://techcrunch.com/2021/10/20/twilio-delves-more-deeply-into-marketing-with-new-tool-built-on-3-2b-segment-acquisition/) Nonsense this is hilarious but also really awesome ux (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FBs8RaiVEAAlDJL.jpg) Sponsors strongDM — Manage and audit remote access to infrastructure. Start your free 14-day trial today at strongdm.com/SDT (http://strongdm.com/SDT) CBT Nuggets — Training available for IT Pros anytime, anywhere. Start your 7-day Free Trial today at cbtnuggets.com/sdt (https://cbtnuggets.com/sdt) Conferences TriggerMesh Open Source Software Webinar (https://www.triggermesh.com/oss-intro) - October 28, 2021 MongoDB.local London 2021 (https://events.mongodb.com/dotlocallondon) - November 9, 2021 THAT Conference comes to Texas January 17-20, 2022 (https://that.us/activities/call-for-counselors/tx/2022) Listener Feedback InfraCloud is hiring a Site reliability Engineer (SRE) in India (https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/view/2763208585/?alternateChannel=search&refId=eSIVvVIqBdTCFUIIcV6Fvw%3D%3D&trackingId=E8rnW8pH9WYFNfz1ZMtONw%3D%3D) James wants you to superorbital.io as a Kubernetes focused Cloud Engineer (https://superorbital.io/careers/) SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/sdtpodcast), Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/), LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) and YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi3OJPV6h9tp-hbsGBLGsDQ/featured). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=823) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté's book, (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt) Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Become a sponsor of Software Defined Talk (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/ads)! Recommendations Brandon: Foundation (https://tv.apple.com/us/show/foundation/umc.cmc.5983fipzqbicvrve6jdfep4x3?ign-itscg=MC_20000&ign-itsct=atvp_brand_omd&mttn3pid=Google%20AdWords&mttnagencyid=a5e&mttncc=US&mttnsiteid=143238&mttnsubad=OUS2019859_1-547710607871-c&mttnsubkw=104006946180__BCaSlfl0_&mttnsubplmnt=) and Squid Game (https://www.netflix.com/title/81040344) Netflix's "Squid Game" Generated $891 Million In Value: Report (https://www.hotnewhiphop.com/netflixs-squid-game-generated-s891-million-in-value-report-news.141147.html) Matt: Gauntlet Slayer Edition (https://store.steampowered.com/app/258970/Gauntlet_Slayer_Edition/) MacOS Mission Control drag & drop between screens Photo Credits Banner Image (https://unsplash.com/photos/IckkprBRmUU) CoverArt (https://unsplash.com/photos/QSBm03YHtrI)

Mostly Security
192: True Portland Fashion

Mostly Security

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2021 54:09


Eric has mixed followup, and Jon finishes the Yurt; Scamming the wannabe scammers, AI authored phishing, and Poly Network Hacked and some crypto returned. A bit about the Apple CSAM detection features. A newly realized carnivorous plant, and a climate change serenity prayer. 0:00 - Intro 13:57 - Honor (?) Among Thieves 17:07 - Let the AI Phish 20:56 - Poly Network Hack 26:26 - Crypto Returns 29:26 - CSAM Take 1 35:50 - CSAM Take 2 43:20 - Carnivory 47:25 - Pinboard's Opinion

TechCheck
Square Planning a New Platform, Pinboard Founder on the Chinese Tech Crackdown & Google Parts Ways with its Cloud VP

TechCheck

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2021 43:19


Our anchors, joined by guest anchor Joanna Stern from the Wall Street Journal, kick off this Friday morning with news on Square getting further into the crypto game. Then, Mizuho Managing Director Dan Dolev is here to speak about his latest research note claiming that buying Square is like buying J.P. Morgan in 1871. Next, Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon joins to break down the latest on chip stocks as Intel explores a deal to acquire Global Foundries. Later, Pinboard Founder Maciej Ceglowski is here to discuss Chinese tech stocks and the broader crackdown in China. We also have all the details on Apple's employees pushing back against the return to office. And later, CNBC Tech Reporter Jennifer Elias is here to cover the story on Google parting ways with its Cloud VP after he published a bizarre manifesto on LinkedIn.

DIGITAL+
Success Pinboard: Psychological Habit

DIGITAL+

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 13:20


Untuk Sukses kita memerlukan sumber daya psikologi. Saya mencari tahu tentang apa esensi dari istilah Success Pinboard. Apa yang di butuhkan untuk sukses di lihat dari psychological habit. Saya membentuk Komunitas Perpustakaan SUKSES terbesar di INDONESIA di FACEBOOK GROUP: http:/bit.ly/sukses2u Join dan mari bersama sama membentuk gaya hidup sukses melalui studi studi empiris dan terukur, bukan sekedar motivasi motivasi membakar hati. instagram saya ada di @husinw...yok dukung ya...

Software Defined Talk
Episode 303: Bring your spreadsheet

Software Defined Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2021 59:36


This week we discuss Matt’s new job at TriggerMesh, the cost of Public Cloud and more M&A. Plus, Coté published a new book that everyone must read. Rundown Matt’s new job at TriggerMesh (https://www.triggermesh.com) Interview with Sebastien Goasguen Cofounder of TriggerMesh (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/278) Coté’s new book is out: Changing Mindsets (https://tanzu.vmware.com/content/ebooks/changing-mindsets-the-missing-ingredient-to-digital-transformation?utm_source=cote&utm_medium=podcast&utm_content=SDT). Johnny Leadgen’s can get it for free (https://tanzu.vmware.com/content/ebooks/changing-mindsets-the-missing-ingredient-to-digital-transformation?utm_source=cote&utm_medium=podcast&utm_content=SDT). The Cost of Cloud, a Trillion Dollar Paradox (https://a16z.com/2021/05/27/cost-of-cloud-paradox-market-cap-cloud-lifecycle-scale-growth-repatriation-optimization/) it's unfeasible to recreate noncommodity (https://twitter.com/zackkanter/status/1399013516107948037?s=21) Cloud is great. But we show it hurts share price of public (https://a16z.com/2021/05/27/cost-of-cloud-paradox-market-cap-cloud-lifecycle-scale-growth-repatriation-optimization/) M&A KKR and CD&R Close to $4.7 Billion Deal to Buy Out Cloudera (https://finance.yahoo.com/news/kkr-cd-r-close-4-022454722.html) Sumo Logic buys Sensu (https://investor.sumologic.com/news-releases/news-release-details/sumo-logic-signs-definitive-agreement-acquire-sensu-extend-open) Prosus buys StackOverflow for $1.8 Billion (https://www.wsj.com/articles/software-developer-community-stack-overflow-sold-to-tech-giant-prosus-for-1-8-billion-11622648400) Relevant to your interests Docker introduces developer environments in containers (https://www.theregister.com/2021/05/27/docker_introduces_developer_environments_in_containers/) A handy new Google Cloud, AWS, and Azure product map (https://cloud.google.com/blog/topics/developers-practitioners/handy-new-google-cloud-aws-and-azure-product-map) Apple says Malware is a problem on Macs. So how bad is it? (https://www.forbes.com/sites/dwightsilverman/2021/05/27/apple-says-malware-is-a-problem-on-macs-so-bad-is-it/?sh=648f84cc36da&utm_campaign=socialflowForbesMainTwitter&utm_medium=social&utm_source=ForbesMainTwitter) DevRel Collective (https://devrelcollective.fun/#resources) Wordpress powers 40% of Websites (https://pbs.twimg.com/media/E2ZyH5gWYAEcyIf.jpg) Cryptocurrency is sustained by a mix of money laundering, vaporware, fraud, ransomware, gambling, and delusion (https://twitter.com/Pinboard/status/1399058952336277505) Employees Are Quitting Instead of Giving Up Working From Home (https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-06-01/return-to-office-employees-are-quitting-instead-of-giving-up-work-from-home) It's Happening. Arm Server CPUs are Coming to the Data Center (https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/arm/its-happening-arm-server-cpus-are-coming-data-center) H1B Visa Salary Database 2021 - By Employer, Job, or City (https://h1bdata.info/) Why Corporations Won’t Hire Remote Workers in Colorado (https://www.vice.com/en/article/m7egp8/why-corporations-wont-hire-any-remote-workers-in-colorado) Twitter to launch local weather news service (https://www.axios.com/twitter-holthaus-tomorrow-weather-meteorologists-6ca8692a-112c-45a4-92f2-3fae5ea813f0.html) Life at Google vs. Life at Amazon: From Hiring to Firing (and Everything in Between) (https://www.inc.com/justin-bariso/life-at-google-vs-life-at-amazon-from-hiring-to-firing-and-everything-in-between.html) You'll Have to Wait Until June for Apple's Paid Podcast Subscription Service (https://gizmodo.com/apple-delays-paid-podcast-subscription-launch-until-jun-1846999142) Zoom reports blowout earnings but warns of a coming slowdown (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/01/zoom-zm-earnings-q1-2022.html) Pluralsight to Acquire A Cloud Guru (https://acloudguru.com/blog/news/pluralsight-to-acquire-a-cloud-guru) Amazon devices will soon automatically share your Internet with neighbors (https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2021/05/amazon-devices-will-soon-automatically-share-your-internet-with-neighbors/) The State of Kubernetes 2021 (https://tanzu.vmware.com/content/ebooks/the-state-of-kubernetes-2021) Hackers hit JBS, the world’s largest meat processor, in ransomware attack (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2021/06/01/jbs-cyberattack-meat-supply-chain/) Nonsense Formatting show and episode notes (https://learn.acast.com/en/articles/3505626-formatting-show-and-episode-notes) Massive bitcoin mine discovered in UK after police raid suspected cannabis farm (https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/28/bitcoin-mine-discovered-by-uk-police-on-cannabis-farm-raid-.html) Sponsors CBT Nuggets — Training available for IT Pros anytime, anywhere. Start your 7-day Free Trial today at cbtnuggets.com/sdt (https://cbtnuggets.com/sdt) strongDM — Manage and audit remote access to infrastructure. Start your free 14-day trial today at: strongdm.com/SDT (http://strongdm.com/SDT) Conferences RabbitMQ Summit (https://rabbitmqsummit.com), July 13-14, 2021. SpringOne (https://springone.io), Sep 1st to 2nd. THAT July 26,- July 29, in Wisconsin, Submissions Open Through (https://that.us/activities/call-for-counselors/wi/2021) June 14 (https://that.us/activities/call-for-counselors/wi/2021) Knative Eventing Training (https://www.triggermesh.com/knative-eventing-training) - June 30 SpringOne Tour, EMEA (https://tanzu.vmware.com/developer/tv/springone-tour/0017/) - June 15th. SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop stickers! Follow us on Twitch (https://www.twitch.tv/sdtpodcast), Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) and LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Use the code SDT to get $20 off Coté’s book, (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt) Digital WTF (https://leanpub.com/digitalwtf/c/sdt), so $5 total. Become a sponsor of Software Defined Talk (https://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/ads)! Recommendations Brandon: Mare of Easttown (https://www.hbo.com/mare-of-easttown) Finale Matt: macOS Automator & AppleScript. Coté: Stir fry sauce (https://www.bonappetit.com/story/tangy-cabbage-stir-fry) with black vinegar (https://www.bonappetit.com/story/black-vinegar#intcid=_bon-appetit-bottom-recirc_598549a4-29e9-4470-9237-96407ad96745_text2vec1). Photo Credit (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu#/media/File:Cthulhu_and_R'lyeh.jpg) Photo Credit (https://unsplash.com/photos/XT-o5O458as)

Priključenija
33: Inteligencija

Priključenija

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 23:29


simulacija, ai, nauka, neuronauka, društvene mreže, pinboard Links:Pinboard (@Pinboard) / Twitter — The light inside is broken, but I still work. The Cadillac of online bookmarking sites. https://pinboard.in maciej@ceglowski.com +1 415 610 0231Superintelligence: The Idea That Eats Smart People — This scenario is a caricature of Bostrom's argument, because I am not trying to convince you of it, but vaccinate you against it.Andrew Huberman: Neuroscience of Optimal Performance | Lex Fridman Podcast #139 - YouTube — Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist at Stanford.Thread Helper — A serendipity engine on the Twitter sidebar.MyHeritage on Twitter — “It makes me so happy to see him smile again!" Try our new #DeepNostalgia #PhotoAnimation feature for yourself and prepare to be AMAZED!!!Flint Dibble on Twitter — Alright, I'm joining the game and animating some ancient stuff. This is from the Acropolis Museum in AthensShockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok — Three days ago, a TikTok account going by @deeptomcruise began posting video clips of the Hollywood actor Tom Cruise doing everything from golfing, to tripping and telling a joke in what appears to be a men's clothing store in Italy, to performing a magic trick with a coin. In each of the three videos, Cruise delivers his signature maniacal laugh—you know, the one he repeatedly unleashed in that batty Scientology recruitment video years back—before launching into some sort of bit, and in all of them, it looks just like Cruise. Only it's not Cruise.GPT-3 - Wikipedia — Generative Pre-trained Transformer 3 (GPT-3) is an autoregressive language model that uses deep learning to produce human-like text. It is the third-generation language prediction model in the GPT-n series (and the successor to GPT-2) created by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based artificial intelligence research laboratory.Franz Kafka's A Country Doctor English Subtitle - YouTube — “A Country Doctor” (German: “Ein Landarzt”) is a short story written in 1917 by Franz Kafka. It was first published in the collection of short stories of the same title. In the story, a country doctor makes an emergency visit to a sick patient on a winter night. The doctor faces absurd, surreal predicaments that pull him along and finally doom him.The EMBO Journal on Twitter: "See what's really going on inside your nerves' ends - real-time analysis of protein mobility at the #synapse courtesy of Rizzoli lab https://t.co/lIUP0yrsnS https://t.co/l15MXR5j9k" / TwitterPriključenija 15: Simulacija — Nebojša misli da živimo u simulaciji. Miloš je skeptičan. Obojici se sviđa serija koja nema veze sa simulacijom, osim što možda ima.Priključenija 23: Računari — Miloš je pod utiskom nakon čitanja knjige, Nebojša nakon gledanja filma. Nepoznavanje inženjerstva i ekonomije neće ih sprečiti da podele svoja mišljenja o oba. Links:Pinboard (@Pinboard) / Twitter — The light inside is broken, but I still work. The Cadillac of online bookmarking sites. https://pinboard.in maciej@ceglowski.com +1 415 610 0231Superintelligence: The Idea That Eats Smart People — This scenario is a caricature of Bostrom's argument, because I am not trying to convince you of it, but vaccinate you against it.Andrew Huberman: Neuroscience of Optimal Performance | Lex Fridman Podcast #139 - YouTube — Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist at Stanford.Thread Helper — A serendipity engine on the Twitter sidebar.MyHeritage on Twitter — “It makes me so happy to see him smile again!" Try our new #DeepNostalgia #PhotoAnimation feature for yourself and prepare to be AMAZED!!!Flint Dibble on Twitter — Alright, I'm joining the game and animating some ancient stuff. This is from the Acropolis Museum in AthensShockingly Real Tom Cruise Deepfakes Are Invading TikTok — Three days ago, a TikTok account going by @deeptomcruise began posting video clips of the Hollywood actor Tom Cruise doing everything from golfing, to tripping and telling a joke in what appears to be a men's clothing store in Italy, to performing a magic trick with a coin. In each of the three videos, Cruise delivers his signature maniacal laugh—you know, the one he repeatedly unleashed in that batty Scientology recruitment video years back—before launching into some sort of bit, and in all of them, it looks just like Cruise. Only it's not Cruise.GPT-3 - Wikipedia — Generative Pre-trained Transformer 3 (GPT-3) is an autoregressive language model that uses deep learning to produce human-like text. It is the third-generation language prediction model in the GPT-n series (and the successor to GPT-2) created by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based artificial intelligence research laboratory.Franz Kafka's A Country Doctor English Subtitle - YouTube — “A Country Doctor” (German: “Ein Landarzt”) is a short story written in 1917 by Franz Kafka. It was first published in the collection of short stories of the same title. In the story, a country doctor makes an emergency visit to a sick patient on a winter night. The doctor faces absurd, surreal predicaments that pull him along and finally doom him.The EMBO Journal on Twitter: "See what's really going on inside your nerves' ends - real-time analysis of protein mobility at the #synapse courtesy of Rizzoli lab https://t.co/lIUP0yrsnS https://t.co/l15MXR5j9k" / TwitterPr

Sustain
Episode 66: Eric Holscher of Read The Docs, Write The Docs, and Ethical Ads

Sustain

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2021 37:41


Panelists Eric Berry | Justin Dorfman | Alyssa Wright | Richard Littauer Guest Eric Holscher Show Notes Hello and welcome to Sustain! On today’s episode, our special guest is Eric Holscher, cofounder of Read the Docs and Write the Docs. As part of his work with Read the Docs, he created a privacy-focused ad network called EthicalAds. Eric will tell us all about Read the Docs, Write the Docs, how EthicalAds started, and why the Ads work. We also discuss challenges since EthicalAds launched, how things have worked with ethical advertising in our current economic recession, and what ad sales look like when it’s ethical. Download this episode now to find out more! [00:01:31] Eric tells us the history of how he co-founded Read the Docs, who funds the company, and he tells us about Write the Docs. [00:04:33] Eric fills us in on how he’s been doing meetups this year and how they’ve been going. He mentions using a tool called “Hopin” for the online events. [00:06:00] We learn how EthicalAds started. [00:08:21] Eric tells us what the reaction was when he introduced Ads on the platform. Also, he explains the rules that he’s applied and what ethical advertising is. [00:12:02] Eric explains what unethical advertising is and we hear his thoughts on if the Ads are scalable and long-term feasible to keep holding on to that early nineties style newspaper advertising. He also talks about Maciej Ceglowski from Pinboard and Doc Searls from Linux Journal. [00:17:26] Richard asks Eric if he has an opinion on how he deals with advertising itself being unethical. [00:19:49] Alyssa asks Eric if he thinks ethical advertising can be particularly useful for the sustainability of other open source work in projects. [00:21:41] Eric tells us the biggest challenges since launching EthicalAds six months ago. [00:23:49] With the economic recession in 2020, Alyssa wonders what the need was and what has this work looked like for EthicalAds in the current economics we’re living in. [00:26:29] Richard asks Eric if any maintainers have been able to support themselves through putting Ads on their docs. Eric mentions Material UI supporting people. [00:29:15] Eric tells what Ad sales looks like when it’s ethical. [00:31:32] Eric lets us know where you can find him on the internet and follow his journey with EthicalAds and Read the Docs. Spotlight [00:32:53] Eric Berry’s spotlight is the importance of simplifying your life. [00:34:02] Justin’s spotlight is his new Versa 3 watch. [00:34:22] Alyssa’s spotlight is a Twitter account called “Cats where they shouldn’t be.” [00:35:06] Richard’s spotlights are Read the Docs and Eric Holscher. [00:35:49] Eric Holscher’s spotlight is Pycon and the PSF 2020 Fundraiser. Quotes [00:06:28] “Trying to get open source maintainers to pay you money, that’s not who we want to charge money. They’re the ones doing all the work and not getting any money. Trying to charge them is just kind of a non-starter.” [00:25:05] “I do believe that a lot of good things are started in down turns because once the kind of market turns around then you’re positioned, you’ve already built the brand, you’re kind of ready to go and kind of ride that growth.” [00:26:34] “I mean there are definitely projects that are supporting multiple people with advertising, and Read the Docs is one.” [00:29:22] “I mean, very similar, except saying no a lot.” Links Eric Holscher- Website (https://www.ericholscher.com/) Eric Holscher Twitter (https://twitter.com/ericholscher) Read the Docs (https://readthedocs.org/) Write the Docs (https://www.writethedocs.org/) EthicalAds (https://www.ethicalads.io/) Hopin (https://hopin.com/) Maciej Ceglowski (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maciej_Ceg%C5%82owski) Linux Journal-Doc Searls (https://www.linuxjournal.com/users/doc-searls) Material-UI (https://material-ui.com/) “Simple Living Manifesto: 72 Ideas to Simplify Your Life” (Zen Habits) (https://zenhabits.net/simple-living-manifesto-72-ideas-to-simplify-your-life/) fitbit Versa 3 (https://www.fitbit.com/global/us/products/smartwatches/versa3) Cats Where They Shouldn’t Be-Twitter (https://twitter.com/catsnoplace) Read the Docs-GitHub (https://github.com/readthedocs/readthedocs.org/) Python Software Foundation (PSF) (https://www.python.org/psf/donations/2020-q42020-drive/) Pycon US 2021 (https://us.pycon.org/2021/) Credits Produced by Richard Littauer (https://www.burntfen.com/) Edited by Paul M. Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Show notes by DeAnn Bahr at Peachtree Sound (https://www.peachtreesound.com/) Special Guest: Eric Holscher.

Lean Into Art
LIA 334 - Writing and Using Digital Notes: Part 2 of Note Taking for Making

Lean Into Art

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020


Last episode Jerzy and Rob talked about note taking on physical media, including a demonstration of taking notes. It’s a big topic, why and how you gather notes, and even how you put notes to use. Join Jerzy and Rob in this episode of the Lean Into Art podcast as they explore digital ways they take notes and make use of them for planning, project, and more. Will Jerzy and Rob clear the last level of the note taking topic? You can join the adventure in the Discord to play along! Sponsors for this episode Four Million Years Later Rob's workshops and coaching Lean Into Art Discord Links mentioned: mdfind Gregg's website iA Writer 1Writer typora Markdown VueScan Calendly Drafts Decset Dictopro V100 Day One Pinboard Setapp Squid Noteshelf MediBang Paint Thanks to our top Patreon supporters Greg Horvath Dave 'Sri' Seah Ashley Knapp Mike White Stephan Black This week's 2 Minute Practice Practice stretching! Connect with Jerzy and Rob Jerzy on Instagram Rob on Instagram Lean Into Art on Twitter

The Old World Lives! A Warhammer fantasy podcast
OWL presents: The Town Cryer 1: Alone in the streets

The Old World Lives! A Warhammer fantasy podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2020 58:49


(Normalized sound) Hello and welcome to the first episode of "The Town Cryer", a series of Mordheim Specials of The Old World Lives! A Warhammer Fantasy Podcast! In the main part this episode Jimmy talks a bit about his Mordheim history, some basic Mordheim backstory and warband lore. He also lightly touches each rulebook warband and about what they can do.    He also lifts subjects posted on "The Pinboard" where listeneres can bring up any subject they want, be it questions or any other subject.   Jimmy also goes through obituaries, where we will honour the warriors who's fallen during our games. If you have a warrior you'd wish to honour who's fallen in one of your games, don't hesitate to write in! The last segment brings up Jimmy's thoughts of how Mordheim have stayed active in his area and how to help others to keep their campaigns up an running. Enjoy!   Social media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheOldWorldLives Instagram: @theoldworldlives Email: theoldworldlives@gmail.com

EdTech Examined
3: Ergonomic Command Centre

EdTech Examined

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2020 24:34


In this episode, Kris and Erik discuss tips for creating an ergonomic work from home setup (i.e. "command centre") and using Pocket and Pinboard for saving and organizing articles from the web..#EdTechOfficeHours.Creating an ergonomic work from home setup.Have a monitor that's at eye level.Ergonomics CCOHS: https://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/ergonomics/office/monitor_positioning.html.Evoluent vertical mouse: https://evoluent.com/.Logitech MX Vertical mouse: https://www.logitech.com/en-ca/product/mx-vertical-ergonomic-mouse.Logitech ERGO K860: https://www.logitech.com/en-ca/product/k860-split-ergonomic-keyboard?crid=27.Logitech K780: https://www.logitech.com/en-ca/product/k780-multi-device-wireless-keyboard.html?crid=27.Microsoft Sculpt Keyboard and Mouse: https://www.microsoft.com/accessories/en-us/products/keyboards/sculpt-ergonomic-desktop/l5v-00001.Herman Miller Aeron ergonomic chair: https://www.hermanmiller.com/products/seating/office-chairs/aeron-chairs/.Rain Design laptop stand: https://www.raindesigninc.com/mstand.html.The Wirecutter's recommended standing desks: https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/reviews/best-standing-desk/.TECH TIPS: .Saving online articles.Pocket: https://getpocket.com/.Pinboard: https://pinboard.in/.Erik's Pinboard: https://pinboard.in/u:echristiansen/.CONTACT: Website: edtechexamined.comEmail: hey@edtechexamined.comTwitter: @EdTechExamined.HOST INFORMATION:.
Erik ChristiansenWebsite: erikchristiansen.netTwitter: @egchristiansenBlog: tech-bytes.net.

The Am Writing Fantasy Podcast
The AmWritingFantasy Podcast: Episode 77 – Top 10 Traits of a Great Villain

The Am Writing Fantasy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2020 43:07


Every story needs a villain. Someone to oppose the protagonist. However, there are some traits that will make the antagonist memorable and feel like a real person, with true motives. In episode 77 of the Am Writing Fantasy podcast, Autumn and Jesper explore how to create the best villain for a novel. Tune in for new episodes EVERY single Monday. SUPPORT THE AM WRITING FANTASY PODCAST! Please tell a fellow author about the show and visit us at Apple podcast and leave a rating and review. Join us at www.patreon.com/AmWritingFantasy. For as little as a dollar a month, you'll get awesome rewards and keep the Am Writing Fantasy podcast going. Read the full transcript below. (Please note that it's automatically generated and while the AI is super cool, it isn't perfect. There may be misspellings or incorrect words on occasion). Narrator (2s): You're listening to The Am Writing Fantasy Podcast in today's publishing landscape. You can reach fans all over the world. Query letters are a thing of the past. You don't even need a literary agent. There is nothing standing in the way of making a living from writing. Join two best selling authors who have self published more than 20 books between them now onto the show with your hosts Autumn Birt and Jesper Schmidt. Jesper (30s): Hello? I am Jesper and I'm Autumn. This is episode 77 of the Am Writing Fantasy podcast. And today's episode is sort of a continuation of last week's episode where we shared 10 Traits that makes a protagonist great. So, today we will do the same thing, but this time it's the antagonists, or the villains turn And I was so, Autumn (55s): So looking forward to this one and it ended up being so hard or it's so much harder than the heroes. Yeah, it was a actually. Jesper (1m 4s): But yeah, I hope it's got to be just as much fun as last week, but at least in coming up with the 10 items and that wasn't even a bit harder. And I, as I said before, we started recording, I felt like the first six or seven of them, those were quite easy. But then number eight, nine, 10 at the bottom end of the list, those where a bit harder. Yeah. I had to think a while, but those, Autumn (1m 27s): Yeah, I would've had been happy if we're coming up with the top five things for our top. Traits for Villain, but I'm in, it's two. I told you this, I a sat down the sporting and stared at my computer until I came up with my final two. I really had a forced myself to think this went through and I might the heroes, I try to do the hero's like in positive traits, but this one that ended up being more, the things Villain shouldn't be so will have to see how much we overlap this time. It's interesting. Jesper (1m 57s): Interesting. But anyway, will get there first. How were things on your side of the Atlantic? It's good. It's good. We, we have guests over the weekend, so yeah, that was quite good. Yeah. Autumn (2m 11s): Koshi and a nice to see some friends and a quick visiting, but of course we couldn't hug each other due to the COVID-19 situations. So that was a bit weird, but at the same time, at least having friends in the house For me, after a long while in isolation, that felt a bit like returning to normal, at least. So that was quite nice. Oh, that's excellent. Yeah. It it's good to be able to see people again. And we haven't, we seen a few extra people, but it is difficult because I know even my parents had said, do you know someone? Autumn (2m 42s): They haven't seen happen to me driving by? And so my dad in the guard and instantly when you go hug and it's like, he's immuno-compromised, you can't do that. You gotta think before you tackle somebody and is yeah, but it was also when we, you know, we had to remind ourselves when they, when, when they entered that we couldn't hockey to it because it feels natural. Jesper (3m 4s): That's what you do. So that was a bit weird, but, but I think other than that, it was, it was very nice. A guy with a bit of normal T in the light again. And, but I think otherwise it, she has also been quite a busy week. I got all my modules, it was completed. I'm so impressed. It only took like two years. I'm so swamped with formatting and creating pictures for the books were going to be releasing here over this summer that I still behind on my modules, but I'll get there. Jesper (3m 38s): I'll get there. Yeah. But in the meantime, I also got started on the self publishing success course that this week course. So I started on that earlier today and I actually upload it the first module fully recorded and uploaded to our hosting platform as well. That is fantastic. Oh yeah, that's good. So nine more modules to go and I would really love it if it would be possible for me to have all of them done before summer holiday. But I don't know if that's going to be go on holiday in, you'd be like, could you build a website while I'm gone? Jesper (4m 14s): So I seen her, this was going, I was planning on doing my world building modules. Well, you were on vacation. So just keep that in mind. Right. All right. Yeah. Well, it's not me. It's more the model or listeners who we'll be on your back because the sooner you get done, then as soon as they will have their free cost delivered two to, I need to clear, I've heard several people say I need to clone myself, or you can think that I just need to clone myself. Yeah. It can be that hot. Right. Of course, there's got to be a magic fairy or something around here who can figure it out for me or a mad scientist. Jesper (4m 50s): Somebody's put in a way to put in an add in the newspaper that your looking for a math scientist, because we need to get more worked. Yeah, I'll do that. Just kind of, not that cracks starts responding to that app should actually be kind of funny. Yeah. Well, at least we we'll have some stuff to read out loud on the, on the Podcast afterwards. I'll do a Facebook ad. That will be even more entertaining. Yeah. Autumn (5m 21s): Yeah. Okay. But how about you then? You seen any people have done anything interesting over the last week? Oh, the person who owns the land, the cabin is on its head. Her daughter is up for 'em of ones from Georgia and the other's from Boston. And so I've seen them and actually got to give everyone a little bit of a tour of the cabin and the work we did. And then, you know what? My, my big project has been three years in the making. I finally put together the trailer two, my Epic Fantasy series. Autumn (5m 52s): So both trilogies combined into one trailer, because if you've got to do it, you might as well just do it for everything. And so I'm so excited to have that three year task off my back burner list. So that feels really good. Yeah. I can understand the why. Yeah. That's good. We got the internet WRITING Fantasy Podcast Oh, well, first of all, a huge and very warm welcome to Jeffrey Crosby who joined us on Petro on there. Autumn (6m 29s): That's right. I saw he joined this last week. So welcome. I hope you're enjoying their, all the tips that are up there on Patrion and the fun in the exclusive benefit's as well. Yeah. That was a, of, there was a ton of posts. I think Petron has started list. I don't know if they've already done or always I'm interested on this and not quite sure, but I have noticed how, if you go to the site, when, if you're not locked in, like, like we normally are, then it we'll list how many posts are in there. Jesper (6m 60s): What kind of categories in just like modern a hundred in writing. And I don't know what it was like 40 world building, or I can't remember how many, but it was a lot. So it had been that busy. Yeah. So there was a lot of posts in there that ah, that one can dive into. So, but that was great. Thank you so much, Jeffery for it, for joining us. And we also need to give a heartfelt thank you to say it, who increased his pledge and totally made me smile with his recent comments. Autumn (7m 32s): I actually have to save this. One's ate because I do. There's a few comments that every once in a while, just to make you feel like Yeah and he, I, we were talking about some of his world building because we have a little task world building extravaganza going on on my Monday post. And he replied too, one of them as such an amazing answer. Or you rock it with those smiley face. I'm like, Ohh, that's going on in my little Pinboard for when I need to smile. So yeah. That, and then sometimes it's this short sweet, enthusiastic in heartfelt one's that just make it kind of like, Oh yeah, I'm saving it. Jesper (8m 6s): Its awesome. Yeah. So I'll have to say that the way it is, those of you who choose to help us on Petro on that are the backbone of this show. It truly is, you know, it's you who keep this show going. So it means a lot to us that you are supporting us if you're listening and you haven't yet checked out Petra, there is a link in the show notes. So please go and check it out. You know, as a patron supporter, you are getting access to a ton of perks on top of all those a story's and, and, and post out there we just talk about, but there was a lot of other purchase. Autumn (8m 41s): Well, and you get in for just a dollar a month, so it doesn't get much more affordable than that. So check it out. It really makes us happy. Yes anything from a THE worldwide web world web. And they're saying, well, yeah, I know. And to see now it was a tongue twister am not going to be able to figure it out. No, I mean, I Am Writing Fantasy group, it's been a ton of fun again. This week there's been some really good posts and they've been continuing with a, some of their breaking down trope. Autumn (9m 15s): So it's just, ah, again, I've only been into a couple of times as a week. It's been, it was such a crazy week, but I do love seeing how everyone is interacting and it's a great resource too. If your looking for some tips, some feedback, just everyone is so nice and response to all the questions and you are usually answering things before I ever even get in there. So it's wonderful platform. So it comes to search for us on Facebook, under Am Writing Fantasy and come check us out and join the group. Jesper (9m 52s): Yes. Yes. So as we talked about at the top of the show here, we, we did have a lot of fun last week, actually automated through our list of 10 Traits and we try to see how much a will that we have it yet. So we can do the same this week, but I wonder how much overlap there's going to be a one sheet. I said that last week as well, but I am actually agreeing with you this week. I know because especially, cause you sounded surprised at my mine are more of what Villain shouldn't be. So I'm thinking maybe we won't have quite as much overlap this time. Autumn (10m 25s): Yeah. I've been, I don't know. I, off the last weeks experienced, I feel like so much less confident about my ability to, to have this run, right. Because Oh, you know, a boy I was wrong as well. So I don't know why should I predict how many overlapping Traits we have this time? Alright, well I'm going to say, I'm going to go with under 50% at this time. So do you want to go with it over? You want to switch places from last week or, or, you know, what does that mean? Autumn (10m 55s): And there are four, I think will have about 40 to 50% overlapping out of the 20 or 20 Traits each week or a 10 Traits each to the 20 total. I'm saying maybe eight to 10 will overlap. Jesper (11m 10s): Yes. Autumn (11m 12s): Eight to 10. What do you mean? Yeah, I think eight we'll have eight or so. Yeah. Eight. So about four or five of our as well, at least five over there. And last week we have seven. Was it a yeah. Well I think it was a 13 cause I added up, you know, a 13. Yeah. I was 13 out of 20 overlaps, so right. Yeah. So, Hm. Okay. I'll I'll be bold at this time. We'll say Oh 11. Autumn (11m 42s): All right. You see a 11 sounds good. So that means like six out of 10. It should be overlapping. Yeah. And I'm saying four to songs sang right around. I'm saying it a little less than a week to 10. Yeah. You somewhere in there. So we're a little, we're really close and are guesstimate of how it much overlap will be. We'll probably ended up with like 20 or something. Oh, well, okay. If that happens again, I don't know. I I'll be lost for words. Jesper (12m 13s): Are we good? Oh, we'll have to give it a go. Alright. I started last time. So I think you should kick us off with your number 10. Okay. Yeah. I can do that after. So you don't need to have a notepad there so that you can keep track of our overlapping them. I will. So again, reader a listener's if you happen to hear some typing, I'm just trying to keep track of, of what we are. And if you, if you keep track and find out we're wrong, please let us know if I miscount. Jesper (12m 44s): OK. So I will start with number 10 and I think as well as last time around, let's try to see if we can just share a bit of thoughts about why we picked each one is I think that's yeah. Okay. This sounds good. OK. So I will start out and again, as I said in the beginning, the last three ones, that means numbers, not a spot number is eight, nine, and 10. Those were really hot. I have trouble finding one. So I think it gets better than further down to watch. Jesper (13m 15s): Number one, we get like a So number 10 was a guy being jealous. Oh, how interesting. And yeah, because when I have, so that's no overlap. Okay. But it's just like being jealous as an emotion. We all can relate to M and a technician who is perhaps feeling jealous of what the protagonists have, or maybe it could be jealous about some of the protectionist personality traits, you know, that the Villain wishes that I could be like this and that, or do like whatever, you know, it, I think it makes the Villain instantly relatable because as I said, jealousy is something we all understand. Autumn (14m 1s): So I think that's good trait. What is a good day? I don't disagree, but it's not what I thought of, but yes. So it's definitely makes them a very relatable person. So yes, I agree. My number 10 is not like a huge one, but it's one is definitely a per more personal than in a more generic Hey this is a good Villain. So for me, one thing that I do live in a really good Villain that really kind of makes me like it is sarcasm. I know it sounds silly, but I love good sarcastic Villain and Someone with like a dry wit and maybe a well earned arrogant air, sort of like they not only think that there better than everyone else, they've pretty much proven it. Autumn (14m 41s): And they have the, the wit, the sarcasm to remain others with some veil threats or amused patience. You know, I know it's maybe my little cynical side, but yes, sometimes you get those characters who had that half smile, a Glint in their eye while there are also a stabbing you and I'm like, I'd love those guys. So that's when I liked. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. I agree. And I, especially like, you know, if, especially in movies, you know, if, if, if you have this really bad, Villain there, Andy. Jesper (15m 16s): And it was just like, he just care at all day. You know, we could just see like, he is completely unimpressed by, by the, by the Hero or the army that his before him or whatever, it was just like, Oh, whatever. . Yeah, exactly. Just like, okay. I Yeah, if I'm ever, like, if I was ever a super villain, that is totally they'll persona. I want to go for it. Yeah, yeah, indeed. Yeah. It was just, Oh, I don't know. I shouldn't have thought a set up because now I lost a penny dreadful. Jesper (15m 46s): We just talked about over this weekend that there was a new season of penny dreadful. I haven't watched it, but, but my, our friends who visited have watched it in the end, they set the, actually that there was two gods' in that new season. He was just, it was a good and a bad or a good and evil God. And they are sort of competing, you know? Oh, well the evil God has just being really evil in manipulating or a human or mankind. So I have to watch that after he set that up, it's like, okay, no, I have to watch it. Autumn (16m 16s): Yeah. And that's funny cause we're just looking for a news show and we've been watching, we just started on upload, which is quite interesting. But I am gonna add that one to our cue because I did see it night for God and it would come out. So I thank you. Yeah you can watch it right after what's the tiger King. What you're really trying to avoid. I actually have watched that episode four, but that's when Adam was a way and he does a lot. It was better than I thought I will actually fish it out. Yes. I will finish it at some point when I'm not torturing my husband. Autumn (16m 47s): Cause he refuses to have anything to do with it. So I've got to spend some quiet time. So for sarcasm, it's not one you have, so there is no overlap. No, no, I don't think that that so far, no is zero for zero. All right. This is unusual. I just kind of know, but this was going to end up with just like last week, last week I was way off in my prediction and not going to be way off again. It will be interesting. Okay. So you want to have my number nine, so lets go for it. Jesper (17m 20s): Okay. Vengeful fit. Ooh. That's an interesting lion. I think this is a good one. You know, somebody who has an Axe to grind, it's a, it's a believable person, but also interesting because one day a vengeful about something. We also want to understand why and we want to learn what happened to the person. So I think that's a good trait for a Villain that it's a very good training and I had something maybe similar, but it's not really close enough. So I'm going to say no overlap, but I knew it was just so weird. Autumn (17m 52s): We, again, I think it's because we struggled so much with this one. After we out of sync, freezing through something wrong, you know what it is? It's a Monday, but it's always a Monday so Hey, all right. Yeah so nine, my number nine is smart and I don't just being clever, but I mean like truly intelligent to the point of DVS and our thinking the Author because goodness knows I had a Villain one of my favorite villain's and I could see he was always out at maneuvering MI. I thought he was gonna win the entire trilogy. Autumn (18m 22s): So I really did not trust him except two trust in that he had figured out what he was doing and tell me eventually. So if this is, especially, if you think about it logically though, this is if you're a Villain your antagonist is a figure who is like risen Farr from the ranks, like maybe started as a peasant and Roosen up through the government or something like that. That is someone who is going to be able to outfox just about anyone to have come so far. So I really like a master chess player of whose doing the long game and can handle the short game. Autumn (18m 55s): That's just so impressed with me when I'm just like, Jesper (18m 58s): Wow. Fully agree. Fully agree. Yeah. I think we'll have some overlap there. Some of us, we got one I think. Yeah. I don't think we, I think I haven't worded it exactly like that, but I think it's closest to some of my other ones. So all right. But number eight is a persuasive. Ooh, because I mean, they're, there's a few of the Traits on my list. You had to come here and that will compliment this one. So I hope it's not too much of a cheat because if there's too much overlap with one, some of my other ones, but, but I just think that, you know, a Villain who is able to give a logical argument as to why it is necessarily to do what he or she's doing. Jesper (19m 45s): It just works wonders in showing the reader that this is a, you know, this is a real person that doesn't mean that the Rita has to agree with a logical argument, but it just like as long as you can follow the logic behind it, if you see what do I really liked that? Mmm. Because it, it shows the real person behind this scheming and what not. Right. So I like that. I like Autumn (20m 10s): That too. I'm trying to decide if it's similar to what I have are not, will have to decide to when we get there. But yeah. And I kind of did the same thing. Some of mine kind of built off of each other and I wasn't trying to treat cheat as well, but I thought there was kind of different, different veins or flavors. Yeah. That's a different one. So that's all fine. I don't have good solid words like persuasive for some of mine. Maybe I just wasn't trying hard enough, but my number line or phrases to my number eight is committed to what they are seeking. Autumn (20m 43s): I mean, they are so committed. They would give up their mother, their best friends or lovers achieve whatever their goal is. And they would do without any hesitation are coughing. There will be like, sacrifices must be made your It so forth. But I like that level of commitment. They don't sit there and go, Oh God, what's the right thing to do. They're just do it. Yeah score another one at another point from me. I think I have that. Great. Excellent. That's so encouraging. You have some overlap, you know, we were getting close to two. Jesper (21m 14s): I need to get to 11. I don't want to be off one book now after I've come miscalculate it last week, I want to have this one right here. We need to get to 11. All right. What I'm at now? You're at one to two to that's all I'm counting us as a long way. Two were only on seven. There is hope. Okay. So number seven is likeable qualities. Oh and this is short of a flipping at the whole thing on his head, I guess. Jesper (21m 46s): But I think that's a good one because the bad guy who isn't bad all the time, it's a much more complex character. And I really like it when the bad guy, all of a sudden does something that is quite likable. And then the next moment he is putting it back to being a bad guy. I really think that that works well because nobody's bat all the time for, just for the sake of being bad. So I liked that. Yes. And definitely overlap, but I have a word. It is slightly different, but Hey, we've got that one comm, so that's a good, I'm getting close to home. Autumn (22m 20s): So my number is seven is again a phrase, but a character who is not just evil because the Author needs an evil character to pit the heroes against. And then they just go in, they give 'em like every bad trait that could think of like, Oh, you should just eat baby. He is or kicks puppies or a starves dragons or, or whatever. But I don't like just a list of evil for the sheer sake of making someone hoard that you'll just hate. They should have an actual personality, an arc reasons for doing what they do and all of those things. Autumn (22m 52s): So I just, I still think even about the star Wars in the evil empire. And I mean, I think it took until maybe the clone Wars and stuff are making, you know, you do assume that dark Jetta in a dark forest is the reason is, is evil. But obviously I still feel like I missing something like why are there so evil people in the evil empire who seemed pretty decent? So I don't know which Cypress was to be rooting for it. It seemed to be heroes. Is that, aren't that decent? So what's the deal. Jesper (23m 23s): Yeah. Yeah. I think we have some overlap there as well, but let's see. Alright. You can't make that up just because you want to win and I can just start saying, Oh, which one was the second one you had before? And then yeah. Yeah. That's my next, you keep asking what's account. No. OK. I need two more. Yeah, I know. I'm gonna, you know, I might not give you the Real so you watch out, He has some typing. That's just me correcting my notes. You have to do something else. Jesper (23m 54s): All right. Number six unethical. And so I think we actually have some overlap here is just, just the words that we've chosen to it for it basically, but you know, Great villains. So they tend to do terrible deeds, but what makes it work is when the Villain firmly believes, like sincerely believes that the end goal just justifies the means so that the antagonist we'll, you know, well basically put aside normal moral conduct are moral considerations. Jesper (24m 32s): And just to feel like this doesn't apply to him or her, that that really becomes a pretty frightening character when they do stuff like that. Autumn (24m 40s): And what do you know what's really interesting about your number six is it's pretty much my number, so I, I didn't, I could get a bonus point. So if we end up a 10, then it comes to 11 because there is a bonus. It kind of goes both ways. But I guess, yeah. It's because I, I phrase it, this just fully believes what he or she is doing is right. And again, I don't mean is that the necessarily that they don't think that there are evil, but that what they are doing is the right thing to do. Autumn (25m 11s): And it's really the hero. That's upsetting the balance of how things must be in their eyes. But yeah, just that total commitment of what I'm doing is the right thing to do. So I think it was almost exactly a phrase you used in there. So I think we're pretty much on par for that way. Nice. Okay. I'm getting close. So you might still where you might get this one. I hope so. Otherwise it'll be embarrassing and I can't sleep tonight will probably end up like, well, we can't rent a, it ended up at 18, but will probably end up with 12 or 15 just to spite us both. Jesper (25m 48s): Ah, okay. At least I'm closer this week, last week I was so bad. Okay. Number five is past wounds. So what I mean by that is an antagonist who have suffered something in the past. You know, it's probably some emotional wound and then how that informs the way he, as she behave in the precedent. I think that also makes for a compelling Villain. It also gives the reader a plausible explanation as to why this person behaves the way he or she does. Jesper (26m 25s): And, but I have to say, you're also have to be careful and come up with something good here, you know, something a bit original because yeah, yeah. The, the, the kid who lived in the street and was an orphan, whatever, you know, that's just, I know I've grown pretty tired of those. So I don't think that's a good past wounds. So you have to, to find something that hasn't been seen a million times before, but, but if you can do that, I think it gives a good origin story for the Villain, but it also gives a good explanation as to why they might think a bit differently than the rest of us. Autumn (26m 59s): Now, see, I'm wondering if, is it possible to have an anti overlap that might be erase a point Jesper (27m 7s): Only if we, our 12th than it will count because we get to pick on it then it absolutely. But its only something I can answer in hindsight. I don't know if it's been Autumn (27m 17s): So it, it should be a double and tie overlap because my number five is not just eval because of a past trauma. So I prefer a failed character arc. Even if its a character arc we, or we haven't seen in the current book, something that happened before the story started, but sort of like where the character made a, they had a choice of like the good internal motivation, but they chose to go with like power or fame or control instead of doing the good thing protecting the week or something like that. Autumn (27m 49s): So, so for me like someone abusing the character as a child is not a good, an excuse to be evil as an adult. I just, I want to see a series of bad choices and bad decisions that went wrong that led them to do increasingly evil or misguided things. I like that set of series and not just, Oh, this event happened in the past and therefore I'm bad. I'm kind of, to me, it's almost like a victim mentality and I want to see someone who's just taken the wrong turn even in despite themselves. Autumn (28m 23s): I guess I like a more nuanced growth. So almost the opposite of yours if I'm reading it correctly. Jesper (28m 32s): Yeah, no, I actually agree with what you're saying. I don't know if it's completely opposite because it's more like, OK, so yeah. I want to go with the orphan kid who lived in the street. Right. But, but okay. So something terrible happened and so it may have becomes like your coping mechanisms for how you survived, you know, so okay. Something bad happened and I try to do with the nice thing and I tried to talk to the people or whatever. Right. Nothing happened. It didn't help me. Then I beat them up and that actually helps, you know, something like this and that. Jesper (29m 6s): And then it builds on, on top of each other because then, then I started incorporating into my mindset. Okay. If I, if I need to, if I need to get my way, I need to beat people up and then you do that as a child. And then, you know, when you get older and you get adult, then it sort of accumulates into nastier and nastier things that you or the Villain is doing. Yeah. Autumn (29m 27s): Yes. So maybe it is an overlap because we're basically both saying that maybe there was something that started the tendency towards the evils site, you need some sort of trigger trigger. And then after that though, that's not the only excuse, they also continue on a path that makes that develops. That makes it more nuanced and keeps reinforcing it into this evil character. So I guess it is the same and again, on the exact same number, which is kind of funny. Jesper (29m 58s): Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Well, we'll see where we end up and then we'll decide if it was to say more if it needs to add or subtract. OK. Depends on where we asked if we had a 10 or 12 or Indian, then we'll see. Alright, alright. Now before this is intelligent and I find this one important it's very much along those same lines. Just what you've said already, because I don't think there's anything scary about Villain who just keep doing stupid mistakes. Jesper (30m 31s): You know, the Chip's keeps falling into the hero's favor. That's really annoying a I don't like that. A Serita and its incredibly frustrating, but as a villain who is an extremely intelligent and our maneuvers, every body at every turn that is just, I love that is definitely. And yeah, so that's why it, it was my number and nine, but its to me a very, it's just an important feature to have in the villain. And that's why I could probably be the two, your number for Yeah. And what's funny is my number for was pretty much your number seven. Autumn (31m 3s): So mine is, has good Traits so that relates to be, that relates to what I said before about believing what they're doing is right. But they earnestly believed they have the answer too, an important question or their, the only one who was powerful in or can get this done. Right. You know, or like you said, maybe they love someone or their kind of children or misfits, but there's truly something deeply decent somewhere in them. I think that's so important because no one, no one is so 100% truly evil. Autumn (31m 35s): Maybe if your writing Christian literary, a religious lit and you have to have a devil that is truly, truly, truly all encompassing evil. But heck I mean, even if you watch supernatural, most of the devil characters on their are actually kind of likable. So it's just kinda the world right now. We've seen things gray. I think that is important, but it also balances it also balances outright because it, it makes for a more three dimensional character. If you're also have some good traits of a loosely and it, again, I think it's interesting to have a character or an evil character that's a more nuanced and that they feel more real because again, not everyone is that bad. Jesper (32m 18s): Okay. We enter Top I am not going to count how many we know are serious. We've had quite a few overlaps recently, so will have to see how this ends. Yeah. Yes. So let's see if we can agree in the Top. So my number three is formidable. That's an interesting one and yeah. And yeah, But the word formidable doesn't have to be understood as raw strength, you know, it can be, but it doesn't have to be, it can also relate to, well, some of the stuff we already talked about, so being like exceptionally cunning, but it could also be a person who has a great wealth in a lot of resources at their disposal. Jesper (33m 0s): Something that just makes them miserable. Well, that Villain but more of a position to the Hero as such so that it adds tension. And the more attention we get, the better to story we have formidable is a very good Autumn (33m 16s): And that's what kind of be another one where I might have to ask the question of, do we have an anti overlap, but it's not my number of three will come back to it. Tune obviously it, we only have three left. So my number three is again, this is where I'm starting to get into the negatives. My number three is me. They may not be an evil at all. My favorite villains are not necessarily evil. I mean, I truly love a good antagonist that has almost like a competitor to the protagonists. Autumn (33m 47s): So they could just be taking a different approach on what needs to be done. And it's more like a race to see who can get the upper hand and solve the issue first because to me and not every story has to be good versus evil two, make it full of tension. Not every hero has to be a hundred percent justifiably. Correct. And right. And good. So it sort of THE Hey, Hey, you know what, you're a hero. You're a Villain does not need to be a necessarily evil. They could just be a very nuanced character and a different position was a different take on things. Autumn (34m 19s): And it's just not working for your here or whatever. They believe maybe works for their set of people, but it doesn't work for the set of people that the Hero is from. And so that's where the clashes, the Rite in their own each of their own way, but buy being right there are hurting each other or somehow those are much more nuanced novels, but I do find them engaging. Oh a very interesting, I think that overlaps and so, okay. Interesting. All right. Autumn (34m 49s): So I'll put an overlap in, I'll leave my question to Mark with who are formidable to see if it is like one of my final to we'll have to answer that soon. Okay. Yes. Yes. Jesper (34m 59s): Okay. My number two is one that you have more or less already set up word by word that I think I just probably labeled the different the, I called it determination, but this is basically just the Villain who is unyielding. You know, somebody who is pursue a goal until the very end, no matter what it takes. Yeah. And that is pretty scary. That's what you already said it as well. Definitely. It's just someone who has committed. I think it is what I put it. Yes, definitely an overlap there. Jesper (35m 32s): So my number two, and this is my anti to your formidable is not all powerful. So I think I've seen it more that the opponent is the villains to formidable, but I like once who are not all powerful there, you know, either whether you call him magic power, wealth, there's they are also working in a system of constraints. Autumn (35m 54s): Plus they have to be able to be defeated. So they have some weakness, blind spot or arrogance, that's going to leave them exposed. So that's my number two is that they're not all powerful so that they're not a 100% formidable. So I dunno, is that an overlap? Where is it a, not an overlap. Yeah, Jesper (36m 11s): But this is formidable and necessarily mean that you're all powerful. Yeah. Autumn (36m 14s): No, not necessarily. That's why I'm thinking it's not quite the same thing. So we might not have an overlap there it's similar, but yes. Jesper (36m 21s): Different. Yeah, no, I think you're saying something slightly different, to be honest, I didn't mean mine to sound like you have to be unbeatable or something like that. That was not the point of it. But I think still you might be saying something slightly different, Autumn (36m 39s): So we are going to call those no overlaps, but they're pretty, they're almost along the same veins were, you know, there is this, they are incredibly challenging in, on one hand, but on the other, they have weaknesses as well. So there kind of like two sides at the same coin. Yeah, Jesper (36m 56s): Yeah, yeah. I agree difficult, but okay. Autumn (37m 2s): Is there a number one number one, right. This will be interesting. What is your number one answer? Jesper (37m 9s): Yeah. So this was the one that I found most important out of all of the Traits to give to a year. And I called this one Modi. And what he meant by that was, you know, an antagonist who clearly knows what he or she wants. That's just a lot more interesting. And again, it is overlapping some of the stuff you said earlier as, or one is never an evil for the sake of being evil. So a good antagonist who believes in what he or she is doing is very important. Jesper (37m 45s): And also the fact that at the antagonist will see him or herself as a hero while thinking that the protagonist is the real Villa. So it's one of those I have to be holder kind of things that you have already mentioned. Yeah. But I Autumn (38m 0s): Really, when they have, when the Villain truly believes what their doing is right in justifiable and it's the Hero, who's the evil one eye just, and you get sucked into their mindset almost. That is a fantastic character. That's the way she is. I kind of cheated because my number one is very similar to my Hero number one. And that it is again that you can take these lists in all of these ideas. But what I want is a, well-developed a fully developed character and with an antagonistic, because I actually really like to a point of view of character, because like I just said, I wanted to be sucked into their mind. Autumn (38m 37s): I want to see the world through their lens and see it makes me question what, you know, the Hero is seeing it, is it right? I like that kind of internal tension of getting to decide who is the right viewpoint. So I don't want them to have all the Traits we listed at which some of them kind of do contradict each other. So they shouldn't just be the list of these as well. Not quite 20 But 20 different traits that they should be something unique. And again, I mean, one of my favorite villains actually ends up joining the hero's in the second trilogy because it was such a cool character. Autumn (39m 12s): He's still not good, but he's still not evil. He's just very complex. And I guess if I could have chosen one word for a character for a Villain complex, maybe should have been my number one choice. Not that. Yeah. That's also a good one. All right. Well, do I, is it time to add a note? So what's the score that overlap my number one. Does that count as an overlap or not? I'll decide one day, if I have put a question Mark. Autumn (39m 44s): So one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11, 12, or 13, 13, 13 out of the 20th, which is the exact same was last week. We had 13 out of 20 last week. I had an expected that, no, I didn't either. I thought we'd be further apart. So, and as usual, we tended to agree too, with each other about the ones we chose, including complex. Autumn (40m 14s): The one that my 11th one I've thrown out there. It's two, you were consistent. I feel good. All right. This will be a lot better than the last time I guessed a little higher. I have wouldn't have guessed there team. And that is hilarious. We were totally consistent. Apparently is. So even though, even though we're creating these lists felled a lot harder than if it really did it last week, I sent you Bonnie Tyler's I need a Hero I couldn't no pop songs came in my head. Autumn (40m 47s): Maybe if anyone listening has a good Villain theme song, just go ahead and put in the notes. We obviously need some Villain. Yeah, yeah, yeah. We did some Villain inspired music. Yeah. What would be a good Villain song? You know, hit us up on in the Facebook group on Twitter or in the common sections here on the podcast or whatever, you know, I would like to know what what's a good Villain saw would be good, but I think that's what we were lacking, but I think of all, you know, take from this and this list have 20 different things were 13 of them would be really close to what, the way it's just, I just have to put that in their, just in case anybody who was very close to be my social Jesper won this week, I one last week. Autumn (41m 39s): I can remember that, but I think that nevertheless, you take what you can come from this 20 items on, use it as inspiration. I think all the antagonist is a critical part of any story. And he, or she is the one who forces the Hero to find smart and clever ways to solve his or her problems and can also at times service to the catalyst for the character arc. Jesper (42m 5s): So all of what we talked about here is actually really important. Absolutely. And Hey sometimes by seeing the antagonist lens, maybe the character of the hero will grow and see a bigger version of the world than they would have otherwise. Absolutely true. So take what you can from this and next Monday or Tuesday, and I will discuss whether or not marketing counts as working on your author business or not. Autumn (42m 36s): Yeah. Narrator (42m 37s): If you like what you just heard, there's a few things you can do to support The Am Writing Fantasy Podcast please tell a fellow author about the show and visit us at Apple podcast and leave a rating and review. You can also join Autumn and Jesper on patreon.com/am Writing Fantasy for as little as a dollar a month. You'll get awesome rewards and keep The Am Writing Fantasy Podcast going to stay safe out there and see you next Monday.

In Reply To
InReplyTo 2020-06_03 Pinboard y los QR de Gopro

In Reply To

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2020 16:42


Pinboard y los QR de Gopro Pinboard y los QR de Gopro. Si quieres suscribirte a este podcast este es el Feed. Puedes dejar un comentario en InReplyTo.net. Este es el grupo de InReplyTo y del #ProyectoEsparta en Telegram. Si quieres apoyar este podcast puedes usar el link de afiliados en Amazon. Si quieres invitarme a un café puedes usar el link de Paypal o de Ko-fi

Daily
Los favoritos de Internet

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 10:27


Capítulo 1797 dedicado a volver la vista atrás (sólo un poco) para recordar algunos servicios de favoritos de Internet que en su momento lo fueron TODO y que hoy, si bien siguen vigentes y son de utilidad para mucha gente, ya no gozan del favor del público mayoritario, al haber sido arrollados por el poder omnímodo de los buscadores. Delicious, Instapaper, Pocket, Pinboard... ¿los usaste? ¿Los usas?Espero tus comentarios en https://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontrarás los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvides suscribirte a Weekly, mi podcast privado semanal sobre Apple, productividad y podcasting, disponible en https://emilcar.fm/weekly.

Daily
Los favoritos de Internet

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 10:27


Capítulo 1797 dedicado a volver la vista atrás (sólo un poco) para recordar algunos servicios de favoritos de Internet que en su momento lo fueron TODO y que hoy, si bien siguen vigentes y son de utilidad para mucha gente, ya no gozan del favor del público mayoritario, al haber sido arrollados por el poder omnímodo de los buscadores. Delicious, Instapaper, Pocket, Pinboard... ¿los usaste? ¿Los usas?Espero tus comentarios en https://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontrarás los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvides suscribirte a Weekly, mi podcast privado semanal sobre Apple, productividad y podcasting, disponible en https://emilcar.fm/weekly.

Good Morning, RVA!
Good morning, RVA: 890, 22; Richmond 300 continues!, and streetcars

Good Morning, RVA!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020


Good morning, RVA! It’s 62 °F, and today’s weather looks pretty great. Expect highs in the mid 70s and, eventually, some sunshine. Rain moves into town tomorrow evening!Water coolerAs of this morning, the Virginia Department of Health reports 890 positive cases of the coronavirus in the Commonwealth, and 22 people in Virginia have died as a result of the virus. That’s almost double both numbers from Friday morning (460 and 13 respectively). VDH reports 78 cases in and around Richmond (Chesterfield: 13, Henrico: 40, and Richmond: 25). Over 10,000 people have received the COVID-19 test.Samuel Northrop at the Richmond Times-Dispatch as a brutal recap of the situation at the Canterbury Rehabilitation & Healthcare facility which has eight of Henrico’s 40 COVID-19 deaths. Health officials have introduced a number of measure to prevent the spread of the virus in and out of the facility, including showers and “bleach foot baths.”Richmond 300, the City’s master planning process, continues despite the coronavirus’s best attempts to shut down reasons to read nerdy PDFs and take online planning surveys. Speaking of, you can and should still take the survey on Accessory Dwelling Units. Allowing ADUs almost everywhere would instantly double the density of the City and give a bunch more folks (theoretically) affordable places to live. Second, you should keep an eye out for the Coliseum Area Framework Plan, which, much like the Greater Scott’s Addition Framework Plan, will set up some guidelines for future development Downtown. Council requested this plan as part of their vote against the Mayor’s North of Broad redevelopment project, and now, with any luck, we’ll end up with a solid document guiding what folks want to see out of that neighborhood. Third, if you’ve got ideas for how the Richmond 300 folks can do community engagement in The Time of Coronavirus, please send them an email at richmond300@richmondgov.comand let them know.With school and graduation canceled, students are faced with two options: angrily listening to loud rock n' roll in their rooms or building a virtual graduation ceremony in Minecraft. C. Suarez Rojas at the RTD, says a couple of folks from Midlothian and Cosby High Schools chose the latter, and we’re all better for it. During plague times, you take your stories of resilience where you can get them!The City is paving a ton of streets at the moment—honestly, it’s a great time to do it since a lot of folks are staying at home and off the roads. Over on /r/rva they’ve got a neat picture of the old streetcar tracks on Main Street that’ve been exposed as workers have stripped off old layers of pavement. If you’re interested, here’s a circa 1900 map of all of Richmond’s old streetcar lines—including that one on Main Street. Hey, also, shoutout to DPW employees and contractors who are out there making our City a better place while most of us—this guy at least—shelters in place.This article in the NYT about Liberty University’s reaction (or lack of reaction) to the coronavirus is wild and infuriating. Jerry Falwell Jr. refused to close the school after spring break, students returned, and now, as of Friday, “nearly a dozen Liberty students were sick with symptoms that suggested COVID-19.” Madness.Trump changed his mind on reopening the country and needlessly killing a bunch of people, and instead extended the federal social distancing guidelines until at least the end of April. Sounds like Dr. Fauci got through to him!I am not a medical professional, but I think the guidance on folks wearing DIY masks around town—not medical grade N95 masks—has started to shift. We definitely do not have a mask-wearing culture here in America, but that’s something I’d love to see change—and stay changed post-coronavirus. It’s important to note that wearing a crafty mask you made at home is more to keep your germs away from other people than keeping other people’s germs away from you. As they say in the Czech Republic: “My mask protects you; your mask protects me.”This morning’s longreadWe Need A Massive Surveillance ProgramHere’s a surprising piece from the dude behind Pinboard.in, who’s a long-time digital privacy advocate. He argues that by deploying our (already existing and terrible) digital surveillance tools, we could slow the spread of coronavirus and save lives.Of course, the worst people are in power right now, and the chances of them putting such a program through in any acceptable form are low. But it’s 2020. Weirder things have happened. The alternative is to keep this surveillance infrastructure in place to sell soap and political ads, but refuse to bring it to bear in a situation where it can save millions of lives. That would be a shameful, disgraceful legacy indeed. I continue to believe that living in a surveillance society is incompatible in the long term with liberty. But a prerequisite of liberty is physical safety. If temporarily conscripting surveillance capitalism as a public health measure offers us a way out of this crisis, then we should take it, and make full use of it. At the same time, we should reflect on why such a powerful surveillance tool was instantly at hand in this crisis, and what its continuing existence means for our long-term future as a free people.If you’d like your longread to show up here, go chip in a couple bucks on the ol’ Patreon.

You've Got This | Tips & Strategies for Meaningful Productivity and Alignment in Work and Life

On this podcast episode, I'm sharing a digital round table on transition to remote teaching, learning, students support, and work in higher education organized by @laurapasquini with podcast hosts @Profpatrice, @jeffjacksonTX, @bonni208, & myself. This conversation is a reflection about the state of things we are doing, thinking about, and planning for as college and university institutions shutdown across the US. We talk about a range of plans, support, and strategies to be implemented and how we are “doing the best we can” as COVID-19 impacts our campus communities.I'm grateful for show notes and transcript provided by @laurapasquiniMentioned in this episode:Katie’s Tweet about Care: https://twitter.com/Katie__Linder/status/1238868536979832834Advice to take care of yourself, family & work team: Take a walk or run Get outside Keep a full-nights’ sleep & rest Meditation: Apps to try? Calm, 10% Happier (free), & Headspace Eating healthy Get silly & social with those at home Clean your house Ask who needs help – childcare, tech support, etc. Read books Relax from your typical routines Keep to your fitness routine Enjoy the quiet/down time nowHow do you ensure your remote plan to go digital is accessible and does not exclude anyone? This might be remote teaching, learning, student support, or work for your staff/faculty. How are you preparing for these potential barriers and needs to accommodate your campus stakeholders? Closed captioning for Microsoft Streaming for Teams MS PowerPoint present with live-captioning or subtitles Zoom Setting: Auto-record transcript (option for paid version) timed transcript side-by-side OR use Zoom closed captions Need to adjust course deadlines & radical flexibility for learning expectations Trust Your Learners! Pivot to Online: A Student Guide via Grading Considerations: Is pass/no pass an option for your course? At your campus? Rely on the resources at your campus for support & suggestions: instructional designers, accessibility office, librarians & more! Do what you can & know you’re doing the best you can right now Phone tree system with team to check-in, share information, & answer questions What if Someone Gets Sick: plan & design courses one week ahead of time; set up a buddy teaching or “on call” system Email: Online teaching with the most basic tool What if the technology or remote ____ plan fails? Do the best you can and think about how you might need to shift to some alternative solution Be transparent and open with your communication – inform them the best you can!Resources to “Go Remote”: ECEC - Remote Teaching | College of Engineering | University of Nebraska–Lincoln Keep Teaching: Resources for High Ed Might Network from Kansas State Online Zoom (web conference) WebEx (web conference) Microsoft Teams (web conference and collaboration) Discord (voice chat) Slack (communication channel) Pinboard (social bookmarking) Diggo (social bookmarking) is (annotation) Descript (podcast + transcriptions) Otter (transcriptions for audio & video) Droplr (record screen and annotation) Remind (text messages) Qualtrics (survey) Poll Everywhere (survey & meetings) EMAIL – use tools you already know/have to communicate with campus stakeholders! OR message on your website, learning management system, etc. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) – “Plus-One” – what’s the one thing you can do? When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema ChödrönCurated docs: Higher Ed Support & Guidance During COVID-19: Teaching, Learning & Student Support [Share this URL:  http://bit.ly/higheredcovid19] Remote Learning: Digital Tools to Quickly Transition Teaching & Student Support OnlinePlease offer your feedback about the show or ideas for future episodes and topics by connecting with me on Twitter @Katie__Linder or by emailing me.If you listen to the podcast on iTunes, please take a moment to rate and/or review the show.

You've Got This | Tips & Strategies for Meaningful Productivity and Alignment in Work and Life

On this podcast episode, I'm sharing a digital round table on transition to remote teaching, learning, students support, and work in higher education organized by @laurapasquini with podcast hosts @Profpatrice, @jeffjacksonTX, @bonni208, & myself. This conversation is a reflection about the state of things we are doing, thinking about, and planning for as college and university institutions shutdown across the US. We talk about a range of plans, support, and strategies to be implemented and how we are “doing the best we can” as COVID-19 impacts our campus communities.I'm grateful for show notes and transcript provided by @laurapasquiniMentioned in this episode:Katie's Tweet about Care: https://twitter.com/Katie__Linder/status/1238868536979832834Advice to take care of yourself, family & work team: Take a walk or run Get outside Keep a full-nights' sleep & rest Meditation: Apps to try? Calm, 10% Happier (free), & Headspace Eating healthy Get silly & social with those at home Clean your house Ask who needs help – childcare, tech support, etc. Read books Relax from your typical routines Keep to your fitness routine Enjoy the quiet/down time nowHow do you ensure your remote plan to go digital is accessible and does not exclude anyone? This might be remote teaching, learning, student support, or work for your staff/faculty. How are you preparing for these potential barriers and needs to accommodate your campus stakeholders? Closed captioning for Microsoft Streaming for Teams MS PowerPoint present with live-captioning or subtitles Zoom Setting: Auto-record transcript (option for paid version) timed transcript side-by-side OR use Zoom closed captions Need to adjust course deadlines & radical flexibility for learning expectations Trust Your Learners! Pivot to Online: A Student Guide via Grading Considerations: Is pass/no pass an option for your course? At your campus? Rely on the resources at your campus for support & suggestions: instructional designers, accessibility office, librarians & more! Do what you can & know you're doing the best you can right now Phone tree system with team to check-in, share information, & answer questions What if Someone Gets Sick: plan & design courses one week ahead of time; set up a buddy teaching or “on call” system Email: Online teaching with the most basic tool What if the technology or remote ____ plan fails? Do the best you can and think about how you might need to shift to some alternative solution Be transparent and open with your communication – inform them the best you can!Resources to “Go Remote”: ECEC - Remote Teaching | College of Engineering | University of Nebraska–Lincoln Keep Teaching: Resources for High Ed Might Network from Kansas State Online Zoom (web conference) WebEx (web conference) Microsoft Teams (web conference and collaboration) Discord (voice chat) Slack (communication channel) Pinboard (social bookmarking) Diggo (social bookmarking) is (annotation) Descript (podcast + transcriptions) Otter (transcriptions for audio & video) Droplr (record screen and annotation) Remind (text messages) Qualtrics (survey) Poll Everywhere (survey & meetings) EMAIL – use tools you already know/have to communicate with campus stakeholders! OR message on your website, learning management system, etc. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) – “Plus-One” – what's the one thing you can do? When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema ChödrönCurated docs: Higher Ed Support & Guidance During COVID-19: Teaching, Learning & Student Support [Share this URL:  http://bit.ly/higheredcovid19] Remote Learning: Digital Tools to Quickly Transition Teaching & Student Support OnlinePlease offer your feedback about the show or ideas for future episodes and topics by connecting with me on Twitter @Katie__Linder or by emailing me.If you listen to the podcast on iTunes, please take a moment to rate and/or review the show.

You've Got This | Tips & Strategies for Meaningful Productivity and Alignment in Work and Life

On this podcast episode, I'm sharing a digital round table on transition to remote teaching, learning, students support, and work in higher education organized by @laurapasquini with podcast hosts @Profpatrice, @jeffjacksonTX, @bonni208, & myself. This conversation is a reflection about the state of things we are doing, thinking about, and planning for as college and university institutions shutdown across the US. We talk about a range of plans, support, and strategies to be implemented and how we are “doing the best we can” as COVID-19 impacts our campus communities.I'm grateful for show notes and transcript provided by @laurapasquiniMentioned in this episode:Katie’s Tweet about Care: https://twitter.com/Katie__Linder/status/1238868536979832834Advice to take care of yourself, family & work team: Take a walk or run Get outside Keep a full-nights’ sleep & rest Meditation: Apps to try? Calm, 10% Happier (free), & Headspace Eating healthy Get silly & social with those at home Clean your house Ask who needs help – childcare, tech support, etc. Read books Relax from your typical routines Keep to your fitness routine Enjoy the quiet/down time nowHow do you ensure your remote plan to go digital is accessible and does not exclude anyone? This might be remote teaching, learning, student support, or work for your staff/faculty. How are you preparing for these potential barriers and needs to accommodate your campus stakeholders? Closed captioning for Microsoft Streaming for Teams MS PowerPoint present with live-captioning or subtitles Zoom Setting: Auto-record transcript (option for paid version) timed transcript side-by-side OR use Zoom closed captions Need to adjust course deadlines & radical flexibility for learning expectations Trust Your Learners! Pivot to Online: A Student Guide via Grading Considerations: Is pass/no pass an option for your course? At your campus? Rely on the resources at your campus for support & suggestions: instructional designers, accessibility office, librarians & more! Do what you can & know you’re doing the best you can right now Phone tree system with team to check-in, share information, & answer questions What if Someone Gets Sick: plan & design courses one week ahead of time; set up a buddy teaching or “on call” system Email: Online teaching with the most basic tool What if the technology or remote ____ plan fails? Do the best you can and think about how you might need to shift to some alternative solution Be transparent and open with your communication – inform them the best you can!Resources to “Go Remote”: ECEC - Remote Teaching | College of Engineering | University of Nebraska–Lincoln Keep Teaching: Resources for High Ed Might Network from Kansas State Online Zoom (web conference) WebEx (web conference) Microsoft Teams (web conference and collaboration) Discord (voice chat) Slack (communication channel) Pinboard (social bookmarking) Diggo (social bookmarking) is (annotation) Descript (podcast + transcriptions) Otter (transcriptions for audio & video) Droplr (record screen and annotation) Remind (text messages) Qualtrics (survey) Poll Everywhere (survey & meetings) EMAIL – use tools you already know/have to communicate with campus stakeholders! OR message on your website, learning management system, etc. Universal Design for Learning (UDL) – “Plus-One” – what’s the one thing you can do? When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema ChödrönCurated docs: Higher Ed Support & Guidance During COVID-19: Teaching, Learning & Student Support [Share this URL:  http://bit.ly/higheredcovid19] Remote Learning: Digital Tools to Quickly Transition Teaching & Student Support OnlinePlease offer your feedback about the show or ideas for future episodes and topics by connecting with me on Twitter @Katie__Linder or by emailing me.If you listen to the podcast on iTunes, please take a moment to rate and/or review the show.

The #InVinoFab Podcast
Episode #63: #CovidCampus: Doing the Best We Can to "Go Remote"

The #InVinoFab Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2020 50:16


On this @InVinoFab episode we bring you a timely conversation in light of the evolving situation and events due to the Coronavirus. We have a digital roundtable all about going remote, that is, what it is like to transition to remote teaching, learning, students support, and work in higher education with @ Katie__Linder, @jeffjacksonTX, & @bonni208. Based on the issues we are all facing to prepare, we decided to come together for a purpose to reflect and share about the state of things and how college and university institutions might prepare as they shutdown face-to-face operations and encourage everyone to move online. We talk about a range of plans, support, and strategies to be implemented and how we are “doing the best we can” as COVID-19 impacts our campus communities.  Advice to take care of yourself, family & work team: Take a walk or go for a run Get outside for fresh air Keep a full-nights' sleep & rest Meditation: Apps to try?  Calm, 10% Happier (free), & Headspace Eating healthy Get silly & social with those at home Clean your house Ask who needs help – childcare, tech support, etc. Read books Relax from your typical routines  Keep to your fitness routine Enjoy the quiet/down time now Just breathe Show gratitude How do you ensure your remote plan to go digital is accessible and does not exclude anyone? This might be remote teaching, learning, student support, or work for your staff/faculty. How are you preparing for these potential barriers and needs to accommodate your campus stakeholders? Closed captioning for Microsoft Streaming for Teams MS PowerPoint present with live-captioning or subtitles Zoom Setting: Auto-record transcript (option for paid version) timed side-by-side OR use Zoom closed captions Need to adjust course deadlines & radical flexibility for learning expectations Trust Your Learners! Pivot to Online: A Student Guide via @slamteacher Grading Considerations: Is pass/no pass an option for your course? At your campus?  Rely on the resources at your campus for support & suggestions: instructional designers, accessibility office, librarians & more! Do what you can & know you're doing the best you can right now Phone tree system with team to check-in, share information, & answer questions What if Someone Gets Sick: plan & design courses 1 week ahead of time; set up a buddy or “on call” system Email: Online teaching with the most basic tool from @tanbob What if the technology or remote ____ plan fails? Do the best you can and think about how you might need to shift to some alternative solution Be transparent and open with your communication – inform them the best you can!  Resources to “Go Remote”: ECEC - Remote Teaching | College of Engineering | University of Nebraska–Lincoln Keep Teaching: Resources for High Ed Might Network from Kansas State Online Zoom (web conference) WebEx (web conference) Microsoft Teams (web conference and collaboration) Discord (voice chat) Slack (communication channel) Pinboard (social bookmarking) Diggo (social bookmarking) Hypothes.is (annotation) Descript (podcast + transcriptions) Otter (transcriptions for audio & video) Droplr (record screen and annotation) Remind (text messages) Qualtrics (survey) Poll Everywhere (survey & meetings) EMAIL – use tools you already know/have to communicate with campus stakeholders! OR message on your website, learning management system, etc.  Universal Design for Learning (UDL) – “Plus-One” from @thomasjtobin – what's the one thing you can do? When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times by Pema Chödrön Curated docs with resources:Higher Ed Support & Guidance During COVID-19: Teaching, Learning & Student Support [Share this URL:  http://bit.ly/higheredcovid19] Remote Learning: Digital Tools to Quickly Transition Teaching & Student Support Online [Share this URL:  http://bit.ly/remotelearningcovid19] How are you dealing with COVID-19? What's happening during these evolving times? Do you want to talk about it? Let us know & stay in touch -- send us a social tweet/private message or email at invinofabulum@gmail.com ----In Vino Fabulum! In Wine, Story!Find the #InVinoFab podcast on Stitcher, Google Play, Spotify, & Apple PodcastsTo subscribe and listen to the next episode of #InVinoFab on: https://invinofab.transistor.fm/subscribe https://twitter.com/invinofab with hashtag: #InVinoFabhttps://www.instagram.com/invinofab/ Connect with your co-hosts on Twitter:https://twitter.com/laurapasquini (she/her)https://twitter.com/profpatrice (she/her)

Art and Science Punks
Episode 68: Where Do I Write Stuff Down?

Art and Science Punks

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2019 52:55


Kate and Rob talk about how Kate wants to find a new note taking tool, what she's currently using and how she'd like it to be better. Rob has lots of questions. :) This week's art and science picks: one is a brief podcast and the other about charming shrinking plastic. Related Links and Resources Evernote (https://evernote.com/) OmniFocus for Mac - The Omni Group (https://www.omnigroup.com/omnifocus) Scrivener | Literature & Latte (https://www.literatureandlatte.com/scrivener/overview) TiddlyWiki — a non-linear personal web notebook (https://tiddlywiki.com/) Apps/Tomboy - GNOME Wiki! (https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Tomboy) DEVONthink, professional document and information management for the Mac and iOS (https://www.devontechnologies.com/apps/devonthink) Pinboard bookmark service (https://pinboard.in/recent) Firefox by Mozilla (https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/new/) Microsoft OneNote (https://www.onenote.com/download) Drafts. Where Text Starts. (https://getdrafts.com/) Kate's Art Pick: A Childhood Hit: Shrink Charms Made From Plastic Packaging (https://www.cleverly.me/shrink-charms/) Rob's Science Pick: The Compiler, huge advancement in computer science by Grace Hopper, covered in a great and brief podcast. BBC World Service - 50 Things That Made the Modern Economy, Compiler (https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04n04cm), Grace Hopper - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Hopper) Art and Science Punks on Twitter (@artsciencepunks) (http://twitter.com/artsciencepunks) Art and Science Punks (@artandsciencepunks) on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/artandsciencepunks/) Kate Stenzinger on Twitter (http://twitter.com/katestenzinger) Rob Stenzinger on Twitter (http://twitter.com/robstenzinger) Sign up for the Art and Science Punks Newsletter (https://artsciencepunks.fireside.fm/newsletter)

Talking Drupal
Talking Drupal #209 - Weekly Drop

Talking Drupal

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2019 48:49


In episode #209 we talk with Bob Kepford about The Week Drop, a weekly Drupal newsletter. www.talkingdrupal.com/209 Topics Drupal stories What is the Weekly Drop Origin story Weekly Drop content Technology behind the newsletter How to get listed Sponsorship Resources Lullabot DrupalCon Recap - Episode 235  Rand in Repose Process Serverless, Well Actually... Feedbin.com Pinboard.in  Guest Host Bob Kepford  @kepford  www.theweeklydrop.com Hosts Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLighteneddevelopment.com @nicxvan

Daily
Favoritos y leer después

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 13:29


En el capítulo de hoy os cuento cual es el estado actual de mi sistema para guardar favoritos y guardar artículos para leer después, y cómo lo estoy reorganizando, tras dejar stash.ai y volver a Pinboard.Espero vuestros comentarios en https://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontraréis los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvidéis suscribiros a https://focus.emilcar.es, donde encontraréis todo tipo de video-tutoriales y además Weekly, mi podcast semanal sobre Apple, productividad y podcasting.

Daily
Favoritos y leer después

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 13:29


En el capítulo de hoy os cuento cual es el estado actual de mi sistema para guardar favoritos y guardar artículos para leer después, y cómo lo estoy reorganizando, tras dejar stash.ai y volver a Pinboard.Espero vuestros comentarios en https://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontraréis los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvidéis suscribiros a https://focus.emilcar.es, donde encontraréis todo tipo de video-tutoriales y además Weekly, mi podcast semanal sobre Apple, productividad y podcasting.

Byte.Coffee
Episode 23: Digital minimalistS 我把微信装回来了

Byte.Coffee

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2018 118:52


Support our show 嘉宾折耳根和 MilkShake 羊的数字简化过程,话题包括但不限于:微信,RSS,PinBoard,VoodooPad,提醒,订阅制,方法论。 Outline 微信 卸载/重装报告 为了「方便」的妥协 退群的「激进」 静音和消数字 RSS 高度定制化的按需投递 抓取网页信息 阅读器 Inoreader Feedly Reeder RSSHub:「万物皆可 RSS」 流量、带宽和更加丰富的网页交互 长文 TLDR 抵抗一下下 兴趣聚合 The interest feed 即刻 信源 给普通人的工具:Nuzzle 和 Mac Automator 独家和独立 等消息来 折耳根的订阅源 MilkShake 羊的订阅源 「一定要吃撑过,才知道节食的好处」 Pinboard 原链和网页存档 Spillo 与网页版本的优势 缓存网页 Q&A: Pinboard, Instapaper & Pocket 在网页存档方面的比较 稍后读 在线服务的索引 MilkShake 羊管理书签的前因后果 重排的赏心悦目 内容的扎实有用 VooDooPad 如何打造私人维基百科 自动互引 整理个人知识和写博客 索引和内容并重 推荐相关话题的文章 互引你自己写的文章 开发者的气质 一套近乎「完整」的个人知识体系 通知 紧急和重要 打开哪些提醒 Unsubscribe 关闭 Siri 推荐 关闭所有通知 邮件通知的设置 不允许 「有空的时候再被数字世界唤醒」 订阅制 羊:如果一定要订阅,尽量只在需要的时候订阅最短(贵)的那个 本地应用最好一次付费 用到服务器可以接收订阅制 混合型:终身制买断 年付去深度体验 折耳根的订阅 PinBoard 逐年增长的订阅费 MilkShake 羊的订阅 方法论 如何建立建立自己的方法论 RSS、PinBoard、VooDooPad 的本质是「以独立思考的自我为中心」 新书 Digital Minimalism: On Living Better with Less Technology Links 少数派 理工大教务处等网站通知 RSS 地址使用方式 RSSHub Inoreader Feedly Reeder 即刻 Why I Unfollowed You on Instagram Nuzzel PinBoard Pinner Spillo Instapaper Pocket VoodooPad Sorted 2Do OmniFocus 2Do 中标签,列表和智能列表的一种用法 [翻译] 2Do 官方网站总结的技巧和窍门 Grammarly This is US: S3E8 Six Thanksgivings Digital Minimalism: On Living Better with Less Technology Host MilkShake羊 折耳根 Sound Editor Kalaokay Contact 网站:http://Byte.Coffee/ 邮箱:hi@Byte.Coffee 新浪微博/Twitter/Instagram:@ByteCoffee Slack 听众群 Special Guest: 折尔根播客.Support Byte.Coffee

EnterVR
You are already living inside a virtual reality ft. Blair Renaud

EnterVR

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2018 77:10


Welcome to the Enter VR podcast featuring Blair Renaud an OG vr developer, creator of Technolust. Join us for a journey down the rabbit hole! Stay in touch with Blair with the links below: https://twitter.com/Anticleric https://twitter.com/QuantumCapture https://twitter.com/OccupiedVR https://twitter.com/WEED_VR https://twitter.com/Pinboard/status/1051259081548214273 https://twitter.com/BasedOps/status/922316546050891776 Thanks again to Blair for being a true scholar and gentleman of virtual reality and thank you for listening!

The ProcrastiN8r Podcast
Lvl 13: Procrasti-logging (Top 10 Ways to Create Content for Your Niche Without Even Trying)

The ProcrastiN8r Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2018 38:56


One of the best ways to ignite your own cozy FIRE is to live life as a lazy digital nomad. And all you need to do is browse the Internet and type things on your keyboard. We're lighting a FIRE the easy way on the ProcrastiN8r Podcast 2 weeks ago (lvl 11. I said 10 but it's 11 and I'm too lazy to re-record the whole thing) we talked about how to FIND your niche. Today we're looking at.... Top 10 Ways on how to WRITE CONTENT for your niche...with as little effort as possible Without further ado, let's BURN...right into it You can't just blog to everybody! Blogging to everybody is blogging to nobody. Find. Your. Niche. NEWSJACKING (or as I call it “Procrasi-logging) involves finding a relevant trending topic and repurposing it for your own blog 10. Look at Your Competition AppSumo Look up a topic, then see the top articles related to that keyword View social media share stats for Facebook, Twitter, and Reddit as well as Total Engagement. Evergreen score (how long after it's published is it still being shared?) Take a look at magazine websites (headlines, images, language/slang used) Subscribe to top content creators in your niche. To find blogs, get an RSS Reader like Feedbin, Feedly, Inoreader, or Flipboard Listen to podcasts. Watch YouTube and Twitch. 9. Read the News Search Google News for a topic related to your niche and look at the top articles. Go to a site like AllTop or Reddit to find topic specific news (niche specific) Look at an article, video, or podcasts as if you're in the room talking to them in a conversation. What can you add to the conversation? What insight is missing? Can you add a joke or something funny? 8.See What People Are Talking About and How They Are Engaging RedditList Type keyword related to niche, find relevant subreddits You could look at the official Reddit as well to find But Redditlist includes Subscriber rank (compared to other subreddits) and subscriber growth. Reddit list does NOT include all subreddits. Search relevant hashtags on Twitter, groups or Pages on Facebook, Pins on Pinterest, stories and posts on Instagram. See which posts are getting the most engagement and what type of emotional reaction the commenters are having. Write content that purposely sparks that emotion in your language (anger, sadness, joy, laughter, fear, etc.) Look at the comments of what people are saying on reddit, blog posts, and news sites. Pay attention to what's happening in the conversation. Are there points you agree with and could build upon with your own spin or maybe something you disagree with. 7. Find Out What People Are ASKING About What do people in your niche want to know? What are some common problems or concerns? Attend Livestreams and Webinars. Take notes not only on the content itself but What are people asking? What kind of comments are they saying? Look at FAQs of sites within your niche and build content answering them in your own words. (eg. There might be “How do I get rid of background noise like fans in my audio?” on a software like Audacity or Adobe Audition or “How do I promote my brand on Facebook” on a site related to online marketing or “How do I receive dividends?” on a stock exchange site/app) 6. Always C&P Participate in forums and Reddit discussions yourself. Comment on FB posts, YouTube videos, Instagram photos. Answer questions on Quora, ehow, or Yahoo Answers. Amazon and other shopping sites are great if your niche is more product focused; you can look at the reviews and asked questions. Copy and Paste your own comments into a note taking app like Evernote, Microsoft OneNote, Dropbox Paper, or Google Keep. Tag it with relevant tags and give it a title so you'll remember the gist of what you're saying at a glance. Include a link to the comments. Color code it to make it easy to find in the future Remember: it's important to ALWAYS copy & paste your comment BEFORE you even post it, maybe even create a note first and copy it from there. Because if someone deletes your comment or their post or changes the privacy settings or blocks you (or shuts down the website altogether if it's a forum/blog), it's gone FOREVER. You can't necessarily rely on the Web Archive.org. Keep your own records of the thing you say online related to your niche. You'll thank me later. 5. Save It For Later Take advantage of Pinterest's “secret boards” to collect ideas for blogs or craft projects in the future Similarly, you can save links, images, and videos on FB's Save for Later feature. You can change your privacy settings for a specific post you create so “Only You” can see it then just save it for later. You can Save Reddit posts and comments. Save articles you find on the web & you plan to re-write or read/comment on with the click of a button using a bookmarking app like Evernote Webclipper, Pocket, Pinboard, or Instapaper. You can also just use the built-in bookmarking feature in your browser, since nowadays you can signin to Chrome or FireFox or Edge or whatever and sync your bookmarks and history across multiple devices. 4. Chat it up! In your daily life, you talk to your friends and family about the things you like. Take note of the points made in the conversation or use the recording app on your phone. The note apps (google Keep, etc) also allows to save voice notes. Or heck, record the conversation (with permission, don't be a creep) on your phone. Start a forum topic and see where the discussion leads. Repurpose it for a blog post. When you reach enough notoriety and level of trust and authority, people will come to you with questions on social media. Actually reach out and talk to people. Hit them up in their DMs. Note the type of questions they're asking you. And if you're not established as a source of authority in your niche yet: Find people that are. Interview guests. Record it then transcribe it, using the autotranscibe tool Scribie. All you do is ask questions and they give answers. You don't even have to know anything. 3. Share It Write a quick blurb about a video or photo or infographic and share it as a post You can even re-word top rated comments already said on other sites. This is one of the laziest ways to create content. Find something already being liked and shared then make a comment similar to one that's also being liked/upvoted/gilded in your blog post. 2. Rinse & Repeat it Find a way to recycle old content, dig it back up and make it look a bit different by re-wording it. This works well if your in a niche that requires advice. You'll find yourself repeating the same advice over and over again. But that's okay, our brains learn from repeated information and stimuli. Use an online thesaurus to get suggestions for alternative words to use in your writing. You can also take a specific quote from an interview and do a deep dive/analysis of it. All that is is rewording what the person said in several different ways. The only thing you are doing is taking previously written or spoken words and rearranging them or replacing them with similar words. You simply express the content using different vocabulary. See what I did there? 1. Go Behind the Scenes Show pictures of your office, recording setup, gear, etc. Show things from your personally life (the game you're playing, the movie you're watching, the pizza you're eating, etc.) You should only do this on occasion. The site is about your niche and not your personal diary. 0. Talk about what you already talked about but do it a bit different Self explanatory. You get the point now. What to Avoid Writing: Verbatim (word for word) Fake News (unless that's your niche) Sounding boring How to Find Your Niche the Easy Way I said this episode was Lvl 10, but it's actually Lvl 11 and I'm too lazy to re-record and fix it. Meh whatever. You'll figure it out. Get Free Images for Your Blog: FreePik NeedPix

EdTech Shorts
Tozzl – A Digital Pinboard

EdTech Shorts

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2018 2:25


EdTech Shorts
tozzl.com – A Digital Pinboard

EdTech Shorts

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2018 2:25


With Today’s Meet announcing that they are shutting down as of June 16, 2018, a lot of teachers and educational conference presenters might be looking for alternatives to replace this great back-channel tool. Tozzl is one that should be considered.

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen
Episode 35: Nytårskig bag podcast-kulissen

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2017 12:59


Og således sluttede det første år med work.flow. Jeg har indrømmet ikke været igang et helt kalenderår, men tænker alligevel på 2017 som den første sæson. Jeg har været enormt taknemmelig for at så mange har sagt ja til at være med, og selvfølgelig for at mange flere lytter med end jeg turde håbe på - og så er jeg stadig bare virkeligt glad for at lave work.flow, og hygger mig gevaldigt. I denne årets sidste episode af work.flow har jeg valgt at hive mig selv i studiet for at fortælle lidt om hvordan jeg laver podcasten - og for at se en lille smule frem mod 2018. Det bliver en kort omgang, men forhåbentlig kan andre podcastere - eller folk som står på vippen til selv at gå igang - finde inspiration og lidt tips til apps og grej og så videre. Links Mindnode - mindmap-app Bear - noteapp plus det løse Instapaper til læs-senere-artikler og research Pinboard til bogmærker Spark email-app til iOS og macOS WeekCal til iOS coSounds - studie på Vesterbrogade Sennheiser e935 - vokalmikrofon Electro Voice 635N/D-B - min nye reportagemikrofon Shure SM7B - min Darth Vader studiemikrofon Zoom H5 - digital optager med to XLR-indgange, der også kan bruges som mini-mixer på computer IRig Pre HD - så jeg kan sætte mikrofon til min iPad eller iPhone Hindenburg - fantastisk redigeringssoftware Byword - minimalistisk tekstbehandling Fireside - podcasthosting Tweetbot - Twitter-app Hootsuite - sociale medie-værktøj for powerbrugere iTunes Connect stats (hvis du allerede har en podcast) 10er crowdfunding Overcast podcast-app

Fatal Error
48. Productivity

Fatal Error

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2017 33:36


This week, Chris and Soroush chat about productivity tools and techniques. Getting Things Done (GTD) Omnifocus Things 3 Bear Notes App: The Ultimate Guide AnyList - Grocery list/recipe organizer Using AnyList with Amazon Alexa IFTTT Instapaper Pinboard Chris's Pinboard Next Episode

Votre coach web
26. Mon guide de la curation de contenu

Votre coach web

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2017 35:43


Souvent dans ce podcast je vous parle de comment créer du contenu de A à Z. Aujourd’hui je vais vous parler de créer du contenu sans créer du contenu vous même, ou plutôt comment créer un contenu à partir du contenu des autres. Je parle bien entendu de la curation. Je vous en donne les grands principes, les clés pour réussir mais aussi mon workflow de sélection et publication des liens.Quelques outils cités :- Refind (lien d'invitation) : https://refind.com/BertrandSoulier?invite=91cfd56f8e- Mon lecteur de flux RSS : http://reederapp.com- Pinboard : https://pinboard.in- Pocket : https://getpocket.com- Revue : https://www.getrevue.co- Buffer : https://buffer.com- CoSchedule : http://coschedule.com/r/54885---Votre Coach Web est un podcast sur la création de contenu pour aider ceux qui veulent s’exprimer sur internet et les réseaux sociaux, développer leur visibilité et en vivre.S’abonner au podcast :- sur iTunes : https://itunes.apple.com/fr/podcast/votre-coach-web/id1249494221?mt=2 - sur Google Play Music : https://play.google.com/music/m/I7f4meeenujgugju3b3nxvhdsdi?t=Bertrand_Soulier_-_Votre_coach_web- Ecouter le podcast sur YouTube : http://bertrand.video/podcastPour prolonger :- Mon groupe d’entraide et de conseil sur Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/groups/242687639569739/- Ma lettre sur la création de contenu : https://www.getrevue.co/profile/soulierbertrandN’hésitez pas à me poser vos questions sur Facebook, Discord, Instagram ou Twitter avec le hashtag #askbertrandSur les réseaux sociaux :- Twitter : http://twitter.com/bertrandsoulier- Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/soulierbertrand- Instagram : http://www.instagram.com/bertrandsoulier- YouTube : http://bertrand.videoMes blogs :- Mon blog tech et pro : http://www.bertrand-soulier.com- Cyberbougnat : http://www.cyberbougnat.net- Mon blog de mec : https://www.monblogdemec.fr

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen
Episode 7: Privatlivsbeskyttelse i det skumle studie

work.flow - med Anders Høeg Nissen

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2017 59:18


Denne gang er jeg på besøg hos Kim Elmose, der er digital udviklingsredaktør i Ingeniørforeningen, IDA. Interviewet foregår i IDAs lille tv-studie, hvor lyset pludselig gik ud - men vi fortsatte ufortrødent! Udover den tekniske drift og udvikling af ida.dk rådgiver Kim om digital kommunikation og underviser i brug af sociale medier som Twitter og Facebook. Men en af Kims største interesser er spørgsmålet om databeskyttelse og privatliv, især med fokus på hvad vi gør som ganske almindelige brugere. Så udover at fortælle om sit daglige arbejde kommer Kim også med gode råd til apps og tjenester som gør det forholdsvis nemt at minimere hvor meget firmaer og andre nysgerrige kan kigge med… Links Kim ordner support for IDAs brugere med Zendesk og laver intern projektstyring med Trello. Microsofts OneNote er blevet omdrejningspunktet for Kims opgave-styring, noter på opgaver og så videre.
 Skal Kim rådgive nogen i huset med at bygge en ny side eller undersite – afdækker han deres behov ud fra Business Model Canvas. Privatlivsting som vi taler om i denne episode 
Privatliv.nu er Kims con amore projekt, hvor han skriver om især apps og tjenester til privatlivsbeskyttelse. Han skriver også på bloggen Online Minds sammen med en ven, Lars K. Jensen, der er digital projektleder på Ekstrabladet.dk. Signal er en velrenommeret krypteret beskedtjeneste.
Wire kan været et fint alternativ - smooth og lækker med privatliv for øje. Til privat mail er Kim glad for ProtonMail, fordi den har to faktor login, og mulighed for at sende passwordsbeskyttede mails til ikke-ProtonMail-brugere. Søgning Startpage.com der har European Privacy Seal, eller i stigende grad også den dansk-baserede søgemaskine, FindX, der lige er kommet i offentligt beta. Den primære browser er Firefox – udstyret med diverse privacy-apps – udover de sikkerheds-features, som browseren er født med. Men Kim bruger også jævnligt Tor-browseren – af solidaritetshensyn overfor de, der virkeligt har brug for at bruge Tor, hvis de skjuler sig for regimers overvågning.

Browserboblere: Brave fra en af stifterne af Mozilla, og Cliqz: ny tysk baseret privacy-browser til de fleste platforme. Disconnect Me er den foretrukne cookie- og adblocker til Firefox. Ellers er der også Privacy Badger: cookie- og adblocker fra Electronic Frontier Foundation, EFF.org.
 Øvrige privatlivs-tips fra Kim Passwordmanageren LastPass tilbyder at gemme password, generere nye og lange passwords. Har en meget fin mobilapp og fungerer fint med tilføjelser i browser.
 SpiderOak One backupper indhold i krypteret form fra din computer, og kan også dele dokumenter ligesom fx Dropbox. Det ER vigtigt med VPN – også på mobilerne – for at beskytte sin trafik. Og der er mange muligheder, fx Orbot på Android eller OperaVPN – ny app fra Norge. De tre tips - og en lille bonus: Prøv at sigte mod Zero Mail indboks. Hver gang du får en mail – beslut hvad der skal ske med den! Screencast-værktøj Snagit kan fx tage screendumps eller lave små videoer til at sende til udviklere, brugere der har spørgsmål til vores cms'er eller andet. Man kan tegne og skrive på fotos og videoer med yderligere instruktioner. 
 Instapaper kan bruges til at gemme artikler fra nettet til senere (offline-)læsning i ro og mag. Til bogmærker bruger Kim Pinboard. 


Art and Science Punks
Episode 24: Playing with Purpose

Art and Science Punks

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2017 48:40


Is play as an activity inherently purposeful? In this episode of Art and Science Punks, Kate and Rob discuss play: playing in different contexts to relax, to be challenged, and to be inspired to make stuff. Kate and Rob also explore an art pick and science pick for some fun and useful resources to explore drawing with AI and Earth Day. Related Links and Resources "Chris Crawford describing the unique power of "games" or "play" or "interactivity"" Dragon Speech Part 2 of 5 (https://youtu.be/Ymu4A9861Ck?t=6m59s) Jerzy Drozd of Comics Are Great! (http://comicsaregreat.com/) and Lean Into Art (http://www.leanintoart.com/) Wild Rumpus | Books for Young Readers (http://www.wildrumpusbooks.com/) Pinboard (https://pinboard.in/) Bookmarklet - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookmarklet) Kate's Science Pick: How to be less of a jerk to the environment | Minnesota Public Radio News (https://www.mprnews.org/story/2017/04/21/earth-day-tips) Rob's Art Pick: AutoDraw (https://www.autodraw.com/) Comics & Writing — Tory Woollcott (http://www.torywoollcott.com/comics/#/mirrormind/) Google's A.I. Experiments (https://aiexperiments.withgoogle.com/) Noun Project - Icons for Everything (https://thenounproject.com/) Art and Science Punks on Twitter (@artsciencepunks) (http://twitter.com/artsciencepunks) Art and Science Punks (@artandsciencepunks) on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/artandsciencepunks/) Kate Stenzinger on Twitter (http://twitter.com/katestenzinger) Rob Stenzinger on Twitter (http://twitter.com/robstenzinger)

art ai playing experiments comics earth day young readers pinboard jerzy drozd lean into art rob stenzinger comics are great science punks kate stenzinger
Daily
#1109 Mozilla compra Pocket

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 9:47


Pinboard es la única aplicación para favoritos y leer después que queda libre e independiente en el mercado, tras la compra de Instapaper por parte de Betaworks en 2013 y, hace pocos días, la compra de Pocket por parte de Mozilla.Espero vuestros comentarios en http://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontraréis los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvidéis pasar por http://focus.emilcar.es, donde por 3,99€/mes tenéis todo tipo de video-tutoriales, siendo además un interesante complemento para el tema de algunos días en Emilcar Daily y por supuesto, una manera de apoyar a este podcast.

Daily
#1109 Mozilla compra Pocket

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 9:47


Pinboard es la única aplicación para favoritos y leer después que queda libre e independiente en el mercado, tras la compra de Instapaper por parte de Betaworks en 2013 y, hace pocos días, la compra de Pocket por parte de Mozilla.Espero vuestros comentarios en http://emilcar.fm/daily donde también encontraréis los enlaces de este episodio y otros medios para contactar conmigo. Y no olvidéis pasar por http://focus.emilcar.es, donde por 3,99€/mes tenéis todo tipo de video-tutoriales, siendo además un interesante complemento para el tema de algunos días en Emilcar Daily y por supuesto, una manera de apoyar a este podcast.

Der Übercast
#UC074: Ultralight und Open Source

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2017 71:41


Patrick gibt Denkanreize um leichter unterwegs zu sein und sich von Sachen zu trennen. Andreas sucht Open Source Alternativen für gute Apps. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Ferrite für Podcaster Threaded messaging comes to Slack So gewinnt man in Excel Keine Ahnung, ob es was taugt, aber es hat “uber” im Namen wie wir: UberPlugins ReviewMeta aka Produktreview Analyse für Amazon Threatless hat Bob’s Burgers Sachen BetterTouchTool für Screenshots und Annotationen Drone ist Gesetz YouTube: How To STOP Stinky Balls & Sweaty Butt Ultralight Outdoor Gear - Einführung “Ultralight” Patrick dokumentiert in der Sendung eher vage seinen Ein- bzw. Umstieg, als euch eine allumfassende Wissensdatenbank zu geben. Zu verschieden sind die Geschmäcker und Vorlieben, als das mehr als ein Informationransporn gegeben werden soll. Definition “Ultralight” Wandern mit so wenig wie möglich Packgewicht durch das Reduzieren auf das Nötigste an leichtgewichtiger Ausrüstung, gemessen an den Sicherheitsbedürfnissen für den jeweiligen Ausflug. Es geht darum wie leicht dein Zeug ist und was du machst um es leichteres Packgewicht zu bekommen. Motivation komfortabler man kann mehr KM laufen, dass ggf. auch schneller man hat mehr Platz für nicht zwingend nötige Erweiterungen (Drone, Fotoausrüstung, Hanteln, Fuchsschwanz) Gewicht Basisgewicht (BPW) = ohne Essen, Trinken, Brennstoff Gewichtsklasse Basisgewicht Traditional > 9.07kg Lightweight < 9.07kg Ultralight < 4.54kg Sub*Ultralight < 2.27kg Das schwerste Equipment ist Zelt, Schlafsack, Matratze und Rucksack. Hier lohnt es am ehsten nach leichteren Alternativen zu fahnden. Anbei ein paar Anregungen ohne Gewähr (und ohne gute Mobilansicht): Rucksäcke   Osprey Exos 48 Osprey Exos 38 Osprey Exos 58 HMG 2400 WINDRIDER HMG 3400 WINDRIDER ZPacks™ Arc Blast Seek Outside Divide 4500 Ultralight Backpack GossamerGear Gorilla 40 GossamerGear Mariposa 60 ULA CIRCUIT Saleva Baegdoo 28 Minaal Carry-on 2.0 Bag (35 L) max. KG       18 kg 18 kg 16 kg 45 kg 13.6   15.88 kg 838 g 1415 g Preis € 131 112 € € 162   € 300 € 400 314 € € 162 € 174 € 210 € 60 $ 339 Gewicht Tasche               742 g       1415 g Gewicht Hüftgurt               198 g       150 g Gewicht Gesamt 1050 g 970 g 1200 g 799 g 907 g 696 g 1247 g 965 g   1162 g 850 g 1565 g LxWxH 71 x 35 x 30 cm 71 x 33 x 28 76 x 35 x 35 cm     19 cm x 31.8 cm x 76 cm         49x25x19 bis 55 x 36 x 7 cm 55cm x 35cm x 20cm (fully packed) Haupttasche   38 l 61 l 40 l + 9.8 l 55 l + 9.8 l 55 l + l 73 l + 20 l 28.84 l 60 l 68 l 28 l 35 l Quilts und Decken   PHD - Single Ultra Quilt Cumulus - Comforter M4oo Cumulus - Comforter L430 As Tucas - Sestrals Quilt APEX 167 As Tucas - Sestrals Quilt APEX 167 As Tucas - Sestrals Blanket APEX 167 As Tucas - Sestrals Blanket APEX 200 Enlightened Equipment Revelation Enlightened Equipment Revelation Katabatic Gear - Flex 22°F Hammock Gear - Burrow 20 Summer: EE - Prodigy Style quilt comforter comforter quilt/synthetic quilt/synthetic quilt/synthetic quilt/synthetic quilt quilt quilt quilt quilt/synthetic Gewicht 405g / 680 g 610 g / 625 g 675 g 725 g 830 g 587 g 665 g 780 649 g - 762 g 442 g     TEMP   -6 ˚C - 4° C 0° C 0° C 0 C -5 C - 7° C - 12° C - 5.5° C - 7° C 10° C Preis 282-317 € 209 € 229-279 € 240 € 235 € 240 € 240 € 322 € 349 € 388 € 254 € - 320 € 147.51 € Length 210cm x 146cm 210 cm x 120 cm 227 cm x 140 cm 210 x 130 210 x 140 225 x 140 225 x 140 6’6” 6’6” 6’6”     Zelte   Big Agnes Copper Spur 2 mglo MSR Hubba Hubba NX MEC Spark UL 2+ REI NPS Half Dome 2 Plus Gewicht 1474 g 1720 g 19.5x49 cm     1582 g   2   Packmass 14x45 cm 15x46 cm X   Kapazität 2 2 138 cm x 223 cm   Ultralight X X 5000 mm   Boden 106.68 - 132 cm x 223 cm 127 cm x 213 cm   193 € Wassersäule Boden 1200 mm 3000 mm     Preis 470 € 378 €     Matratzen   Klymit Insulated Static V Lite Therm-A-Rest NEOAIR Large Therm-a-Rest NeoAir Xtherm MAX Large Therm-a-Rest NeoAir Xtherm Nemo TENSOR™ INSULATED 25L MUMMY Therm-A-Rest Z-Lite Gewicht 556 g 460 g 640 g 570 g 510 g 410 g Weite 58.4 63 63 63 64 51 Länge 183 196 196 196 193 183 Dicke 6.5 6.3 6.3 6.3 8 2 Packmaß 12.7 x 20.3 cm 28 x 11 28 x 11 23 x 10 24 x 9.5   R-Wert 4.4 3.2 3.2 5.7 3.7 2.2 Preis 99 EUR 142.50 EUR 190 € 169 EUR 165 EUR 34 EUR Deals, Packlisten und die Szene Tipp bei nassen Schuhen bzw. nassem Wetter (Stichwort Schottland und Schweden): Eincremen mit Hirschtalgcreme. Alternativ sind wasserdichte Socken von Sealskinz oder auch Neoprensocken recht gute Bewahrer des Fußwohls.` Deals OutdoorDeals.de Ladenzeile Szene outdoorseiten.net Ultraleicht Trekking Forum A reddit for ultralight hikers. Packlisten Apps MileStepper GearGrams (iOS 2€) LighterPack Gear Loft iOS Apps: Backpack Optimizer PackLight PackList Payware to Open Source: Instapaper und 1Password Alternativen KeePass wallabag Pinboard.in Padlock - A Minimalist Password Manager Fetching Unsere Picks Andreas: EKEN H9R Wifi Action Kamera 4k Unterwassergehäuse Patrick: KeyBar ab $50; Alternative bei Amazon für 33 € Keypack oder die DIY Alternative auf YouTube Die DIY-Variante mit der Patrick gut ein paar Monate ausgehalten hat. Die Wachablöse aka die Key-Bar. Doch sobald es sich anbietet wird eine Ablöse mit leichteren Materialien bestellt. PS: Wer ein 20:1 Mulit-Tool - aka den MSTR KEY - kaufen will, der meldet sich bei Patrick. In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

Build Phase
113: Make Austin 1888 Again

Build Phase

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2016 36:51


This week, Gordon and Mark sit down to talk about a wide array of topics such as Ride Sharing services in Austin, Venmo's new architecture for managing URL and user activity routing alongside authentication, the pain caused by forced Swift updates, and spooky spiders! It's like a Halloween special just in time for Thanksgiving! MetroGnome's iPhone ringtone remix Eero Google WiFi Google Fiber announcement Pinboard's tweet about Google Fiber announcement Fasten Ride Austin PR fixing swift segfaults on Argo Build Phase episode 112: Embarrassment Factor (With guest Chris Eidhof) Swift Talk episode about Loading ViewControllers

Longform
Episode 189: Maciej Ceglowski

Longform

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2016 59:54


Maciej Ceglowski is the founder of Pinboard. He writes at Idle Words. “My natural contrarianism makes me want to see if I can do something long-term in an industry where everything either changes until it's unrecognizable or gets sold or collapses. I like the idea of things on the web being persistent. And more basically, I reject this idea that everything has to be on a really short time scale just because it involves technology. We’ve had these computers around for a while now. It’s time we start treating them like everything else in our lives, where it kind of lives on the same time scale that we do and doesn’t completely fall off the end of the world every three or four years.” Thanks to MailChimp, Audible, and Casper, and MIT Press for sponsoring this week's episode. Show Notes: @baconmeteor idlewords.com Ceglowski on Longform [2:00] Pinboard [2:00] The Bedbug Registry [17:00] "The Internet With a Human Face" (YouTube) [20:00] "Thoreau 2.0" (Idle Words • Sep 2013) [27:00] The Longform Guide to Sleep (Presented by Casper) [32:00] "The Alameda-Weehawken Burrito Tunnel" (Idle Words • Apr 2007) [40:00] Mimi Smartypants [41:00] "Send Idle Words to Antarctica" (Kickstarter • Jul 2015) [46:00] "On Smarm" (Tom Scocca • Gawker • Dec 2013) [47:00] "The Advertising Bubble" (Idle Words • Nov 2015)

Der Übercast
#UC053: Mobiles Scannen wie ein Meister

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2016 75:40


Im Inhalt befindet sich heute der große iOS Scannerappvergleich von Sven. Außerdem beratschlagen wir darüber, was ein Meister seines Fachs zu tun hat. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Google Nik Collection Schon in Flug #UC018 “Kai’s Power Goo” hat Patrick auf die Bearbeitungstools für digitale Bilder aus dem Hause Nik geschwört. Die 7 Helferlein der von Google in 2012 aufgekauften deutschen Firma stehen euch nun für Lau zur Verfügung. Ein Pflicht-Download. Apple bestätigt seine erste TV-Serie: Eine Reality-Show über App-Entwickler Neben Amazon steigt jetzt auch Apple in die Produktion ein. Es ist offiziell: Apple arbeitet an eigenen Videoproduktionen und plant somit den Angriff gegen andere Content-Produzenten wie Netflix. Gegenüber der New York Times bestätigt Senior Vice President Eddy Cue das erste Projekt. Dabei handelt es sich um eine Reality-Show über die App-Economy und App-Entwickler. IFTTT Es gibt mal wieder Neuigkeiten von IFTTT: Day One + IFTTT My Heroic and Lazy Stand Against IFTTT (Pinboard Blog) Während wir uns in der Sendung noch zu einer Rüge hinreißen lassen, gibt es direkt nachdem die Aufnahme im Kasten ist bereits eine Entschuldigungsemail von IFTTT CEO. Mehr Links: YouTube: Rechte Social Media Killing Pinboard and IFTTT Integration Trello – Ultimate Productivity Boosters Tipps & Tricks Wer wie Sven (und der Rest der Crew) viel mit Trello arbeitet wird überrascht sein wieviele kleine, hilfreiche Tricks Von dem “Ultimate Board Of Trello Tips & Tricks” sie oder er noch nicht kennt und nutzt. Der Rest wird sowieso überrascht sein. Accessible images for everyone | Twitter Blogs Nachdem geklärt ist, dass Twitter nun “accessible images for everyone” im Angebot hat, verweist Andreas auf Instagrams ASCII Funktion. Erweitert man eine direkte Bild URL durch ein .html oder .txt passieren magische Dinge. Probiert es doch selbst… Beispiel: https://www.instagram.com/p/BDRVeRzAnj_/ https://instagram.ftxl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/t51.2885-15/s640x640/sh0.08/e35/925109_466800730194619_1453959680_n.jpg Wird zu… https://instagram.ftxl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/t51.2885-15/s640x640/sh0.08/e35/925109_466800730194619_1453959680_n.jpg.txt https://instagram.ftxl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/t51.2885-15/s640x640/sh0.08/e35/925109_466800730194619_1453959680_n.jpg.html Voice Dream Reader 4 Die Text-to-Speech App wurde in einer neuen Version veröffentlicht und kann nun neben vielen neuen Formaten auch Rich Text. Die Anzeige gelesener und nicht gelesener Bücher und Texte lassen sich nun per Ansichts-Filter definieren. Synchronisation über iCloud Drive, mit Importfunktion. Und die Stimmen klingen nun noch toller. Voice Dream Reader 4 Brainstorming Your Presentation Es gibt ein neues Buch zum Mind Mapping. Dieses hier von Dirk Haun hat den Fokus Mind Mapping für Präsentationen. Das Buch enthält ein Vorwort einer unserer Piloten. Brainstorming Your Presentation Scannen auf iOS Sven ist nun bei seinem neuen Arbeitgeber, der Stiftung Warentest angekommen. Es folgen hier die ersten Auszüge aus seiner ersten Aufgabe. “Fullstack”-iOS Scanner Apps im “Test” Referenz Scanner: Doxie Go Wifi für 180€ Readdle’s Scanner Pro für 3.99 € Scanbot für 0€, IAP 7.99€ Smile Software PDFPen Scan+ für 6.99€ Scan Qualität & Dateigröße App Schwarz & Weiss  Graustufen Farbe Doxie 56 KB  n/a 716 KB Scanner Pro 544 KB  607 KB 527 KB Scanbot  217 KB 558 KB  649 KB PDFPen Scan+  393 KB  1.1 MB  1.2 MB OCR Fehler App Zahlen & Sonderzeichen  Buchstaben Gesamt Doxie 1 0 1 Scanner Pro* 5  1 6 Scanbot  6 5 11 PDFPen Scan+  6  3 9 Mastery Durch was unterscheidet sich die Arbeit großer Meister vom Durchschnitt? Welchen Weg sind diese Menschen gegangen um dort anzukommen, dass wir sie noch Jahrhunderte später als herausragend ansehen? Robert Greene schreibt in seinem Buch Mastery (Hörbuch) genau über dieses Thema. Das Buch beschreibt wie die Leben von Mozart, Göthe, Bach, Curie verlaufen sind. Nicht überraschend sind auch die großen Meister der Künste und Technik nicht bereits in diesen Rang hinein geboren worden, sondern hinein gewachsen. Viele fingen sehr klein an, kamen aus ärmlichen Verhältnissen, hatten keine finanziellen Mittel und doch hat der stete Tropfen dazu geführt ihren Stein einmal zu höhlen. Nach Jahren der Lehre die, wie Andreas bemerkt, sich nicht unbedingt auf ein einziges Feld bezieht und laut Sven nicht auf ein einziges Tool, ist die Lehre mehr ganzheitlich zu betrachten. Andreas zieht die Forrest Gump Analogie heran. In dem Film sagt Forrest: “Ich hatte einfach Lust zu laufen.” So fühlt es sich für uns an, wenn wir nach einer kurzen Einführung in unser Thema, beispielsweise durch die Uni, ins Leben treten. Denn dort erleben wir die eigentlich Lehre, den Greene Apprenticeship nennt. In Forrest Gump läuft er soweit bis es nicht mehr weiter geht. So laufen wir auch, nach unserer Schul-Lehre, an zu laufen. Angekommen an einem Ufer, an dem es nicht mehr weiter geht, drehen wir um und lernen etwas neues, fangen also wieder an zu laufen. So wird man wieder zum Schüler. Nach Jahren des Lernens merkt man aber, dass genau dieses Lernen neuer Themen die Ausbildung zum Meister ist. Mehr hört ihr im Podcast und könnt bei Andreas im Blog lesen. Die 20 wichtigsten Lehren in Mastery IMDb - Forrest Gump Mastery auf Goodreads (Zitate aus dem Buch) Zitate bei Visualreads Victor Antonio’s YouTube Channel Unsere Picks Sven: Flexibit’s Fantastical für den Mac mit großem 2.2 Update. Jetzt mit voller und nativer Microsoft Exchange und Office 365 Unterstützung. Corporate Nutzer werden sich freuen - sogar doppelt, denn das Update is umsonst. Patrick: iConnectHue, die beste Hue Remote für iOS ist noch ein Stück besser geworden und ihr könnt nun fröhlich Farbverläufe programmieren. Andreas: Viele der bekannteren kostenlosen Stock Kataloge auf einmal durchsuchen. Grossartig für Storytelling. Zoommy In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

In Reply To
InReplyTo 2016-03-31

In Reply To

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2016 19:34


TOS Con puntual impuntualidad y regular irregularidad una semana más para hablar de criticas en igualdad de condiciones, Keynotes Acústicas y de términos de servicio que son un tanto "injustos". El post sobre Pinboard vs IFTTT es este. El Libro sobre Certificado electrónico en sedes Electrónicas de Jose María Cortés. Si quieres suscribirte a este podcast este es el Feed. Puedes dejar un comentario en InReplyTo.net. Si quieres apoyar este podcast puedes usar el link de afiliados en Amazon. La música que suena en este episodio es Happy Ukelele de Dan Caedab.

Nerds On Draft
Episode 064 — Imperial Biscotti Break Natale and Browsers

Nerds On Draft

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2016


Gabe and Jeff discuss the window to the Internet - the browser. Browsers are often overlooked when we think about our computer and yet for some (like my mother) the browser is the internet. Gabe talks about his iOS browser tips and tricks and they both profess their undying love for Pinboard. Pervading the discussion is the rich chocolate and cherry smells of Evil Twin Brewing’s Imperial Biscotti Break Natale, a great beer which you can look up information about in your browser using the links below. Imperial Biscotti Break Natale by Evil Twin Brewery BreweryBreweryDBBeerAdvocate Show Links Copied app for iOS iCab iCab Tricks for 2016 Crystal 1Blocker Pinboard save tabs Pinboard tips on Macdrifter

Slashreport Podcast
517 Episode 100

Slashreport Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2016


We've somehow managed to fail upwards long enough and hard enough that this is our 100th episode of /report. Yeah, we're shocked, too. In celebration, this week we discuss early fandom, what's changed in the five years we've been doing this, and your early fannish experiences. Thank you for sticking with us for 100 episodes!LinksFandom & The Internet (Fanlore)2015: A Statistical Year in Fandom (Destination Toast)AO3 and Kudos (halekingsourwolf)The Fans Are All Right (Pinboard)Why Lemon/Lime? (TV Tropes)The Message Podcast (GE Podcast Theatre)

IT 公论
Episode 186: 「越来越不觉得 2016 年是虚拟现实元年了。」

IT 公论

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2016 94:59


章节(时:分:秒): 00:00:00 开场。《IT 公论》会员计划 00:01:28 听众反馈 00:06:42 互联网技术圈耻辱柱 00:12:35 快播庭审 00:22:13 反恐法 00:31:03 联想在 CES 2016 发布的一些新产品 00:37:12 Smartisan T2 01:02:02 Netflix 全球扩张 01:10:33 平板电子杂志的衰亡 01:16:35 Oculus Rift 开始接受预订 01:34:10 尾声 本期会员通讯将于稍后发至各位会员邮箱。每月三十元,支持不鸟万如一和 Rio 把《IT 公论》做成最好的科技播客。请访问 itgonglun.com/member。若您无意入会,但喜欢某一期节目,也欢迎用支付宝或 PayPal 支付小费至 hi@itgonglun.com,支付宝用户亦可扫描下方二维码: 我们推荐您使用泛用型播客客户端订阅收听《IT 公论》,但您也可以在喜马拉雅、荔枝 FM 或网易云音乐收听。 相关链接 《IT 公论》博客 IPN 播客网络 Telegram 听众群列表 关于 Edward Tufte 的读音 六公司关于抵制流量劫持等违法行为的联合声明 Smartisan T2 关于 Mac 团队早期历史的 Folklore.org Criterion Collection Joel on Software Joel Spolsky Maciej Cegłowski Pinboard Plurk 关于美国国家杂志大奖取消「平板杂志」类别的文章 美国杂志发行公信会 General Magic IPN 播客网络常见问题解答 人物简介 不鸟万如一:字节社创始人 Rio: Apple4us 程序员

DataSnak
SAMDATA HK Podcast 09 2015, del 1

DataSnak

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2015 21:44


I denne næstsidste episode af SAMDATA podcasten, der er bidt over i to dele, er emnet kommerciel overvågning på nettet. Jeppe Engell tager i første del udgangspunkt i sikkerhedseksperten Maciej Cegłowski seks forslag til, hvordan vi kan sikre et brugbart internet fremadrettet. Han interviewer formand for IT-Politisk Forening Jesper Lund om de såkaldte ‘six fixes’, som Cegłowski foreslog på konferencen Fremtidens Internet, der fandt sted på Internetdagen den 14. september i år. Anden del af podcasten der udkommer den 23. november, består af et interview med overvågningsforsker fra Aarhus Universitet Peter Lauritsen, om emnet. Interviewet med Jesper Lund indeholder også en diskussion om persondataloven og datatilsynet, som der ikke blev plads til i podcasten. Den kan høres på SAMDATAHKs Soundcloud-side, som du finder på http://soundcloud.com/samdata-hk. Shownoter- Internetdagen 2015- Pinboard.in- Maciej Cegłowskis blog- Freja Wedenborgs cryptoguide- IT-Politisk Forening- Peter Lauritsens side på au.dk Kommentarer, ris/ros er som altid velkomment, om indhold til jeppe.engell@hk.dk og om teknik/produktion til esben@mememaker.com.

danmark hk anden teknologi interviewet forening ceg pinboard jesper lund maciej ceg jeppe engell internetdagen
Der Übercast
#UC042: Unser Browser Setup

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2015 70:20


Google Chrome und Safari sind heute im die Zwischenstopps bei Sven, Patrick und Andreas. Wer hat was in der Toolbar, wie werden Favoriten gehandhabt und was für Extensions sind unglaublich unverzichtbar? Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Why It’s OK to Block Ads Minaal mit neuer Kickstarter Kampagne: Ein großes Bild auf Minaal.com deutet an, was Sven’s aktuell liebster Reisegepäckhersteller als nächstes vorhaben. Eine neue Kampagne mit verbessertem Rucksack/Tasche, dann auch in zwei Größen, ist auf dem Wege. Bio Zitronen von Amazon Überschallneuigkeiten Transforming Bar Desk Wer vom blitzschnell vom Workaholic zum Barkeeper switchen will, der darf hier mal klicken und dann ab in den Hobbykeller flitzen, um mit Hammer und Säge den In-Treffpunkt des Hauses zu bauen. ACPAD – The Electronic Orchestra For Your Guitar by Robin Sukroso Diese schicke Kickstarter Project richtet sich an alle Musiker bzw. Gitarrenspieler und will eure Klampfe um einen Wireless Midi-Controller bereichern, der so einiges auf dem Kasten hat. Google Chrome und Safari im Fokus Browser die auf der Strecke geblieben sind: Flock Camino Rockmelt Sven sitzt im Safari Camp, während Andreas und Patrick Google Chrome (vorerst) ewige Treue schwören. Was ist euer New Tab? Damit ihr erst einmal einen Eindruck bekommt wie es beim jeweiligen Piloten aussieht, gibt es hier ein paar Screenshots. Ganz wie sich Andreas und Patrick das bei einem Safarinutzer vorstellen surft Sven durch die Gegend. Sein auf Hochglanz polierter Mercedes sieht so aus: Patrick macht sich mit Humble New Tab Page das Leben schöner. Die Extension ist recht anpassbar und kann zudem noch auserlesene Bookmark-Ordner beliebig anordnen. Hier noch die Einstellungen zum Theme. Das Schlusslicht in Punkto spannendes Setup bilden heute Andreas, der sich nicht für das Wetter interessiert und aus genau dem Grund diesem seinen New Tab überlässt. Psychologen hätten an dieser inneren Rebellion ihre wahre Freude. Die meistgenutzten Extensions Sven: 1Password, Instapaper & Evernote Patrick: Oft benutzt wird die Google Image Search Extension, sowie Buffer. Im Hintergrund läuft oft Stop Autoplay for Youtube™ und URL Pinner) Andreas: Definitiv wird 1Password am häufigsten aufgerufen. Im Background sind Ghostery/AdBlock und HTML5ify am werkeln. Die 5 Lieblings-Extensions Sven Evernote 1Password Instapaper Ghostery Patrick Awesome Screenshot: Screen capture, Annotate Fatkun Batch Download Image OneTab EasyReader Falls exportiert werden soll nach PDF oder Website, dann ist für Chrome noch iReader und SingleFile/SingleFile Core ganz brauchbar. The Great Suspender Linkclump Andreas: Shut Up - Chrome Web Store 1Password Pushbullet Patricks momentane Epichrome Browser Epichrome, das Google Chrome SBB Helferlein zum erstellen von Ein-Mann-Armeen zum browsen haben wir hier ja schon öfters erwähnt. Im SBB Extensions zu nutzen ist großartig – vor allem 1Password. Web Developer (mit ‘nem Google Chrome Canary Icon und massig Spezial-Extensions) + Choosy, um die lokalen Seiten in diesem Browser zu öffnen. Synology, Finanzblick, Pinboard, Trello Private, Ubercast (FeedPress, Trello, Analytics, Sync), Facebook, Tumblr, Every Time Zone, Overleaf, Overcast, Reddit Kundenwebseite + Analytics Page + CMS Sonstige Links Brett Terpstras Bookmarklets: Marker, Grablinks, and Bullseye fixes Keyboard Maestro and your browser are friends — RocketINK Aktuell sieht das bei Patrick so aus Die Standard Palette Der erweiterte Settings Shortcut (cmd-Komma) The Reason Why Google Chrome Is My Favorite Browser — RocketINK Fixing the Google Chrome Print Preview — RocketINK A hotkey for closing the Google Chrome Download Bar — RocketINK Save Tabs set to Pinboard Reditr - Bring Reddit to your Desktop! URL mit Alfred in drei Browsern gleichzeitig öffnen Banana Tabs — Tabs von Safari in Chrome und umgekehrt öffnen Mit dem netten kleinen Alfred Workflow “Banana Tabs” könnt ihr alle Tabs, die ihr aktuell im Safari offen habt in Chrome öffnen, oder eben andersrum. Hilfreich, wenn man Websites habt, die mit der einen oder anderen Rendering-Engine Probleme hat. Fake - Mac OS X Web Browser Automation and Webapp Testing Made Simple. Helium – Ein Browser die immer sichtbar ist Unsere Picks Sven: Joe Buhlig’s neues OmniFocus Buch Andreas: Beard Type Chart Patrick: Zimtsohlen Audible-Pick: The Power of Vulnerability von Brené Brown, die auch Ted Talks macht. Sonderpick – Zettt’s liebster Cheerleader-Film: Bring It On! Unser Cineast empfiehlt dringend “Bring It On!” in Referenz zu “Pitch Perfect 2” zu schauen. Wie ihr sicher schon gemerkt habt, sind wir in Sachen Arthaus und Indie-Filme hier bei Deutschlands größtem Kino-Podcast ganz vorne mit dabei! Wer bisher daran gezweifelt hat, sollte sich umgehend in die nächste Stammvideothek begeben und sich diese Kulturgüter einverleiben. Beschwerden dann ggf. bitte an @zettt. In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

Der Übercast
#UC038: Die Rosé-Gold Keynote

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2015 68:37


Die Highlights aus der üppigen Keynote werden von Andreas, Patrick und Sven durchgesprochen. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Die heutige Episode von Der Übercast wird unterstützt von: • Marked 2 - für den Mac zeigt euch eine Vorschau von eurem Markdown Dokument während ihr schreibt in eurem Texteditor. Nutzt den Coupon Code DERUBERCAST um 30% Rabatt auf die Direktversion zu bekommen. • Audible.de - Hörbücher überall genießen. Jetzt einen Monat lang gratis testen. Überbleibsel Backup Excel Tabelle Dan Loewenherz, der Entwickler des (bei Patrick) populären Pinboard.in Klienten Pushpin, hat einen Einblick in seine Backup-Tabelle veröffentlicht. Ihr könnt euch das mal anschauen und euch inspirieren lassen: Backup Worksheet.xlsx pic.twitter.com/4lrMhqBH4I— Dan Loewenherz ⚡️ (@dwlz) August 25, 2015 Grundsätzlich ist es schon einmal nicht verkehrt seine Backup-Strategie so festzuhalten. Wenn ihr auch so etwas am Start habt, könnt ihr es uns gerne zusenden, denn unsere Neugier kennt keine Grenzen. GIPHYCAM Tja, in der letzten Sendung waren Andreas und Patrick nicht so begeistert. Doch Patrick hat es geschafft die Lesebrille aufzusetzen und weiß nun, dass das Endergebnis wesentlich besser aussieht, wenn er die Aufnahmetaste gedrückt lässt. Seitdem terrorisiert er Freunde und Familie mit GIPHYCAM. … eigentlich immer noch keine Konkurrenz für Dubsmash (und Patricks Kriegstanz), aber schneller. Indev Software Giveaway Alle Teilnehmer des Indev Software Bundles sind völlig ausgelaugt von den vielen Umarmungen, welche sie uns zukommen haben lassen. Einige waren so aus der Puste, dass wir sie nun als Gewinner küren möchten. Auf MailTags, Mail Act-On und Mail Perspectives können sich @Bloerch, @confluencepoint und @JulianC1412 aka Julian C. Albrecht freuen. Letzterer muss uns aber irgendwie seinen Zweitnamen zukommen lassen, bevor wir ihm seinen Preis überreichen können. Überschallneuigkeiten NetNewsWire Es ist schön, dass NetNewsWire nun endlich nach einer gefühlt hundertjährigen Betaphase auf dem Mac und auf iOS erschienen ist. Viele von uns haben trotzdem auf mehr Features und vor allem die Unterstützung für gängige Newsreader statt nur eigenem Sync gehofft. Amazing! Unbelievable! Awesome. The Best Comments We’ve Ever Made! Bei uns geht es heute um den Spezial Event im September 2015 von Apple. Was die Gerüchteküche im Voraus angeht waren wie genauso nüchtern wie viele unserer Kollegen, denn im Grunde gibt es dank der Insider-Informationen von Mark Gurman nur noch wenig zu spekulieren. Im Prinzip ist alles vorher bekannt und man wartet auf Livebilder, Demos und die gefühlt miterlebte Hands-On-Erfahrung beim Anschauen der Keynote. Nichtsdestotrotz ist für Technikbegeisterte wieder genug dabei gewesen… deshalb gibt’s auch in dieser Sendung die “10,000 ft Director’s Commentary” Tonspur von uns für euch. Mit dabei folgende Punkte: Apple Watch Neue Partner, neue “Modelle”, neue Bänder Sport-Preise mit den neuen Farben “rose-gold” und “gold” Die Stainless-Variante gibt es nun auch mit schwarzen Sportband, als “Product red”, und und und neue Herbstbänder Das neue Watch OS erscheint am 16. September 2015 iPad Das iPad Pro mit dem gigantischen 12,9″ Screen kommt mit viel optionalem Zubehör Neues Smart-Keyboard für’s Pro $169 Die “smart-connector”-Schnittstelle ist auch für Drittanbieter offen und Logitech hat bereits zum Launch eine passende Keyboard-Alternative angekündigt Ein Apple Stylus, der Pencil, wird für $99 angeboten “The ability to touch a single pixel” Doppelt so schnelles abtasten bringt hier den Vorteil gegenüber allem was bisher für das iPad auf dem Markt war. tv tvOS heißt das auf iOS basierende Betriebssystem, welches das Wohnzimmer umkrempeln will und nach Tim Cook “die Zukunft des Fernsehens ist”. Phil Schiller ist da vorsichtiger in der Wortwahl und gibt kund, dass hiermit lediglich das Fundament gelegt ist. This is the foundation for the future of television. Bedienbar per Spracheingabe sagt euch das TV-Helferlein, ob eure gesuchte Serie auf Hulu, Showtime, Netflix oder iTunes verfügbar ist. Wie sich alles hierzulande in den europäischen Gefilden gestaltet bleibt abzuwarten. Apple Music und ein App Store. Super. Sven glaubt immer noch daran das hier eine Spielkonsole das Feld betritt, Patrick glaubt da auch zu 1/16 dran. iPhone Peter Fox hat es gesagt und Apple richtet sich danach: “Alles neu”. 3D Touch (mit 3rd-party support), schnelleres TouchID, mehr Power so das ein freundliches “Hallo Siri” nun auch ohne Stromstecker funktioniert. 12 MP iSight und 5 MP FaceTime Kameras, welche die neuen Live Photos knackiger und schöner machen. Da die Fotos mehr Platz brauchen kommen die hoffentlich bald gültigen neuen iCloud Pläne. An Zubehör gibt es zum Smartphone farblich passende Docks und schöne neue Cover aus Cupertino. Audible-Picks Patrick: Terry Pratchett – Jingo (Discworld 21) Andreas: Radical Honesty: How to Transform Your Life by Telling the Truth Sven: Die Känguru-Chroniken: Live und ungekürzt Hörbuch von Marc-Uwe Kling.de Unsere Picks Andreas: Browser Fairy Patrick: Marcato Sven: Anker 2nd Gen Astro Externer Akku Bis in 2 Wochen! In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

Für's Protokoll
Altes Eisen

Für's Protokoll

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2015 10:54


Thu, 03 Sep 2015 19:00:00 +0000 https://www.protokollcast.de/32-altes-eisen 4b0bcee487f7297b7cc25ab3baf21d52 Apple Special Event 2015, Grafik auf alten Maschinen, Pinner for Pinboard Bald gibt es wieder ein Apple Special Event und wir können unser wohl verdientes Geld loswerden. Wenn ihr wissen wollt wie Grafik auf alten Maschinen funktioniert, schaut in das verlinkte Video rein. Und falls ihr noch einen Client für Pinboard sucht, kann ich euch Pinner (Affiliate Link) empfehlen! Die Links für diese Folge: Special Event September 2015 How "oldschool" graphics worked Part 1-Commodore and Nintendo Pinner for Pinboard (Affiliate Link) https://images.podigee.com/0x,sps7ioMh3gsxkAZrlgUYc6Lib-Wg9KpByEt7aZ528i8M=/https://cdn.podigee.com/uploads/u301/1441304860898c.jpg Altes Eisen https://www.protokollcast.de/32-altes-eisen 32 full Apple Special Event 2015, Grafik auf alten Maschinen, Pinner for Pinboard no Marc Kalmes

Daily
#737 ¿Dónde compartes?

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2015 11:10


Lo comentado estos días sobre NewsBlur, Pinboard e Instapaper me lleva a preguntarme dónde compartir los contenidos de estas aplicaciones, si en Twitter y otras redes sociales o dentro de las propias aplicaciones.

Daily
#736 NewsBlur y Pinboard

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2015 10:35


Hoy hablo de mis dos opciones para leer feeds y artículos, NewsBlur y Pinboard, que han sustituido a Fever° e Instapaper.

Der Übercast
#UC031: iOS Robotik

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2015 94:17


Das liebe iOS kann ja mittlerweile von Haus aus einiges mehr dank Extension. Doch wie erleichtert ein Uber-Pilot sich das Leben abseits von Apples Bordmitteln? Dran bleiben, mehr erfahren. Auf Madame YouTube liegt übrigens ein Videomitschnitt dieser Folge… von Sven. Totalkrasch per QuickTime Sven-only… als Schmankerl hat Andreas aber Screencasts von seinen Workflows eingebunden… die Kollegen waren zu lahm. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel TextExpander Update Auf dem Mac gibt es nun Version 5 als Upgrade zu erwerben und die iOS Version hat ebenfalls ein Update erhalten. Unter anderem neu mit an Bord: Javascript Snippets (die auch auf iOS funktionieren) – allerdings funktionieren die fill-ins leider, leider nicht mit der TextExpander Tastatur-Erweiterung. Menno. Der Hauptkritikpunkt seit Jahren schlechthin ist ebenfalls “gefixt”: Ihr könnt euch nun aussuchen in welchem Ordner in der Dropbox die Synchronisationsdatei reinkommt. Alleine das ist schon das 3-fache des Kaufpreises wert und manch einer hätte dafür gerne schon vor Jahren gezahlt. Eine simple standardkonforme App-Folder Synchronisation hätte es zwar auch getan, aber vielleicht gibt gute Gründe für den “Full Dropbox” Zugriff… vielleicht muss die Redaktion auch nur einmal die Blackbox resetten. Mehr Info von offizieller Seite gibt es auf der Smile Webseite und Beispiele zu den JavaScript Fill-ins finden sich im Smile Blog. Links für Lernwütige: Codecademy Khan Academy Hackr.io Ulysses-ses-ses Passagier Farid M. (34) aus P. hat uns einen detaillierten Erfahrungsbericht zukommen lassen was Ulysses (besprochen in Episode #028 angeht. Hier das Worst of Ulysses von Farid aka die Punkte die ihm Sauer aufstoßen und für Probleme sorgen: Arbeiten mit Tabellen Die Kapitelnummerierung bei Export nach HTML, PDF oder ePUB Nix mit Inhaltsverzeichnissen beim HTML und PDF Export Keine Integration von Quellennachweisen (z.B. Bibtex) als Mathemn -Ass vermisst man Unterstüzung für Formeln Für technische Dokumentationen ist Ulysses also wenig zu gebrauchen. Das Ulysses-Team hat dies bestätigt und will dieses Thema irgend wann mal angehen. Er verlässt sich daher auf die folgende App-Rezeptur: Texte schreiben mittels SubLime Text und sich dank SublimeTableEditor über eine tolle Tabellenformatierung freuen – ansonsten hilft im TextExpander bei der Markdown-Syntax. Die Vorschau erfolgt - wie sollte es anders sein - per Marked 2. Exportiert wird mittels Pandoc in was auch immer, zum Beispiel HTML, PDF oder ePub – wobei ihn eine make-Datei begleitet die Herr über die verschiedensten Parameter ist. Für solche Großprojekte nutzt Patrick übrigens ein abgemagertes Scrivener und den Referenz-Manager BibDesk, exportiert dann nach LaTeX wo er mittels LaTeX-Plus ein PDF raushaut. Pandoc wollte er auch einmal probieren… irgendwann… falls er weiterstudiert. Nochmals danke für’s Feedback aus der eigenen Schreibstube. Die Flugmeilen sind dir bereits auf deinem Frequent-Flyer Konto gutgeschrieben Farid. Überschallneuigkeiten Der nvALT Nachfolger kommt zu Weihnachten Na hoffentlich haut der Zeitplan hin Brett. Uns jucken die Finger und der Geldbeutel liegt bereit. I kind of want to make sweet, sweet love to @ttscoff after hearing about a commercial successor to nvALT successorhttps://t.co/HSC9js5AZR— Michael Schechter (@MSchechter) May 27, 2015 Dr. Robotnik vs. iOSnic Andreas hat ein passendes Webcomic zur Sendung ausgekramt und Patrick sagt “Ja” zu dem Comic und damit seiner Auskunft nach auch “Nein” zu zu viel iOS Automatisierung. Für seinen Teil haut er sich mittlerweile lieber eine App drauf, die das machen kann was er will – wenn möglich sollte diese aber mit einer nutzbaren Extension daherkommen. Das coole daran ist für ihn, dass Extensions somit ein eigenes Icon haben, die App im besten Falle genau das macht, was der Herr möchte und somit nicht die Workflow.app Liste unnötig verlängert wird. Das ist auch schon der erste Punkt worüber Andreas und er sich für geschätzte 50 Minuten uneinig sind. One-Thing-Well sein, oder nicht sein. “Automation” via xkcd Die alten Hasen - Teil 1: Launch Center Pro Auf die URL Enkodierung mit URL schemes kann Andreas gar nicht. Das bringt uns auch schon zum ersten Sargnagel der Stunde: Mit Launch Center Pro ist Patrick damals durchgestartet, hat verschachtelte Listen angelegt wie ein Messi und sich bemüht in der Kombination mit Pythonista sinnvolle Sachen zu machen. Bei Editorial ist er aber schon wieder aus dem Automationsboot ausgestiegen. Fazit: Keine Zeit Python zu lernen. Dazu hat er noch gemerkt, dass er zum bloggen nun doch nicht iOS nutzen möchte. Er ist kein Viticci, er hat seinen Mac noch lieb. Launch Center Pro nutzt Patrick trotzdem noch in seinem Dock (das Zweite Icon von Dreien) – heute allerdings eher als Launcher. Für ihn ist das reine Platzersparnis, da er dort 12 Icons von Apps unterbekommt anstatt nur 9 in einem iOS Ordner. Zudem ist dann auf dem Home Screen Platz für andere wichtige Apps. Wir halten fest: Andreas = lieber Workflows und Bookmarklets statt URL schemes oder zusätzliche Apps/Extensions Patrick = mehr Apps, mehr Extensions, leicht weniger Workflows Sven = simplicityisbliss = wenig Apps, lieber heimischen Riesling trinken statt die Nacht durchzuautomatiserien Vorteil: Man kann seine Actions auf dem Mac in einem Editor schreiben und Encodieren ( ← wichtig bei der App)… zum Beispiel in Sublime Text. Ansonsten ist Workflow wirklich komfortabler als reine iOS-touch-und-zieh-Lösung. Außerdem ist Workflow halt geiler und flexibler, weil es als Extension aufgerufen werden kann. Die alten Hasen - Teil 2: Pythonista Pythonista ist toll. Die Dokumentation ist toll. Auf iOS ist das toll. Da Patrick nie den gelben Gürtel in Python erworben hat, verlässt er sich lieber auf Bash-Skripte die in der Dropbox oder auf dem Uberspace Server liegen. Das ist für ihn vielseitiger und einfacher zu managen, z.B. beim Thema Bildbearbeitung (skalieren, optimieren) überlässt er lieber seinem Server die Arbeit, statt sich mit Python und den vorhandenen Modulen auseinanderzusetzen. Es gibt bestimmt tolle Python Module, aber Pythonista unterstützt ja nicht alle… und wenn man jetzt nicht der Python Gott ist, dann ist das Vertraute halt einfach praktischer. Pythonista war damals das Ding um Sachen von Launch Center Pro aus auf dem eigenen Server per SSH anzutippen (siehe Quickly Run Scripts In Your Remote Computer With Pythonista And Launch Center Pro — Moving Electrons). Den Todesstoß bekommt Patrick aber nicht durchgepaukt, da springen die lieben Kollegen vor den Zug und schützen die App… aber so tödlich war der Stoß ja auch nicht gemeint, oder? Vorteil: Wer Python spricht, der stellt hier die iOS Welt offen. Anbei noch der versprochene Auszug aus Patricks Pythonista Archiv. Mehr ist es nicht, bis auf ein paar ganz spezifische Sachen mit seinen Markdown-Listen und ein wenig SSH Magie die hier nicht reinmüssen. Die alten Hasen - Teil 3: Editorial Editorial ist die Eierlegende Text-Editoren-Wollmilchsau und Patricks nvALT Suchmaschine. Referenzen auffinden = am schnellsten in Editorial, da die Suche super ist. Außerdem ist die TaskPaper-Unterstützung der Hammer ( ← Teaser, momentan sind noch einige Features im Betastatus). Link zu Patricks Lieblings-Workflows: Recent Folders Custom Menu Und natürlich darf von Federico Viticcis 2 Euro Büchlein nicht fehlen. Klare Editorial-Leseempfehlung: „Writing On The iPad: Text Automation with Editorial“. Die neue Liga: Workflow Nun, wer sich mit den Apps da oben genaus kaputt-automatisiert hat wie so manch ein Pilot oder Roboter… … der kann bei Workflow aufatmen. Da ist nämlich nix mit URL Schemes de- und encodieren, sondern hier ist einfach nur Happy Hour angesagt. “Bookmarklets” ruft Andreas nach wie vor in Safari auf. Patrick fällt aus allen Wolken, da die Workflow Extension sich da ja förmlich anbiedert und einen lästiges rumgetouche erspart. Er hat sich ein paar davon angelegt, unter anderem für Huffduffer. Viele braucht es aber in der Tat nicht mehr, da iOS ja mittlerweile nutzbar geworden ist ohne und Instapaper, Pinboard und Co. ihre eigenen Pferde im Stall. Workflow ist auch für Pilot Sven die erste Wahl: Extrem zugänglich und man kennt das Prinzip von Automator (OS X) her. Auch Andreas stimmt ein, es ist sein Favorit auf iOS um Arbeitsabläufe anzulegen. Deshalb gibt es geradewegs vorab die Workflow Workflows von Andreas “Zettt” Zeitler schickt verschnürt in einem Blog Post. Patricks stimmt mit ein, Workflow ist sein Lieblingsroboter auf iOS. Coole Workflows die andere geschneidert haben: Da Patrick es verpasst hat zeitig alle seine Worflows fachgerecht für die Show Notes aufzubereiten. Gibt es an dieser Stelle nur den Hinweis RocketINK im Auge zu behalten. Als kleine Wiedergutmachung, gibt es dieses Sammelsurien von ihm hier: Best Workflows (@BestWorkflows) on Twitter Workflow Gallery Workflow-VCS.de und natürlich die offizielle Gallery in der App Andere Workflows die Patrick interessant findet sind: Annotate & Delete by Seth Clifford Get Images from Page Make PDF Convert to fnd​ io Add Text to Photo (Suchbegriff eingeben, Bild kopieren, Editieren, …) Get App Icon App Images Das Workflow jeder nutzen kann/soll erzählt euch Philipp Gruneich von One Tap Less. Für Filmfreunde ist dies hier noch ein Schmankerl: The new Workflow and the Movie Diary bzw. die Version für Fortgeschrittene “Tweaking the Movie Diary”. Open Twitter Open in Tweetbot View Google Cache The Photo Message Gun With Workflow.app for iOS YouTube to MP3 to Dropbox to Huffduffer oder YouTube To Huffduffer Home ETA Für Fotos: Time Machine Wayback a Dead URL Der Textvernascher: Drafts Svens App wird benutzt um OmniFocus zu befüttern und in Markdown schick formatierte Mails zu versenden. Mehr zu OmniFocus + Drafts + Meeting Minutes gibt es auf seinem Blog. Kurz: Alles was mit Text anfängt ist einen Draft(s) wert. Mitflieger Patrick nutzt Drafts auch für jeglichen Input. Bei ihm gestaltet sich das ganze ähnlich: Markdown im Hintergrund an Person X emailen, die Einkaufsliste eindiktieren und an Reminders schicken, ab und an wird noch Evernote mit Vokabeln oder harten harten Raps versorgt. Der gute Andreas nutzt vor allem gerne das Location Feature von Drafts, da das unschlagbar schnell ist im auslesen von Longitude und Latitude. Zack. Plain-Text kommt raus und kann in jede Maps Anwendung geworfen werden. Hier runterladen. “Open in + Share” um Plain-Text weiterzureichen, OmniFocus mit Notizen, seine Send Link to Dropbox Hazel Action und das Gewicht-Tagebuch. Launcher in der “Today View” Cromulent Labs hatte mit Launcher für iOS8 ja einen schweren Einstieg. Erst hatte Apple die Today View App verboten, dann doch noch nach Monaten zugelassen. Für Patrick ist die App ganz großen Tennis, da man hier praktische Clipboard Workflows direkt von überall aus aufrufen kann ohne extra die Anwendung zu wechseln. Die anderen beiden zucken nur mit den Schultern. Web-Automati: “Sie rung” mit sich wie wild Frau Zapier (AffiliZettLink – 100 mehr für dich und ihn) findet Andreas gut. Der neuste Meisterstreich zeigt wie man auf Trello postet kommt demnächst auf seinem Blog. Zapier ist ja wirklich umfangreich um es milde zu sagen und da wir genügsame Sparfüchse sind, wird auch direkt auf IFTTT umgeschwenkt. Zum Beispiel findet Patrick das Markdown-Pinboard Archiv von Andreas echt gut. Hier ist seine fast komplette aktuell genutzte Sammlung die dank iOS 8 recht kurz ausfällt. Wegfallen sind nun zum Glück Sachen wie per LCP über IFTTT Nachrichten oder Dateien senden, Pinboard nach OmniFocus per Maildrop, usw.. Abschließende Worte Vielen Dank noch einmal für die zugesandten Fragen an unsere Hörer. Dazu sei noch angemerkt, Heimautomatisierung ist nicht hinten runter gefallen, aber so weit sind wir einfach noch nicht. Die TextExpander Touch Tastatur ist hinten runtergefallen, aber hier nutzt sie nur Sven, Andreas mag sie nicht und Patrick braucht nur die Anbindung in ein, zwei Apps. Natürlich haben wir jetzt nicht jede App ausgekramt die toll Sachen automatisieren kann, wie z.B. TextTool. Aber… das da oben sind unsere Sieger der Herzen. Vielleicht kommt irgendwann mal ein Teil 2. Nebenbei… der Jailbreak Himmel steht dem geneigten Nutzer noch immer offen… man sollte es kaum glauben, aber hier mal zwei Links zur Inspiration: Advanced Workflow Launching for Jailbroken users. Send home button, sleep button, etc at the end of workflows using Activator. Und ganzzzettt wichtig am 9. Juni 2015 in Stuttgart präsentiert Andreas euchdir : Warum auch du ein CRM haben solltest. Ebenso wichtig: Das OmniFocus Bliss Webinar mit Sven. Unsere Picks Andreas: djay Pro Patrick: Showmaster Sven: FlipBoard In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

apple er pilot open blog draft leben thema als app mac apps arbeit mehr ios paypal ihr bei gro probleme comic seite automation upgrade tennis lionel messi gibt dazu unter finger beispiel haus suche andreas icon bild crm vielleicht viele stelle herzen monaten deshalb extension punkt zudem liste erst arbeiten ding auge kollegen hintergrund gallery sachen punkte safari happy hour input python stuttgart sven beispiele einstieg dropbox editorial server herr tat reminders icons geh workflow zug marked prinzip export kombination falle zum beispiel dock html drafts black box blog post anwendung ansonsten trello stall alleine ebenso extensions evernote roboter sieger raps patricks sto abschlie nutzer zapier nebenbei redaktion sammlung wolken pferde workflows epub mails sauer favorit automatisierung auszug latitude stirn notizen schultern erfahrungsbericht auskunft latex farid riesling parameter geldbeutel scrivener activator menno schmankerl zeitplan ifttt robotnik ssh robotik dokumentationen markdown referenzen launcher dateien datei anbindung arbeitsabl wiedergutmachung longitude webcomic textexpander omnifocus vokabeln lcp ordner vertraute anbei dreien instapaper ios8 modulen nochmals einkaufsliste sorgenfalten mehr info plain text die dokumentation sublime text die vorschau flattr screencasts sargnagel sparf pinboard annotate videomitschnitt kaufpreises wegfallen filmfreunde editieren ios version pythonista person x launch center pro pandoc huffduffer nvalt viticci thema bildbearbeitung da patrick lernw url schemes ios welt
Beta privada Podcast
Capítulo 2. Gastos en aplicaciones, YNAB y Pinboard

Beta privada Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2015 50:55


En este capítulo 2 hablamos de las aplicaciones y servicios de pago vistos desde dos perspectivas: los que no se plantean pagar por ningún tipo de aplicación y los que compran casi de forma compulsiva y sin pensárselo demasiado. Terminamos hablando sobre dos aplicaciones que han llamado la atención a finales de 2014: You Need a Budget (YNAB) y Pinboard.

Daily
#617 Pinboard

Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2014 9:19


De cómo he fracasado en 2014 en el uso de Pinboard y de por qué tú deberías empezar a usarlo, y además hoy.

Der Übercast
#UC019: Schreib dir das auf, sonst vergisst'es nur wieder!

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2014 67:14


APF [Andreas, Patrick, Sven] sprechen ins Mikrofon und die Worte beinhalten ihre Empfehlungen an digitalen und analogen Schreibutensilien. Garniert wird das ganze mit jeder Menge frischer Samples. Die Frage welche alle Festlandbewohner so bewegt scheint 2014 zu sein, wie notiert man als Pilot eigentlich so. Ein Glück sind noch genügend Sitzplätze in der 60er Jahre Flugmaschine frei, um beim Erkundungsflug teilzunehmen. Setzen, Zigaretten raus und zuhören wie man so auf 8.000 Höhenmeter Notizen macht. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Aller Anfang ist schwer. Auch wenn erst keiner so recht was sagen will, irgendwann gibt Patrick dann doch zu, dass er den ersten Punkt auf die Tagesordnung gesetzt hat und äußerst sich leicht befangen dazu. Mute Switch Mini Rant Patrick stört(e) der Mute-Switch bei Apple. Mittlerweile hat er sich dran gewöhnt, dass dieser bei Third-Party Apps nicht ignoriert werden darf… eine Sache die durchaus nützlich wäre bei der ein oder anderen Alarm Anwendung (z.B. Due als kompletter Ersatz für die vorinstallierte Uhr). Fakt ist: Einzig die Clock.app von Apple darf sich über den Stummschalter erheben und den schlauen Handapparat mit dem Leuchtedisplay lauthals zum tönen bringen. Nun, in dieser Rant wundert sich Pilot P., warum zum Beispiel die Erinnerungen App nicht auch dieses Feature mitbringt. Die Antwort folgt auf dem Fuße von seinen zwei Co-Piloten. Es handele sich nicht um einen Fail, sondern ist sowas von durchdacht, denn wer will schon im Meeting mit Deutschlands nächsten Börsenhai von einem Reminders Alarm daran erinnert werden, den gelben Sack vor die Tür zu tragen. Okay, Patrick sieht ein, dass es nicht cool wäre in Mitten einer Besprechung aufspringen, den Konferenzraum zu verlassen und hastig zu nuscheln “Entschuldigung, … muss nun das Unkraut im Vorgarten jähten”. Fantastisch, um es mit Svens Worten zu sagen, dass dieses Rätsel nun gelöst wurde dank Sherlock Fechner und Dr. Zeitler. Bildbearbeitung: Acorn, iPhoto Bashing, Geotagging Andreas räumt auf. Zu aller Erst macht er auf die Untat schlechthin aufmerksam: Acorn - die Photoshop-Alternative der Herzen - haben wird völlig unerwähnt gelassen in der letzten Episode. Das geht so gar nicht, deshalb sagt er uns was im supergut gefällt: Es ist das Crop-Tool. Patrick muss sich da erst einmal die Ohren waschen gehen, denn das ist sein Aufreger Nummer eins bei Acorn… so unterschiedlich sind die Geschmäcker. Was Andreas einwandfrei findet ist, dass man einfach nur C drücken muss und dann ein halbautomatischer Algorithmus schon einmal die Ecken korrekt anschneidet. Gerade bei Screenshots ist das wohl super handy. Patrick hingegen gefällt nicht, dass es keinen Shortcut gibt, um automatisch die Breite auf beiden Seiten zu erweitern oder verringern. Teil 2 des Re-Bashings ist, dass iPhoto ja bei Sven und Patrick schlecht abgeschnitten in der letzten Folge. Über dieses grobe Faul war Andreas not amused. Deshalb schlussfolgert er, das jemand der iPhoto einen Buhmann schimpft auch für Aperture ungute Worte von der Zunge fallen lassen müsse – beide haben ja schließlich auch dasselbe Library-Format. Patrick hustet sich einen Weg ans Mikrofon und führt an, dass er nichts über Aperture als Verwaltungsprogramm kommen lässt. Smartfolders und und und; da kann Herr iPhoto nicht mithalten. Gespannt erwarten jedoch alle wie gut bzw. karg, schlecht, abgespeckt der Nachfolger für OS X daherkommt… wenn er denn einmal da ist. Wo Andreas aber uneingeschränkt recht hat ist – ganz ohne Stop- und Warnschild, dass sind Geotags. Die werden nämlich von einigen Filter-Apps entfernt auf iOS – auch einige in der letzten Sendung genannte Apps sind nicht freizusprechen von dieser Greultat. Der nötige Umweg ist dann, diese mit einer App wie Mappr nachträglich wieder hinzuzufügen. Mutmaßlich wird das so gehandhabt, da die Apps den User nicht noch damit belästigen wollen, den Zugriff auf die hochheiligen Lokationsdaten freizugeben. Kurz: Nutzerfreundlichkeit und 0-Misstrauen vs. Features. Dubsmash & Co. So. Nun gibt’s endlich was richtiges. Ein digitales Kulturgut quasi. Instagram war nie wirklich Patrick sein Ding, Snapchat, Vine und Konsortien gehen völlig an ihm vorbei – er schiebt’s aufs Alter. Aber… ein leuchtender Lichtstrahl viel neulich vom Horizont direkt auf eine kleine Berliner App…. Dubsmash. Dieses Schmuckstück trifft genau Patricks Nerv. Hier darf man Lippensynchron faxen machen zu Audioschnipsel von der Dubsmash-Community. Da ist alles mit dabei von Harald Glööckler bis zu Bud Spender und Terence Hill Samples. Das Ergebnis ist ein kleines Video, dass ihr an die Oma oder euern Schwarm im Büro nebenan schicken könnt. Richtig gut. Auch wenn so die große Liebe zerbrechen sollte, das Video war es alle Mal wert. So viel steht fest. Artikel: Dubsmash, die neue Viral-App aus Berlin Snapselect Nachdem Sven so begeistert von Macphun Produkten ist, hat die Software-Schmiede nun jetzt für nur 13,99 € extra noch eine App rausgehauen. Damit sollt ihr fortan Bilder auf dem Mac einfacher aussortieren können. Nach einer ersten Probefahrt findet Patrick das Teil soweit ganz sympathisch und kann nun vielleicht schneller die Bilder von 6 Monaten aussortieren. Schaut einfach selbst. Im YouTube Kanal gibt’s auch noch mehr für die Leute die nicht so einfach die Patte raushauen wollen. Überschallneuigkeiten Mein Grundeinkommen Mein Grundeinkommen sammelt konstant Spenden bis die 12.000 € Marke erreicht ist. Dann wird das liebe Geld verlost und ein Glücklicher darf dann 1.000 € Grundeinkommen für ein Jahr lang beziehen kann. Ganz klar eine super Sache nach Patrick. Der wischt sich nun das Wasser aus den Augen und schaut was Sven als nächste Neuigkeit in der Hinterhand hat. Pyro — ein feuriges Wearable Bei dem PYRO Wearable brennt es einem im wahrsten Sinne des Wortes die Augenbrauen vor lauter Staunen weg. Das Armband erlaubt nämlich das Copperfield-mäßige Verschießen von brennenden Kugeln aus dem Handgelenk. Für 174 US$ stiehlt man damit jedem zukünftigen Apple Watch Besitzer die Show. Link zum Bild: Dhalsim Co-Pilot und Street Fighter 2 Pionier Patrick ist auch schon ganz aus dem Häuschen. Wenn es 2015 ein unnötiges Gadget sein darf, dann bitte schön dieses. Er klaut jetzt schon der Freundin heimlich Tampons, um so genug Patronen zu haben, wenn das Gadget irgendwann mal an seinem Handgelenk ist. Generali Versicherung und Wearables Auch die Krankenversicherer, in diesem Fall die Generali, kommen auf die Wearables. Tarifanpassungen soll es entsprechend der Schrittzahl auf dem eignen FitBit geben — am besten vor dem nächsten Check schnell noch den Schrittzähler bei dem Schleudergang in die Waschmaschine schmeissen oder dem eigenen Vierbeiner an’s Halsband knipsen um die Stats zu pushen. Zack. Schon seid ihr im kostengünstigeren Tarif. Der Übercast weiß wie’s geht. Keine Ursache. Weiterlesen. Microsoft kauft HockeyApp Microsoft acquires HockeyApp: http://t.co/hwgDUvy2xU— HockeyApp (@hockeyapp) December 11, 2014 Mehr Info: HockeyApp joines Microsoft Microsoft acquires HockeyApp, leading mobile crash analytics and beta distribution service for iOS, Android, and Windows Phone Damit ist wohl noch auch die letzte “große” Beta Testing Platform aufgekauft. TestFlight hat sich ja Apple geschnappt und Crashlytics ist seit einiger Zeit bei Twitter beheimatet. Flic - Bluetooth Button Für alle, aber vor allem für Patrick, die gerne eine Interaktion zwischen der physischen und der virtuellen Welt herstellen wollen gibt es jetzt den Bluetooth Button FLIC. Diese Go-Go-Gadgetetto Knöfpchen verbindet sich mit dem Smartphone und schickt dann bei einmal drücken eine Email an die Schwiegermutter, startet bei zweimal Drücken automatisch die nächste Game of Thrones-Folge oder verpasst eurem Erzfeind einen Stromschlag sofern ihr ihn dazu bewegen könnt das in Deutschland illegale Add-on zu tragen. Bei der Gelegenheit verweist der physisch-virtuelle Grenzgänger Patrick gerne nochmals auf ein Alternativprodukt namens ‘Pressy’ und den ‘Bttn’ für IFTTT. Workflow - Mächtig viel iOS Automatisierung gaaaanz easy Quelle: Workflow – Powerful automation made simple. So, nun ist die App endlich draußen und Patrick hat eine neue App in seiner persönlichen Top 5. Schaut’s euch einfach an. Damit kann sogar Oma ein Ani-GIF erstellen und dem Hauspudel automatisch ein ★★★★★ Menü kredenzen. Ein klasse Pinsel. COBI – Connected Biking – Ein Kickstarter aus Deutschland Schön, wenn Hardware-Innovationen auch mal aus Deutschland kommen. Das Team von iCradle bastelt mit COBI daran euer Fahrrad ein ziemliches Stück intelligenter zu machen. Wenn es die Biker unter euch begeistert, was da in Frankfurt ersonnen wird, dann schmeißt gleichmal ein paar Euro ins Kickstarter-Schweinderl, auch wenn das Projekt schon erfolgreich gefundet ist! Für Hipster-Single-Speeds übrigens gänzlich ungeeignet — rein optisch, natürlich. Giveaway iPhone 6 und iPhone 6 Plus Der Übercast scheut wieder mal keine Kosten und Mühen. Ist ja auch Weihnachten… deshalb gibt’s nun ein iPhone 6 und ein iPhone 6 Plus zu gewinnen… und zwar diese Zwo hier: Da hat @_patrickwelker tatsächlich schon die neuen iPhone 6 “Übercast” Editions am Start. pic.twitter.com/caxsV7Phw0— Der Ubercast (@derubercast) September 10, 2014 Der Clou ist natürlich das die Geräte handsigniert an die Gewinner geschickt werden. Um diese Prunkstücke zu gewinnen bitte auf Twitter den folgenden Tweet absetzten: »#ichwilleinkind von @derubcerast und außerdem ein Limited Edition iPhone 6 für meinen goldenen Schrein.« Der Hashtag in Kombination mit unserem Twitter-Handle ist das einzig wichtige. Beim Rest könnt ihr auch kreativ sein. Viel Glück. Notizen im Allgemeinen Welche Arten von Notizen macht ihr? Diese Frage wird in die Runde geworfen von Patrick. Er jedenfalls macht oft kurze Notizen, welche in folgende Kategorien passen: - Kommandozeilen-Befehle - Webseiten "Erinner-Mich" abseits von Pinboard.in in einer TEMP Datei (Scratch file) - Geschenkideen und so was - Wichtige Daten-Schnipsel, zum Beispiel wann die beste Zeit ist, um mit Tomaten zu reden Mittlere oder längere Notizen umfassen bei ihm StackExchange Antworten, Entwürfe für Emails oder Forenbeiträge, Dokumentationszusammenfassung (z.B. die wichtigsten Features und Tastaturkürzel für eine App). Was er nicht mehr in nvALT haut sind so Sachen wie Rezepte oder die eigenen Blog Posts, dafür hat er mittlerweile eigene Ordner. Auch Sven nutzt ein digitales Scratchpad für kurze Notizen. Im Business macht er natürlich auch Notizen, meist unterscheidet er zwischen Notizen, die als Referenz zu werten sind und denen die eher temporären Charakter haben. Genauso oft kommt es bei ihm aber zu handschriftlichen Notizen: Sven ist ja ein Verfechter der analogen Kunst. Er ist irgendwie beim “Klassiker” hängen geblieben und nutzt das Moleskine Cahier Journal in der Variante “groß & nackt”, sprich A5 und unliniert (2er Pack für 10,50€). Für Meetings sind bei dem Business-Tiger handschriftliche Notizen immer noch zu werten als die höflichste Form. Zudem sind sie ideal um sich kreativ auszutoben, z.b. mit Sketch Noting oder Scribbeln. Von Moleskine gibt es inzwischen auch eine ganze Reihe an Evernote kompatiblen Notizbücher, aber Scanbot tut es im Zweifel auch. Übrigens, Moleskins Sachen gibt es mittlerweile auch in der Galleria Kaufhof. Für die modischen Kleinschreiber unter euch, die ihr Notizbuch gerne in der Hosentasche verknicken gibt es natürlich die äußerst hippen, aber in Deutschland nach wie vor sehr seltenen Field Notes Notizbücher. Die Editionen sind wirklich außergewöhnlich, hierzulande gibt es allerdings maximal die Standardausgaben. Aber wenn ihr in einer größeren Stadt wohnt, so stehen die Chancen laut Patrick nicht schlecht, dass ihr in der Papeterie eures Vertrauens auch mal exotischere Field Notes findet. Da Sven zu den Stiftverlierern gehört (und’n alter Turnbeutelvergesser ist,) greift er bei Stiften nach einigen teuren Lehrstücken auf den günstigen, aber sehr guten Pilot G2 Gelstift zurück. Bei 3 Stück für 7,98€ sind einzelne Verluste einigermaßen zu verkraften. Wenn es denn dann einmal bunt wie ein Pfau werden soll im analogen Notizbuch, dann greift Wolkenstürmer Sven auf die Muji Gel Pens 0.5mm zurück. Der schlägt mit ca. 1,30 € pro Stück zu buche. Das Sketch Note Buch (24,99 €) findet Sven auch gut. Denn wer seine trögen handschriftlichen Notizen visuell etwas aufwerten will und damit auch einen völlige neue Zuhör-Notiz-Ratio erleben will, der sollte sich dringend das Sketchnote Buch von Mike Rohde zulegen. Im Juni in Episode 6 war Patrick noch kein Analoger, jetzt ist er’s aber und dankbar dafür. Andreas bleibt eisenhart und fährt unbeeindruckt rein digital weiter. Denn, wie die meist schwarz-weiße Applewerbung, so fährt Andreas das Minimalprogramm. Wenn es mal irgendetwas gibt, dass es wert ist erfasst zu werden, dann hält er diese Notizen meist nur kurz und temporär fest. Meetingnotizen macht er beispielsweise in Mindmaps, Sachen die er lernt werden hingegen direkt an dem Ort gespeichert, wo er Referenzen ablegt. Als jemand der mal Snippets als Code Snippet Manager genutzt hat auf dem Mac (nun ist es doch wieder nvALT + Markdown) fragt Patrick sich, was Andreas dafür nutzt seinen C-o-d-e verwaltbar zu machen. Des ischt klar beim Andi, denn der war lange Zeit CodeBox sehr zugetan, nun benutzt er Dash. Ein Tipp für die analogen “Code”-Manager aus Wien, hier gibt es übrigens auch eine vortreffliche iOS App für genau diesen Spezialfall… die Vor- und Nachteile des Gackerl Sackerl wurden ausführlich vor der Sendung erörtert… in der Sendung schleicht es sich auch immer mal wieder ein. Hach ja, Fäkalhumor ist schon was feines. Mac & iOS Patrick’s Anfänge waren bei Circus Ponies NoteBook, eine App die ähnlich wie Microsofts OneNote alles kann und dabei den Charme eines Papiernotizbuchs per Software vermitteln will. Heute gibt es auch “modernere” Looks, welche das analoge Flair auf den Mac bringen. Da keiner von uns ein wirklicher Fan von dem Ansatz ist, gibt es leider, leider auch keine Links. Wovon aber Sven und Patrick und eventuell auch der mindnodige Andreas Fans sind, dass ist nvALT von Brett Terpstra (Urvater der App: Notational Velocity). nvALT ist Patrick’s Notizen-Hub. Mit 88 mp/h geht’s Zurück in die Zukunft und mit 88% ist auch die Wahrscheinlichkeit gesetzt, dass er nvALT am jeweiligen Tag nur zur Suche benutzt. Falls er die Datei dann doch einmal länger editiert macht er das per Shortcut und öffnet die Datei in FoldingText, SublimeText oder wo auch immer. Übrigens, … in diesem Post beschreibt Patrick wie er geschwind wie der Wind seine Notizen mittels Keyboard Maestro ablegt: Updated Notes Palette Filing Macro. Ach ja… FoldingText findet Patrick auch “besonders cool”, da es rein von der sauberen Ansicht her ein Art Marked mit Editiermöglichkeiten ist. Inline-Links zeigt die App nur als Links an, deshalb wirkt euer Markdown extrem sauber, fast wie Rich Text. An dieser Stelle sei auch Typora empfohlen, welches sich momentan in der Betaphase dem wagemutigen Tester bereitwillig in die Arme wirft (Danke an dieser Stelle für den Tipp an Passagier @confluencepoint). Wir halten fest: nVALT ist super… für kleine Notizen, zum schnellen auffinden von Textdateien, und bei Patrick immer offen, da es rank und schlank im vertikalen Modus kaum Platz wegnimmt. Für Neulinge merkt Sven auch gerade einmal das Erkennungsmerkmal von nvALT schlechthin an: Die Suchmaske dient gleichzeitig auch dazu Textdateien zu erstellen. Sven schreibt dort seine Meeting-Notizen (fortlaufender Weise). Somit kann er je nach Projekt den letzten Stand schnell erkennen und quasi an Ort und Stelle weiterschreiben. Dazu nutzt er natürlich gerne TextExpander. Die Magie von TextExpander haben wir ja schon in UC#014 ausführlich vorgestellt und natürlich ist gerade das Notizen erfassen eine der Bereiche in der TextExpander Unglaubliches vollbringt. Beim Erfassen von Gesprächsnotizen - besser bekannt als “Meeting Minutes” - helfen beispielsweise kleine Snippets für das Datum, optische Trenner, Aufgaben oder einzelne Wörter, die öfters genutzt werden. Natürlich kann man sich auch mit großen Snippets, die die gesamte Notizstruktur vorgeben helfen. Auf OS X unterstützt jeder Editor TextExpander, bei iOS ist es ggf. etwas eingeschränkt, aber die allermeisten ernsthaften Editoren bieten ein Sync mit den TextExpander Snippets an, und, für den Notfall gibt es ja noch das TextExpander Customer Keyboard auf iOS 8. Für seine Meeting-Notizen nutzt Sven auch Trick 17 - welchen auch Patrick sehr hoch schätzt - … Trommelwirbel… Trick 17 ist: Einfach die GitHub-Style Checkboxen für Tasklisten nutzten. Das sieht so aus im Rohformat: - [ ] Aufgabe 1 - [x] Aufgabe 2 - [x] Aufgabe 3 - [ ] Aufhabe 4 Aufgabe 2 und 3 sind quasi erledigt und der Rest noch nicht. Sven exportiert das ganze als Rich Text mit Marked 2 und erntet staunende Blicke. Im Kontext sieht das ganze so aus: Link zum Bild: Mettwurst Minutes Sven’s Marked Template: DOWNLOAD Alternative für nvALT: bawigga/nvalt-prime Marked, den “Markdown Viewer auf Steroiden” haben wir auch schon des öfteren erwähnt. Bei Notizen eignet er sich nicht nur zur Betrachtung (inkl. Ein- und Ausklappen einzelner Sektionen), sondern auch zum nachhaltigen Beeindrucken von Kollegen und Kunden im Bezug auf “Meeting Minutes”. Zum einen werden viel zu selten welche gemacht, zum anderen sehen sie dann meist aus wir Kraut und Rüben. Sven nutzt nvALT zum Erfassen von Meeting Minutes und verwendet dabei die GitHub-style Checkboxen, die nvALT und Marked 2 von Haus aus unterstützt werden, um Aufgaben herauszustellen. Dank einer eignen, kleinen CSS Datei in Marked 2 erstellt er dann eine ansehnliche und “professionelle” Version von der dann das RTF kopiert (⌥⇧⌘C) und als Email versendet wird. Hinterlässt immer Eindruck! nvALT unterstützt ja auch Tags. Patrick nutzt aber die nativen Tags von nvALT nicht. Die nehmen ihm erstes zu viel Platz weg (da so unter dem Dateinamen noch eine Zeile rutscht) und zweitens sind die, wie Andreas so schön punktgenau einwirft… zu kompliziert einzubinden. Patrick schreibt einfach in der ersten Zeilen tags: ubercast todo. Das ist mit nvALT immer noch schnell auffindbar und wird in einer Markdown Preview ignoriert, da es durchgeht als YAML Front-Matter (LMGTFY). Sven taggt kaum, aber wenn, dann nutzt er die nvALT-Option. Wobei er selbst anmerkt, dass er sich in der App die Tags auch sparen könnte. Wo hingegen er konsqeunt alles durchtaggt wie der wilde Förster aus Ungerbach, dass ist Evernote. Hier wiederum macht er aber keine Notizen, sondern lagert nur langfristig aufzuhebende Referenzen (z.B. Rezepte). ACHTUNG: Falls ein Hörer wirklich in Evernote ablegt, dann melden, sagen wie, was, wo und den Seltenheitswert bestätigen lassen von uns. An diesem Punkt in der Show fragt Patrick, wie Sven nvALT nutzt, im horizontalen oder vertikalen Modus. Für das V wie vertikal bekommt er ein High Five, aber beim Blick auf die Show Notes stellt sich raus, das dies eine Falschaussage war. SAY WHAAAT? Das High Five wird Sven F. hiermit umgehend offiziell entzogen. Sven… so sieht das vertikale Layout aus: Link zum Bild: Sehr vertikal, mein Lieber. Bei Patrick erstreckt sich das nvALT Fenster über die komplette Bildschirmhöhe und ist meist ganz rechts zu finden. Er zieht Sven auch noch einen weiteren Nerdpunkt ab, da dieser keine Monotype Schrift nutzt. MindNode ist ja nach wie vor Andreas sein Ding. Er schreibt sich auch zu seinen Meetingnotizen immer das Datum und die Uhrzeit dazu. Sven will wissen, wie er die Datei dann wiederfindet, doch für Andreas ist MindNode nur die Zwischenstation. Diejenigen Aufgaben welche sich herauskristallisiert haben, übertragt Andreas in seinen Task-Manager und die Mindmap kommt ins Archiv. MindNode MindNode iOS MindNode Mac Sven ist da eher kurios, denn er exportiert sich seine MindNotes als PDF und haut die in Evernote. Dort ist ja dann alles auch dank Auto-OCR auffindbar. Wenn er noch ein Bienchen dazuverdienen will, dann kommt die MindMap als Zip noch mit in die Notiz. Evernote ist bei Patrick mittlerweile nur noch der Ort an dem “seltene Gäste” landen, also Sachen die er nur ganz selten aufmacht und die unwichtig sind. Zum Beispiel sowas wie geplante Anschaffungen für den Haushalt. Bei dem vielen Gerede um Evernote stellt sich raus, dass keiner die App nutzt um Notizen zu erstellen. Patrick fällt da spontan Metanota ein, welches als Client für Simplenote und Evernote auf dem Mac funktioniert und ein wenig nvALT-Charme versprüht. Für’s Protokoll: Andreas ist kein Evernotenutzer, geschweige denn Evernotefreund. Wenn es denn mal an die Endablage geht, also den Ort des Archivierens, so hält Andreas das tatsächlich und unglaublicherweise in DayOne fest. Die Piloten müssen da natürlich nachbohren, da die App hat ja bei ganz regulären Kunden den Ruf einer guten Tagebuch-App genießt. Andreas erklärt, dass dort die Notizen landen, welche schon mehrere Revisionen hinter sich haben und als solides Gedankengut von seiner Murmel gewertet werden. Eine Notiz, die ein solch durchdachtes Machwerk darstellt kann also schon einen Tagebucheintrag wert ist. Das wird abgesegnet und wir können weiterfliegen. So um alles unter einem Hut zu haben und möglichst wenig Apps am Start zu haben, wird ja bei Sven Write genutzt. War ja schließlich mal sein Pick und ist auf iOS und dem Mac vorhanden. Bei Andreas hat der Pick sozusagen Früchte getragen und Write schlägt Wurzel in seinem Dock und auf dem iOS Homescreen. Derjenige der schwankt, ob er Write oder Ulysses wirklich braucht ist Patrick. Er hat zwar rein proforma Ordner angelegt für Notizen, Todos, Listen und sein Wiki, aber LaunchBar tut den Trick auch und öffnet seine Textdateien in den Ordnern ebenfalls zügig. Auf iOS bevorzugt er 1Writer, welches er so eingestellt hat, dass automatisch die Markdown Preview aufgeht. Hier noch einmal ein Beispiel zu einer typischen Markdown Liste im GitHub Task-Style: - [ ] [The Big Lebwoski](http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0118715/) - [ ] [Gentleman Broncos](http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1161418/) - [x] [Doctor Who (1963–1989)](http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056751/) - [x] [Star Wars: Episode VII](http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2488496/) In FoldingText auf dem Mac sieht das so (sauber) aus: Link zum Bild: FoldingText Watchlist … und in 1Writer, dass ebenfalls GitHub style tasks unterstützt sieht die Listenansicht ebenfalls schick aus und kann auch zum abhaken genutzt werden: Link zum Bild: 1Writer Watchlist Write hin oder her. Sven ist nicht so recht zufrieden, dass die vielen Schnittstellen mit Box, Dropbox und Co. nicht so 1:1 auf iOS widergespiegelt werden. Deshalb ist er nun wieder komplett zurück bei nvALT. Für iOS hat er keinen wirklichen Favoriten und räumt zeitgleich ein, dass er dort auch “nicht wirklich viel Notizen anlegt”. Andreas ist auf iOS auch sparsam unterwegs und erstellt wenig Notizen dort – wenn dann nutzt er aber Drafts. Wo er ebenfalls fleißig Notizen macht, ist im OmniFocus Notiz-Feld. OmniFocus ist sein Scratchpad. In der App kann er dann auch gerade noch die Punkte eintragen, welche zum vervollständigen der Notiz nötig sind. So kann aus seiner Notiz evtl. auch einmal ‘ne Email werden oder weitere Tasks entstehen aus dem Nichts. Danach kann er immer noch festlegen, ob diese Notiz dann z.B. ein Zuhause als Blogartikel in Write findet, als DayOne-Eintrag oder als Email oder als …. OmniFocus OmniFocus iPhone OmniFocus iPad OmniFocus Mac Attachments Drafts ist auch Sven sein Ding. Was Andreas gerade für OmniFocus geschildert hat, findet er an Drafts so toll. Eine App, die wie Drafts auf iOS Notizen aufnimmt und einem dann erlaubt diese weiterzusenden an OmniFocus, Trello und Co. wäre sein Traum für den Mac. Das fehlt für ihn irgendwie… auch wenn das jetzt schon geht mit Alfred, LaunchBar und Keyboard Maestro. Kurz, der Fechner hätte halt lieber eine App mit Action Directory. Tipp: Gehe mal auf www.eierlegendewollmilchsauapp.de. Patrick merkt an, dass er so eine App auch doll-doll-doll finden würde. Allerdings muss diese dann ihre Actions ähnlich wie .Choose, sein Pick von letzter Woche, oder SublimeText die Actions bereitstellen. Kurz: Einfach aufrufbar und durchsuchbar sein per Tastaturkürzel (siehe ↓). Link zum Bild: Suchleisten in choose und SublimeText Drafts findet Patrick natürlich auch schnieke, aber zum Suchen und Editieren auf iOS nutzt er Editorial, weil man dort ähnlich wie bei Write, Ulysses, 1Write, etc. Ordner aufrufen kann und spezifizierte Suchanfragen starten kann. Link zum Bild: Editorial Ordner Bookmark Link: Editorial Workflow — Bookmarks Folder Zurück zum Entwickler der Herzen. Fast fühlt es sich so an, als wenn der große Brett Terpstra iOS Editor Vergleich etwas Staub gefangen hat, trotzdem bleibt er ein guter Anlaufpunkt für alle, die den richtigen Editor für ihr iPhone oder iPad noch nicht gefunden haben. Falls also bei euch nix dabei ist, schaut mal auf der Webseite von Brett vorbei. Nachdem Tobias Günther von Fournova uns ja in Flug #UC009 die Stuttgarter App Kards.io in gepickenter Form unter die Nase gerieben hat, fragt Patrick nun in die Runde, ob die Herren Co-Piloten denn auch bestrebt sind möglichst kurze Notizen zu machen? Bei Kards ist diese Herangehensweise explizit empfohlen. Die App ist darauf ausgelegt kleine Notizen - das kann auch mal nur eine URL oder eine Zeile sein - aufzunehmen bzw. aufzufinden. Im übrigen eine Methode, die auch von vielen nvALT Nutzern propagiert wird. Patrick selbst hat mit der Adaption von Kards, sowie mit ausschließlichen Einzeiler-Notizen so ein wenig seine Probleme. Er schreibt gerne auch mal mehr und was Kards angeht, da verzichtet er ungern auf die konstante Hochzeit welche Dropbox mit den iOS Texteditoren Tagein-Tagaus feiert. Kards für den Mac ist noch in der Beta und ein iOS-Client ist vorerst nicht in Sicht. Andreas benutzt Kards häufiger. In der Tat ist das Konzept auch so spannend, dass jeder Pilot es uneingeschränkt dem geneigten Hörer (oder Leser in diesem Fall) ans Herz legt. Also, Webseite aufrufen, Beta-Einladung anfordern, selbst ein Bild machen. Last but not least… Notability ist auch noch was, was beim Herr Zeitler unter den digitalen Stift kommt: Notability Webseite Notability iOS Notability Mac Web-Empfehlungen Simplenote ist immer noch eine der besten Apps was Notizen angeht. Hinzu kommt der schnellste Sync weltweit und die Möglichkeit eine Datei kollaborierend zu teilen oder die Vorschau des Markdown Files öffentlich zugänglich zu machen. StackEdit – In-browser markdown editor ist auch noch eine nette Geschichte für Browserfetischisten. Man kann hier Dropbox, GoogleDrive & Co. verlinken. Ganz am Rande: Der Author nimmt auch Spenden entgegen. Alternativen zu StackEdit sind für Dropbox-Nutzer definitiv vorhanden, insbesondere wer bereit ist ein paar Euros zu zahlen hat mit TextDrop einen soliden Editor zur Hand. Ist das nix für euch, blättern einfach mal in dieser Liste mit 10 kostenlosen Online Markdown Editoren. Unsere Picks Patrick: Der vermessene Mensch (von SWR.de) Andreas: Markdown Keyboard (4,49 €) Sven: Crossy Road (0 €) In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

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Der Übercast
#UC007: App Launcher Bondage

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2014 71:55


Mit Marco Masser und Manfred Linzner von Obdev aus Wien navigieren wir die neuste Version von Launchbar 6 (dem beliebten App Launcher für OS X), sprechen über die deutschsprachige Apple Entwicklerszene und vereinbaren ein denkwürdiges “Safe Word”. Diese Woche fliegen wir über Wien und gabeln dort Marco Masser und Manfred Linzner von Objective Development auf, um über das holde Entwickeln von Anwendungen, Apples Entwicklungsumgebung, LaunchBar 6 und Little Snitch 3 zu reden. Nach dem furiosen und verwirrungsstiftenden Intro für die zwei Wiener erntet Patrick leider Gottes weder schallendes Gelächter, noch entrüstete Ausrufe für seinen Swift-Witz – dafür aber fällt der Luftdruck in der Kabine schlagartig ab… wobei die Maschine erst knapp 2 Minuten in der Luft ist. Das eigentlich schlimme ist, dass es nicht besser wird. Weitere Schlagworte die Fallen sind Bondage und Tantra. So viel zur Qualität des Ubercasts. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Zum Thema Paperless gibt es noch Rückfragen von Andreas, und zwar wie es bei allen am Mikrofon so mit Fahrtickets aussieht. Andreas schildert sein Vorgehen beim digitalen Erwerb von Tickets mit dem DB Navigator und FahrInfo SVV. Manfred ist seit 2 Jahren komplett Paperless und hat mit dem MacSparky Paperless Guide angefangen. Anfangs nutzte er noch Evernote, wobei die wachsende Datenbank dann immer schwerer zu managen war. Nun nutzt er eine Ordnerstruktur und BitTorrent Sync. Um auf dem Mac das archivierte Material aufzufinden nutzt er Spotlight und das hauseigene LaunchBar. Außerdem merkt er an, dass es in Wien für alle öffentlichen Verkehrsmittel und auch Zugverbindungen eine digitale Variante gibt. Das erntet neidische Ohren der deutschen Nutzer. Marco dahingegen stellt sich als low-maintenance Digitalarbeiter raus. Er ist eher kein Paperless-Typ, da bei ihm ganz einfach wenig Dokumente anfallen. Überschallneuigkeiten Auch wenn wir mit den Flieger die Schallmauer nie und nimmer durchbrechen könnten, werden ab und an mal “News” zu uns durchgefunkt. So zum Beispiel das frisch anlaufende Google Domains für welches man sich zurzeit als Betatester anmelden kann. Google Domains is a new domain name service set to launch from Google. It’s currently in private beta, though you can request an invite. Official pricing is unavailable at the moment, but from images on the site it looks like domains will run around $12. Features will include free private registration, easy domain forwarding, branded emails and more. Ebenfalls neu auf dem Radar ist Pocket Premium, welches für $44.99 im Jahr mit permanenten Backups glänzt und so einmal zum Archiv hinzugefügte Seiten ewiglich in ihren Status Quo speichert. Hinzugekommen sind auch eine verbesserte Suche und passende Tags, die zum jeweiligen Link vorgeschlagen werden. Für alte Read It Later Supporter gibt’s es sogar 45% Rabatt auf Lebenszeit. Premium Alternativen: Pinboard zurzeit $10 einmaliger Eintrittspreis $25 für die Archivierung (pro Jahr) InstaPaper inkl. Abonnentenaccount $12 im Jahr Die Features von Pocket Premium sorgen nicht für Begeisterungsstürme bei den 5 Leuten im Flieger, niemand sieht so recht die Trumpfkarten im Vergleich zum bisher gebotenen. Profi-Nörgler Andreas geht sogar soweit das Archivierungsfeature als Unnütz zu deklarieren… also auch das von Pinboard… was Pilot Patrick wiederum völlig fertig macht. Dem ist dieses Feature heilig und mindestens 1x pro Jahr auch nützlich. Es hilft ihm einige API-Schweinereien bei Pinboard zu ermöglichen wie zum Beispiel ein lokales offline Archiv der eigenen Pinboard Seiten zu haben (und um dort beispielsweise dann einige Workfloweinträge aus Sean Korzdorfers öffentlichen Notebook (✝ R.I.P.) erneut zu analysieren). Historie von Obdev und das App-Entwickeln an sich Das 1995 veröffentlichte LaunchBar ist eine der “ältesten” Mac OS X Apps (siehe “Longstanding Mac Apps” von Shawn Blanc). Marco gibt Einblicke, wie die erste Version von LaunchBar aussah. Das Licht der Welt erblickte die App dank Norbert Heger. Der Obdevler wollte sich so um unnötige Maus- und Tastaturakrobatikaktionen drücken und repetitive Aufgaben vermeiden. So war die V1 nur ein reiner Applauncher, welcher mittels einer Sammlung von Shell Skripten arbeitete. In einem Fenster in der Ecke wurde derzeit besagter Script-Ordner mit den Kurznamen der Skripte geöffnet, man machte einen Klick und los ging es. LaunchBar Veteran Shawn Blanc hat auch hier zwei Screen Shots aus seinem Archiv gezaubert für Leute die mal OS 9 Luft schnuppern wollen. Als nächstes gibt es für den Interessierten Hörer einen kleinen Einblick in Firmenhistorie. So zum Beispiel erfahren wir, dass das Team von 4 auf 11 Personen gewachsen ist, wer an welchen Projekten arbeitet und wer was für eine Aufgabe erledigt. Zudem gibt es food for thought, nämlich was Entwickler damals noch selbst erfinden mussten und was von Apple dann nach und nach (komplett) übernommen wurde. Ein Beispiel, welches von unseren Gästen angeführt wird, ist die offizielle Schnittstelle zur Lokalisierung. Bei so einem “Klau” denkt Sven natürlich sofort an das Stichwort “sherlocking”. Marco gibt aber nun die offizielle Entwarnung und verkündet, dass nach 2 Wochen Yosemite-Spotlight-Nutzung er den angestiegenen Funktionsumfang der App als positiven Effekt deutet. Apple bringe so das Konzept eines Launchers der Öffentlichkeit näher. Ein Zugang würde geschaffen werden, welcher nach der Eingewöhungsphase, den nach mehr dürstenden Nutzer vielleicht gen eines erweiterbaren und funktionsschwangeren Launchers auf dem Markt stößt. Nach Manfred hat Spotlight immer noch ein großes Gebiet in welchem es sich verbessern kann, wo sich seit Jahres nix tut: Daten rein und raus schicken, um diese dann weiterzuverwerten sei immer noch nicht wirklich möglich. Was hat sich für Entwickler verbessert? In unserem Gespräch mit Obdev können wir festhalten, dass es mit der Vermehrung der Wildkatzen und schönen Plätze in Kalifornien stets leichter wurde mehr Features in die vorhandene Applikation zu integrieren. Dank dem Anstieg öffentlicher APIs sind weniger Hacks nötig um an Daten zu kommen. Auch zeigte Apples Gatekeeper eindeutig, dass die Fruchtfabrikanten aus Cupertino immer noch interessiert daran sind Entwicklern möglichst viel Freiraum (abseits von der auferlegten Sandkiste) zu lassen. Ebenfalls neu seit OS 10.9 ist auch die spezielle Signatur von Kernel-Erweiterungen, welche eine verbesserte Sicherheit gibt und als Entgegenkommen von Apple gewertet werden kann. Wie tastet sich Obdev an Swift ran? Marco ist begeistert, dass Apple genug Mut hatte eine neue moderne Sprache einzuführen und auch, dass Swift parallel zu und mit Objective-C verwendet werden kann. Das Endziel nach Marco ist, dass Swift die Zukunft wird, also prognostiziert er das aller Wahrscheinlichkeit nach in einer fernen(?) Zukunft immer mehr ausschließlich mit Swift gecodet werden wird… auch wenn Objective-C weiterhin als funktionabel gilt und die problemlose Co-Existenz beider Sprachen beworben wird. Ganz intern und ganz offiziell passend zum Thema: Auch in Zukunft wird es LaunchBar und LittleSnitch nicht im App Store geben. Ersteres hätte mit viel Drücken und Ziehen noch die Chance dazu, Letzterem ist es auf Grund der erwähnten (selbstgeschneiderten) Kernel-Erweiterung nicht möglich in die App Store Familie einzutreten. Patrick fragt, ob der App Store trotzdem noch interessant ist für Obdev und eine eventuell bereits geplante neue Anwendung dafür ein Kandidat wäre. Ganz diplomatisch bejaht ihm das Manfred mit einem “Ja”. Er plaudert weiter aus dem Nähkästchen und informiert uns, dass für Obdev schon immer Apps interessant waren, welche eine Nische bedienen, herausforderndes programmieren erfordern und ganz einfach nicht von jedem geschrieben werden können. Ebenso aber die Kehrseiten dieses Ehrgeizes, nämlich das auch Apples Direktsupport für Entwickler, welchen man immer einmal pro Quartal anfordern kann, meist nicht den Profifragen standhalten konnte und die Helfer oft mehr oder minder ratlos war. Irgendwann hat Obdev diese Möglichkeit des Feedbacks komplett verworfen, da die Fragen der Wiener für Apple zu trickreich waren. Somit hatte sich schnell ein neuer Workflow eingebürgert, und zwar das alle Problemlösungen intern vom Team gelöst werden. Spiel, Satz und Sieg. Eine Sache die Patrick öfters gehört hat ist, dass die WWDC einen Raum schafft, in welchem solch trickreiche Problemfragen fachmännischer von den Applemitarbeiter beantwortet werden können; drum spricht er die Support-Foltermeister direkt darauf an. Marco bejaht dies. Auf der WWDC konnte er auf seine spezifischen Fragen Antworten aus erster Hand erlangen. Sein WWDC-Besuch liegt zwar schon eine Weile zurück, aber in einem persönlichen Gespräch mit dem Entwickler von Apples QuickTime wurde im Rede und Antwort gestanden. Marco betont, dass man allerdings auch die Person finden muss, welche für die Frage maßgeschneidert ist. Hätte er mit einem UI-Spezialisten seinen Plausch abgehalten, so wäre ihm damit auch nicht gedient gewesen. Das man ein optimales Feedback bekommt ist also tatsächlich ein Merkmal der WWDC. Allerdings kann es durchaus sein, dass man nur die Puzzelstücke bekommt, welche Apple auch bereit ist ans Entwicklervolk zu verteilen. Marco nennt auch hierzu ein, zwei Beispiele (… die ihr gerne nachhören könnt). Der Ausflug in den iTunes App Store: Pebbles Pilot Patrick möchte wissen, was das Leitmotiv hinter der Entwicklung von Pebbles war. Kurz, ob das nun Entwickler-Spieldrang war etwa einmal mit Objective-C etwas für iOS rauszuhauen, oder herauszufinden wie profitabel der Spielemarkt im App Store ist und welche Chancen daraus für das Unternehmen erwachsen können. Wie sich herausstellt ist Pebbles auch wieder einem einzigen Entwickler aus dem Team zuzuschreiben: Johannes. Die Redaktion sieht hier Parallelen zu Panic, wo auch oft genug quasi pro Entwickler für die Kreation an sich verantwortlich war. Wie dem auch sei, zurück zur Ausgangsfrage; Pebbles wurde unter anderem entwickelt, weil Johannes neugierig war, wie das Signing und auch die Xcode 4 Integration so funktionieren auf iOS und mit dem App Store. Die literarische Übersetzung von Sven folgt auf den Fuss: Den großen Zeh ins Wasser halten. Was wir Nutzer aber daraus lernen ist, dass Obdev den Fokus auf OS X hat. Marco bejaht das, schiebt aber auch direkt nach, dass firmenintern schon Pebbles als potentieller Spielplatz für ein Swift-Projekt gehandelt wurde/wird. Abschießend hält er fest, dass für Neuentwickler die Nutzerzahlen von iOS natürlich wesentlich interessanter sind. LaunchBar 6 Hier wird das Obdev Team wieder gefordert. Wie im Schulunterricht müssen die wesentlichen Neuerungen runtergerasselt werden. Manfred holt sich eine 1 mit Sternchen ab und gibt einen kleinen Ausblick was als nächsten noch auf der Karte steht, zum Beispiel selbstgebastelte User-Themes. Um die Nerdherzen jedoch noch höher schlagen zu lassen gibt es hier und jetzt ein paar Lieblingsactions von LaunchBar 6. Keiner der Fluggäste und Piloten lässt sich lumpen und was nun folgt ist die Ausbeute dieses Austausches. Links zu LaunchBar 6 Actions: LaunchBar Scripts GitHub Repository von Andreas AppleScript Beliebtheit auf GitHub Offizielles Objective Development Forum - LaunchBar Actions Keyboard Maestro Macros Action Pinboard Actions hlissner/launchbar6-scripts prenagha/launchbar Launchbar Actions von Manuel Weiel Justin Lancys Tools um Browsertabs zu organisieren Wie immer quetschen die vernetzwerkten Schwaben noch einen lokalpatriotischen Link rein. In diesem Falle zum Stuttgart Opendata Framework. Der hat zwar jetzt nix mit Actions an sich zu tun, aber damit, dass die ehrgeizigen Baden-Württemberger einen weltkosmosweiten Standard entwickeln (hust). Ein weiterer kleiner, firmeninterner Vorausblick: Es gibt noch viele (auch große) Features die noch auf LaunchBar-Nutzer warten. Die App bieten sich an konstant ausgeschmückt zu werden und Obdev hat wohl noch eine Todoliste vor sich, die sich gewaschen hat und welche unsere Augen erneut leuchten lassen wird. LittleSnitch 3 Der Überwachungschef auf Mac OS X und das Kind von Obdev Entwickler Karl hat fast schon 15 Jahre auf dem Buckel und Betas für Yosemite sind bereits am Start. Was der versierte Blogleser vielleicht nicht vermutet, da tendenziell mehr über LaunchBar durch die Technikpresse wandert: Little Snitch ist quasi das Zugpferd von Objective Development. Eine Empfehlung die es auf den Punkt bringt spricht Sven noch einmal an alle Nutzer aus: In einer Welt wo immer mehr vernetzte Applikationen Daten durch die Gegend pusten und man vielleicht zumindestens ein Stück Kontrolle darüber haben möchte (… denn da hilft LittleSnitch). Der sanfte Ausklang hin zur Landebahn Die abschließende Frage von Patrick zum Thema Softwarepiraterie endet mit einer Hommage von Marco und ihm an die Entwicklerszene, welche Apps mit Liebe zum Detail und ausgefeilten Funktionsumfang für die Nutzergemeinschaft des Macs entwickelt. Eine Sache die beide nachdem Umstieg auf das Apple Betriebssystem sehr beeindruckt hat und den Schritt vom Freewareuser hin zum Gernezahler wesentlich erleichtert hat. Der Rest der Mannschaft stimmt in den Tenor ein. Kurz, wir sind alle immer wieder erstaunt über die aktive und talentierte Entwicklerszene, welche für unser System der Wahl Programme schreibt. Gewinnspiel Was gibt es abzustauben??? Na ganz objektiv dürft ihr nun drei Mal raten… es gibt: 2 Lizenzen für LittleSnitch 2 Lizenzen für LaunchBar Wie nehme ich teil? Frisch zitiert und druckreif aus unserer Marketingabteilung kommt hier die Anleitung: Hört euch den Flug UC#007 an — ach kommt schon… am besten nehmt ihr uns gleich ins Abo. Folgt, liked oder plust uns bei einem sozialen Netz eurer Wahl: Facebook, Twitter, Google+ oder App.net Im jeweiligen sozialen Netz findet ihr einen Gewinnspiel Post, bzw. Tweet welchen ihr bitte shared, liked, plust, retweeted oder mit 7G einmal um den Mond schickt Mit diesen drei Schritten seid ihr im Pool und vielleicht einer der glücklichen Gewinner einer Lizenz für Launchbar oder Little Snitch von Objective Development. Schluss mit der ganzen “Teilerei” und somit lustig ist am Freitag, den 11. Juli. Die Bekanntgabe der Gewinner erfolgt während Flug UC#008 (VÖ Freitag, den 18. Juli). Des weiteren werden die Sieger natürlich auf ihrem jeweiligen Sozialen Kanal, ob das nun Facebook, Twitter, Google+ oder App.net ist, kontaktiert und informiert… wir finden euch schon und die Lottofee wird ihr Übriges tun. Letztendlich können die vier Softwaremillionäre hier dann ihre Coupons einzulösen. Wer die Apps von Objective Development regulär erwerben möchte dem wird mit dieser kleinen Liste geholfen: Hier kaufen: Objective Development Hier fragen: @launchbar und @littlesnitch Hier der Preisüberblick für LaunchBar: LaunchBar – Single License: 24€ Upgrade von LaunchBar 5 auf LaunchBar 6 — Single License: 15€ LaunchBar – Family License (5 Computer): 39€ Upgrade von LaunchBar 5 auf LaunchBar 6 — Family License: 24€ Endlich “Picks” Darüber hat sich Patrick besonders gefreut, da ihm seit Anbeginn seiner Podcastinglaufbahn und der Taufe dieses Podcast eine Empfehlung schon länger auf der Zunge lag. Wie immer gilt, wer die detaillierte persönliche Meinung hören will, der darf gerne noch einmal genauer hinhören. Marco: PaintCode von PixelCut Manfred & Andreas: xScope von The Iconfactory Patrick: Uberspace.de und seine flexible, faire Preisstruktur Sven: WiFi-Explorer von Adrian Granados Das war’s. Wir wünschen einen angenehmen Aufenthalt, drücken allen Teilnehmern die Daumen und bedanken uns recht herzlich bei unseren tollen Gästen. Bis zum nächsten Mal. In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

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Der Übercast
#UC006: Origami für Aussteiger

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2014 63:18


Heute geht es um das Thema wie man sein Büro nackter gestaltet… also ohne Papier: Paperless wird das ganze genannt und die drei Piloten stellen ihre Erfahrungen und Workflows vor. Diese Woche: Workflows und Tools die unsere Piloten nutzen, wenn es um die Arbeit mit und ohne Papier geht. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel Healthkit und Slapstick-Einlagen der letzten Keynote werden thematisiert in unseren Follow-Ups. Das eigentlich Überbleibsel ist jedoch, dass der Start um ca. eine halbe Stunde dank der Yosemite Beta von Andreas verzögert wurde… ψ(`∇´)ψ. Paperless Wir sitzen heute eigentlich nicht in unserer Originalmaschine, sondern in einem Papierflieger… und das obwohl unser Thema “Paperless” heißt. Patrick W. (33) Nachdem von Patrick mit der oben zu lesenden Anmoderation des heutigen Themas das volle rhetorische Geschick des Ubercasts aufgeboten wurde, gerät unser Passagierflugzeug kurzweilig in Turbulenzen bis wir dann dazu kommen “grundlegendes” zu klären. Grundsätzliches: Wie Piloten papierlos werden. Das papierlose Büro wurde nach einer von Sven aus dem Stehgreif getätigten Aussage bereits Ende der Neunziger prognostiziert, theoretisiert und gar auch postuliert. Bis die Technik dann in der Tat praktikabel genug wurde, vergingen dann doch noch ein paar Jahre. Heute ist der Verzicht auf einen Großteil des Papiers möglich… daher bietet sich dieser Rundflug an für alle Füchse die papierlos werden wollen. Ein Grund für die steigende Popularität vom papierlosen Büro ist, das heute der zeitliche Aufwand deutlich geringer ist, wenn man papierlos arbeiten will. So gestaltet sich beispielsweise das Archivieren und Wiederfinden der Dokumente dank zahlreicher Hilfsmittel und genug Speicherkapazität problemloser. Doch nicht für jeden ist die papierlose Existenz eine Option. Als Selbstständiger ist ein für Andreas ein rechtlich einwandfreies papierloses Büro nicht zu 100% möglich. Seine Originaldokumente müssen 10 Jahre im zeitlerischen Archiv ihr dasein fristen und haben somit auch diverse Umzüge mitgemacht. Nichtsdestotrotz archiviert Andreas für seinen Steuerberater und sich selbst gerne digital, um schnellen Zugriff auf seine Papiere zu haben, beispielsweise falls diese mal flux nach der unangemeldeten Steuerüberprüfung an den bereits erwähnten Steuerberater weitergeleitet werden müssen. Sollte der Supergau eintreffen, so steht der papierlose Atombunker von Andreas bereit. Diese 10 Jahre an Akten stimmen Sven nachdenklich. Kritisch hinterfragt er den Status Quo, wo uns elektronisch erstellte und nicht mehr handschriftlich signierte Dokumente von Versicherung, Staat, Unternehmen und Geschäftspartnern zugestellt werden. Er kratzt sich an der Pilotenmütze und wundert sich in die Welt hinein, wo rechtlich überhaupt noch ein Unterschied besteht zwischen solchen “Originalen” und dem digitalisierten Pendent. Wir wissen die Antwort nicht und lassen ihn so mit einem nervösen Gefühl in der Magengrube weiterkratzen. Noch immer sind wir im Steigflug… also beim Einstieg. Patrick ist grundsätzlich bestrebt wenig Papier zu behalten. Er digitalisieren fast alles und versucht möglichst wenig in analogen Ordnern zu behalten. Dieser Freiberufler jedoch druckt erst aus, wenn dies explizit von ihm gefordert ist. Wichtige Dokumente von Ämtern, dem Finanzamt, der Bank und den lieben Versicherungen hebt er jedoch auch er in Ordnern auf (und von diesen digitalisiert er meist keine… wobei er sich nach dieser Folge fragen wird, warum er dies nicht auch noch macht). Auf jeden Fall steht fest, seitdem er Paperless ist, spart er sich jedoch für jedes Jahr einen separaten Ordner anzulegen. Schön das sich somit deren deren Anzahl auch etwas reduziert hat. Das Jahr 2010 markiert Svens Einstieg ins papierlose Büro. Wie Patrick hat er nur noch wenige Ordner, digitalisiert viel, aber nicht alles. Den neusten Tchibo-Prospekt z.B. nicht. Die große Frage ist, wie fängt man an langsam von seinen Papierbergen digitale Äquivalente zu erzeugen, wenn man 5, 10 oder gar 50 Ordnern aus den letzten Jahren vor sich sieht kann einem schnell die Lust vergehen. Sven zumindest hatte sich seinerzeit dafür entschieden vorerst nur neue Dokumente im Posteingang zu digitalisieren. So hat er auch herausgefunden, dass er es sich sparen kann veraltete Papiere aus seinen Ordnern ins neue digitale Format pressen welche sich alljährlich ändern (und eine neue, alleingültige Version darstellen). Des weiteren empfiehlt er sich 1-2 Tage im Jahr zu reservieren, an denen der Scanner zum glühen gebracht wird, auf das die Berge an Papier dahinschmelzen. Das paperless nicht automatisch heißt, dass man nur Akten scannen muss, wird von Patrick angeführt. Der hat nämlich ganz zahm seine ersten Schritte gewagt, indem er seine Kisten mit Bedienungsanleitungen gescannt hat (… jedenfalls die Exemplare für die er im Internet keine digitale Version gefunden hat). Wir halten fest: Auch mit “unwichtigen” Sachen kann man den Anfang machen und schauen, ob es für einen überhaupt funktioniert. Digitalisieren Das Scannen ist des Zeitlers größte Lust. Daheim hat er einen antikes Multifunktionsgerät - den Pixma von Canon - und im Coworking-Büro eine moderneres Gerät von Brother (welches sogar mit Einzug). Je nachdem wo er gerade ist wird dann direkt gescannt und das Ergebnis ist… was soll es anderes sein, ein PDF. Ein größeres Problem ist, wenn Andreas Steuerberater von ihm fordert, dass er das Dokument mit der Rechnungsnummer XYZ vom 27.06.1981 braucht. Da fast jeder Rechnungssteller sein eigenes Rechnungsformat hat, fand Andreas oft nicht was er sucht. Bis… ja, bis er seinen digitalen Dokumenten dieses einheitliche Rechnungsformat aufgebrummt hat. Der Löwenanteil der ganzen Benennung läuft bei ihm per Automation, weil es sonst zu viel Zeit kostet. Im Hause Welker steht zwar ein modernes Multifunktionsgerät in der Abstellkammer im Flur, der Samsung CLX-3185FW, aber Patrick schwört trotzdem auf Scanbot und/oder Scanner Pro. Er hat für sich entschieden, das er keinen Doxie oder Fujitsu Scanner braucht, da seine wöchentliche Papierflut sich in Grenzen hält und er die meisten Dokumente bereits digital bekommt (sei es vom Stromanbieter, den Banken oder Dr. Amazon). Er hält fest, dass jeder selbst wissen muss, wo sein Break-Even-Point ist und ab wann sich eventuell die Anschaffung eines Doxie lohnt. An der iPhone-Lösung gefällt Patrick, dass er nicht in den Flur latschen muss und direkt bestimmen kann wohin das PDF geht, in ein Evernote Notebook oder zur Dropbox. Bei Scanbot ist der automatische Upload zu in einen Dropboxordner voreingestellt. Am Zielort wird dann je nach Name der Datei eine automatisierte Aktion ausführt. Scanner Pro wird ab und an noch von ihm genutzt, wenn das File sensible Informationen enthält und es nicht automatisch hochgeladen werden soll. Mögliche Ziele für eine solche Datei sind z.B. der eigene NAS. Wenn man vom Teufel spricht…. Also nicht von Sven, sondern dessen Doxie. Der erfahrenste Pilot hat nämlich einen akkugestützten Einzugscanner, den Doxie Go, in der Küche gebunkert. Das ist der Ort an dem die Fechners ihre Post auf Stapeln stapeln, bis Sven Ende der Woche in seiner weekly review alles reviewt. Dann nämlich kämpfen sein Doxie und er sich durch die Papierfluten mit schnellen Kraulbewegungen. Als Pro-Alternative zum Doxie Go führt Sven den bei Vielen beliebten Fujitsu ScanSnap Scanner (inkl. Einzug, auch gemischte Formate, zwischen 50-100 Blatt) an. Auf den Mac kommt seine gesammelte Ausbeute entweder mit der Doxie App, welche auch direkt nach Evernotehausen senden kann oder so wie es erfahrene Piloten machen: Einscannen mit dem Doxie Go. Auf den Rechner laden, Doxie macht dann optional OCR (aka Schrifterkennung). Sven speichert schwarz/weiß mit OCR. In dem Inbox-Ordner gibt es Regeln von Hazel, welche das Dokument umbenennen. Generell öffnet Sven alle Dokumente in der Vorschau.app und nutzt einen selbstzusammengeflicktes Tastaturkürzel zur Umbenennung der Dateien. Dieses Kürzel zündet ein TextExpander Snippet, welches den Names aus folgenden Kategorien generiert: Typ des Dokuments (Rechnung, Quittung, Referenz, …) Jahreszahl-Monat Textfeld Wer schreibt mir (Versicherung, Telefongesellschaft) Grund: Mahnung, Erbschaft, … evtl. noch mehr Info Hazel macht nun endgültig Schluss mit lustig und schafft erneut Ordnung – je nachdem was für Schlüsselworte im Namen steckt. Auf die Frage von Andreas - der im übrigen keine Unterscheidung in Typen vornimmt, sich aber wundert, - was sich hinter “Referenz” versteckt, gibt Sven an, dass es sich hierbei um schwer zuordenbare Dokumente handelt. Neben Schriftstücken, welche bereits in getippter Form vorliegen, soll es wohl auch so etwas wie handschriftliche Notizen geben. Davon haben Andreas und Patrick keine. Sven schon. Seine Moleskin Notizen aus Meetings und dem harten Businessalltag werden mittels Scanbot einmal in der Woche digitalisiert. Aus mehreren Seiten wird so ein PDF zur Archivierung generiert. Buchhalter Andreas hingegen hat eine Numbers Tabelle zur Budget-Verwaltung worin sämtliche seiner Ausgaben im App Store, im Musikfachhandel und und und eingetragen werden. Ausgaben für Lebensmittel sammelt er per Launch Center Pro samt Ort, Betrag und Datum in einer CSV-Datei. Handschriftliche Notizen, digitale Notizen, OCR Neben Scanbot und Konsortien nutzt Patrick ab und an InstaWeb, eine App welche aus Webseiten ein PDF generieren kann und dieses auch neben dem Emailversand an Dropbox oder Evernote senden kann. InstaWeb erzeugt auch eine Titelseite mit dem Titel der Seite, URL und Datum des Aufrufs. Es gibt leider keine Option, um das Datum automatisch in den Dateinamen einzubetten. Patrick benutzt die App allerdings sehr selten, denn die meisten Dinge (ob Webseiten oder Notizen) schickt er in mittels Drafts, Launch Center Pro oder einem Bookmarklet in eine seiner laufenden Listen. Auf dem Mac entscheidet sich dann, ob und wohin archiviert wird oder ob radikal gelöscht wird. Die digitalen handschriftlichen Notizen von Andreas werden ab und an in Penultimate, Notability oder Anwendung X gesammelt und landen früher oder später in OmniFocus. Von dort aus geht die Reise für diese Notizen weiter und die Datei wird gelöscht. Als OCR App für iOS ist den Piloten nur PDFpen Scan+ von Smile eingefallen… was jeder von ihnen kennt, aber keiner nutz. Patrick hat noch TextGrabber von den OCR-Profis ABBYY installiert, welches aus jedem Foto oder Screenshot den Text herausfiltern kann… aber das hat er natürlich vergessen zu erwähnen. Auf dem Mac hat er vor geraumer Zeit mal Prizmo ausprobiert als es noch in Version 1 daherkam. Ihn hat in dieser frühen Version die Deutsche Erkennung nicht überzeugt, welche sich aber mittlerweile deutlich gebessert hat. Da PDFPenPro ein Schweizer PDF-Messer ist, hat er sich aber letzen Endes dafür entschieden. Neben der Schrifterkennung nutzt er hauptsächlich die “redact” Funktion, welche Text unkenntlich machen kann. Ansonsten schwört Patrick in Puncto OCR auf Evernote. Sven merkt an, dass das Hauptproblem hier wohl ist, dass Evernote das zwar vortrefflich macht, aber man leider, leider nicht umgewandelte, editierbare PDF’s aus Evernote exportieren kann. Evernote & Co. vs. die klassische Ordnerstruktur Bei Patrick kommen die “nicht sensiblen Sachen” nach Evernote und die sensiblen Sachen auf den NAS in eine Ordnerstruktur. Workflow Beispiel: Mit Scanbot im Dateinamen bereits Schlüsselwörter einbinden, welche dann von Hazel in die jeweiligen (Evernote) Ordner von SocialFolders verschoben werden. SocialFolders ist eine Sync-Anwendung, welche es ermöglicht von verschiedenen webbasierten Diensten eine lokale ordnerbasierte Struktur auf den Mac zu zaubern, z.B. ausgewählte Evernote Notizbücher. Das Nette daran ist, dass diese Ordner dann auch ‘zurücksynct’ werden. Dieses Beispiel ist eigentlich nur grobe Theorie, den Patrick nutzt die nerdigere Variante, denn das ganze geht natürlich auch mit einem AppleScript anstatt SocialFolders. Apropos Nerd. Ratet mal wer wieder “Anti” ist? Richtig. Andreas. Er ist nun Anti-Evernote/-Yojimbo,/-DEVONthink, da diese “Inboxen” ihn zu sehr dazu verführen Unmengen an Daten einzusortieren. Dadurch ist nicht immer klar, ob das archivierte Wissen auch tatsächlich abrufbar ist in der jeweiligen “Inbox”. Sein erster Schritt war sich erst einmal um ein stark entschlacktes Evernote zu kümmern. Die daraus resultierende Folgeüberlegen war: Lohnt es sich für die paar Sachen, welche dort archiviert sind noch Evernote zu nutzen? Andreas beantwortet sich diese Frage mit einem klaren “Nein” und fährt seitdem mit einer zeitlosen und formschönen Ordnerstruktur, quasi also dem Jaguar unter den Archivierungssystemen. Wer wie Andreas die Schnauze voll hat von Evernote, der darf hier in seinem Blog weiterlesen, um zu erfahren, wie man den Absprung schafft. Passend zu diesem Exodus wirft Patrick ein, dass er den umgekehrten Weg beschritten hat. Er ist zurück zu Evernote gekrochen. Nun… um ganz ehrlich zu sein fährt er momentan doppelgleisig, also mit einer Ordnerstruktur, welche er exakt in Evernote nachbildet ( = spiegelt). Vorher hat er allerdings wie Andreas einen Frühlingsputz in Evernote machen müssen. Den Grund für seinen zweiten Frühling mit Evernote nennt er zwar nicht, aber die Leser der Show Notes sollen wissen, dass er wegen Evernotes fantastisch Suchfunktionen in Kombination mit Alfred dem Service eine zweite Chance gibt. Gerade on-the-go mit dem iPhone ist es für ihn praktischer, als sich auf dem kleinen Bildschirm durch eine Ordnerstruktur zu navigieren. Sven dagegen ergreift hier klar Partei. Er hat alles in Evernote und hat eine Pro-Abonnement, welches er von seinem Mobilfunkanbieter mitspendiert bekommt. Sein Pro-Tipp: Sensible Daten hat er in einem lokalen Evernote Notizbuch, welches nicht synchronisiert wird mit der Evernote-Wolke. In Evernote kommt bei ihm nur der Stoff, welchen er langfristig zu archivierende gedenkt. Seine grobe Kampftaktik für den Import sieht so aus: Doxie PDF wird generiert > sinnvoller Name wird manuell gegeben mit der Hilfe von TextExpander > AppleScript + Hazel reagieren auf den Namen und sortieren die Datei in ein Evernote Notizbuch mit den passenden Tags. Evernote - Tags oder Notizbücher Sven hat weniger Notizbücher und mehr Tags. Er empfiehlt euch einen Artikel von Michael Hyatt, der sich mit genau diesem Thema beschäftigt hat und zeigt wie man den Umstieg schaffen kann. Er illustriert wie man mit drei Notizbüchern zum smarten Tagging-Gott wird. Noch ein Buchtipp ist Evernote Essentials von Brett Kelly – die Evernote Bibel schlechthin. Patrick hat “wenige ausgewählte Notizbücher” (was übersetzt heißt 60 Notizbücher die sich auf 5 Gruppen aufteilen… zu seiner Verteidigung: vieles davon sind temporäre Projekte und Recherchenotizbücher). Er ist bestrebt wenig Tags zu vergeben, hat aber nach seinen Evernote-Frühlingsputz noch nicht die Tags in Evernote umbenannt. Diese unterscheiden sich noch von seinem seit Jahren bewährten System auf dem Mac und auf Pinboard. Randbemerkung: Auf dem Mac taggt er seit Mavericks mehr, z.B. Rechnungen (die er im übrigen nicht in Evernote hat… hört sich im Podcast so an… ist aber nicht so). Selbstgemacht oder doch lieber machen lassen? Nun habt ihr einen Einblick wie wir unser papierloses Dasein so fristen. Grundsätzlich soll man sich allerdings fragen, was kostet das ganze an Zeit? Andreas zum Beispiel als Freiberufler hat folgende grundlegende Überlegung angestellt: Er braucht 2 Stunden die Woche dafür. Seine Dienste als Freiberufler kosten xx EUR die Stunde für seine normale Arbeit. Im Moment ist er am probieren, ob sich für ihn einer der VPA-Dienste (Virtual Private Assistant) lohnen würde und ihn somit von dem ganzen Aufwand befreit. Falls ihr in einer ähnlichen Lage seid, wisst ihr nun was genau ihr in die Suchmaschine eures Vertrauens hämmern könnt. Andreas’ Empfehlung: freiarbeiter. Computer, hazel mir meine Dateien mal! Putzen macht Spaß, besonders wenn man wie Sven sagt, seinen digitalen VPA namens Hazel putzen, benennen, taggen und sortieren lässt. Hier ein paar handverlesene Beispiele unserer Aeronauten. Wer es ganz genau wissen möchte, hört am besten noch einmal rein. Ansonsten gibt’s jetzt einen spartanischen Auszug. Andreas Z. Wo wir schon beim Thema Tags sind, Andreas taggt zwar kaum was, aber was er geschickt mit Hazel abtaggt, dass sind seine Rechnungen. Andreas seine Dokumente sind wie folgt benannt: Dreistelliger Kundencode - Monat und Jahr (zweistellig) - Rechnungsnummer Hazel schaut, ob dieses Format vorliegt, taggt alles fein und sortiert es in den jeweiligen Kundenordner ein. Ist das Format nicht gegeben, wird nur getaggt. Link zum Screenshot Wer im übrigen eine guten und detaillierte Einführung in Hazel erwerben möchte, dem sei das Hazel Video Tutorial von Andreas ans Herz gelegt. iTunes Rechnungen drucken und taggen Obendrauf, völlig für lau gibt es ein Ubercast Exclusive für die Keyboard Maestro Nutzer unter euch. In Keyboard Maestro wird die Rechnung benannt und gedruckt: Link zum Screenshot … und Hazel sorgt dann für die Archivierung der Datei: Link zum Screenshot Patrick W. Link zum Screenshot Das obige Beispiel hat Patrick am Start für sämtliche seiner PDF’s die er herunterlädt. Je nach Quelle wird eigentlich nur die URL und das Datumsformat leicht angepasst. Anmerkung: “Full Name” ist noch ein Relikt aus der Zeit bevor es die Source URL Regel gab… eigentlich brauch man das gar nicht mehr. Sven F. Bei Fechners wird oft direkt Evernote geschickt, und hier gibt’s eine extra Packung AppleScript zum Hazel-Vergnügen: Link zum Screen Shot Lese-Empfehlungen Buch Tipp: “Evernote Essentials” von Brett Kelly Buch Tipp: “Paperless” von David Sparks Paperless Blog: DocumentSnap von Brooks Duncan In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.

amazon internet service fall brothers system er tools pilot iphone blog bank exodus welt thema weg app mac spa computers lust names falls arbeit smile ios erfahrungen dinge gef paypal reise noch option gro wo diese gesch seite automation anfang wissen hilfe meetings beispiel einblick ort andreas schl herz grenzen nun quelle unternehmen schritt nas ziele namen antwort bis dallas mavericks lage unterschied stunden seine neben canon titel gerade app store keynote technik seiten schritte schluss richtig import file projekte stunde foto regeln nachdem einf daten sachen ergebnis sollte status quo sven beispiele ordnung einstieg dropbox tat jaguar struktur davon staat geh papier theorie aktion das jahr gruppen funktion upload aussage kombination passend lebensmittel existenz screenshots dadurch berge drafts variante aufwand lohnt ansonsten typ inbox eur typen vielen anzahl blatt partei banken teufel evernote kategorien stoff grunds leser rechnung steuer verzicht vorschau ausgaben einzug formate penultimate workflows vorher dokument vertrauens ihn versicherungen der l versicherung ocr dasein scanner hilfsmittel verteidigung origami themas bildschirm michael hyatt auszug zugriff webseiten stirn notizen dokumente piloten ein grund rechner akten rechnungen unterscheidung im moment popularit buchtipp generell betrag steuerberater schnauze turbulenzen kritisch nichtsdestotrotz umstieg putzen finanzamt suchmaschine endes exemplare anschaffung paperless diensten flur daheim geschick kisten umz dateien unmengen freiberufler dokumenten datei papiere absprung aussteiger textexpander super gau omnifocus papiers referenz umbenennung erbschaft ordner business alltag relikt neunziger als selbstst anmoderation den grund benennung vpa notability ausbeute ratet notizb sorgenfalten hauptproblem wiederfinden quittung stromanbieter posteingang titelseite applescript brett kelly flattr originalen archivierung rundflug pinboard mobilfunkanbieter patrick w devonthink selbstgemacht passagierflugzeug stapeln abstellkammer speicherkapazit ordnern doxie dieses beispiel archivieren papierlos scanner pro scanbot stehgreif launch center pro ordnerstruktur prizmo papierflieger atombunker dateinamen wie patrick suchfunktionen evernote essentials papierflut evernotes einscannen sven f pdfpen scan bookmarklet multifunktionsger tastaturk pixma coworking b
Dave & Gunnar Show
Episode 47: #47: Out-of-Order Execution

Dave & Gunnar Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2014 66:00


  This week Dave and Gunnar talk about home storage, open source 5th columnists at MSFT, the Amazon unicorn factory, Gunnar’s new job, new workflow, and Georgios Papanikolaou, a monthly visitor of guinea pigs. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. Image courtesty of @feitclub Redshift in EPEL dynamically adjusts screen brightness and color based upon location and time of day like f.lux OpenSpritz and FBReader OpenSpritz Plugin for speed reading! Dave’s choice is jetzt on Firefox with a workaround Lauren, now in ebook form and as an Opensource.com 2014 People’s Choice Award nominee Bonus link: Ellie the robot is ready to compete Gunnar is thrilled about a revamped and open sourced dgshow.org his other new new project Soren! Gunnar’s Drobo 2.0? — Google Drive prices slashed! Anyone try Insync? Is Space Monkey the device Gunnar thought he heard mentioned on Back to Work? Anyone try the Synology Dropbox-like storage product? Goodyear Zeppelin arrives near Dave’s house Goodyear’s next generation iconic airship takes flight RHEL 6.6’s plans for inclusion of the SCAP Security Guide Heartbleed: oy. See if your favorite web site is vulnerable ← Runs on OpenShift! Sleep well — Red Hat has you covered Open Wifi: don’t listen to this radio in my window. By extension, is it then illegal to strobe someone else’s server? Gunnar’s been complaining about this since 2003 Microsoft releases source code for its OS and Word (MS-DOS 1.1 and 2.0 and Word for Windows 1.1a specifically) Microsoft Launches .NET Foundation To Foster The .NET Open Source Ecosystem AWS urges developers to scrub GitHub of secret keys ATM operators eye Linux as alternative to Windows XP Dave and Gunnar need this like we need smart watches: Google and Microsoft are out to stop dual-boot Windows/Android devices Nice open source list of 2 factor authentication sites + ways to pester those who don’t have it yet HT Dave Sirrine: ScratchJr — Coding for Young Kids Cisco cozies up to Red Hat and KVM RHEL on Google Compute Engine with Cloud Access! AWS Achieves DoD Provisional Authorization RIP, the server. It’s time to breathe the air of cloud connection ‘Amazon has destroyed the unicorn factory’ … How clouds are making sysadmins extinct AFSPC CIO thinks we’re doing consolidation, not cloud. Agree? Disagree? Talk amongst yourselves. HT Bob Kozdemba: How to request resources for Non-Profit, Open Source, or Educational Institutions A Customer We Like: NASA and their launch control center firing room featuring Red Hat (Enterprise) Linux (6)! slack.com looks really interesting for collaboration Gunnar plays with capture tools like NewsBlur and Blogtrottr but can’t quit rss2email and processing tools like Pinboard which he still needs to figure out D&G Book Club: The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer Ken Burns 6 hour documentary coming in 2015 The pap test for cervical cancer screening is due to Georgios Papanikolaou in 1928 where he studied the menstrual cycles of guinea pigs Related: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks — start with the Radiolab episode and follow up episode Bonus book: Proficient Motorcycling: The Ultimate Guide to Riding Well Cutting Room Floor Pretty great interview with Horowitz of Andreesen Horowitz A persuasive case for government-run/subsidized Internet Semantic Versioning — It’s a thing Amazon Dash: genius Make your own GitHub ribbon with CSS alone Twilight Zone action figures (in black and white!) The Expert JakToGo: Great for smuggling hams into movie theaters too We Give Thanks Dave Sirrine for letting us know about ScratchJr Bob Kozdemba for helping spread the word about free OpenShift for non-profit, open source, and educational institutions

The All Things Plants Podcast
ATP Podcast #50: Common Gardening Mistakes

The All Things Plants Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2014 65:30


With a brand new baby in the house we had to skip last week's podcast, but we're back now! In today's episode we get caught up on the usual goings on, and we discuss a few common gardening mistakes (and how to avoid them!) We also have a bonus segment today on our Pinboard of Bad Ideas!

Coaching For Leaders
129: How To Create A Personal Knowledge Management System, with Bonni Stachowiak

Coaching For Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2014 49:06


“Knowledge management is a set of processes, individually constructed, to help each of us make sense of our world and work more effectively.” -Harold Jarche Capture Capturing through the stream Twitter Some social media Live TV Live radio Capturing through subscriptions Email updates and newsletters Podcasts RSS via services like Feedly.com Curate Bonni uses Delicious (link to her library) Dave uses Pinboard (link to his library) Evernote Pocket Kindle App Snippefy app (useful to export notes and highlights from Kindle) Diigo Create Social media postings Conversation starters Classroom/meeting starters Writing Bonni's blog is TeachingInHigherEd.com How would you like to get info from Dave? Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.

Coaching for Leaders
129: How To Create A Personal Knowledge Management System, with Bonni Stachowiak

Coaching for Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2014 49:06


“Knowledge management is a set of processes, individually constructed, to help each of us make sense of our world and work more effectively.” -Harold Jarche Capture Capturing through the stream Twitter Some social media Live TV Live radio Capturing through subscriptions Email updates and newsletters Podcasts RSS via services like Feedly.com Curate Bonni uses Delicious (link to her library) Dave uses Pinboard (link to his library) Evernote Pocket Kindle App Snippefy app (useful to export notes and highlights from Kindle) Diigo Create Social media postings Conversation starters Classroom/meeting starters Writing Bonni's blog is TeachingInHigherEd.com How would you like to get info from Dave? Discover More Activate your free membership for full access to the entire library of interviews since 2011, searchable by topic.

FAQ-podden
Avsnitt 34: Internetz

FAQ-podden

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2014 54:47


Det här med internet alltså. En massa datorer som liksom hänger med varandra och byter samlarkort på söta katter och grejer. I det här avsnittet av FAQ-podden snackar Anders, Ivan och Magnus om just detta världsomspännande datornätverk och försöker svara på frågan: Vem i hela världen kan man lita på? Ladda ner avsnittet som en mp3:a, prenumerera via iTunes, eller använd dig av vår RSS. * * * * * * * SHOWNOTES! * * * * * * *Internet är fullt av länkar och här är några av dem:Anders använder Unblock-us för att kika på amerikanska Netflix i PS3an. Vidare nyttjar Anders Diino för oändlig backup och (relativt) praktisk 100 Gb lagringsutrymme á la Dropbox. Spotify & Netflix såklart och även anonymiseringstjänsten Anonine.Ivan hostar upp slantar på regelbunden basis till Spotify, Netflix, Dropbox och Torguard.Magnus lade pengar på Flickr Pro och katalogiseringstjänsten LibraryThing, men numera lägger han sina surt förvärvade pengar på internetbokmärkeshanteringswebbtjänsten Pinboard. Och Dropbox, Netflix och HBO Nordic såklart. Magnus litar blindt på Cory Doctorow som huserar på favvobloggen Boing Boing, den typ enda bloggen Anders läser och älskar.Ivan kikar datorpryttlar på SweClockers och gillar Zero Punctuation.Netflix rekommendations-aprilskämt innehöll knasiga kategorier som t.ex. dessa:Movies That Are in English But Still Require Subtitles   ("In the name of the Father", "Trainspotting" o.s.v.)Surreal Ballets Based on a William Shatner Album   ("Gonzo Ballet")Movies Featuring an Epic Nicolas Cage Meltdown   ("Adapotation", "Raising Arizona", "Face/Off" o.s.v.)Fler tokroliga kategorier hittar du här. Vi tipsar om att använda bankernas Swish-tjänst. Och till sist: XKCD har en jätterolig stripp om det här med mobilbeteende! 001111000010111101110011011010000110111101110111011011100110111101110100011001010111001100111110

Teahour
#40 - 聊台灣軟體業失落的十年

Teahour

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2013 39:49


本期由 Xdite 主持,邀請了台灣熱門網路電台的站長 Now.in 的創辦人 Victor Lin,聊聊他最近出版的一本新書「台灣軟體業失落的十年」。這本書是一本相當全面性的談摩登軟體開發流程的書,在 LeanPub 上販售。聊聊 Victor 出版並這本書的契機,以及分享與交換 LeanPub 這種新式流程撰寫出版電子書的心得。最後,Victor 也預告他下一本書的內容,內容會是工程師的職涯發展指南。 一些討論到的點: Now.in:Victor 上一個經營的網路電台平台,同時數萬人在線。且這個電台的底層竟是由他自己一人打造。 台灣軟體業失落的十年:寫這本書的動機。 摩登技術出版在傳統出版架構下的困境 LeanPub 出版經驗分享 VictorLin 的部落格: 程式設計遇上小提琴 Victor Lin's coding notes Now.in 台灣軟體業失落的十年 LeanPub 一至千萬的藝術 — 如何養成支撐網路巨量交易的伺服器艦隊 Pinboard 約耳談軟體 The Developer's Code: What Real Programmers Do Land the Tech Job You Love Special Guests: Victor Lin and xdite.

The All Things Plants Podcast
ATP Podcast #34: Flowers for the Fall, and Our Favorite Gardening Ideas

The All Things Plants Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2013 49:35


In this week's episode Trish shares her favorite blooming plants for the fall, and Dave goes through his list of most interesting and innovative gardening ideas posted to ATP. We also introduce a new feature: "The Pinboard of Bad Ideas."

Systematic
41: Collin Donnell on app development, Portland and wearing watches

Systematic

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2013 59:32


Collin Donnell, developer of the iOS app Pinbook for Pinboard, guests to talk about app development as a full-time job, drinking at soccer games, living in Portland, making great coffee and good reasons to wear a watch.

Identical Cousins
Identical Cousins 6: Launching Ports

Identical Cousins

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2012 41:58


Recorded 16 Nov. 2012. We talk about porting apps from OS X to iOS and vice versa — and about launching new apps. You can download the m4a file. This episode is sponsored by Pinbook from Albina Development. Pinbook is a Pinboard client for iOS. It’s fast, focused, and well-designed. Check it out. Also see Collin’s post on Pinbook 1.1: Polish and Speed. (Yes, we’re taking sponsorships now. Contact Michael or Brent if you’re interested.) Some things we mention: Avalon, New Jersey FastSpring Fantastical And, at one point, Brent says, “Dear Lord, thanks for making me a Simmons.” Happy Thanksgiving from Identical Cousins!

/dev/hell
Episode 22: Object-Oriented Home Renovation

/dev/hell

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2012


We hit the Double Deuce this week with special guest Jim Gay. Jim is the author of Clean Ruby, the upcoming book that applies “Data, Context and Interaction” (DCI) concepts to Ruby and Rails development. Jim is clearly much smarter than us, so we took this opportunity to attack him mercilessly as a representative of the sexist Ruby community. Jim also shares his experiences as a self-published author. In addition, we talk about how True North PHP planning is going for Chris, and Ed’s experiences at Brooklyn Beta. If you’re a true believer, you’ll do these things: Check out our sponsors WonderNetwork Follow us on Twitter here. Rate us on iTunes here Listen Download now (MP3, 33.1MB, 1:14:41) Links and Notes Jim Gay Clean Ruby Brooklyn Beta Cory Booker True North PHP Maciej “Pinboard guy” Ceglowski Ben Pieratt Codeconnexx 30x500 DCI on Wikipedia DCI web site GeekFeminism Wiki article on CouchDB talk at the 2009 Golden Gate Ruby Conference Anti-Oppression 101

techzing tech podcast
210: TZ Discussion - Supercharged

techzing tech podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2012 107:29


Justin and Jason talk about time management and focus, what Jason likes about the iPad, programming using Codea and Lua, managing information using Instapper, Pinboard and Evernote, Colby's soccer resurgence, why Jason is selling Facebook and buying Tesla and Tesla's plans for a supercharger network, the recent growth of the show and the idea of bringing in revenue via job advertisements, Jason's LinkedIn debacle, what happens when $$ meets Hacker News, better learning tools and a better space for Catalyst, learning bioinformations through problem solving on Rosalind, inconsistant complaining about the science of science fiction movies, and using a worker queue to process a large number of emails.

The Talk Show
88: I'd Get A Super Yacht

The Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2012 122:24


John and Dan discuss iOS text editors, Read It Later/Pocket going free, Pinboard, WWDC, The Android Lockdown, the future of Windows and Nokia, and the James Bond novels going Amazon.

TEKNICAST
TEKNiCAST Episode 52 – Pinboard

TEKNICAST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2012


Denne gang skal vi snakke om Pinboard:) Det er længe siden jeg (Nick) har været så meget oppe og køre over noget vi har haft på Teknicast. Jeg elsker at lave podcast episoder sammen med Andreas det er ikke på den måde, tingene vi har snakket om har da været interessante men jeg har ikke […]

Enough - The Podcast
Ep 126 - You've Got (Too Much) Mail

Enough - The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2012 28:16


In this episode, based on a listener request, we talk about reasoned approaches to keeping your data to a minimum. At least, that's how we start out until it is revealed that there are a couple of areas where I could really be doing better in the regard. As I've said before, folks, I'm no guru and have plenty of areas where I struggle with this stuff. This episode is brought to you by Instacast. It's the only way we listen to podcasts and you should make it yours. Links include: Emergency Clown Nose Minimal Mac | Listen to What You Love — This was not mentioned in the episode but it will help with iTunes clutter. Sparrow — Get mail done Strongspace - Secure offsite rsync backup and sharing — Also not mentioned but this is where I'm backing up my Dropbox files to. Bare Bones Software | Yojimbo Pinboard: public bookmarks for patrickrhone — My public Pinboard bookmarks.

Tummelvision
TummelVision 91: Maciej Ceglowski of Pinboard

Tummelvision

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2011 76:39


Maciej Ceglowski (@pinboard) joins us to talk about the sustainability of online services, artisanal software, and social bookmarking for introverts. We highly recommend his Pinboard.in bookmarking service and his blog Idle Words.

42
Виктор Захарченко о продуктивности, управлении стартапами и книгах (48)

42

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2011 64:31


В 48-ом выпуске мы беседуем о продуктивности, управлении стартапами и хороших деловых книгах с Виктором Захарченко, создателем и руководителем интересных онлайн-проектов, исполнительным директором компании Drimmi, постоянным экспертом в программе "Точка" на радио "Эхо Москвы". Принципы и инструменты продуктивности: — Как Виктору удается все успевать при высокой занятости и совмещении разных видов деятельности. — О системе управления входящей информацией (твитами, RSS-постами, статьями для отложенного чтения и т.д.) в едином центре с элементами GTD. — Об автоматизации задач с помощью мэшапа ifttt: определенные события в одном сервисе вызывают события в другом. Сервисы и программы: Evernote, Read It Later, Pinboard.in, Buffer, Reeder, Tweetbot, Simplenote, QuietWrite, LastPass, Goodreads, Bookmate, Calibre, Stanza. Управление стартапами: — Бутстрэппинг: как запускают стартапы настоящие лайфхакеры. — Как собрать эффективную команду стартапа и обеспечить ее мотивацию. — О корпоративной культуре Netflix. — Jira — система отслеживания ошибок и управления проектами. — Как способствовать развитию сотрудников в компании (мотивирование к чтению, внутренний буккроссинг и другие приемы). Хорошие книги о бизнесе: "Стартап" и другие книги Гая Кавасаки, "И ботаники делают бизнес" Максима Котина, "Библия бутстрэппера", "Незаменимый" и другие книги Сета Година, "Мотивация в стиле экшн" и "Искренний сервис" Клауса Кобьелла, "Сотрудники на всю жизнь" Лорейна Грабс-Уэста, книги Малкольма Гладуэлла, "Сначала скажите нет" Джима Кемпа, "Длинный хвост" Криса Андерсона, "Черная книга менеджера" Вячеслава Панкратова, книги Rework и Getting Real от 37signals, "Миф о многозадачности" Дэйва Креншоу, "Deadline. Роман об управлении проектами" Тома Демарко. Редактор "42": Павел Калугин. Обращайтесь к Павлу с идеями и предложениями по адресу 42@pavelkalugin.ru. Улыбнись :) Послушай еще один подкаст команды "42" — "Вечерний кефир".

Changelog Master Feed
Maciej Ceglowski / Pinboard (Founders Talk #9)

Changelog Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2011 37:43


Adam talks with Maciej Ceglowski, Founder of Pinboard about turning this side project into the next Delicious, handling a massive in-flux of Delicious users when they announced its “sunset”, keeping the technology and architecture simple and more.

Founders Talk
Maciej Ceglowski / Pinboard

Founders Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2011 37:43


Adam talks with Maciej Ceglowski, Founder of Pinboard about turning this side project into the next Delicious, handling a massive in-flux of Delicious users when they announced its “sunset”, keeping the technology and architecture simple and more.

net@night (Video)
n@n 219: Pinboard.in - Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more.

net@night (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010 59:13


Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more. Hosts: Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte Guest: Maciej Ceglowski Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/netnight We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes.

TWiT Throwback (Video HI)
net@night 182: Pinboard.in

TWiT Throwback (Video HI)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010 59:13


Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more. Hosts: Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte Guest: Maciej Ceglowski Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/netnight We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes.

TWiT Throwback (Video LO)
net@night 182: Pinboard.in

TWiT Throwback (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010 59:13


Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more. Hosts: Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte Guest: Maciej Ceglowski Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/netnight We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes.

net@night (Audio)
n@n 219: Pinboard.in - Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more.

net@night (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010 58:57


Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more. Hosts: Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte Guest: Maciej Ceglowski Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/netnight We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes.

TWiT Throwback (MP3)
net@night 182: Pinboard.in

TWiT Throwback (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2010 58:57


Better Santa trackers, Yahoo! selling de.icio.us, Likealittle explodes, Instagram's first million, AOL buys About.ME, Pinboard.in, and more. Hosts: Amber MacArthur and Leo Laporte Guest: Maciej Ceglowski Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/netnight We invite you to read, add to, and amend our show notes.

Metamuse

Discuss this episode in the Muse community Follow @MuseAppHQ on Twitter Show notes 00:00:00 - Speaker 1: Infinite canvases are essentially like a different document format. The screen represents a camera that’s floating above a surface, and there are things on that surface, and those things can be anything. You can move them, you can duplicate them or resize them, and that each one of these types of thing on the canvas also has its own rules about how it can be changed. 00:00:26 - Speaker 2: Hello and welcome to Meta Muse. Us as a tool for deep work on iPad and Mac, but this podcast isn’t about muse product, it’s about the small team and the big ideas behind it. I’m Adam Wiggins here with my colleague Mark McCrannigan. Hey, Adam. And our guest today is Steve Ruiz of TL Draw. Hello. And Steve, I understand you’re a little bit ahead of me on the fatherhood journey. You’ve got a 315 year old. What do I have to look forward to in the coming couple of years? 00:00:55 - Speaker 1: Oh man, a kid is what, like 1.5? 00:00:58 - Speaker 2: That’s right. 00:00:59 - Speaker 1: Eventually they will start drawing, they’ll start playing with words, and they will grow ever more interested in iPads, and also, everything will be an iPad, every computer, every device, everything with the screen will be an iPad. That’s my prediction, yep. 00:01:17 - Speaker 2: Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah, already is the case that trying to keep screen time limited is a challenge. Now, of course, we can also look forward to having built in beta testers for our software. You got a chance to do that yet? 00:01:29 - Speaker 1: Yeah, actually, my daughter has probably spent more time with tealra than anyone else, and I’ve learned quite a lot by watching her kind of poke around and try and draw, try and make different things. She really likes arrows, but the touch targets are too small and mobile. That’s one thing that I need to work on. 00:01:46 - Speaker 2: I’m reminded of a scene in one of these Steve Jobs biography movies where I believe it’s his daughter comes in and tries out Mac Paint, and they sort of show this maybe hypothetical idea that he was sort of inspired to make software and a computer generally that was easy enough that a young person could be creative with it. 00:02:04 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I mean, if you have, uh, they’re kind of hard to schedule or bring into the office. I don’t think the agencies do 3 year olds, but toddlers are excellent beta testers. They won’t tell you what’s wrong, but you’ll definitely see it. 00:02:19 - Speaker 2: So you’re working on TLDraw. Tell us about that project and your background that brought you there. 00:02:24 - Speaker 1: Yeah, so Tal Draw it started out as like an open source project, I guess it still is an open source project. It grew out of kind of earlier open source work that I did with a library called Perfect Freehand, which is an algorithm for creating like digital ink, so pressure sensitive or variable width lines, takes a whole bunch of input points, and comes up with a whole bunch of output points that kind of describe a shape that surrounds the input points. So, perfect freehand, I kind of started working on it pretty publicly on Twitter. So posting all these in progress GIFs and talking about the different ways that I was trying to solve this problem of doing pressure sensitive slash variable width lines. You can’t really do that in the browser, like it doesn’t have any primitives for like lines that change their width. So, hence the whole like journey into trying to figure out how to do that kind of programmatically myself. It works, it works super good. I would recommend it if you have anything to do with the browser that needs to have a kind of a cool ink. And it’s being used all over the place. It’s used in Draw.io, it’s used in Excali Draw, it’s used on, I think NextGS Live uses it in their product. It was one of these situations where The status quo for like a pencil tool or a pen tool was like so poor on the internet or on the browser especially. That any improvement sort of would have been well timed and perfect freehand just happens to be an improvement that is pretty good. You should use it. That’s what I say. So, I’d been working on perfect freehand, I’d been doing some integrations with like other diagramming tools like cala Draw and I guess in along the way of making perfect freehand, I built a couple of these. Canvas playgrounds almost, places where I could test this thing out or try out the different algorithms, see where it was going right or wrong. And I’ve done that a couple of times for Perfect Freehand, also for like a kind of an offshoot of this project called Globs. But anyway, I just made enough of these sort of infinite canvas editors that once Perfect Freehand was pretty much done, I started working on that kind of a framework. Originally it was gonna be like a programmable design tool that I could use both together with direct manipulation, but also with like, you know, programming, in order to help me figure out problems like perfect forehand or problems like cool arrows or something. And once I started posting that, On Twitter, saying like, oh cool, I’m looking, I’m kind of making almost like a figma that you can program, or a figma that you can put anything on the canvas that you want, and I’m doing it in React. That story suddenly got pretty popular. Like I had folks reaching out to me and saying like, hey, we’re building something that kind of needs this kind of canvas. Can you open source this or can you share this or can I hire you? So based on that attention, I was like, all right, well, maybe this is worth proceeding with. I took some time off between jobs. I was gonna start a job actually at Adobe, and I thought, OK, I’ll take some time off in between and I’m just gonna work on this project, make it open source, spend 6 months on it, and then, yeah, see what happens. Worst case scenario is that I’ve made something really cool open source, worked on something interesting in this space, and I should say there’s really very, very few open source kind of canvas UI type of tools out there. And none of them that were using this kind of react driven canvas. 00:06:04 - Speaker 2: It’s interesting that you got that initial demand, you might say a product manager lingo might be it’s sort of market validation, you know, don’t build it until you already know people want it. Even before you got into the project itself, did you have a sense of why people wanted it or had they tried to build it themselves and discovered it was hard? Had they not built it and they just hoped someone else would do it for them? It just they liked your other work and they just thought if you did a good job on this other library, maybe you do a good job on this library too. What was the core of their demand, I guess. 00:06:36 - Speaker 1: Yeah, my theory about this or my guess about this is that this was 2021, so not too long ago, 18 months ago maybe. We were still middle of the pandemic, seemed like everyone had started using these apps like Miro or Mural or I think Fig Jam had just been released and The place for online collaboration was starting to just be the sort of the whiteboard, you know, abstractly like this 2D kind of surface that you could move around on and interact with people and co-create this type of surface. And the tools in that space were pretty mature, like again mural fig jam was new, but it was already, you know, built on good bones of FIMA itself. And so, As normally happens with like successful general products, like you start seeing different teams wanna carve off verticals for that, say, like, OK, cool, Mirro is great. Mirro is for everyone, Miro is for everything. What if it was just Mirro for project managers? What would that look like? Can we steal a billion dollars off of Canva? Can we, you know, take a little bit of that giant market from FIMA or something? The issue there is that all of these tools, pretty much anything. That wants to use that kind of canvas UI, it’s a tough engineering problem. And there’s like a ton of uh functionality maybe of like a canvas like that that is like, it’s almost like a text editor that it just has to be there in order for it to feel complete. And if it’s not complete, it’ll feel broken. But if it is complete, if it has those like table sticks features and all that, then congratulations, no one will notice because they expected them to be there from the beginning. And maybe you ran into some of this with Muse as well like. Selection should just work, like Undo reader should just work, the cloud stuff should just work. And some like really gnarly, like logic puzzles involved in these type of things that we take for granted in something like Mirro or fig jam. Yeah, like they’re they’re just gnarly problems. Never mind the whole like, how do I render this thing. So when I started saying like, look, this is something that you can use as like a starting point, where all those problems are gonna be solved. Now it’s just about picking like, what do you want to put on the canvas, how do you want these things to interact with each other. I think that story of giving someone like good open source starting place, that was like the compelling story. It’s just like the same with maybe like prose mirror or a code mirror. Text editors are super hard, no one wants to build one themselves. I mean, I don’t want to build a text editor myself ever. But I do want to make apps that include them, and I do want to do stuff with them, and if I can do that on open source work, then all the better. So, I think that’s where the validation started clicking in, or like pre-validation. I didn’t have an idea really, but I did notice that there was a demand for this kind of thing, because, yeah, it was becoming more of like what software looks like, especially around collaboration, like it looks like a canvas. 00:09:30 - Speaker 2: Fun little parallel story there from the Hiroki days, which is a very early version of Hiroki that was mid-2000s, 2007, 2008, had a text editor in it, but yeah, we had to implement that from scratch in the browser and you know, pretty quickly you exactly as you said, all these table stakes things you just expect to work, particularly in programming editors, you know, we had to implement it and that’s not the differentiated or wasn’t the differentiated part of the product at the time. But it wasn’t long after that that the AC editor, I believe it was, was kind of the first really solid open source in the browser code editor, and that seemed to unlock a kind of explosion of people seeing that. I mean, I know GitHub used it in the early days for some of their stuff, but lots of other projects did as well. Suddenly people saw, oh, there’s a really good code editor that covers that table stakes stuff. Now I can build this weird project idea that I had that I haven’t been doing because I don’t want to have to build a whole, you know, fully functional text editor first. That’s just too hard and isn’t the core of the idea. So maybe there’s, if your hypothesis that the canvas is a foundational type of some kind, as you said, how software is just starting to be, then maybe there’s a similar explosion that could be unlocked with the right canvas tool kits. 00:10:52 - Speaker 1: I hope so. I released this thing in November of 2021, so after, I think I started working on it full time in like July, so not too much time. It got pretty popular, the initial usage. 00:11:07 - Speaker 2: You talking about the open source or because I know, I guess I should describe that. 00:11:09 - Speaker 1: While I was developing this, I was posting about it on Twitter a lot. You’re gonna hear me say Twitter a lot, probably during this interview. 00:11:19 - Speaker 2: I think we could have done a build in public episode with you if we already did it with the maker of Canopio Club. Yes, so it’s a similar kind of concept which is showing your work in progress as you go and obviously it’s a very visual domain and yeah, people like that. They like those little bite sized pieces and they like to see the journey. 00:11:39 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I’d started thinking like, this was right when GitHub sponsors had come up, and I guess the media that I was consuming was largely like sponsor driven. Podcasts, YouTube channels, etc. And I was really interested to see if that kind of model could work for programming. Programming does not lend itself well to YouTube streams or videos, even like the educational stuff, I think it can work, but it’s not like a sponsor model that kills, it’s like a course model or something. 00:12:10 - Speaker 2: Yeah, from what I’ve seen that typically people who have programming YouTube channels, then you have an upsell into buy my course, so they put the more basic stuff online, you find it, you watch it, you get to the end and you like the teacher, quote unquote, and then you think, well, I want more, I want the intermediate level stuff, then you go buy their course that’s behind some paywall. 00:12:29 - Speaker 1: Yeah, which is great, and I’ve certainly bought, you know, courses and books as well, and especially if you have an education budget, you know, consider spreading that around, don’t let it go to waste. But I was kind of thinking about the type of content that I could post every day almost, or the or the type of content that required like a very low level of engagement with, like, much lower than by my course, and even like a level of engagement where just clicking like was like the correct. Appreciation for this type of content. You know, I’ve seen folks who are making like really amazing involved educational material, not just in programming, but in other stuff too, and it always feels bad where like all I can do is just click a little heart, you know, it’s like, oh man, like this is worth way more than that, kind of feels awkward. So anyway, I kind of made user content, educational content when I worked at a company called Framer. So that was all very involved as well, very kind of produced. Took a lot of time to make, and I didn’t want to do that anymore. So, the kind of the place where I settled in terms of like the kind of content that I would use to drive interest around Tealro before I had released it, like, while it was under development, was just like these eight second gifts. These gifts that maybe had like, you know, were at 150% speed, didn’t take very long to make at all, and certainly didn’t take very long to consume and just be done with, and, you know, just clicking that little like button was, what more could you do? Like, it was perfect. And so I was posting this a lot as I was working on Tealraw and at the same time, I had made the like TealDraw.com a kind of sponsorware. So the only way to access this was to be a GitHub sponsor. And there really wasn’t any like floor for that. You could give me a $1 and, you know, have full access. It wasn’t even like a $1 a month. It was just like, give me something and you can come in. And that worked pretty well. I got like a couple 100 sponsors, which certainly wasn’t enough for like a tech salary or anything like that. But it did show that people were interested in this and it was like a good thing to come back to as I was developing it. I was also a good motivator for making that content. 00:14:46 - Speaker 2: And to come back to that product manager style validation, here’s the next step. People parting with money any amount, the number doesn’t even matter that much, is just such a hugely higher bar and saying they like it, clicking a like button. Telling you they think it’s cool, even using it. Parting with your hard earned cash is just the ultimate measure of validation. So I don’t know if this was intentional, but it seemed you’re following the product management playbook kind of market discovery in this journey. 00:15:18 - Speaker 1: It was not very intentional. Again, I was kind of just playing with this before going to take a job at Adobe, but, you know, I liked making the content, I liked being able to share this before it was ready and get that like feedback from people. And I liked that those people were a little bit motivated as sponsors, and somehow it just really like ended up in a kind of warm place. It felt like there were a lot of people on Tal Draw’s side as I was making this and like wanted to see it do well and wanted to You know, be a part of that. I spent a lot of time asking folks on Twitter like, how should this feature work, you know, this, here’s how it works in sketch, here’s how it works in FIMA, here’s how it works in Miro. What should happen when you try and resize a group of shapes where one of them is rotated? I don’t know, like, does it skew? Does it smash? Does it lock the access or uh aspect ratio and then resize that way, so. There was a lot of like kind of audience involvement in a sort of a musical sense. And yeah, that carried right into the release in November, where I made everything open source, like overnight. It had previously been closed source. I’ve removed all the kind of the sponsor walls around Tealra.com. And just said, like, there you go, release, you know, there was no product hunt launch. I didn’t post it on hacker news or anything, but other people did. Enough that I had to ask like product I’m like, can you just stop posting these? Like, I would love to do a launch sometime in the future, but I don’t want to do that. And then it was like at the top of Hacker News for a while, like, for like a majority of the day, it started. Getting a ton of attention on GitHub, like in terms of stars and interest from people there. My Discord started exploding. It was, it was like a really interesting week as this thing made its way around the internet. And just as like a free diagramming drawing tool that had I poured a lot of like, I guess, attention into the microinteractions to sort of add up to a canvas tool. Yeah, it was fun, and bunch of cool contributions started coming in, and I was thinking, I don’t know, maybe I don’t go to Adobe, maybe this is like a good Maybe I can make this into a little microsas product for myself. And then what happened was, since it was open source like folks started building with it and I started seeing a lot of interesting projects that started being used or built around Tealra and getting some amazing contributions from people who are kind of using it. And noticing like where it needed to grow and and how it needed to change, and a ton of feature requests and suggestions and will it do this, could you make it do this? Can we contract you to come over and integrate it here or there? And also interest from like investors and other people who are kind of working on similar projects, but there weren’t many. It was a really exciting time. Eventually, the interest was enough. And I had some conversations with, I guess people whose advice I could take that this might have legs, this idea, kind of like this bet that we’re living in a moment where, for better or for worse, there’s a lot more remote collaboration. People want to do interaction or like collaboration through software more and more that needs to happen somewhere. The canvas is probably the place where that’s gonna happen. My bet was these apps, there’s just gonna need to be more of them. It will be impractical for every team that wants to make Miro for project managers or fig jam for doctors who wanna collaborate on annotating images, like, it’ll be impractical for every one of those companies to also build Miro or also build fig jam, which at the moment is sort of, there are no primitives, so, yeah, good luck. Like if you want to do that type of software, like your work cut out for you. If you want to do that kind of software then. Yeah, there’s really nowhere to start except from scratch. So, there’s Tal Draw the startup, that’s just Teal Draw the company Teal Draw Inc and TealDraw GB now also. 00:19:28 - Speaker 2: Well, congratulations, and at the moment is this, the story you told up till that point, it sounded like it was very much a solo effort doing kind of everything yourself, one man show. Is there a team now or is that still to come? 00:19:42 - Speaker 1: Yeah, it was pretty much just me, probably like 99% of the code in the project was just written by me over those couple of months between July and November. I have had amazing contributions from a lot of people on the GitHub repository. And those continue to come in, we have a nice little community growing. But yeah, now I have a team. I’m up to, I just hired my first employee, and I have two other contractors who are taking up different parts of the project. We’re growing it, for sure. 00:20:13 - Speaker 2: Oh, congratulations on your new job as a manager, I guess. 00:20:17 - Speaker 1: Yeah, exactly. I have no experience, but so far so good. 00:20:22 - Speaker 3: So when you open sourced TLDraw, were you at that point specifically positioning it as a platform for making verticalized canvas apps, or was it more open sourcing the app and then people discovered that you can mod it basically and do their own thing? 00:20:41 - Speaker 1: Yeah, so I had picked a kind of a point to chop the app into two, in a way. I was saying, OK, here’s a rendering layer. Here’s a, basically like, put react components on the canvas. I call that the kind of the core layer. And then on top of that, I built a kind of an application that would use that core layer, which implemented things like selection or erasing or different types of shapes. And my guess was that other teams would want to build on that core layer and say, OK, well, you know, Tealro’s cool, but we’re gonna make a different app, so we’re just gonna use the same render, like react Canvas type of render. Um, I was completely wrong. I think there’s maybe one team that ended up doing that. Everyone else just forked Teal Draw. I picked the wrong place to chop, essentially, that what I thought was unique to the app, to TealDraw. Ended up being more general than I thought. And so things like the selection tool where you, you can whatever hold shift and click things and now they’re all selected or draw a box in order to collide things and select them that way. Turns out that’s the same for every canvas and I just gotten it right and followed all the conventions that I saw in other apps who had also reimplemented the same sort of logic and whatever an eraser is an eraser is an eraser like. So the part of the task, once I did decide to keep going on this was to basically start over, like within 6 weeks of releasing, I was like, all right, let’s start over, let’s make this for real. And let’s make that abstraction point that like, where can I chop this? What can I say is general versus what is specific to til draw and move that way up so that it really is, you could get more for free without having to fork it. 00:22:31 - Speaker 3: That’s interesting and that’s super surprising to me. I feel like for these complex problems, it’s basically impossible to design a framework de novo, and people try this all the time, but it very rarely works. Instead, what happens is you have an application that works well, and then basically you copy and paste that 2 or 3 times, and then you look at the discs and the things that aren’t the disks become the framework. And that sounds like it’s basically what you ended up doing with this. 00:22:55 - Speaker 1: Yeah. 00:22:56 - Speaker 2: I think that was a story with rails as well, where there was a bit of they kept writing these kind of crud apps with a model view controller framework, and once they’d done it a few times, it became pretty clear what should be extracted from that and be common to all of them and what would be different. 00:23:12 - Speaker 1: Right. Yeah. Well, even though I did pick the wrong place to chop or the wrong abstraction, it was part of the kind of the DNA of this project from the beginning to be something that other people built on. And so, once it was evident that like folks just were using Tera the component, which I should say that we did distribute the complete app as something you could put inside of any website. So it was like also something that you might like drop into your video chat app, even if you didn’t want to change how it looked or worked, but you just wanted to have it somewhere other than TDraw.com. But yeah, once it became evident that folks wanted to say like, Teal jaw is perfect. We also want to add like a shape that represents a person. You know, and that like looks like an avatar and has like that type of data attached to it. How do we do it? And my only answer was like, smash that fork button and then own this thing forever, because like, I just, it’s not built for that, or start from scratch essentially again, like, maybe not zero, but still very close to it. So yeah, version 2 is much more kind of Anticipates those kind of stories, and I had no idea folks would want to do that, but looking back, I guess, yeah, now it’s obvious. 00:24:30 - Speaker 2: I see that’s where you are today. I’d love to hear a little bit of the backstory there. You mentioned briefly working at Framer, which is a very interesting product. It’s been through a lot of iterations and itself has its own canvas aspect, and I know you’re actually even relatively new to the programming field, so tell us a little bit about the journey that brought you to Teal Draw. 00:24:48 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I guess, you know, it seems like everyone I talked to has a non-traditional story about how they got into this kind of tech field. For me, I studied art. I studied, uh, you know, painting for undergrad and then grad at University of Chicago. So I had a tiny bit of like technical experience building like portfolio websites, but that was pretty much it. It wasn’t until I had turned 30, I was now living in Cambridge in England. Kind of broke, realizing I should probably make some money in my life and have a career that has a little bit more speed to it. So, yeah, I kind of shut down my studio out out near Cambridge and started looking at different ways of using that same creativity and I guess industry, I suppose. So I started out in design, and then I quickly learned about like prototyping as a place where the tiny little seed kernel of technical skills that I had had from all those WordPress sites that I’d in the Bush administration could be brought over and applied. This was also like 2017, the idea of like designer who codes was like, even for someone just crashing into the tech scene like was very evidently like hot and so that essentially became my brand or my story as I came in. I was an extremely active user of Framer’s first product, the Framer, now Classic. So typing out coffee script code and making things spin around when you click at them. And my first couple of jobs here in London were essentially, yeah, like prototyping. Like I was brought in because one way or another, they wanted to be able to build something before they actually brought engineers on to build it. And so this Kind of approach to design and approach to programming of like discovery mode of like, well, we’re not even sure what this needs to be, but let’s start hacking something together. Yeah, that was essentially what I have been doing my whole career and still what I’m doing now. Ended up working for Framer doing their education, which was an interesting break from actually like shipping designs or shipping prototypes and instead trying to figure out. How do I talk to people about this, or how do I show how to do this type of work? And instead, like, how do I present this to other people? How do I communicate, like, what makes a good prototype? How do you go about that and specifically how do you do that with Framer. I wasn’t so good at that job. And so afterwards I went back into design and prototyping for a company called Play who’s making a design tool, another design tool for iOS, which surprisingly like, you wouldn’t think that a design tool fits on a phone or on an iPad, but it does. It’s a pretty cool one to check out if you haven’t. That was a fun opportunity to kind of rethink all of the creative software experience. As a designer, you kind of can’t help but think about the tools that you use because of their software too, and you’re designing software. Play was like an extreme example of being able to rethink features like a layers list or an objects list that haven’t changed since. I don’t know, Adobe Illustrator, and say like, OK, well, how do you do that on the phone? How do you do a properties panel when there’s, you know, the size of an iPhone to work with? That was a blast for me, and it was during that contract when I started doing the open source work around arrows and around a perfect freehand, and then eventually healra too. So, that’s sort of the abridged version of my kind of path from Design and technical design, or increasingly kind of technical aspects of design until now I’m, I guess, not too far away, but they definitely do more programming than design and now managing too, it’s fun. 00:28:49 - Speaker 2: Not to mention it seems like there’s an evolution there from prototypes which are by nature or even by definition throwaway, and then going to something that’s an open source library, other people are building on it, you need API stability. There’s going to be, I mean, so far the project’s pretty new, but you need long term, it’s quite the opposite of that prototyping, so I imagine you’re growing new skills there too as well. 00:29:12 - Speaker 1: Yeah, to be honest, this is also a place where I think the team that I’m building is gonna Do a lot of the heavy lifting because my relationship to software is still very like disposable, kind of like crumple up and and throw in the trash, just do lots and lots and lots of sketches until it resembles what you want. Not to say that Tilra isn’t like solidly built and, you know, we’ve fixed the bugs and it it has good abstractions and solid API and all that. But yeah, definitely there are certain problems that you can’t quite as easily start over with. So, I will be slightly hands off on the on those problems just because different skill set for sure. But the community side of things, I mean, managing not only the open source, like an engineering project, but also as a community project has been really interesting too. That’s probably closer to the work that I was doing at Framer in terms of education and doing a lot of work with the community and a lot of work on Twitter and uh chats and such of kind of unblocking people as they’ve been working with at that time, Framer now and with Tealro turned out to be decent training for those sort of Open source relations manager, open source project, open source maintainer, culture or role. Luckily we haven’t had any drama with Tera, but it’s still a little bit chaotic and fun. 00:30:36 - Speaker 2: So our topic today is infinite canvas or perhaps infinite canvases. So I think we’ve explored this a little bit already in talking about in this new world of kind of, yeah, the whiteboard brought into a digital space and made collaborative and that is increasingly feels like a foundational piece of many pieces of software. So yeah, I’d be curious to, you know, kind of go to the fundamentals here, which is certainly how you Steve or Mark how you define. What is an infinite canvas, and then we should probably also talk about the name, cause that’s an interesting thing. But let’s start with definition. Steve, what do you makes one of these canvases what it is and different from other types of software? 00:31:15 - Speaker 1: Yeah, well, especially on the web, we are used to a kind of a document metaphor that, well, the web is just built for, which is kind of a vertically scrolling infinite page. Infinite canvases are essentially like a different document format. This idea that there are two dimensions or kind of almost 3, you know, you can move left, you can move right, you can move up, down, you can zoom in and out, and that the screen, what you’re looking at kind of represents a camera that’s kind of floating above a surface, and there are things on that surface. And those things can be anything. And in a drawing app, those things might be little lines that you’ve drawn in a visual note taking app or canvas-based note taking app, those would be different notes or different headers or different flags or in a whiteboard, they might include arrows and texts and sticky notes and all that. The actual things on the canvas don’t matter. It’s mostly about Stuff on the canvas that you can view, or if you’re able to, if you have the correct permissions, then you’re able to directly manipulate. You can drag things around, you can move them, you can duplicate them or resize them, and that each one of these types of thing on the canvas also sort of has its own rules about how it can be changed. So maybe it’s a video, maybe the aspect ratio of that video can’t change, even though you can’t change the size. Whereas maybe it’s like a rectangle and you can change that aspect ratio or the sizes. And whatever you wanna call these things on the canvas like shapes or primitives or elements, the thing that you do with an infinite canvas is, you know, to manage these and read them or arrange them or put the canvas into a state where it represents something. So, obviously, again, like whiteboards are pretty clear, like you wanna do a retro and you’re moving sticky notes around, and maybe voting by stamping things. And the important thing also is that, unlike a document where you’re only seeing a very small part of infinitely scrolling page. The canvas works really, really well for collaboration. The idea of having multiple people working on the same surface is pretty natural. You just represent them by their cursor, wherever the cursor is, that’s where they are. Um, you can do things like follow people around. I suppose you could do that on a vertically scrolling page, but it might not be as fun. Yeah, so that’s why I think it’s been picked up so readily by, again, like whiteboarding or diagramming or or places where you need to have more than one person editing the same document. It’s not like something with text where, as I’m editing text at the top of the document, all the other text is being pushed down the document. 00:34:00 - Speaker 2: The elements are relatively independent of each other. Yeah. 00:34:03 - Speaker 1: Yeah, exactly. You know, you can have independent experiences on the same document that are just in different places. And I suppose the idea of place is also a big part of this, and potentially a big part of this. The idea of near and far, of close and distance, or like it quickly drifts into like video game territory of your cursor is your avatar, or maybe you have an avatar and you’re moving that avatar around this top down view of an office or a space and jumping into video calls with people close to you. So yeah, that infinite canvas, that’s kind of a long definition of how I see it. It’s just a found an infinite 2D plane and you are a little camera represented by a cursor. Moving around, moving over that surface. Mark, what do you think? 00:34:52 - Speaker 3: Yeah, I have a pretty similar take. I’ve often called these multimedia canvases, cause I think there are two dimensions going on. So one is the canvasness, which is at least 2, sometimes 3 dimensions and the freedom and flexibility to place content items wherever you want, like you were saying with relative independence. The second axis is multimedia, so Which types of media the digital document accommodates. When you lay it out like this, it’s interesting because this actually captures the whole universe of digital document editors. So for example, a classic plain text editor is at the sort of bottom left of this graph where it’s very limited to one content type and it’s very linear, a spreadsheet in contrast. Has pretty limited content types. It’s basically text and numbers, maybe a little bit of color, but it’s quite high on the canvasness. You have this flexibility and freedom to place things and by the way, as we’ve talked about in this podcast, that’s something people love about spreadsheets. It’s not just a calculator, it’s just a place where you can put stuff, people like that. Then you can go all the way out to the top right where I would put like muse and TL draw where you have a full 2D canvas and it’s highly multimedia. You have handwriting, text, images, videos, links, whatever. Or you could kind of go back down and say we want lots of different media types, but we don’t have the full flexibility. So I would put notion in this category, for example, of you basically have whatever media type you want, and there’s, there’s a little bit of flexibility, but it’s pretty much a linearized document. So in this view, the multimedia canvas is simply the fully generalized final form of a digital document. 00:36:38 - Speaker 1: It’s good to be here at the end, yeah. 00:36:40 - Speaker 3: And all the others are sort of specializations of that space. 00:36:45 - Speaker 2: One element you touched on there, Steve, which also I think fits in with the multimedia side as well as you talked about the elements, you know, we call them cards and news just because I think that works for us visually and particularly with the touch screen. It feels like an index card moving around on a desk or something, but yeah, the elements have a certain sameness and I think this does go back to Illustrator, which in many ways was the original Infinite canvas to my mind, but you know, maybe sketch and. FigMA and Framer kind of modernized that a little bit, but when you lay down a bit of text or add an image or add a rectangle in, for example, sketch, you can click on and select each one of them. You resize them the same way as you said there might be slightly different rules around resizing. There may be snapping or other things, but in the end, You can do the same things with all of them, and I think that’s really important and it’s actually something that to me comes actually from file systems. This is what’s great about files. It doesn’t matter what’s in the file. You can always delete it the same way. You can copy it the same way. You can put it in a folder the same way, you know, inspected size, that sort of thing. There’s this uniform container. And then over the years, files have gotten more capable and contained more and more different types of things, including, you know, things like video that the original creators of the file system probably couldn’t have even pictured being possible on a computer, but because it’s this general purpose container and as a user, I feel that gives me a lot of agency and power because even if I don’t know the specific type, I know exactly how to manipulate it. 00:38:16 - Speaker 3: This is reminding me that there’s potentially some secondary axis here. So one is collaboration, which we’ve mentioned, and we almost take that for granted now when we think about modern software, but you know that is a separable axis. The other is this notion of inline editing, which I think is actually pretty essential to what we think of as a modern multimedia canvas app, in contrast, you know, with the typical file manager like Finder, that’s actually very high on multimedia and quite high on. 2D flexibility, especially on your desktop, but you don’t have the inline editing, so it it feels like a totally different experience. 00:38:50 - Speaker 1: Yeah, this ability to not only move, delete, organize, copy, hold alt to clone, to directly manipulate content, but also It’s not only about making choices about where a thing is, or its relationship to other things, but it’s the place also to make stuff and to edit it directly. And yeah, one of the bigger kind of challenges with tealra was deciding how to allow interactions within shapes versus interactions with shapes. So, for example, you have a video, you can click on the video and drag it around. But you might also want to like pause the video or change the time of the video, and thinking about, OK, well, how do you transition from a shape that is, I call them shapes, whatever tail drops I’m gonna keep using that word, too hard to deprogram a shape that is Acting like a shape versus in a shape that is acting like a video, and that you can interact with with like a video. And yeah, it turns out that there’s a pretty good rules around that, like how to make it consistent, which works just as well for like text as it does for videos, as it does for, I think I have a code sandbox, you know, running on the canvas and teal draw in one of my example projects. The joy of using a kind of a web-based canvas of rendering stuff using the web, although that sounds like such a bad idea to render things in HTML and CSS, but it really does give you the ability to just put anything that can be in a browser on the canvas and interact with it. 00:40:29 - Speaker 3: And this also brings us to the why now and why is this hard. Like if this is the fully generalized form of digital documents, why didn’t software start this way? I think a big part of it is just that it’s hard. Like we talked about how it’s hard to write a text editor, but what if you now need to write a text editor, an image editor, a video editor, and audio editor, and they all need to be in the same thing, you know, it’s, it’s quite difficult. And then on top of that, you got to actually render all the stuff and make it manipulable and fast and responsive. It’s just quite difficult. I think that’s a big reason why. We haven’t seen it until relatively recently. I also think there is an element of people just, they don’t fully realize the expansive possibilities of the software, perhaps when they’re starting from a very limited. World. But OK, I constantly bring up this analogy of like a woodworking shop. Could you imagine if you had like a woodworking district and you had a shop just for like your chisel work and then a shop for your saw work and then a shop for your standing work and like you had to take this, you know, quote unquote file of a project and bringing it across to these different buildings. That’s kind of the world that we live in now, and you can’t even look at two things at the same time, like you’re standing and your chiseling work. That’s kind of the world that we’ve been living in with respect to software for a long time. And yeah, it takes some work to bring all those things into one. Workshop and to learn all the tools and to keep them all maintained and stuff, but that’s what you really want as a creator. 00:41:43 - Speaker 1: Yeah, especially in the browser, it’s like. Every 10 years, I’m told that you just have to forget what you knew about like what you can do and what you can’t do just because it just gets that much better. Certainly when I was Poking around with WordPress websites in college, the web was not a place where you could make a kind of a dumb driven canvas and make it like fast and good and perform it and do all the things that you need to do with pressure and multi-touch and all that. But it is possible today, and I think that when a platform is mature enough, you know, for you to have like an anything app, kind of a place where you can just put anything. OK, cool. Videos, yeah, put it there. Text, we’ll put it there. And that’s always sort of been the promise of the browser. It’s just been really constrained to this document format that is increasingly showing its limits. I think one of the newer APIs that I was looking at from Google, you know, involved like transitions, like kind of iOS style transitions between things, you know, that absolutely explodes the notion of the web page as a page and hopefully Tera also kind of demonstrates that this technology could be used. By the way, like, the idea of a rack driven canvas, not to keep coming back to framer, but That’s where I saw that this was possible because their, their canvas is driven by react and is driven by the dumb and like surprised me with the fact that it worked and that it could be made secure and all that. So, I don’t think I would have come up with this project without having seen it been done by people more capable than me than considered that as a possibility. It’s like, hey man, you could put anything on here. Like, why aren’t we? 00:43:26 - Speaker 3: This was an important data point for me in believing 4 or 5 years ago that these multimedia canvases were going to be really important because anywhere you had anything that was like multimedia canvas, if you squint, people loved it and they were using it for all kinds of stuff. I mentioned the example of spreadsheets. Another example is using tools like PowerPoint or drawing programs to do like whiteboarding basically. We’ve also seen this more recently with FigMA. FIMA is obviously a design tool, but people will use it for a personal note taking just because they really like the ability to put different stuff on a canvas. 00:43:56 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I think one of my first creative software experiences was with Hypercard, way back in the day. I think it was still Hypercard, like Apple Hypercard or not macromedia or Flash or anything like that, but yeah, there’s this idea of like, that is not an infinite canvas, that’s just a glorified slideshow. But it’s still like I’m like, man, you can make games with this, you can make presentations for this, you can make You know, animations, if you just click next fast enough. Yeah, um. A little bit of Like giving users a little bit of room to run, you know, it’s always like the best, just because, yeah, suddenly you have Doom running in Microsoft Excel. Yeah, and I think with TLDraw, I mean, folks have made a slideshow app, like a slide editor app with TLDraw, which apparently didn’t take too much work cause it already had like pages and you’re just have a UI for moving between pages and I’ve seen it used to do video annotation, like you pause a video at a certain time and just overlay like teal draw and be able to edit, like, you know, this guy’s gonna run over here or whatever, and it’s been used for like wikis. One of my favorite stories about this actually is that there are two products that compete with each other. They’re both for Dungeons and Dragons game masters or Dungeon masters. And when you’re telling or running like a story campaign or a story world game, you have a bunch of locations and people and, you know, items and all this stuff and they might have relationships to each other, etc. And so there are two pieces of software, one is called WorldAnvil, one is called Legend Keeper, and they both are essentially wikis, custom wikis for people who are running these games. And Legend Keeper shipped a whiteboard view of their like wiki, essentially. Based on TalDraw, like 6 weeks after I shipped TealDraw, like open source it, like immediately, they seemed to be like immediately, oh cool, this thing that we wanted to do for like 2 years, like, let’s just do it. Like we could just nail this, and they did. And then about 6 months later, World Envil released their canvas, their whiteboard view of their wiki, which was also based on Tealra. And I had been, I’d been telling people I’m like, someday there’s gonna be a product. Or two products that are competing with each other, similar features, and the thing that they’re not gonna be competing over is like how well the eraser works or how well the select tool works. They’re gonna be competing at that higher level of, yeah, like the features that they built that are unique to their products because both of them are gonna be using TealDraw. And then it happened 6 months in, it happened that I was like able to point to both of them and I love that. They’re both wonderful products and then their communities are always posting. Like I kind of lurk on their Discord channels just to see people’s like whiteboards, and yeah, it’s like 200 individual characters, you know, in a big family tree structure or like alliances between things. Yeah, definitely not what I expected when I was working on Tealdrop, but that’s the whole point, right? It’s like to see where people take it. 00:47:06 - Speaker 2: That’s great and I like the Dungeon master and world building aspect. We have some new customers who do a similar thing for their sort of dungeon mastering, but it is in a way the purest form of knowledge management. Yeah, you have this complex world, you need to keep track of stories, characters, yes, it’s all made up. There’s a version of this for sort of fictional worlds as well, right? Like, yeah, if you work on some franchise like Star Trek or whatever. to keep some shared knowledge base of all the canonical everything that has ever happened, timeline and characters and rules for the universe and things like that, but yes, it is a mix of obviously textual, kind of more linked wiki knowledge graph style stuff. But obviously diagrams, maps, drawings, all of that can and should be a part of it, but traditionally the digital tools that we use tend much, much more towards those that text and that linear top to bottom document, and it’s not even top to bottom, it’s really about the inline. It’s about the text that flows left to right and it wraps when it hits the edge of the screen and it keeps going down until you get to the bottom and any multi. The media you add tends to kind of float awkwardly as sort of a big character or something, but I think when you look at something like the Dungeon Master use case which so purely and in this made up realm captures the complexity of what you can do with computers in terms of tracking knowledge and what you might want to do, and quickly you see that text is a big part of the story, but it’s not the only part. 00:48:38 - Speaker 3: Yeah, and I think related to this idea of constrictive media types and layouts is the notion of premeditated workflows versus totally in the control of the user workflows. So typically with software, you have workflows that are Designed by a product manager or whatever, and they write down the software and that’s that. So you can imagine for world building, you have a database table that’s like characters and database table that’s equipment and you know, if you have something that doesn’t have a common database, well too bad, you know, email the product manager maybe able to add it in a year. But people really like the ability to craft the software to their use cases and motivations. I think this is a big draw of The multimedia canvas, you can just do whatever you want with it. You know, if you have a different way that you think about equipment or characters or whatever, you just put it on the canvas and and do whatever you want. And I think that’s an important aspect. But the other thing here is you can go down a layer and change the actual programming, which is one of the things that sounds like it is really exciting with TLDraw. And again, people, when they just give them a little kernel of power and capability and you meet that. With some motivation, people do all kinds of stuff. I’m reminded of the Half-Life game engine. I don’t know if you guys know the story, but the game itself was great. It was very successful. But this game engine spawned off all kinds of stuff, you know, that critically, the original creators did not anticipate, design, approve, or even know about, right? Just someone else, they took this kernel of power and made something new. I think that flow was so great. 00:50:05 - Speaker 1: Yeah, absolutely. One of the opportunities of having like a multimedia canvas is the ability to extend it semantically, almost, and you see some of this discourse around like the idea of notion-based editors, block-based editors, right? Is that like text is a primitive, images are primitive, but you start to kind of wrap these things up into more specific domain specific or just project specific and more meaningful blocks, right? And those things can interact in ways that maybe have to do with like what they are. So in the kind of the Dungeon Master example with something like Legend Keeper, the things on the canvas that they added were parts of your wiki that you can put on the canvas. And so the character on the canvas, you know, you can drag out a character from your wiki and put it on the canvas, is not just an image of that character, but it’s sort of is a representation of it. And It could be that dragging a character onto another character might produce a different outcome, might suggest a different user intent than dragging a character onto a location, right? Now suddenly you’re able to extend this surface metaphor into something where those same basic interactions, those same basic direct manipulation actions can be like meaningful in a way and produce different outcomes based on what you’re working with. Um, it’s not just text, it’s not just images. Now, we have people, we have places, we have things, and they might have their own rules around them. 00:51:34 - Speaker 3: Yeah, I think this idea of extending the content types in the canvas is super cool. We explored this a little bit back in the day with the prototypes that led to Muse in the Ink & Switch research lab, and I remember a couple that were really fun. One was a person. Which is represented as like an avatar and a name, but it was so useful to be able to have someone on the board and put them next to tasks or put people in a group, or, you know, put your current work under your picture. It’s like a great primitive, in other words, maps and locations, something that actually people use all the time for planning purposes. But I think there’s an important sell to here around extensibility. So there’s one thing you could do, which is draw out the notion of a box and say, we as the creators of this program could put different things in this box, you know, notion could put different things in their block abstraction. And just that is useful because then you can manipulate these in standard ways and link to them and so on. But then users being able to extend it is so fun and powerful. I remember with our prototypes, because this was back when we were doing the prototypes in JavaScript and people could just kind of write the stuff like a react component. And it was people were so excited to be able to write their own things, you know, things that were too specific and niche for the central, you know, controllers of the framework to ever worry about or even think of, but people felt so empowered to write their own components. This brings me to a problem that we’ve been noodling on for several years and and to my mind it’s still a critical open question. So when you’re trying to build these end user extensible digital document systems, there’s a few deerrata that you want. OK, you want it to be very fast, you want it to be safe in the sense of end users aren’t gonna be injecting wild stuff, you know, and other users' data or something. You want it to be approachable cause you want end users to be able to actually use this thing. You don’t want to give them some like, you know, assemble or guide and say go have fun. And ideally, I think you want the extensions to not feel like a totally different world, like some limited, slower, neutered, you know, subset of the platform. You really want to feel like the extensions and the platform itself are like written in the same way. And in fact, if an extension does well, it can be promoted into the platform. Or if a piece of the platform is, you know, not finding a lot of use that can be sliced off as an extension. And I just think it’s very hard to get all these things at the same time and it’s not clear to me how you do it. So for example, C++ can be very fast and It can be safe. Maybe Rust would be a better example of something that’s very fast and safe. But then telling end users to write their components in Rust, that’s a little bit harsh. And JavaScript in our experience can be very approachable, it’s very flexible, but it can be very hard to make fast, especially at the 120 FPS level that we’re targeting from use. So I’m just kind of curious if they that problem statement kind of resonates with you, and if so, how you’ve been approaching that. 00:54:25 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I think that’s a really good summary of the problem of extensions. Um, which some of that is gonna be true for any products, right? Like it’s true for a text editor as for a video conferencing infrastructure. I don’t know, whatever. In the case of Tealra. I’ve addressed this in kind of three design decisions. One is to use React for the canvas again, because I think the development story there makes up for the performance story. And the performance story is pretty good. It’s never gonna be as good as something like custom webGL canvas that was written in a systems language, right? That’s not gonna be possible. But on the other hand, uh, you can put things in there that you just can’t put in anything else. You can put a mapbox map or you could put a, you know, YouTube video, like as we’ve talked about, and you can do that, you can offer those things fairly easily. So, in the case of Tealra, all the shapes that you and I’m kind of referencing this next version that’s gonna be launching soon, all the shapes that you see. When you look at teardrop when it loads up, those are essentially extensions. Those are all custom. We wrote the user facing app kind of at that same level as you would write your custom plug-ins and your custom things. And I was pretty good about not cheating, and of course it’s easy cause we can change that lower level, you know, that core level in order to facilitate things that don’t work yet, but um all the shapes are custom shapes or plug-ins. And then the shapes themselves, these sort of like plug-in shapes. are all based on like uh primitives that the lower levels do share. So, for example, you have something like a box, right? A box rotates in a certain way, it resizes in a certain way, it hit tests against like points and lines in a certain way, and all of those things are different than if it was like a pencil shape, like a drawn line. All those answers are different. However, they’re all the same. Every box is gonna hit test pretty much the same way as every other box. Every line is gonna hit test the same way as every other line. So when you’re creating these custom shapes, when you’re creating these extensions, you’re able to just sort of inherit all that functionality from kind of the base, right? You say this is a box, all right, job done. This is its model. It has a width and height just like a normal box, but it also has a latitude, longitude and a camera zoom. And then the next question is like, well, what does it look like? And you say, well, it looks like a map box component, and it uses that data from the model, and that’s pretty much all the code you have to write, because all the other parts of that box in terms of its behavior and such are just their default, right? If you wanted to make something crazy and unique or if you wanted to make something that was very different than all of the primitives that we do share, things like whatever boxes, lines, polygons. Then you can also access those same primitives, those like lower level primitives to say, OK, well, here’s my squiggle. It has 3 ups and downs. Here’s it’s like outline that you can use for hit testing, and here’s how it resizes and all that. But most of the time, the custom shapes that we’ve written are just boxes, mostly just boxes with react components inside of them. So that’s the authoring experience, or the like developing story there, which itself is a developing story as we try and push like what you can do with these type of shapes. Then separately, it’s like, how do you do that, especially in a multiplayer situation, how do you allow multiple people to be using their own custom shapes, especially if they’re sort of end user credable. At the moment, the answer is, well, you don’t. The way that I’m thinking about this is deferring to sort of the implementer level, is that TealDraw as a SAS product might someday have its own extension markets like you might find in Figma where you can download stuff. But in the short term, this is primarily infrastructure tool for other teams to create apps with. Those folks would be the ones defining, you know, OK, well, here’s my person place thing shape. Those folks would be also guaranteeing that everyone who’s using the app has access to those same shapes. And so it wouldn’t really be like end user developer who’s making those extensions. 00:58:38 - Speaker 3: Yeah, so each instance of the TLDraw derived app chooses its extension ecosystem and curates those and makes sure that they’re safe, and it’s not every individual Joe, you know, injecting JavaScript into everyone else’s computer. 00:58:52 - Speaker 1: Yeah, exactly. There might be a future where we want to solve those types of problems or like create those types of marketplaces. And there are a ton of interesting questions about like, well, how do you distribute those shapes in like a multiplayer situation with people who haven’t installed the plug-in. What happens if you copy your squiggle shape from one project into a different project that doesn’t have that squiggle shape? Those are all questions for later down the road. I think the primary thing that I’m going for with this version is just giving other developers the tools that they need in order to build the experience that they want for their users to have that involves this sort of canvas. 00:59:27 - Speaker 3: Yeah, and I think that’s a very reasonable and practical set of trade-offs, you know, react, curated by the instance, makes a lot of sense. It is fun to think about the fully general world. 00:59:37 - Speaker 1: Oh, totally, yeah. 00:59:39 - Speaker 3: Of arbitrary extensions. 00:59:40 - Speaker 1: I’ll get there eventually. There’ll be some cool streaming JavaScript modules, you know, that are pulled in at runtime in order to, you know, we’ll get there, don’t worry. happy not to be thinking about that yet. 00:59:52 - Speaker 2: I think of the time, certainly. 00:59:54 - Speaker 3: And your experience with React is that it’s fast enough. My recollection, so this was a few years ago, but my recollection was that React or React like systems on the web for this canvas use case was Not fast enough. 01:00:09 - Speaker 3: More like was very close. It was right on the line in the sense that if you kind of did anything weird or made a little performance mistake, it’s very easy to throw the flags, not meeting even 60 FPS. I don’t think we ever could try to get to 120 FPS because the browsers on the iPads don’t support 120 FPS as far as I know. 01:00:34 - Speaker 1: Yeah, that’s true, that’s true, but it’s like plausible for 60. 01:00:37 - Speaker 1: Yeah, I think Chrome goes up to 120, and I mean you could try out on Teal Draw, even though the current Tealraw.com is sort of the first version, and that ha