1Password 4 for Mac Teaser

Dan Moren at Macworld has a little overview of a little something that my colleagues and I have been working on for a while.

I'm really proud of how 1Password 4 for Mac is turning out, and I can't wait until we get it into the hands of the people.

As they say, Fall is Coming.

Addendum: 9to5Mac has more pictures.

Disclosure: I work for AgileBits and 1Password's success pays my bills.

Working in the Shed

Matt Legend Gemmell:

We act as if we take concentration for granted, yet everyone has had trouble keeping their mind on the task at hand. We litter our menubars with icons, keep notifications enabled, and run our email programs, chat apps and social media clients all day. Something’s got to give, and invariably it’s our creative output.

I've felt this in past months. The inflow of widgets and wotsits vying for my attention, not to mention people. My focus and attention have been pulled in almost any and every direction imaginable. And something did give, and it was most definitively my creative output.

I have felt completely and totally hampered in my desire and ability to write here. And this past week, I have found that writing in the quiet of the night, just before I turn out my bedside lamp, to be optimal. There is little seeking my attention then.

It's very obvious that I need to scale back some distractions that mean little, so I can enjoy the things I love.

¶ Downcast for Mac | Review

I'm pretty sure I've been an avid podcast listener since Apple first integrated it into iTunes and the iPod. Many would likely agree Apple kicked podcasts into mainstream use.

After the debut of the iPhone and then the App Store, third party podcast apps started to appear for movie listening, but I stuck with Apple's iTunes and the iPhone's iPod app, since I was syncing all the time anyway, because untethered sync still wasn't around for the iPhone. And I kept on this way until Apple released its Podcasts app partway through iOS 5's life cycle.

And boy did that app suck.

Podcasts was gorgeous at its debut, sure. I loved the reel-to-reel animation, superfluous as it was. But actually using the app was downright awful. So that left me with a decision to make between the two biggest names I had heard about. Instacast and Downcast. Both were iOS only at the time, but I didn't mind because I was doing most of my listening on my iPhone, anyway.

I chose Downcast. It didn't take long using Downcast and seeing how easily it synced over iCloud with my iPad to realize it was the app that Podcasts should have been.

From my review of Downcast for iOS:

Apple’s Podcasts app is slow, buggy, and lacks the typical polish and refinement we’ve all come to expect. This app does not feel like something Apple made. It doesn’t even use iCloud to sync the subscription list between your iPhone and iPad, instead making you go through the subscription process twice.

So here’s what you should do. Buy Downcast. It is every bit the caliber you would expect Apple to make, but Apple didn’t make it.

The only role Downcast didn't fulfill was being able to listen from my Mac. At first this didn't really bother me until I started being in front of my desk more and more. Sure, I've fired up my podcasts on my iPad and kept it playing on my desk, and that's fine and all. But I had been wanting podcast listening on my Mac again.

Today, my want is fulfilled. Downcast for Mac is now available on the Mac App Store. As soon as I installed and launched it, I simply clicked a little cloud icon, and checked four boxes. Immediately, my settings, episode list, podcast subscriptions, & playlists all came in via iCloud.

Aside: Downcast is one of the few apps using iCloud that really seems to just work without hassle. Many others I have don't work entirely well and I use Dropbox instead.

Downcast's interface is plain and simple in a refreshing way. It's very focused. You select your podcast and play. I do think it needs some refreshing over time. For instance, there are three different refresh buttons in the main window. One that refreshes all feeds, one to refresh a specific feed list, and another that seems to refresh everything in iCloud.

Aside from an abundance of things to refresh, Downcast for Mac is a faithful interpretation of what Downcast is in a Mac app. Downcast for Mac is available on the Mac App Store at an introductory price of $9.99.

Starbucks Wi-Fi is Going Google

Starbucks is dropping their often slow & crappy AT&T Wi-Fi for hopefully lickety-split Wi-Fi from Google. While Starbucks' coffee is subpar, I greatly enjoy the atmosphere there for getting some stuff done away from the home office. And while Google as an ISP gives me a bit of the heebie-jeebies, fast Internet is appreciated.

Besides, that's why I have Cloak for public Wi-Fi.

Apple's Answer on Upgrade Pricing

Underscore David Smith on Apple's release of Logic Pro X this morning and how we finally know how to deal with upgrade pricing on the App Store:

Logic Pro X is a Major (with a capital M) update to their professional audio editing suite. It appears to represent a significant investment in both time and resources. So how is it being sold, especially to people who already paid $200 for the previous version (Logic Pro 9)? It is a separate app download with a full cost purchase. No upgrades, no introductory pricing, just straight forward sale.

So, basically, do what we have been doing. Yep.

¶ July 11

July of 2008 was a busy and significant month for me. Most importantly, I celebrated my first wedding anniversary with my wife, and welcomed our son into the world.

But that month also holds other historical significance, one being recognized by a lot of geeks this week. On July 11, 2008, the App Store launched alongside iPhone OS 2.0, the iPhone 3G, and MobileMe. That morning I woke ridiculously early to drive an hour to my nearest Apple Store and wait in line. In retrospect, it was pretty silly of me to head an hour away from home when my wife was home 9 months pregnant and days away from the due date. I remember standing in line kind of afraid my Motorola RAZR would ring.

The next few hours went by uneventfully. AT&T's activation servers had turned into molten slag, so I was able to purchase my iPhone and head home, where I activated it through iTunes later that day.

Since the prior winter I had been using a first-generation iPod touch, which ran nothing but Apple's stock apps. So July 11 was pretty neat in that the App Store was opening up. My first purchase was Twitterrific, which is now in its fifth version and is still my twitter app of choice. In fact, it has held the same position on my home screen for five years through three different iPhone models I have owned.

The App Store really did unleash the true potential of the iPhone, and later the iPad. The iPhone is essentially my connection to the world at large. Sure, I have my local friends and community, but the advent of the iPhone and the apps people have made have connected me to new friendships across the globe (back int he day those were called pen pals ).

Heck, if it weren't for the booming success of the App Store and iPhone and iPad, I wouldn't be where I am today. I don't think my job would exist without the App Store.

So much has happened in the past five years. I am days from celebrating my sixth anniversary with my wife and my son's fifth birthday. I am coming up on a year of working at the company of my dreams, and Apple's future is shining bright as they prepare to radically re-invent what iOS will be for years to come.

I really can't wait to see where we'll be on July 11, 2018.

Go Get Day One [iTunes Link]

One of my favorite iOS apps, Day One, is free this week as part of the App Store's 5 year anniversary promotion. The iOS app is normally $4.99 and really is one of the nicest apps I have ever used.

You can read my review of Day One, but at the price of free this week, you don't have much excuse not to grab it.

There are other apps in the promotion which you may like, and Tools & Toys has a lovely roundup.

The agony and the ecstasy of the new MacBook Air’s battery

David Chartier:

For all the incredibleness of the MacBook Air’s new battery, the device is still dependent on WiFi hotspots and, let’s face it, the internet is an essential ingredient these days for getting most things done. Now, keep in mind that adding 4G radios to the MacBook Air likely poses its own share of challenges that Apple has clearly decided to avoid for the Mac, at least so far. In general, it seems like 3G/4G radios have never been very popular in notebooks for some reason.

I can see why David wants cellular data in a MacBook, but I guess I don't find it to be much of a bother to just fire up Personal Hotspot on my iPhone.

Six Years

On June 29, 2007, Apple released the first iPhone. It didn't have third-party apps, copy & paste, or even something as simple as sending a photo or video over MMS. Six years later the iPhone is the most important product Apple sells. When thinking about people who make apps, people who use those apps every day, children with disability or without learning easier and faster — it makes one wonder how many lives this one device has enriched in a mere six years.

It is truly amazing the leap forward we've taken with technology in this short time, and what else is yet to come.

Feed Wrangler’s Smart Streams

On the topic of a post-Google Reader RSS world, and specifically regarding my choice of FeedWrangler, this explanation by Shawn Blanc of how versatile Smart Streams are in FeedWranger is fantastic. I learned quite a bit about them, and though I have some set up as "folders" like I had in Google Reader, I can completely see myself using keyword based Smart Streams and Filters for seasons of organization.

If you are also settling on FeedWrangler, you should definitely read up on Smart Streams.