Not a joke.
Purchased. Enthusiastically.
Matt Alexander:
The changes are not imposing, but there is a tangible and welcome difference. Things feel far more fluid and intuitive in places I hadn’t quite realized needed fixing.
Totally agree.
I switched to Tweetbot a few months ago after the official Twitter app went the way of the shitbird and, other than a couple of very minor complaints, I’m glad I did. This update alleviates several of my main complaints about Tweetbot. Highly recommended.
It seems a great number of people have whipped themselves into quite a frenzy over what Pinterest does with links that are posted to its servers. The really funny part is that this kind of thing isn’t new and the people who are mad about it are, in typical Internet fashion, jumping on the bandwagon (sorry, but t’is true).
No idea what I’m talking about? Here’s a quick summary.
Many online retailers offer affiliate programs — ways for people to earn a commission if they refer a customer. Amazon is an easy example; if you add ?tag=nerdgap-20
to the end of an Amazon product page URL, then I’ll get a small commission if you buy anything after clicking that link. Easy peasy.
Each time a user adds a link to Pinterest, the service will examine the URL, determine if it can add the company’s affiliate code to it somehow and, if it can, it does. After that, anybody who clicks through a modified Pinterest URL and buys something will earn the Cold Brew Labs folks a little bit of cash.
The reason everybody’s crapping their pants over this is because, ostensibly, they didn’t disclose that they were doing this. I have three problems with this position:
They actually do disclose that they are doing this. It may not be as clearly spelled out as people would like, but it’s there. From the oft-ignored Pinterest Terms of Use page:
By making available any Member Content through the Site, Application or Services, you hereby grant to Cold Brew Labs a worldwide, irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, royalty-free license, with the right to sublicense, to use, copy, adapt, modify, distribute, license, sell, transfer, publicly display, publicly perform, transmit, stream, broadcast, access, view, and otherwise exploit such Member Content only on, through or by means of the Site, Application or Services.
Just to recap, people on the Internet are mad at Pinterst for:
Good on ya, Internet.
(Full disclosure: I don’t use Pinterest.)
👓Back from his hazy, bongwater-soaked vacation in Amsterdam, Myke returns with a vengeance for this week’s episode of the UK’s favorite cooking podcast. Among other things, we discuss my Frankenstein-ish microphone setup, iBooks Author and, of course, we read our iTunes reviews in those funny accents you all seem to like so much.
And special thanks to Agile Tortoise, makers of Phraseology for iPad, for sponsoring this week’s show. I own the app and it’s a lovely addition if you’re a writer who uses an iPad.
Internet funnyman Ben Brooks made a video demonstrating the Magnus iPad 2 stand by Ten One Design. The stand looks pretty nice, but the real star of the show is the 5¢ piece that makes a quick cameo near the end of the video for reasons that aren’t entirely clear to me.
Teenage heartthrob Myke Hurley is on vacation this week, so I was asked to fill in on this week’s episode of the Ungeniused podcast with Mr. Stephen Hackett.
If you want to hear what it sounds like when a completely unprepared me appears on a podcast requiring preparation, this is your huckleberry where—quite poetically, I think—we discuss the Challenger space shuttle.
Old nerd humor, but very funny.
(NSFW).
Shawn Blanc:
From a personal standpoint, the conference felt more like a vacation than a business trip. All my time in San Francisco was spent with friends and peers.
Yep.
David Sparks:
A surprising number of attendees at my Macworld talk about OmniFocus were not aware that you could show start date items in the iPad version’s Forecast View.
He isn’t joking. Myself and a number of my fellow OmniFocus nerds who were in attendance had no idea this setting existed. Incredibly useful if you spend any time in OmniFocus for iPad’s Forecast view.
Geeky as all get-out, but a creative approach that seems to be working well for him. Includes source code.