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American teens have had it with this authoritarian crap

Jason Kottke, writing about a few experiments where totalitarian regimes were tested in some schools:

The nation’s youth, raised on The Hunger Games and Harry Potter, are reminding the baby boomers that considering what their own parents went through in the Great Depression and World War II, they should fucking know better than to slam the door on succeeding generations.

That was the bit I laughed at. But overall it’s an intriguing idea.

Introducing the Gmail Developer Preview of AMP in Email

You may have heard of the open-source framework, Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP). It’s a framework for developers to create faster-loading mobile content on the web. Beyond simply loading pages faster, AMP now supports building a wide range of rich pages for the web. Today, we’re announcing AMP for Email so that emails can be formatted and sent as AMP documents. As a part of this, we’re also kicking off the Gmail Developer Preview of AMP for Email—so once you’ve built your emails, you’ll be able to test them in Gmail.

It just keeps getting worse.

2018 - 365 Project - January

This year I’ve been posting a photo every single day, to my micro blog. Seeing as January is well over, I’ve compiled the entire month into a quick video.

Watch on YouTube.

January Blog Statistics 📈💰

After signing up my blog for Carbon Ads at the start of January, I’ve just had my first set of earnings calculated!

Maybe some people wouldn’t make this sort of thing public, but it’s on such a small scale there’s nothing really to hide.

Here are the stats:

  • 3087 Impressions
  • 5 Clicks
  • 0.162% Overall CTR
  • $7.58 Payout

So it’s nothing really, but it’s my first ever payment from ads, and my blog costs $10 to run. So it’s not actually far off!

It’s certainly a motivational push, to make me post more, and better content!

Owen Wilson "Wow" Wow Mod

I think anybody that has seen Owen Wilson, can hear him saying “Wow” in his voice. Well, some kind developers have taken various clips of this, and created a mod for World of Warcraft, and used them to replace various sounds in the game.

It’s pretty funny!

Watch on YouTube.

Download the Owen Wilson Mod.

Quickly Saving Web Pages to my Notes

Matthew Cassinelli, previously a developer of the now Apple-owned Workflow app, has started blogging recently. And I thought I’d share one of his recent workflows, about quickly saving webpages to the Bear notes app.

I’ve been doing more research on iOS lately as my iPhone is the device I use the most, so capturing full web pages quickly saves me a lot of time. While I really like Apple Notes’ latest iterations, it’s not easy to clip websites there – so I adopted Bear for notes, which has support for Markdown, images, and a handy Get URL function.

Bear’s ability to download websites as a note is killer, but it’s usually easily available for most people via their Action Extension. Rather than limiting my access to the share sheet, I’ve been taking advantage of the Workflow action Get Bear Note From URL1 to save web pages from anywhere on iOS.

I never knew Bear had that feature, and that may push me into using it again in the future. But this workflow has a bit more complexity that most, in that it can be run from the today widget using the clipboard contents, from the share sheet, and from other apps like Launch Center Pro.

Seeing as he used to actually work on the Workflow app, his blog is certainly one to keep an eye on.

Read the full post.

Apps

Workflow

Bear (iOS / macOS)

Custom operators in Swift

John Sundell has written a great piece about using custom operators in Swift. Some really interesting examples as well. I never really thought about custom operators like he has, but clearly they can be very powerful tools:

Few Swift features cause as much heated debate as the use of custom operators. While some people find them really useful in order to reduce code verbosity, or to implement lightweight syntax extensions, others think that they should be avoided completely.

Love ’em or hate ’em – either way there are some really interesting things that we can do with custom operators – whether we are overloading existing ones or defining our own. This week, let’s take a look at a few situations that custom operators could be used in, and some of the pros & cons of using them.

Read the full post.

Pokémon GO Becomes One with Nature

From the Pokémon Company:

Don’t miss the epic new Pokémon GO trailer created in the style of a nature documentary, featuring Pokémon that have recently begun appearing near you in Pokémon GO.

[…]

The video is narrated by iconic actor and comedian Stephen Fry, with his dulcet tones complemented by an original symphonic score by legendary composer George Fenton.

This could quite possibly be one of the best game trailers ever.

Watch on YouTube.

Read the full announcement.

What I Wish the iPad Would Gain from the Mac

Ryan Christoffel wrote a great piece over at MacStories, about what he wants to see the iPad gain from the Mac:

I made the iPad Pro my primary computer when it first launched in late 2015. The transition pains from Mac to iPad were minimal, and the device has grown even more capable since that time thanks to improvements in iOS. My need for a Mac is now extremely rare.

My desire for a Mac, however, still exists in a few specific use cases. There are things the Mac has to offer that I wish my iPad could replicate.

Now that the modern iPad has many basics of computing covered, here are the things I think it needs to take iPad-as-PC to the next level.

My favourite proposition:

Wouldn’t it be great if an app like Workflow could become more Hazel-like, triggering workflows automatically in the background based on pre-set rules?

They’re great ideas, and I hope Apple adopt at least a few of them.

Read the full article.

 

Steve Jobs Knew How to Write an Email

In 2010, Jobs and Apple were preparing to release the iPad. A key feature would be the tablet’s ability to function as an e-reader, similar to Amazon’s Kindle (which had already been out for a few years). Of course, the more publishers willing to contribute books to Apple’s iTunes store, the more appeal the iPad would hold.

Four major publishers had already signed on, but another, HarperCollins, was holding out.

Negotiations eventually centered around a key conversation between Jobs and James Murdoch, an executive at News Corp. (HarperCollins’ parent company). Murdoch wasn’t convinced his company (and its partners) could agree to the terms Apple was offering, especially regarding the “ceding of pricing to Apple.”

Jobs proceeded to write an email to try to convince HC to join.

This is a very intriguing piece, and while I’ve seen some articles before about “the best” ways to write an email, this one email seemed very well formed, in a whole manner of aspects.