Dr. Who Flashcast

I’m a Dr. Who fan. That is largely as a result of Jason Snell and the gang over at the Incomparable. It took me a few years, but I managed to watch all episodes since the 2005 reboot and I’m now keeping current with the new shows. So when Jason was out of town for a few days and needed a guest on this week’s Dr. Who Flashcast after last night’s episode, I said, “Me me. me!”.

MPU 284: Optimize Your Mac

The most recent episode of Mac Power users is all about optimizing your Mac from tweaking system settings to third party utilities. We dive deep on enhancing your experience and making your Mac your own.

Find Friends from Any Computer

Although it doesn’t get much press, one of my favorite features of iOS and OS X is Find Friends. As a dad, I love the ability to keep tabs on where my kids and my wife are. As I write these words, I recognize that sounds creepy but I’m willing to take that label this time. 

I’ve mentioned in the past how I equate Find Friends to Mrs. Weasley’s clock and the analogy stands.  All the members of my family are frequently dispersed throughout Southern California and, as the dad and husband, I get a certain degree of comfort knowing where they are at. From all of my Mac and iOS devices I can very quickly confirm that nobody is in jail or any other sort of trouble. I like that.
 
Starting a few days ago, I can also now access the data from any computer. The iCloud.com site has its own Find Friends tool that shows me the same data.  While it probably won’t be often that I would need to access this data from a third-party computer, the fact that I can is appreciated.


Cameras and Cars

One of my friends recently bought a new camera. This guy is passionate about photography and one of those types that meticulously researches a purchase like this. So when he told me decided on his next big camera purchase I assumed it would be Canon, Nikon, or maybe even Leica. What I didn’t expect was his answer–Fuji.

He explained that when it comes to mirrorless cameras, there is a lot of stiff competition from companies that weren’t even in the ring a few years ago. That got me thinking about cars.

The mechanism that is an SLR camera–the mirror, the shutter, and the rest–is a bit old and creaky. Removing it in mirrorless cameras made competition from outsiders easier. I’d argue the same is true for the internal combustion engine. Existing car makers have so much specialized knowledge about how to make the best and most reliable internal combustion engines and, for many years, the acquisition of this specialized knowledge was the barrier to entry for anyone that wanted to make cars. However, that is changing. Electric cars are much simpler. There is an electric motor that is attached to a chassis with some sort of braking and steering mechanism. Carburetors, pistons, engine blocks, smog absorbers, oil pans, and all that other junk that are required to make an internal combustion engine all get thrown out the window with an electric car.

Like the high end camera market, cars are also easier to design and build now thanks to these advances in technology. This is why companies like Google and Apple seem to be ramping up to get in the car business. They don’t need the expertise that was mandatory a few years ago and new types of expertise, like batterie and software, will soon rule the day with respect to making cars. Those new subjects just happen to be right in Apple and Google’s wheelhouse. Like my friend’s new Fuji camera (that he loves), you may be surprised who people are buying cars from in a few years.

Automating Invoice Processing on My Mac

When I first opened my solo law practice, one of the unanswered questions in my mind was how I would go about billing clients. This is supposed to be hard. Some law firms spends days every month on getting bills out the door. Others pay outside vendors. I decided to nerd the s%*t out of this problem and do it myself.

I use an online practice management solution, Clio, to track my time. At the end of the month, the service creates PDFs of my invoices that go into my Mac’s Downloads folder. Rather than show an actual client invoice, I’ll use this dummy invoice for my side landscaping business.


One of the tricks of this workflow is that when I push a button in Clio, the PDF is created and opens automatically on my Mac in the Preview application. The first tool to help me automate the process is Hazel. I’ve talked a lot about Hazel at this site and on the podcast over the years. One of Hazel’s many talents, is the ability to identify, name, and move files. So I’ve got Hazel constantly looking at my Downloads folder. If it sees a PDF file that has the text “Lawn Care Products and Livestock”, “PO number”, and “Gunther’s Gardening”, it will start acting on that file. My logic is that there will be no PDFs in my Downloads folder that have all of those words in that order that are not an invoice. Here’s the Hazel Rule.


Once Hazel finds a match, usually within seconds of the file downloading, Hazel renames the file with the current date, client name, and a further description of the invoice. Because the PDFs open on my desktop at the time of the download, it’s fun to watch the name change as I’m reading the invoice over. Next Hazel moves the invoice to a folder I’ve designated in the client’s Admin/Invoices folder.

So within seconds of downloading the invoice, my Mac has named and moved the invoice to its appropriate folder.


Next I click on the sharing button in the Preview App (which is diplaying the invoice). From there I click on the Mail icon and this creates a new blank email with the invoice already attached.

My next big tool is TextExpander. I manually type in the client’s name as an email recipient. Then I tab down to the s ubject line and fire off a TextExander snippet. The snippet phrase is “newbill”. The snippet first fills in the subject line with the terms “Sparks Law %B Invoice” which TextExpander fills in as “Sparks Law October Invoice”. Next month the snippet will automatically change “October” to “November”. (TextExpander recognizes the wildcard %B as the current month.)


Next, the snippet asks me to fill in the client name and let’s me choose from several frequent options. Three common issues in these cover emails are questions about whether the client wants to pay online via credit card, wants a snail mail copy of the invoice, and if there is someone else at the company that needs to get the invoice. I use TextExpander Optional Selection phrases for this. I can check or uncheck the appropriate phrases for the particular invoice.

Finally,  I have a multi-line field at the bottom where I can write or dictate in a further description of services or plans for the coming month.

Here is the finalized email from the above snippet screen.


Here is a screenshot of the snippet form TextExpander.


Here is the full text of the snippet if you want to adapt it for use use it in your copy of TextExpander at home.

Sparks Law %B Invoice
%key:tab%Hi %filltext:name=field 1%,

Attached is this month’s invoice. %fillpart:name=online pay:default=yes%I also sent you a separate email with online payment instructions if you’d prefer to pay that way via credit card.%fillpartend% %fillpart:name=optional part 3:default=yes%Also, please let me know if you’d like hard copies of these invoices in the mail.%fillpartend% %fillpart:name=someone else:default=yes%Finally, if you’d like me to direct these to someone else at the company, let me know.%fillpartend%

%fillarea:name=Message:default=Thank you for your business.%

Kind regards,

David Sparks
Sparks Law
SparksEsq.com

So this detailed explanation probably sounds like a lot but in action, the whole process is wicked fast. It takes just moments for me to approve and download a PDF invoice, at which point my Mac names and files the invoice, and I send it off to the client with a customized email. I love being a nerd.

As an aside, I have had very few clients take me up on the offer to get snail mail invoices. Almost everyone wants things in just PDF form. I have brilliant clients.

Sponsor: Eternal Storms Software

I’m pleased to welcome a new sponsor to MacSparky, Eternal Storms Software. Eternal Storms makes some of my favorite Mac productivity software and I’m really pleased to have them sponsoring the site. Here are just a few of their tasty morsels:

Yoink

(Website)(Mac App Store)

You know that thing where you are using full screen mode and it’s a pain to move files between screens or building a document and can’t find the image file you need that’s buried somewhere on your desktop? Don’t fret. Yoink it.


ScreenFloat

(Website)(Mac App Store)

Ever taken a screenshot of something for reference only to find out that you can’t actually see the screenshot when you need it because it’s buried under seven windows? ScreenFloat keeps those screenshots above all other windows. This app also helps you organize and sort your screenshots.


Transloader

(Website)(Mac App Store)(iOS App Store)

This app lets you start downloads on your Mac from your iPhone or iPad and make you feel like a total boss.

There’s more. Eternal Storms also has Glimpses, that takes the grunt work out of making still motion videos from a collection of photos, and Flickery, that help you manage your Flickr images and library.

When Eternal Storms first contacted me about sponsoring the site, they offered license codes for their apps. The funny thing is that I didn’t need any because I’d already bought them. Eternal Storms makes some really slick productivity apps. Check them out today.

Steve Jobs Movie Impressions

A few days ago, I had the opportunity to see a screening of the new Steve Jobs movie. I have to admit, I went in there with a bit of a chip on my shoulder. I didn’t like the Walter Isaacson book for all the reasons that all the other nerds didn’t like it and my expectation was, “garbage in, garbage out”.

That being said, I actually enjoyed the movie more than I thought I would. The movie is really a story about the fictional Steve Jobs and his fictional daughter. I use the word “fictional” because many of the meetings and conversations represented in the movie simply never happened. Likewise, even the relationship between Steve and his daughter Lisa is not accurately represented. The movie is entirely silent about the fact that Lisa was living with Steve and his wife and other children during the same period of time the film portrays them as estranged. For that matter, the movie also does not acknowledge his wife and other children.

It is this lack of accuracy that is going to make all Apple nerds a little crazy. According to this movie, Steve Wozniak was responsible for the Newton (he wasn’t), Steve Jobs had multiple powwows with John Scully after Scully fired Jobs (they didn’t), and the entire inspiration for the iPod was a tape deck that Lisa wore on her hip for about 15 years (it wasn’t).

Aaron Sorkin writes some great dialogue and the story does pull you in. However, there is so little connection between the movie and actual events, that you have to wonder why they called it Steve Jobs at all.

All of these dramatizations of Steve Jobs seem to be focusing exclusively on the low hanging fruit. Make no mistake: if just a fraction of the stories are to be believed, Steve Jobs was a pretty terrible manager when he got started. This movie dramatizes several of those sins around the orbit of his denial of Lisa’s paternity. What the movie, and to a lesser extent the Isaacson book, fail to do is expand the story much further than that. How did someone with these types of demons succeed so spectacularly? How did he get a measure of wisdom after his years in the wild to turn Apple into the biggest public company in the world? How did he balance Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde?

In the end, I don’t think the makers of this film had any interest in those questions. They looked at the source material and saw an opportunity to tell a father-daughter story and they did it pretty well. The unfortunate part is that by attaching it to Steve’s name, it creates this sort of mythology that everyone who has any knowledge of the actual events agrees isn’t true but for most people who watch the movie, will become gospel. I can see why his family didn’t want this movie made.

The Computer Show

Adam Lisagor is making more than ads. At XOXO, he shared a rough cut of the first episode of The Computer Show. It’s a mythical television show about computers in 1983. It brought me back and was hilarious all at once. Now you can watch the first two episodes on the web. This is some great weekend viewing. Watch them all at the delightfully 1983-inspired website.

iWork Updates Abound. Long Live iWork.

A few months ago there was this thing going around the Internet where everyone decided that Apple had given up on iWork. I didn’t buy it. While the iWork applications certainly aren’t the most important applications being developed at Apple, I think the are key part of their business and having Apple’s own, homegrown productivity suite has benefits that justify its continued development. Moreover, Apple often uses the iWork suite as a demonstration of how they think productivity apps should look on the Mac and iOS.

Today Apple released updates for all of the iWork suite applications for both OS X and iOS. Some of these updates are simple fixes for new features in the hardware and operating systems, like the ability to use split screen mode on the Mac or 3-D Touch on the new iPhone, but other bits show continuing development. For instance, Pages for the Mac got some improved AppleScript tools and added several new Apple designed templates. I don’t believe Apple would be putting development time in to templates and AppleScript support for Pages if it had given up on the application.

You can download the updates through the iOS and OS X app stores. Check it out.

20 Minutes with the New Apple Magic Keyboard

I had to go into the Apple store today to get my MacBook checked out. I’m having some issues with the spacebar sticking. Ironically, while I was there I was able to try the new Apple Magic Keyboard

I use the existing Bluetooth keyboard with my iMac every day and I was curious to see how the new keyboard stacks up against the old one.

The new keyboard is lighter than the existing one. I’m guessing that has a lot to do with chucking the battery barrel that runs along the back of the existing Bluetooth keyboard. Using a molded battery let’s Apple get rid of a lot of weight.

The new keyboard now charges through a lightning port on the back of the keyboard. Attaching the keyboard directly to your iMac lets the keyboard charge and pair. It’s all pretty slick and since most people have a lightning cable hanging off their iMac already, much more convenient then my usual routine of rotating the rechargeable batteries.

Another improvement is the on/off switch. In the existing keyboard, whether or not the device is turned on is always a bit of a mystery. You need to long press on the power button (located on the opposite side of the battery access cover) and that either results in the device turning on or turning off. The trouble is you don’t know until you try. The new keyboard has a switch. The slider background shows green if it’s on and red if it’s off. That’s much better.

Typing on the new keyboard I couldn’t tell any difference from the existing keyboard. Apple explained they’ve done additional work to improve the scissor switches to have 33% more stability and I have no doubt that they have but it felt pretty similar to me. One nice improvement is that the function keys now are full-size instead of half size on the existing keyboard.

Removal of the battery barrel also allows the keyboard to be slightly flatter. This reduces the angle of the keys off the table and is probably ergonomically better. Again, after using the existing Bluetooth keyboard every day and now trying out the new Apple Magic Keyboard, couldn’t tell a difference.

Overall, the new keyboard seems an improvement in just about every way. I’m not sure if it’s worth replacing my existing keyboard but because I am weak, I will probably at some point in the future do so anyway. Regardless, going forward, the new Apple Magic Keyboard is better than the old one.

One final point is the branding. Notice how it’s called the Apple Magic Keyboard and not the Macintosh Magic Keyboard or just Magic Keyboard? I think this is one more example of the recent trend where Apple is putting it’s own name into product branding.

As an aside, while I was at the Apple Store I also got to try the new Magic mouse which felt exactly the same as my old Magic mouse at home except for removal of the battery compartment and instead placing a lightning adapter (strangely on the bottom of the mouse) for the built-in recharging. The Apple Store didn’t have any of the new Apple Magic Trackpads for me to try.