Last weekend, Katie and I recorded a live MPU show. Topics included equipping remote workers, Daylight for Mac office management, tech for going back to school, listener workflows and more vacation gadgets.
FX Photo Studio Updates with 200 Filters
The most recent version of FX Photo Studio is out, now with 200 photo filters, which is a pretty impressive feat. The image below is one I took on a recent hike following application of a few FX Photo Studio filters. Apps like this are going to be so interesting when iOS 8 extensions arrive. Can you imagine having 200 filters right in the Photos app? I can too.
Back to Work 181
Merlin Mann couldn’t make Back to Work this week. Merlin is one of my favorite people. I’ve lost count of how many times he’s stepped up to help me out. Nevertheless, I was pretty disappointed in him today. Instead of finding a top-tier guest to fill in during his absence, he brought in a low-rung hack. Poorly played Merlin. Poorly played indeed.
Act Now!
Looking through Twitter today, I discovered many of my favorite iOS apps are on sale.
MindNode: $4.99, Usually $9.99
MindNode’s become my favorite mind mapper. It got a nice iOS 7 redesign and it continues to get better.
PCalc – The Best Calculator: $4.99, usually $9.99
It took me several years (and plenty of Dr. Drang posts) to finally come around to PCalc but now I can’t imagine not having it on my iPhone.
Launch Center Pro: $1.99, usually $4.99
Launch Center Pro for iPad: $1.99, usually $4.99
This is another app that took me awhile to warm up to. Now it’s in my dock.
Boxer: $4.99, usually $9.99
I’ve been playing with this app and plan to give it extended coverage in the next update to the Email Field Guide.
Fantastical 2 for iPad: $7.99, usually $9.99
One of the best calendar apps on the iPad.
Broadwell and ARM Macs
I wrote last month about Broadwell’s delays and the expected impact on the release of new Macs. It appears that is coming true. The recently updated MacBook Pros just received slightly bumped Haswell chips and, as Macworld reports, the speed improvements are small.
Moreover, I’m more convinced than ever that the rumored 12″ MacBook Air with retina screen, assuming it exists, will get pushed back until next year when Apple can get the Broadwell chips it needs to put a retina screen in a small MacBook. If Apple were to release a Haswell-based MacBook Air with retina screen, I’d recommend waiting.
There is also more buzz about the idea of an ARM-based Mac. The ARM chips that currently power iOS devices are Apple designed and Apple controlled. If Apple could put those in Macs, they wouldn’t be dependent on Intel for future Mac releases and wouldn’t get saddled with the problems they have with the current Broadwell delays.
The problem is that ARM chips aren’t nearly as powerful as these Intel chips and it would incur a substantial performance hit. Another downside of ARM Macs would be that they don’t run Windows nearly as easily as Intel based Macs do. (However, I have to wonder how important that is as we increasingly move to web-based services and Windows becomes less relevant.)
On the plus side, ARM based Macs would have ridiculously great battery life. When you think about it, a thin, light Mac that sucks at Final Cut but runs Safari and Mail for 24 hours on a single charge may have a pretty large audience. If Apple were to go this route, I suspect that initially they would keep producing high-end Intel Macs for people that need the power.
Yesterday, Jean-Louis Gassée (who knows more about this stuff in his pinky finger than I do in my entire body) wrote that he believes an ARM based Mac may very well lie in the not so distant future. One of the points he made that hadn’t occurred to me is that since Apple is designing the chips, they could create a separate ARM design for the Mac that is a bit more powerful and uses a bit more power. Pound-for-pound though, I suspect Apple would have a hard time matching Intel on the power end, especially now that the Broadwell chip is on a 14nm dye.
Could something like this be already in the works at Apple? To answer that question I’d state that just a few months ago Apple announced an entirely new programming language for the Mac and iOS that they’d been internally developing for years and nobody on the outside had a clue of its existence.
MPU 206: Terpstra *drink*
Brett Terpstra joins us this week to talk about what he is up to and some of his favorite Mac hacks. Recording this show, the time flew by.
Comprehensive Guide To Text Expander
The gang at Asian Efficiency just published a comprehensive guide to using TextExpander. You can see they spent a lot of time on it and it includes many screenshots and screencasts to get you rolling. If you’ve been having trouble wrapping your mind around TextExpander, go check it out.
The Science of Star Wars
Physicist Andy Howell explains the science behind Star Wars, to the extent Star Wars follows the laws of science. I wanted so much for there to be hope and physics supporting the construction of my own lightsaber. (via Kotke)
Speaking of lightsabers, while there is much praise of George Lucas for having the foresight to keep the merchandising rights for Star Wars, he was pretty slow to get rolling when A New Hope premiered. My friends and I would have killed for toy lightsabers and they just didn’t exist. Instead we had to take cardboard tubes (my best source was my mom’s wrapping paper stash) and use those to wail upon each other. The trouble was that they just didn’t hold up well and a few good whacks would often turn your saber into a limp, sad mess. The ironic part is that I learned a little science at the time as my friends and I perfected duct tape techniques to make our lightsabers last longer.
Mac Power Users Live Today at 10am PST
Today we’ll be recording Mac Power Users live at 10am PST / 1pm EST. The chat room during the show is always a lot of fun. If you haven’t got anything better to do, why don’t you join us at 5by5.tv/live.
Presentations: Book of the Month in Australia and New Zealand
The Australian and New Zealand iBooks Store picks a few books every month for their Books of the Month feature. I’m thrilled to discover that Presentations made the cut. As a very small publisher, I still am amazed by the support I’ve received by the iBooks Store team at Apple.
My day is made.