Fiddling with Ulysses III


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I’ve been working on a bigger-than-usual writing project in Ulysses III the last few weeks and there is a lot to like about this app. It looks amazing. There clearly was a lot of thought put into design. It renders text beautifully and embraces plain text. Ulysses is, thankfully, not a Scrivener clone but something different. In my mind the simplicity and organizational tools make it great for projects of medium size and duration.

My biggest dissapointment is the iOS integration with Daedalus Touch. While it works, it doesn’t really feel right and Daedalus is such a different paradigm that it is off-putting for me. I’d really like to see the developer release an iPad version of Ulysses that brings a large part of the experience over with seemless iCloud syncing.

Moving into 2014, I know there is an iPad version of Scrivener in the works and I suspect there is a version of Ulysses for the iPad coming too. If those two apps ship, us iPad writers are going to have some really great options to choose from.

My Fancy-Pants Camera After a Year


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Shawn Blanc wrote about the nerd vision-quest he took that ended up in him buying a mirrorless Olympus E-PL5 camera last years. I followed this quite closely since I was also in the market. At the time I had one of the early Canon Digital Rebels that was still a fine camera but I found I rarely brought it with me on a whim. Sure I’d bring the big bag for planned family gatherings but never for a trip to Disneyland or just a walk through the local park. It wasn’t just the wieght around my neck that held me up but also the camera’s general “bigness”. The camera body plus my lens simply didn’t make it easy for me to jump on the teeter-totter or run after a frisbee. So instead I left it at home.

So when Shawn seized on the Olympus, so did I. I bought the PL5 shortly after he wrote about it (through Shawn’s affiliate link) about a year ago along with the Panasonic 1.7 20mm pancake lens. With the body and the lens, I was in for about $1,000. I’ve been using it for a year nearly exclusively with that lens and can report the camera was a great investment.  It fits in my pocket and takes some really great pictures. A year later you’d think that I’d be itching for a new lens but I’m not. The combination of the small body and pancake lens are perfect for me. (The Panasonic lens is even smaller than the stock lens pictured above.)

If you are looking for a new camera, take a look at Shawn’s update post, which I agree with on just about every point. If you are thinking about buying the Olympus, you are making a good choice. Just make sure to buy it through Shawn’s link since he is the one that started us all on this journey.

Secure a Network for Some Turkey

If you are going to be on the road this Thanksgiving visiting your muggle relatives, that would be an excellent time to do them a favor and enable OpenDNS. It is ridiculously easy and I’d bet your hosts will be really thankful if you can ban porn from their homes, especially if there are kids. We talked about OpenDNS on the Mac Power Users ages ago but it is all still relevant. Also, my pal Katie Floyd made this handy screencast. 

TextExpander and iOS Data Sharing

From the first time TextExpander touch showed up it always seemed kind magical that data could get shared … on iOS. Over the years, Smile has always found a way to keep this working. This past week, Smile faced a new setback when Apple rejected a relatively minor update that has sent them back to the drawing board. I’m sure they’ll figure it out but in the meantime, I recommend opening the current version of TextExpander touch and downloading your snippet library before the current system changes. I suspect it will be awhile before everything sorts out and even longer before the app developers adopt the new sync method (whatever that ends up being).

I’m guessing the apps that haven’t updated will still be able to get at your existing snippets through the Reminders database (which is how TextExpander currently syncs your data). 

The bigger issue in all of this is the lack of options for iOS apps to share data. I understand how important security is but I also think the iOS experience is worse off without a way share data easier .Why can’t we take a PDF file and move it between separate applications instead of making a separate copy every time? Why can’t apps we trust, like TextExpander, get enough access to move some data between apps? Windows Phone and Android have already taken steps in this direction. I sure hope this is high on the list for iOS 8.

MindNode for iOS, Version 3


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There’s an update out for the MindNode for iOS today and it’s a doozy.  I first started buying this mind mapping application when it was just on the Mac. Actually, that was before there was an iPad. 



The thing that always attracted me to MindNode was the simple interface and, frankly, low-cost. For the longest time mind-mapping applications were one of those rare breeds where everything cost at least $200 and looked like it was created by Enterprise-class UI designers. In other words, ugly as sin. MindNode came to the game with a nice, simple mind mapping application with an attractive interface and a price tag of around twenty dollars. It didn’t have every feature under the sun but I didn’t need every feature under the sun. I needed a place to quickly create simple mind maps for my simple mind.
 
MindNode eventually made it to iOS and for several years I’ve kept it in a folder. Even though MindNode has always been my first choice on the Mac, it has also always played second fiddle on my iPad to iThoughts HD. That is no longer the case. This update puts MindNode on an equal footing with iThoughts HD for me, which is saying something.
 
MindNode’s developer has been aggressively updating the application culminating in today’s update. The user interface got an iOS 7 overhaul and it looks great. The built-in themes have great typography and color choices and you can quickly switch between them. The below gallery shows a few. There’s also a custom theme if you want to set your own colors, typography and other settings. I’ve been using, primarily, the “Delight” theme as I’ve used this application through the beta period and it serves nicely.

Another feature that has grown on me is the outline mode. There is an outline button in the top-right corner of the application. Tapping on it builds an outline from the mind map. The outline has hierarchical disclosure triangles that you can use to expose or hide various portions of the outline and tapping on an entry in the outline takes you to that entry on the mind map. This is quite useful for the way I “do” mind mapping.



The application also now supports keyboard shortcuts. Three spaces gets a child node and three carriage returns gets a sibling node. These are the same shortcuts found in iThoughts HD and they greatly speed up mind map creation.


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There are multiple export options including email, Dropbox, camera roll, and your printer.  You can also send your MindNode mind map to other applications. When you export a mind map, MindNode gives you several formatting options including the MindNode document format, FreeMind, PNG, text outline, OPML, and PDF. For example, the below screenshot shows my MindNode mind map in Omni Outliner 2 for iPad. I sent it directly using OPML export.


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While there are plenty of legitimate knocks against iCloud, file sharing with iCloud in an application like MindNode just works. I own copies of MindNode for the Mac, iPad, iPhone and my mind maps sync flawlessly across the various devices. 

When I work on mind maps, I am literally cooking ideas and the soup always tastes better if I spend small bits of time over a long period of time instead of trying to knock it all out in one long session. I need the ability to fiddle with mind maps from anywhere. As a result, having mobile access and painless syncing is a big deal for me.

Both MindNode and iThoughts HD are high quality apps but also reflect different priorities. iThoughts HD still has the edge for export formats, customization, and features but for the way I mind map, I’ve come to the realization that MindNode works better. In the end, MindNode’s clean UI, simpler design, and iCloud sync win out and MindNode now sits on my home screen.

This is a free update. If you haven’t already purchased the application, you can get it in the App Store for $9.99. Also, learn more at the developer’s website. MindNode for iOS works both on the iPad and iPhone.

Counters


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Occasionally, I need to count series of items. I’ve played with iOS apps for this purpose in the past but they were all such a carnival of ugly that I couldn’t take it. Instead I reverted to notecards, tick marks, and pencils. I just downloaded Counters and I like it. 

One thing I would change with this app is the requirement to open a specific counter before adding to its count. I’d like to see a setting or mechanism that lets me add to the counters from the master list.

This is a small niche, but one I’m glad to fill with my iPhone.

MPU 165: Geek Gift Guide – 2013 Edition

Looking for something geeky for your friends or even perhaps yourself? Katie and I had a lot of fun recording this show sharing some of our favorite geek gifts. Well … most of it was fun. I think Katie fell asleep when I started waxing poetic about my authentic Indiana Jones satchel.