Yesterday afternoon Apple announced 1 billion podcast subscriptions through iTunes. Billion. With a “B”. I take pride in the fact Katie Floyd and I added a little dent to that number with the Mac Power Users. Ten years ago I never thought I could talk into a microphone about things that *nobody around me* cares about and hear back from appreciative listeners all over the globe.
MPU 147: David Wain Returns
This week on the Mac Power Users actor, writer, director, (and geek) David Wain returns to share his latest workflows for writing and directing motion pictures and television shows. David also weighs in about Final Cut Pro X and talks about his new-found love for his jailbroken iPhone.
BusyCal 2.5 Beta with Exchange Support
BusyCal, the best Apple Calendar replacement on the Mac, is about to unveil Exchange support. I’ve been using the beta with my Office 365 account and it’s working great. The beta went public this morning so you can too. Go check out BusyCal.
Piling on the Surface
There is a lot of press the last few days over the Microsoft Surface, including this bit in the New York Times. The Surface hasn’t sold very well and Microsoft reports taking a $900M loss on the product. MacStories has an article today that looks at the problems with the Surface in detail, which I largely agree with. The problem, as I see it, is that the Surface was a tabletish computer designed for nerds. Its overriding design principle was not to be simple but instead run Microsoft Word. They largely succeeded but most people don’t care. The compromises required to reach that goal turned off most buyers. Microsoft didn’t go after the fat 90% of the marketplace but the niche 10% that wanted to run Microsoft Office. I’m guessing most of the people in Redmond would think that everybody needed that product but in truth, they don’t. Most people are looking for tablets that get them as far away from Microsoft Office as possible. Maybe the Surface isn’t a failure as much as a poorly aimed arrow.
Leap Motion Lamp
I try not to get sucked into unreleased product hype but when I saw the initial demo of the Leap Motion product, a box that sits in front of your Mac and reads your hand gestures Minority Report style, I bought one. The product is shipping later this month but they’ve been sending out units to developers for awhile and there are some really fun applications showing up. Today Brett Terpstra pointed out this video where a guy is controlling his lamp with hand gestures. This is pushing all of my nerd buttons. I wonder if John Lassiter has seen this.
Mac Case Shoulder Pad
I’ve had several emails from listeners about my comment in this week’s Mac Power Users about my guitar shoulder strap on my bag. I use this one. It makes carrying around my 15″ rMBP, iPad, and other gear much easier.
OmniFocus Background Sync? Yes, Thank You.
There’s a new update for iPhone OmniFocus today (version 1.16) that adds Background Sync. So what does that mean?
Start by enabling Background Sync in the application settings. Tell OmniFocus to Add Current Location for your home, work, school, and favorite bar. (You have to do this while at the location of choice.) OmniFocus then draws a geo-fence around those locations. It doesn’t use GPS–which drains your battery– so it’s a pretty large, vague geofence. Nevertheless, when you leave, OmniFocus updates itself in the background. OmniFocus is not the first app to use this trick but it sure is handy. Every time I leave home, work, court, or Trader Sam’s, my OmniFocus database updates itself.
iOS 7 has a less-hacky fix for background syncing but why wait? Enable this today.
MPU 146: Our Gear
In perhaps our most narcissistic episode yet, Katie and I talk about our favorite tech gear (and I talk about my glasses).
Yahoo Fought Back Against PRISM
Sam Glover at The Lawyerist reports that Yahoo fought against the government’s PRISM initiative. The court, in a hearing which itself was classified, upheld the government’s right to read private mail. Good on Yahoo for fighting. Yahoo is now petitioning to unseal the rest of the file.
App Camp for Girls
The Sparks family just contributed for a second time to Jean MacDonald’s App Camp for Girls project. There are only five days left on the Indiegogo project and they are almost at their $100,000 expanded goal. I got to watch Jean talk to 3,000 people last weekend about this project and I saw the pictures of the girls at the camp and this project is truly worthy of support. Don’t believe me? Ask The New Yorker.