Category: Uncategorized
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riverBrowser
Dave Winer is at it again. This time with an open source âbrowserâ that can read a âriverâ called riverBrowser. riverBrowser is, at its core, a set of HTML, JavaScript, CSS that can read JSONP files and output them as HTML. What can this be used for? Well, it could â potentially â replace RSS for a
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Monkey Keyboard
Monkey Keyboard: Monkey is a free keyboard for iOS and Android that allows you to drop stickers while you’re chatting in WhatsApp, snatch a file from DropBox while you’re writing email, or send your lover a Spotify song right in iMessage. Looks very interesting. But free makes me leery.
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Effortless publishing
Manton Reece, writing on his blog, about quick blogging workflows: I believe there are two important facets to microblogging. The first is the timeline experience: a reverse-chronological list of posts from your friends, like you see on Twitter. The second is that posting should be effortless: if thereâs less friction between your idea and publishing
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100 words 014
Yesterday a young chap walked into the doors of Coalwork wanting to see âwhat we were up toâ. He moved away from Scranton but would like to see Scranton improve. After talking for awhile about start ups, failures, successes, our respective backgrounds, whether or not there was money to be raised in this area, it
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10,000 free DuckDuckGo shirts
DuckDuckGo: DuckDuckGo just crossed ten million searches a day for the first time ever! Weâre proud to be helping so many people take back their privacy. In celebration, weâre giving away ten thousand DuckDuckGo t-shirts to enthusiasts who help their friends and family take back their privacy as well. Iâve been using DuckDuckGo on every
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WordCamp Scranton
WordCamp is a big deal in the WordPress community and Iâm very pleased that Joe Casabona, fellow Coalworker, is organizing one for Scranton, PA. There are only 88 seats left so run and get your ticket. Side note: Iâve been to WordCampâs in Hawaii, California, Texas, Arizona, New York, Philadelphia etc. Iâm looking forward to
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Microblogging with WordPress
Manton Reece, on his blog, about the fact that heâs using WordPress to âtweetâ: Iâm very excited about the potential for microblogging. For the last year Iâve been working on a new platform around this stuff. By adopting some of these tips for WordPress, your microblog will be ready for my platform, but more importantly your
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43North
43North âBehold the worldâs largest business idea competition.â Five million dollars in cash awarded to the winners (plural) of this competition happening in Buffalo, New York. If youâre into investing this is a model to watch as it goes into its second year. Iâm watching closely.
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100 words 013
Yes, I skipped the weekend. Iâm going to skip all weekends likely. Here is why. And you may just have to live with that. Speaking of the weekend, this one was pretty good. On Friday, I was able to play full court basketball for the first time since I was injured. It was painful but
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Gestimer
Gestimer is âfor those little reminders during the dayâ and has a pretty cool gesture-based UI for setting short-term reminders. I think Iâd like an interface like this if Gestimer plugged into Reminders. Neat idea. /via Matt Gemmell on Twitter.
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Eat less. Lose weight.
Speaking of losing weight; an interesting piece in the New York Times by Aaron E. Carroll about how eating less is more important than exercise as a determining factor in weight loss. In the adult population, interventional studies have difficulty showing that a physically active person is less likely to gain excess weight than a
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Dalrymple down 40
Jim Dalrymple, one of the nicest people on the planet, is down 40 pounds â in part, due to the Apple Watchâs constant nagging to move. He wrote a follow-up to his excellent review of the product specifically about his weight loss. While Iâll do my best to answer the questions, I have to say that
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100 words 012
At Coalwork we somewhat recently began offering $5 Fridays. A chance to come in and work for just $5 (regularly $15). And today was the first day that someone officially took us up on the offer. In fact, two people â one from about 45 minutes away â popped in. Scranton has never seen coworking.
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What is Code?
Paul Ford, in a tome-of-a-post for Bloomberg/Business Week: There are 11 million professional software developers on earth, according to the research firm IDC. (An additional 7 million are hobbyists.) Thatâs roughly the population of the greater Los Angeles metro area. Imagine all of L.A. programming. East Hollywood would be for Mac programmers, West L.A. for
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Faith in eventually
Jason Fried in a post from September 2014: Remember that what youâre making is in a perpetual state of almost right up until the end. Great post. And boy is he right. Everything is a mess on a product until it isnât. /via Jason Fried on Twitter.
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100 words 011
Iâm happy to see Joe Casabona pick up the 100 words torch. Dark Sky, one of my most-used applications on my iPhone, got updated yesterday. The update is terrific. It has the same information as it had before â except it is far easier to digest. It also has the added benefit of being more
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100 words 010
 I missed posting this yesterday. I have only myself to blame. Number 10 already! Speaking of 10; yesterday I finally surpassed the 10,000 daily step goal. Iâm using Pedometer++ (my favorite step-tracking app) to track my steps. When I hit the milestone the app exploded into this cool animation showing that I had made
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100 words 009
The best days are filled with variety. Variety helps to break up the day and keep me moving and productive. Today started with some programming to finishing up a client project. Then, I drove to two client meetings where I was able to do a little training and a little fixing. Then, lunch watching Casey.
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100 words 008
Yesterday I missed the opportunity to drop a James Bond joke. đ For a over a year Iâve owned a GoPro Hero3. I love this little camera. However, for the passed 5 months or so it has sat in my home office doing little else than collecting dust. I took it out yesterday and shot
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100 words 007
I washed the dishes this afternoon and when I got to my least favorite dish to wash, the silverware, I was reminded of this post I wrote in March 2011. Rather than saving the silverware to last I should have started with them and figured out a way to make it fun. Or, at least
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100 words 006
For years, well over a decade and a half, I worked at night and on the weekend. Many people do this and they like to do it. However, several years ago â right around the time I started Plain â I decided not to work in the late evening or on weekends. Iâm willing to
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Twitterâs Save Button
Chris Saccaâs infamous blog post on What Twitter Can Be ranged from topics about its apps, the platform itself, and what Wall Street thinks of the company. There are several bits I plan to write about but today Iâm focusing on his idea of a âTwitter Save Buttonâ. So much of the time, Twitter moves too
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100 words 005
Jurassic Park was the first book that I read because I wanted to rather than because I had to. I was 11 when I read the book and 12 when the movie was released 22 years ago. I remember going opening weekend with family who had read the book. Since then Iâve been a lifelong
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100 words 004
Yesterday Kyle and I had an outdoor lunch with a local entrepreneur who wanted to throw two ideas at us. The first idea was a throwaway. At least he thought so. When he began to describe the idea we provided our feedback, our ideas, and tried to lay out several paths that could help him
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100 words 003
I feel like there is a groove being hit. At Plain, Kyle and I are getting better at our work every day. With every improvement of our business comes a little bit less stress and worry. Rather than feeling uneasy in âthe seatâ I feel at home. With Barley, weâre rebooting it and it feels
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100 words 002
Isaac Newtonâs third law of motion is: When one body exerts a force on a second body, the second body simultaneously exerts a force equal in magnitude and opposite in direction on the first body. Paul McCartney, of The Beatles, wrote in their song The End: âAnd, in the end The love you take is
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Starting over with Barley
Kyle and I have decided we love Barley too much to let it die. So weâre starting over with it in hopes we can find the right fit for it in the market. That is why we are going to sharpen our productâs focus by starting over and weâre going to ask that you follow
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Random WWDC 2015 Notes
Random notes from Appleâs WWDC Keynote today: Apple Music Radio sounds exactly like Top 40 radio and that is terrible. I hope it doesnât end up being just âradio onlineâ because that isnât something I want and I doubt that is something âthe kidsâ want.
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Interviewed about Unmark
I was interviewed by Belle Cooper for the Zapier blog about Unmark â our open source bookmarking application: But, we decided to make it open source because we didnât want it to become like every other service we loved that ended up disappearing. If we built it in the open, it can live on forever
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100 words 001
What can be said in 100 words? I remember signing up for Twitter in November 2006 and wondering; what can be said in 140 characters? I had no idea tweets would be as versatile as they have become â especially when you combine those words with photos, hyperlinks, and hashtags. But this, this exercise of
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Visual Studio Code 0.3.0
Iâve been using VS Code for a little over a month now. It is easily my favorite editor at the moment. Yesterday Microsoft released an update to the application but youâll need to re-install it to get it. The auto-update feature in the app will not work. Check out the list of updates.
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Why blog?
Deanna Mascle on her blog in February of this year: Blogging isnât for everyone, but as I must write to think and process life, blogging is a gift (What Blogging Taught Me). I hope my blog benefits others, but I cannot measure the positive impact blogging has had on my life. Then, yesterday, in a follow-up
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Design to solve real problems
Paul Adams of Intercom on Medium: In the last year Iâve reviewed a lot of product design work from job applicants and Iâve noticed a worrying pattern. Too many designers are designing to impress their peers rather than address real business problems. This has long been a problem in creative advertising (where creative work is
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The Web of Alexandria
Bret Victor: We, as a species, are currently putting together a universal repository of knowledge and ideas, unprecedented in scope and scale. Which information-handling technology should we model it on? The one thatâs worked for 4 billion years and is responsible for our existence? Or the one thatâs led to the greatest intellectual tragedies in
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Haughey introduces the Panoselfie
Matt Haughey on Medium: After seeing the first couple panoselfies Colin made, I became immediately enamored with the idea. You can see #panoselfies are picking up a bit.
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Why Shopify is valued higher than Woo Commerce by a public market
I saw a discussion on Twitter while laying in bed last night. You can catch up right here. Essentially, it asks⌠why is Woo Commerce, which has a larger install base, valued so much lower than Shopify by the public market? A bit of background; Woo Themes, the company that built and maintains the Woo
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Web pages should load quickly
Facebookâs Instant Articles platform has us web people discussing the speed at which our pages load. It is excellent to see this discussion happening. Here are a few of my favorite tidbits from a few of the pieces I have read recently: Mark Llobrera on A List Apart: Thatâs my biggest takeaway from Instant Articles: we
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Panoselfie hooplah
A little over a week ago I wrote: They arenât new. You can find them if you dig. But they arenât âa thingâ and I think they should be. I was talking about panoselfies. Well, weâre getting somewhere with this new way of taking a selfie and Iâm glad to report a few bits of
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Courier
Joe Betz at Coursera: Weâd like to try a bit of an experiment here at Coursera. Instead of building a project internally and waiting until we think itâs fully polished to open source it, weâre going to âthrow it over the wallâ before weâve even gotten going on the coding. We did the same thing
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Watch sales
In February Canalys estimated that there have been 720,000 Android Wear watches sold. Pretty good, Iâd think, for a watch. Any watch maker would likely be proud of those numbers. Estimates for Apple Watch sales are all over the map. But recently KGI Research adjusted their figures and estimated that Apple will sell under 15
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Weâve Made Web Development Complicated
Alex King: Iâm working on a web app now and it recently struck me how much more complicated things have become. I agree. While some of the tools weâve added onto the process of building for the web have some incredible value â weâve made the barrier to entry much, much higher than it has
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What is a Panoselfie?
They arenât new. You can find them if you dig. But they arenât âa thingâ and I think they should be. So, yesterday I created a Flickr group called Panoselfies. I recommend giving it a try. How: Put your phone on pano mode Point it just over your right shoulder Slowly rotate your wrist as the
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My weekend
A few images from the weekend.
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Today: May 7, 2015
A little something new. Another try at daily blogging. This is what I looked at most of the day. Weâre putting in a fair bit of work on some new things for Barley this week and Iâm pretty excited to get them out the door. Had lunch at Backyard Ale House and managed to stick
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Stop calling businesses unicorns
Me, on Twitter early this morning from bed: Startup culture is such that the word unicorn is used to describe a successful business. Imagine if the culture fostered success more often. Then, Fred Wilson on his blog this morning: I hate the word unicorn. Itâs using fantasy to describe something very much reality. But I
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Casey Liss on Code
Casey Liss on Microsoftâs Visual Studio Code: All told, Code may or may not be for you, but itâs working out really nicely for me so far. I definitely suggest giving it a shot. I too have been using Code as my primary editor since it debuted at Build. Iâm enjoying it. It seems much
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Microsoftâs Windows 10 Vision Isnât Simple
Cade Metz for Wired on Microsoftâs vision for Windows 10 to be on a billion devices and for applications from Android, iOS, and Windows all running on them âeasilyâ: But this kind of thing is never as easy as it seems. âIâm skeptical of anything that pretends to be the magic bullet,â says one coder, who
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Windows Media Center finally shot in head
Ed Bott, of the Ed Bott Report, reporting on ZDNet that Microsoft is shooting Windows Media Center in the head: That decision shouldnât come as a surprise. Media Center, once a signature feature of Windows âpremiumâ editions, has been on life support for years. The team developing Media Center features was broken up in 2009,
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Brent Simmons deletes his tweets
Brent Simmons on his blog: But those arenât my reasons for deleting my tweets. Instead, itâs because Twitter is a blogging (or micro-blogging, really) service that doesnât meet my requirements [âŚ] Follow the link to read the rest of the post. This is very tempting. Ever since Jeremy Keith went Indie Web with his ânotesâ (read:
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Why I wouldnât bet against Microsoft
If you follow me on Twitter you can probably tell that for the past 48 hours my brain is swirling around Microsoftâs Build conference and keynote. In a lot of ways my brain is swirling in the same way that it did in 2002 when I saw Steve Jobs debut the 17â iMac. This was