Techinch Feed http://techinch.com/blog Kirby Tue, 21 May 2013 14:11:15 +0700 The latest articles from Techinch.com Icon Fonts: the Best Simple Design Resource http://techinch.com/blog/Icon-Fonts-the-Best-Simple-Design-Resource http://techinch.com/blog/Icon-Fonts-the-Best-Simple-Design-Resource Tue, 21 May 2013 14:10:00 +0700 A couple years back, I picked up something in a bundle that became my favorite little design tool: the Pictos Font. It's an icon font — a font with icons instead of each letter, like Webdings but nicer — and one of the nicest in my opinion. It's organized nicely — icons are usually on the first letter in that object's name — and the icons are simple yet elegant.

You've likely seen the Pictos icons if you've paid attention to my articles at AppStorm, where I'll often reach for a Pictos icon when I need a basic elemental icon for an article logo. They're only a T away in Photoshop, and are infinitely resizable and tweakable. If you want some flat design, all it takes is good colors and a nicely aligned icon from the font, and you're good.

Icon fonts are far from new, but they're most popular in web dev circles for a nice way to add icons to your UI. But that's not all they're useful for: you could use them to spice up a report, add icons to your print designs, and more. Resizing and coloring them is simple, with the same font settings you're used to. And there's some that go beyond replacing a single letter with an icon: FF Chartwell lets you turn numbers into auto-generated graphs with, yes, just a font, and Symbolset that uses OpenType features to turn words (say "heart) into icons.

There's tons out there, and you should pick some up to help in your designs, whether you're a budding designer or a pro. I love Pictos, but it's far from the only one out there. There's the free Any Old Icon font built from zany, community contributed icons by my colleagues at Envato, for starts. Then, CSS Tricks has a huge roundup of the best icon fonts, some free, some paid. If you need more icons, check out the ambitious Noun Project for loose icons not in fonts (though some are in fonts as well).

And enjoy designing with type. Pure type.

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Flight or Fight: What to do When Your Favorite App Gets Bought Out http://techinch.com/blog/flight-or-fight-favorite-app-bought-out http://techinch.com/blog/flight-or-fight-favorite-app-bought-out Tue, 21 May 2013 13:31:31 +0700 Wherein I write about Yahoo!'s acquisition of Tumblr, and why you shouldn't go grab pitchforks so fast when the internet slights you.

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Web Apps' Death by a Thousand Cuts http://techinch.com/blog/Death-by-a-Thousand-Cuts-web-apps http://techinch.com/blog/Death-by-a-Thousand-Cuts-web-apps Mon, 20 May 2013 16:05:00 +0700 I love web apps. Hardly anything inspires me to write a detailed review like an exciting new web app. I got started writing online back when I only had a Windows PC, and web apps were the most exciting thing there with the all-but-inexistent indie app market on PCs. So I found the best of them, curated them at the now-defunct GreatWebApps blog, then got my first editorial job at Web.AppStorm.

And yet, I'm a hypocrite. I use plenty of web apps — mainly as services to feed into native apps. When I'm writing, my words might be synced in iCloud or Dropbox, but they're usually written in a native app. Same for almost everything else. I use web apps to publish my site, track stats, collaborate with team members, and everything else that obviously has to be networked. Everything else might be synced with the cloud, but I reach for native apps for work and fun whenever I possibly can. And I suspect the same is the case for almost most others.

Foster at Mysterous Trousers just wrote a detailed article about the numerous little things that stack up to make us conditioned to not rely on web apps for our normal work. They make a very good point:

"Someone could build the most amazing web app ever and they’d be battling our history with hundreds of other web apps that have let us down."

Go read the full article for all the reasons they came up with for why people are scared of relying on web apps, which are all too true. It puts in words what I've been thinking about web apps — even those I love — for quite some time.

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Advertise on Techinch via InfluAds http://techinch.com/blog/Advertise-on-Techinch-via-InfluAds http://techinch.com/blog/Advertise-on-Techinch-via-InfluAds Sat, 18 May 2013 10:31:02 +0700 Ever wanted to run an ad specifically on Techinch.com to make sure our readers hear about your app or service? Here's your chance. Right now, we run only one ad from InfluAds on Techinch.com, and we're proud of the minimalist quality of their ads. It keeps Techinch's hosting paid for without the ugliness of Google Adsense, and if you pay attention, you'll likely find stuff you actually like from the advertisers (case in point: right now, we've got ads from the beautiful hosted CMS Squarespace, the cute Instagram-powered magnets Instantgram, and more).

And now, if you want to make sure your app is featured with an equally stylish ad on Techinch.com, you can. Just head over to our Techinch InfluAds Page, where you can get your ad on Techinch — exclusively — for $85/month, or in our RSS feed for $25/month. Or, you can purchase a brand-new sponsorship page for $100/month. The rates are rather low, so now's a great time to get in.

Looking forward to having your app featured on Techinch.com!

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Replacing Google Reader Sync with iCloud http://techinch.com/blog/Replacing-Google-Reader-Sync-with-iCloud-Sync http://techinch.com/blog/Replacing-Google-Reader-Sync-with-iCloud-Sync Wed, 15 May 2013 11:00:00 +0700 Yesterday, I got an email about the newest update to NewsBar, a simple Mac RSS ticker app. It just got updated with iCloud sync — a custom-built iCloud sync that uses a custom file format and iCloud's document sync instead of the less reliable database sync. It does its own native RSS subscriptions, then syncs your subscriptions, starred posts, and read status over iCloud between your Macs and the iPhone app.

And you know what? It actually works great. Despite iCloud's sync issues, it works as reliably here as it does in most text editors. Check out the full review on Mac.AppStorm for the whole scoop, but if you're looking for a simple RSS reader that runs directly on your Mac or iPhone without needing another web service, it's a great option.

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FoldingText Just Came to The Web http://techinch.com/blog/FoldingText-Just-Came-to-The-Web http://techinch.com/blog/FoldingText-Just-Came-to-The-Web Wed, 08 May 2013 22:20:45 +0700 Want an awesome text editor in your browser? Then you've got to check out Oak Outliner, the newest project from Hog Bay Software. It's awesome … but best of all, it points to a new future of amazing text-powered web apps.

Check out my full review on Web.AppStorm. Oak Outliner is fun - and terribly useful - today, but I for one can't wait to see what's next.

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This is Water http://techinch.com/blog/This-is-Water http://techinch.com/blog/This-is-Water Wed, 08 May 2013 15:22:15 +0700 Go take 10 minutes and watch this video made from an excerpted portion of author David Foster Wallace's 2005 commencement speech at Kenyon College. Then make a reminder in your todo list to watch it again a year from now.

It's nothing like what you're expecting, but everything you need to hear right now.

Really. You won't regret it.

also, I don't know what it is with commencement speeches, but the best of them — say, Steve Job's Stanford Commencement Address, which is another must watch that's oddly also from 2005 — could easily rival the best TED talks, ever. Any day.

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There's More Out There Than Gmail... http://techinch.com/blog/Theres-More-Out-There-Than-Gmail http://techinch.com/blog/Theres-More-Out-There-Than-Gmail Tue, 30 Apr 2013 20:57:00 +0700 Gmail has dropped its free apps plan — though you can still get a single email account through a workaround. And still, there's always that little thing about trusting Google with so much of our online lives, even if you did want to pay.

The good thing is, there's a lot of other options. Atmail Cloud is a nice option, as is Microsoft's new hosted Exchange with Office 365 for Businesses. There's a ton of options that I run through in this new roundup at Web.AppStorm. Check out the full roundup there if you're looking for a new place for your emails.

I'm looking forward to giving Office 365 for Business a shot sometime soon, myself.

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It's Now or Never to Backup Your Posterous Site http://techinch.com/blog/Its-Now-or-Never-to-Backup-Your-Posterous-Site http://techinch.com/blog/Its-Now-or-Never-to-Backup-Your-Posterous-Site Sat, 27 Apr 2013 16:19:10 +0700 If you've ever blogged on Posterous — and so many of us have since it was so insanely easy to start a blog just by sending one email — then you've got something you need to do this weekend: backup your old Posterous site and find it a new home.

It's not that hard, either. Just downloading the Posterous backup will only take a few minutes, and you'll have a full site you could actually FTP to your server and have a new home for your site in minutes. Or you could just save the backup to your computer to flip through in the future for nostalgia's sake. Or, you can get a new start with WordPress.com, Squarespace, Tumblr, or even Kirby.

Check out the full article on Web.AppStorm for the full scoop. But don't forget: you've only got until Tuesday to backup your Posterous site, before it's deleted for good.

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Microsoft, You Need to Make up Your Mind http://techinch.com/blog/Microsoft-You-Need-to-Make-up-Your-Mind http://techinch.com/blog/Microsoft-You-Need-to-Make-up-Your-Mind Tue, 23 Apr 2013 20:39:11 +0700 Several weeks back, I wrote about Apple being unapologetically different. Apple's choosy in what they'll release, and they tend to stick by their choices and lead the industry. They're opinionated, in their software choices, in their devices, and in the way they market and deal with the public. It does its best to seize the future in the way it deems best.

Microsoft has long been accused of simply following — then near-monopolizing — market trends, from their user interface to their browser and more. Yet, with their Metro (now called Modern) UI design launched in Windows 8 is a distinctive style that's boldly different than any previous version of Windows.

Bold changes take determination, and they don't always take off. But Microsoft needed to try something drastic — anything, almost — and Windows 8's design is a defining change that's attracted grudging admiration from even Microsoft critics. Windows 8 looks and feels new, and while it copies from competitors where it makes sense — with its own App Store, "natural" style scrolling, minimal scroll bars, integrated spell check, and included internationalization, all like Mac users have expected for years — it's different enough that Windows 8 feels fully unique.

If you approached Windows 8 as a brand-new operating system, sans-desktop and legacy apps, it's very interesting on its own right. But Microsoft decided to leave the desktop in, apparently to cater to their primary customers — businesses that have stuck to XP and have grudgingly at best adopted Windows 7 — while still trying to win the future in tablets and mobile. They took out the start menu, moved most settings and commands — including shutdown — to the new style of Windows 8, but left traditional apps running in a stripped-down Windows desktop that looks like Windows 7 with less features and a broken Aero interface.

Of all weird things, Office 2013 — quite an ambitious release in itself, one that's strongly integrated with the other half of Microsoft's future: the cloud — is only for the traditional desktop aside from a separate OneNote app. Office 2013 should have been the strongest supporter of the new Windows style, and here it sits in the now old-fashioned desktop. And that's not all: the Windows Live suite of photo and video editing apps are still in the desktop, as are the bundled apps like Paint.

It's like Microsoft got a solid vision for the future, went far enough with it to shake up their whole OS strategy … and then got cold feet and backed up. The market's done the same: Windows 8 has incredibly low adoption rates, and complaints from users and the press continue to roll in.

The word now is that the next release of Windows, so-called Windows Blue or Windows 8.1, will include new ways to customize the new Windows 8 start screen and have more of Control Panel moved into the new Windows Preferences, but will also include options to boot to desktop and possible see a return of the iconic Start button. There's also word — possibly — of an update to Office 2013 that'll bring it to the Start Screen as a modern Windows app.

On the one hand, it sounds like they're doubling-down on the new design, working to fix the problems many have complained about in it. But at the same time, they're making it easier to stick with the old Windows desktop, which now doesn't look like it's destined to as certain a death as it did in Windows 8's initial release.

Microsoft, you need to make up your mind. If you want to cater to those who don't want to move forward, release a new version of XP. The market would love that, I'm sure. But if you want to win the future, do everything you possibly can to make the new Windows 8 interface the very best it can be, with the best apps your teams can put out. Make stuff to showcase its power. And move legacy apps to the new interface; surely you can flip a Win32 window boarder switch to make the old apps fit in the new start screen sans their normal title bar and exit/minimize/maximize buttons, albeit without being customized for it.

Make up your mind, stick to your guns, and be opinionated. We might not all agree with the choices, but we'll sure respect you for it.

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