iTunes 4

Wow! It was a busy day at work…end of the term and lots of marking and adding and wrapping up. In my brief glance at Apple’s Web site this afternoon I saw that they launched the music store and updated iTunes to version 4. Even though I’m in Canada and we (along with the rest of the non-US world) can’t buy songs yet, it’s a pretty amazing leap. One of those Apple things that you look at and say, “Hey, that makes sense.” I can see me impulse-buying stuff as soon as it’s possible. There are still some gaps in the music that is available, but they’ve got a lot and the presentation is great. The staff picks are idiosyncratic and I suspect that they reflect the folks at Apple. It looks as if the whole thing was a massive task. Over 200,000 songs, tons of album art and a whack of encoding. The other neat features of iTunes 4 are sharing via Rendezvous and AAC encoding (higher quality at lower bitrates…just the same as encoding audio for DVDs).

A very cool feature for iTunes 5 or maybe 4.5 would be “Upload My Songs” to allow independent musicians to make their work available via the Music Store. Now that would be the next step, but would the record companies allow it? The video that Apple has (in the new “Music” button on Apple’s site that replaces the “Switch” button) introducing the store and new iPods has a rather smarmy tone about the music industry, so maybe it’s not too far-fetched. I love the new ads for the music store… they feature people singing as they listen to music on an iPod. A neat exercise in contrasts.

April 28, 2003 , , , , ,

Presentations and Storytelling

Doc Searls got me thinking about presentation software which has become a current topic with Apple’s new Keynote software. PowerPoint dominates presentation software and I really hate it. Maybe that’s not completely fair. I hate PowerPoint in the same way that I hate Flash…not so much the software itself, but how it’s used. With most applications there is a way that you are supposed to use them…it’s how they’re designed. You can work with them in a different way, but you’re going against the grain. PowerPoint seems to tend toward mediocrity in the direction that it pushes people.
Derek K. Miller explains “Why PowerPoint is like a sauna in a Saab” and Doc’s article “It’s the Story, Stupid” should be read before anyone prepares a presentation.
Years ago I had to make PowerPoint presentations for other people as part of my job. On the 7100AV that I used it was slow and an incredible memory hog. I didn’t help it a lot since I’d usually make up the shows in Photoshop as a series of images and bring them in. I much preferred doing things like that using Director and later Flash. But one of the hidden, but very useful features of Adobe’s Acrobat reader is the full-screen mode that turns a PDF file into a presentation. I’ve done some presentations that way.
The last presentation that I gave was supported with slides that I created in Photoshop and then assembled with QuickTime Pro as a series of stills. It worked well.
Now when I’m writing something more structured I’ll start in OmniOutliner which is probably the best outliner I’ve every used. Most other things that I write will be in BBEdit (where I’m writing this now). Whenever I have to do another presentation I’m thinking of using BigShow which was written by Aaron Hillegass of Big Nerd Ranch. It’s very small and simple and uses XML. I’m thinking that if I organize things in OmniOutliner and then maybe use a bit of AppleScript to reformat things into the proper XML it can be a quick way to whip something up.

January 18, 2003 , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Changing the Face of the Web

It’s rare that something indispensible is added to your toolkit after a number of years. It is even rarer when an application can change the way you do things. The Web browser did that and now I’m thinking that NetNewsWire has done that for news and ‘blogs for me. When RSS feed first came out I thought that they were cool and I wanted to use them, but never got around it. Meerkat did (and still does) a great job, but I was too lazy to set up my own mobs to use it more efficiently. In the last few months it seems that many things have clicked into place: the explosion of ‘blogs into the more mainstream consciousness, the proliferation of feeds, and Brent Simmons releasing NetNewsWire Lite. I was trying to explain to Carolyn how much I love NetNewsWire, but I said the best way to figure it out is to use it and she did and understood. So now a big chunk of my online reading happens through the RSS feeds that are aggregated by NetNewsWire Lite. It lets me spend more time getting to the good stuff and less time surfing and more time reading what I’m interested in. There are only two applications that are constantly running on my PowerBook: Mail and NetNewsWire.
I started thinking about this more when I read Meg Hourihan‘s O’Reillynet Megnut columnDial Up Revelations” where she talked about using dialup while in France and how NetNewsWire Lite helped to ease the low-bandwidth pain. The other encouraging thing that I took from her writing was that the sites that work well and translate to various devices are the ones that are standards compliant. It’s an exciting time…now if only more people would write great software like NetNewsWire and create standards-compliant web sites…

January 11, 2003 , , , , , , ,

Top 5 Shareware Applications I’ve Paid For

Hmmm… I seem to be in a top 5 mood… The top 5 applications that I’ve registered or use just about every day are as follows (in no particular order)… NetNewsWire Lite (I haven’t registered it, but that’s because the Pro version is in beta now), BBEdit, Graphic Converter, Transmit, and Joe’s Filters For Final Cut Pro. Over the past year I’ve come to depend on these things… in some ways they are the silent heroes who work away in the background, but each one of them have talented people working away making my life easier.

December 31, 2002 , , , , , ,

Another Reason to Use Mozilla

If you don’t know about Mozilla, you should. It’s the child of Netscape, born back in the days when there was competition for Web browsers and standards and all that. It’s also the basis of the current release of Netscape Navigator…or is it just Netscape now? You can find out more news about Mozilla and related stuff at Mozillazine. Now it’s at Release Candidate 2, which means that it’s very close to release. The other reason to use it, aside from it being fast and cool is that you can turn off unrequested pop-up windows…and that includes the annoying pop-under ads as well. Lovely!

May 11, 2002 , , ,