Reading Things With Instaper

One of my favourite ways to read things is with Instapaper on my iPhone. Marco‘s program is simple and easy to use and it makes me think that I would like it even more on an iPad. Instapaper is one of those apps that you may think that you don’t need until you start using it and then it becomes part of what you do.

The key to a compelling app is that it needs to disappear. Any good tool enables you do to things. If you think about it too much, it’s not working. Instapaper really effectively gets out of the way. It helps you read things later and it does that smoothly and efficiently. I started using Instapaper with my iPod Touch since you can’t always depend on reliable WiFi access everywhere. So as long as I kept it synced there would always be something to read when I had some time.

Reading in an RSS feed reader or a web browser can be a good experience, but the nature of reading on a laptop means that you can be distracted by other things. Jumping around between different things isn’t conducive to long-form reading, so changing modes to an iPhone or iPad can make a big difference. Switching modes makes it more fun and more casual. It’s closer to the mode of a book or a magazine. What you’re reading is the only thing on the screen so it allows you to disappear into the writing and that’s a very good thing.

Instapaper also plays very well with others. The basic sharing functions are usually mailing something to someone, but within Instapaper there are many possibilities for all sorts of workflows. Wherever I see something online now if it’s longer or if I don’t have time to read it, I’ll Instapaper it. (If something becomes a verb it’s a very good sign.) It’s easy to get things into it and it’s really easy to get things out of it as well. There are buttons for sharing in ways that I use often. The basic method is to email something, but that only scratches the surface. I can select a few sentences and post them as a quote to my tumblelog on Tumblr (or send it to the Tumblr app). I can send it out to Twitter with Twitterrific or Birdhouse. I can bookmark it on Pinboard (or have it automatically added to Pinboard) or I can add something as an OmniFocus task.

Now most of my online reading happens through Instapaper or through things saved there. It’s powerful, subtle and essential for me. It’s like a customized version of the web that always provides interesting things to read.

 

June 12, 2011 , , , ,

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Storing my Stuff in Pinboard

Keeping track of what you read online can be a challenge with the diverse ways of finding and reading things. Now there are devices everywhere to get online. Even Twitter provides a string of links  so it can be hard refind things that you were looking at. One of the great things about the maturity of the web and the technologies associated with it is that thanks to APIs and standards it’s not an impossible challenge. I’m a happy and enthusiastic recent convert to the minimalistic bookmarking site Pinboard. It’s where I consciously as well as automatically bookmark things in public and private ways and it’s a place where I can always find what I’m looking for if I’ve looked at it.

Back in the old days I was excited about tags and tagging starting with Flickr, del.icio.us and Technorati tags. I started using del.icio.us in November of 2004 to bookmark things. The biggest plus for it was that it was a way to get out of being locked in to having bookmarks in any specific web browser. You could get to your bookmarks from any browser on any computer. As the number of bookmarks increased, the tags became much more useful in finding things. One of the very attractive things about the way that del.icio.us was set up was the minimalism and almost aggressive simplicity of the site without many instructions. It was the reliable place to put any of my bookmarks.

It was great and with the API it was possible to post to Delicious (as it was renamed from the geekier del.icio.us) in various ways. One of the neat ways was with the simple OS X program Pukka which gave a slightly better way to add a bookmark (and it didn’t leave the web page). Pukka also provided a quick way to find a bookmark before launching a web browser. So as I switch from web browser to web browser it means that things at least stay the same with my bookmarks.

The way that I kept up to date with things on the web was (and still is) through the RSS feeds from many different sites. My method of choice was through the great NetNewsWire for OS X. One of the great things in it was a quick keyboard shortcut to add a bookmark for something in Delicious (which could also send something out to Pukka). So I would go through my feeds, flag things that I wanted to read later or possibly bookmark and then go through all of the flagged items and then save bookmarks of things that I wanted to keep. This worked great for a number of years and my workflow is still similar.

With Yahoo purchasing Delicious it didn’t seem to make a difference in how the site worked and was evolving. There was the change in the way to log in with the addition of your Yahoo ID, but it seemed as though things were going well. But then in December of 2010 word leaked out that Yahoo was restructuring things that the Delicious team was let go and that they were looking for someone to buy the service. But without the team that created and ran the site, it’s probably not that attractive to buy. I’d heard of Pinboard before and thought that I’d take the plunge and try it out. It took a few minutes and then I brought all my bookmarks in and never looked back.

As the iOS world began evolving I found that the reading of things and discovering of interesting things in RSS feeds moved to my iPod Touch. My preferred way of going through feeds now is with Reeder on my iPhone. When I find something interesting that I want to keep I will bookmark it in Reeder and it allows me to add it to Pinboard right in the app. If it is something longer I will send it to Instapaper to read later. Then when I’m reading it in Instapaper I can decide to add it to Pinboard (or even post a quote to my tumblelog on Tumblr).

Bookmarking things are the conscious additions to Pinboard, but the really powerful method is how I can automatically add stuff there too. If you still use Delicious you can have bookmarks from there added automatically. With my Instapaper feed I have all of the things I save to read later become bookmarks in Pinboard. The other powerful part of this is that with the automatic bookmarks you can set your preferences to whether the bookmark is marked as “unread”. If it is “unread” it doesn’t show up in your public feed. That was important to me as I didn’t want a steady stream of things automatically added. Now I can look through was is unread and decide if I want to add some more tags and make it public.

Pinboard also is a great way to keep track of all of the tweets you are sending out. You can link your Twitter account and there will be an archive of all of your tweets going forward (and for a chunk of recent ones that it can get). The very cool part comes when you go in to the preferences and can automatically create bookmarks for any links that show up in tweets. That’s a great way to have a set of links that show up in your twitter stream. For me I usually post a lot of links to films that I watch, so they will be added to my stream. Then I add a few tags and make them private (so they don’t clutter up my feed of bookmarks) and then I have a list of films that I’ve watched with a set of links to their IMDb pages.

Pinboard isn’t free, but has a signup fee that is based on the number of people who have joined the site (around $10 now). It’s an innovative way to set pricing and it discourages spam. I happily paid the fee because I want to support a great project. But the most powerful and useful part of Pinboard is in the archiving that you can pay a bit extra for ($25/year). With archiving the link and the page that it goes to is archived, so if the page changes or the site disappears there will be an archived version that you can always go back to. This is quite powerful and means that the bookmarks that you have will keep working even if the sites that the bookmarks are pointing to don’t work.

I love the simplicity and attitude of Pinboard. It does what it sets out to do with clarity and precision

April 17, 2011 , , , ,

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Friendly Rules

The Crowd for Andrew Baron's KeynoteAt the recent and wonderful Podcamp Halifax, the first session that I attended was Joel Kelly‘s “Unfriend Someone Today“, which was all about pruning and managing the people who you count amongst your friends (online). There was a great discussion and I kept thinking about the number of people I follow on Twitter and how I add (or remove) friends with various social networking services. It also was strange to see many people in person who I follow on Twitter, but I hadn’t met in person.
I’m most stingy about following people on Twitter and more open in following people on Flickr, and Facebook is somewhere in the middle. With the social networks where I have fewer friends, I’ll check in on them several times a day, where I’m not so picky it will be every few days or longer before I check in.
Continue…

January 31, 2009 , , , , , , ,

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small, specific, and real

leafinweb.jpgWhat makes something compelling in any form, mediated or not? Popularity means an audience but in that crowd, people form the connection.

Memories are not big. They are made of glances, touches, sounds, tastes, and smells. Shared transient moments that resonate in our heart.

Stories we love have details that are unique and individual. They’re the seeds inside narratives that grow – a time, a place, a person.

Authenticity is vital. We crave the truth on many levels and when someone shares something, they are vulnerable and it is a leap of faith.

Twitter started me thinking about this as it forces you to cram things into a very small and specific box of 140 characters.

Constraints boil things down to what is essential in the same way that maple syrup is formed from boiling the sap from the maple tree.

We connect with things that are small, specific, and real. It’s the essence of good storytelling as we share mediated bits of ourselves. Continue…

November 22, 2008 , , , , , ,

Wordle and del.icio.us

Thanks to Carolyn for pointing out the very lovely visualization tool Wordle from Jonathan Feinberg. It allows you to either paste words or use a del.icio.us username to generate a rather beautiful visualization of the words and their frequency. The image with this post is the collection of my del.icio.us tags, so you can see what I bookmark most frequently. I love being able to see things in different ways like this.

June 29, 2008 , , ,

Firefox 3 Download Day

Download Day - EnglishMy web browser of choice has been Firefox for a few years now. I love how it works and it just keeps getting better and better. I’ve been using the betas of version 3 of Firefox without many problems at all for a few months now, and happily the official release is happening next week. This time it’s different and the Firefox team has set an ambitious goal of setting a Guinness world record by having the most software downloads in one day. The launch date is June 17, 2008, and I would encourage everyone to download Firefox 3 next Tuesday. I’m going to be downloading it and celebrating (probably with some Guinness).
It’s been a remarkable journey for the web browser from the early days when the code was released by Netscape (as documented in the film Code Rush) to the revitalized and dynamic progress that Firefox has made. It’s changed the online world and made the web a much more exciting place.

June 15, 2008 ,