đź”— OmniFocus, my task manager and probably most used app of all time, is now free to try on the App Store

I switch up my task manager every now and then to stay on top of what is out there, but for the vast majority of the past four or five years, OmniFocus has been my todo app of choice.

 

Free downloads: OmniPlan and OmniFocus for iOS are free to try - The Omni Group:

The first, OmniPlan 3.6, features a better dark theme and optimized inspectors, designed to reduce the number of taps required to manage your project. We’re also transitioning OmniPlan—and OmniFocus—to free downloads. Both updates contain a free 14-day trial; the Standard and Pro features are unlocked (and discounted for existing customers) via In-App purchases.

🎬 PDF Converter - an app for turning stuff on your iOS devices into PDFs

In the second most recent episode of my podcast, Paul Shimmons and I discuss apps for working with PDFs. One of the apps I mentioned, PDF Converter by Readdle, is an excellent solution for for turning content in apps into PDFs. PDF Converter turns a variety of data (websites, articles, documents, photos, etc.) into elegant PDFs and is available as an extension on iOS so it can be accessed from within any app. See the video below.

The result doesn’t look incredibly elegant in this case because PDF Expert struggled with the ads on the website. In most cases, it does a decent job and even with stuff like this web article, I now have a text searchable copy of that article on my computer’s hard drive.

 

đź”— Astounding video from the Starling Academy of Music

Watch here!

Just click the link above. I am breaking my belief of absolutely detesting Facebook video and their agitation of the open web. I hate that this video is not available on YouTube and must be viewed on Facebook, and I hate that I cannot even embed it in this post, but I wouldn’t share it if it wasn’t so good. Just check it out! I did not take a breath until about half way through the video.

đź”— The Washington Post - Why my guitar gently weeps

This article is fascinating. It also comes at an interesting time for me since I recently, and for the first time ever, purchased a six string electric guitar.

A few quotes...

The Washington Post - Why my guitar gently weeps:

In the past decade, electric guitar sales have plummeted, from about 1.5 million sold annually to just over 1 million. The two biggest companies, Gibson and Fender, are in debt, and a third, PRS Guitars, had to cut staff and expand production of cheaper guitars. In April, Moody’s downgraded Guitar Center, the largest chain retailer, as it faces $1.6 billion in debt. And at Sweetwater.com, the online retailer, a brand-new, interest-free Fender can be had for as little as $8 a month.

What worries Gruhn is not simply that profits are down. That happens in business. He’s concerned by the “why” behind the sales decline. When he opened his store 46 years ago, everyone wanted to be a guitar god, inspired by the men who roamed the concert stage, including Clapton, Jeff Beck, Jimi Hendrix, Carlos Santana and Jimmy Page. Now those boomers are retiring, downsizing and adjusting to fixed incomes. They’re looking to shed, not add to, their collections, and the younger generation isn’t stepping in to replace them.

Gruhn knows why.

“What we need is guitar heroes,” he says.

...

But there were already hints of the change to come, of the evolutions in music technology that would eventually compete with the guitar. In 1979, Tascam’s Portastudio 144 arrived on the market, allowing anybody with a microphone and a patch cord to record with multiple tracks. (Bruce Springsteen used a Portastudio for 1982’s “Nebraska.”) In 1981, Oberheim introduced the DMX drum machine, revolutionizing hip-hop.

So instead of Hendrix or Santana, Linkin Park’s Brad Delson drew his inspiration from Run-DMC’s “Raising Hell,” the crossover smash released in 1986. Delson, whose band recently landed atop the charts with an album notably light on guitar, doesn’t look at the leap from ax men to DJs as a bad thing.

“Music is music,” he says. “These guys are all musical heroes, whatever cool instrument they play. And today, they’re gravitating toward programming beats on an Ableton. I don’t think that’s any less creative as playing bass. I’m open to the evolution as it unfolds. Musical genius is musical genius. It just takes different forms.”

đź”— Why Reach Navigation Should Replace the Navbar in iOS Design

Speaking from the perspective of a user interface nerd, I found this blog post from Brad Ellis to be very interesting. 

Why Reach Navigation Should Replace the Navbar in iOS Design:

The UINavigationBar, navbar for short, has been around since the original iPhone. Historically, navbars have been convenient and clear, easy to understand and easy to build.

Then phones ballooned, enough that the iPhone 7 Plus supplanted sales of the iPad mini. Now, if you own a modern iPhone, navbars can feel unwieldy — literally out of touch.

Burgeoning screens mean the distance between the navbar and our thumbs has grown. The screen on a 7 Plus is so tall it would take a thumb-length increase of 150 percent to reach those pesky buttons with one hand. Just another knuckle or two. Nothing weird.

As devices change, our visual language changes with them. It’s time to move away from the navbar in favor of navigation within thumb-reach. For the purposes of this article, we’ll call that Reach Navigation.

 

Tile Community Find Feature is Pretty Cool

For those who don’t know about it, Tile is a brand of small connected devices that can keep track of your belongings. They are thinner than cardboard and can attach to your key chain or fit in your wallet. Through a mobile app, your phone can stay connected to them over Bluetooth and help you track where they are on a map wherever they were last connected to the internet. I keep one of these in my backpack and one of them in my wallet.

I was in a coffee shop in Denver last week when I got a notification from the app telling me that my Tile had just helped someone else track their Tile. I was curious, so I Googled the notification and found out more about the feature...

Tile Community Find:

If you placed a Tile in your bag before you misplaced it, every phone in the community can help you search. Just select “Notify When Found,” and we will! As soon as someone running the Tile app comes within range of your bag, we’ll send you its location. Use your phone to guide you to the exact spot your bag ended up.

I’ve got to say, this is pretty neat. I love the idea, and its one of those things that just works. My favorite features of apps are the ones that solve a problem for me that I didn’t even know I had in the first place. It is not unlike when Google and Apple maps started telling me how far I was from my next location in my calendar, and how long it would take for me to drive there. 

Tiles are really useful, and they make great stocking stuffers around the holiday season (that is how I received my first Tile).

đź”— Ravenscoft 275 for iOS, a Fantastic Piano App

The Ravenscoft 275 is a piano app for iOS that I just learned about. It sounds truly fantastic. I do not do any of my audio power lifting on an iPad so I am not sure the price ($35.99) is worth it.

Apps like this make me dream for a day when the iPad can run a real digital audio workstation with full plugin support. I have dumped a lot of money into Waves and Native Instruments plugins over the years and I like having them at my disposal. iOS technically does support something like audio plugins. It is called inter-app audio apps (a mouthful,I know) and it allows third party audio plugins to be run in GarageBand. The app Audiobus allows you to make third party plugin apps work with third party DAWs (and more). I did a brief video demonstrating the feature a few years back. You can watch it here.

đź”— Gvido Music E-Reader

Just this past week I was recording a forthcoming episode of my podcast with Chris Russell (which should be posted within the next few weeks) on working with digital scores. We got talking about stand alone sheet music reader devices, in particular how previous devices were made instantly irrelevant when the iPad came out.

Click the link below to read about a new device in this class, the Gvido Digital Music Score. The article goes into depth about the technical details of this device. I still cannot see how something like this is going to take off when even the top of the line iPad Pro is only hundreds of dollars cheaper and can do way more. I have a Kindle Paperwhite and I do think that E Ink is beautiful and far easier on the eyes during extended lengths of use. Still though, I think I would choose my iPad over this any day of the week. 

Early impressions of the Gvido music e-reader from the 2017 MOLA conference