[[ryan]] It seems like every time Apple reports its quarterly earnings these days, the company mentions huge growth in the domain of subscriptions on its various platforms. As 2018 comes to a close, the App Store and Apple ecosystem in general are filled with a record number of subscription options, including first-party offerings like Apple...
Edit
[[ryan]] On the surface, it seems like there isn’t much that needs saying about Edit, because there isn’t much to the app itself. Edit is a simple scratchpad utility that does one thing: provide a single-screen text editor so you can quickly jot down anything that’s on your mind. There’s no concept of saving different...
Channels
[[ryan]] The year is 2018, and yes, as Tim Cook once proclaimed, the future of TV certainly is apps. In place of traditional television channels, our TV watching is now dominated more than ever before by the likes of Netflix, YouTube, and other streaming services. Unfortunately though, no matter how much cord-cutting may be on...
Getting Things Done Together
{.app-collection} [[ryan]] Web-based collaboration tools have seen a popularity surge in recent years thanks to the increase in remote workers around the globe. Here at MacStories and Club MacStories, we rely on collaboration tools to get things done every day, whether that’s through sharing emails, documents, messages, or kanban boards. Here are some of the...
Pretext
[[ryan]] Sometimes stripped-down simplicity is all you want from an app. When it comes to Markdown text editors on iOS, there are a variety of great options, but they all have their own quirks and complications. Most have their own differing methods of cloud storage and syncing, and features you may or may not want....
A Special Apple Event Interview with Federico
[[ryan]] When Apple debuted its third-generation iPad Pros in Brooklyn earlier this week, our own Federico Viticci was present for the event and got hands-on time with the new devices. He shared his first impressions on the site, but today exclusively for Club members he has also answered a variety of questions about the new...
Investing in Shortcuts Where I Never Did with Workflow
[[ryan]] Apple’s Shortcuts app has been getting a lot of attention around MacStories in recent months, and rightfully so, as it represents the best case scenario for Workflow’s future. When the beloved automation app was acquired by Apple in early 2017, the move inspired concern for iOS power users. No one outside of Apple knew...
Twitter Testing Reply Buttons, Presence Indicators, Ice Breakers, and More→
In an interesting move that highlights Twitter’s recent efforts to develop its product more openly, soliciting feedback from its user base, the company invited The Verge’s Casey Newton to a meeting where it shared details on a handful of new features it’s working on.
A new design that more clearly indicates how to reply to tweets was one project in the works. Current prototypes resemble the sort of UI found on Facebook and Instagram, with a reply button indented underneath tweets. Related to that change, and in another modeling of other popular social networks, the UI for threads is being worked on to better resemble a conversation rather than a string of individual tweets.
hey Twitter. we’ve been playing with some rough features to make it feel more conversational here. presence and reply threading. still early and iterating on these ideas. thoughts? pic.twitter.com/3U3NvpHWPy
— sara beykpour (@pandemona) August 31, 2018
One of my favorite ideas from those shared with The Verge was something Twitter calls “ice breakers.” Newton writes:
Another feature Twitter is considering is a twist on the pinned tweet designed to promote conversations. The company showed me a design that would let you pin an “ice breaker” to the top of your profile to let people know you wanted to talk about something specific. The company’s design director, Mike Kruzeniski, told me it could help Twitter users channel their followers’ enthusiasm into discussions they wanted to have — whether it be about a new project, a current event, or some other item of interest.
The current implementation of pinned tweets is fine, but I love the idea of conversation starter tweets that can be changed up over time as users’ interests and desires for connection change.
Finally, presence indicators and status indicators are two similar features that would, respectively, let the world know when you’re online and ready for conversation, and share a status within your status such as “at WWDC19.” While I’m generally not a fan of presence indicators, according to Newton Twitter’s will be entirely optional, which I appreciate. If the feature were used sparingly enough, it could be a replacement for the standard AMA (“ask me anything”) tweets that are common when a user is free and open for conversation. Most likely though, Twitter will activate presence indicators by default for all users, making that specific use case doubtful.
None of these changes are set in stone, so be sure to make your voice heard if you feel strongly about any of them. As Twitter’s Sara Haider told Newton:
“Coming up with a product in a silo and dumping it on people is not going to work,” she said. “Some people are going to love it. Some people are going to hate it. We want to understand what people’s feedback is, and then tweak and iterate on the product.”
Project Gemini Is a New iPad Illustration App Coming from Adobe→
Along with details about the forthcoming Photoshop for iPad, Adobe has announced another brand new iPad app coming soon, dubbed Project Gemini:
Today we announced Project Gemini—a focused new app focused specifically on drawing and painting. Building on Photoshop’s powerful brush engine, this new app combines powerful Photoshop brushes, precise and scalable vector brushes, and an entirely new category of groundbreaking Live oil and watercolor brushes – you’ve never seen anything like them. In addition, layers, selections, and masks enable the most modern non-destructive drawing and editing workflows.
Most importantly, though, we’ve built Project Gemini with the illustration community.
Kyle Webster, of KyleBrush.com, joined Adobe in 2017 to help build Gemini and act as an ambassador and advocate for the illustration community. Along with Kyle, a group of illustrators with diverse styles and backgrounds have been working closely with us to help Gemini achieve its potential.
According to the announcement post, the genesis of this new app was advancements in hardware that enabled Adobe’s team to build more powerful tools than were previously possible. They highlight “selection and masking tools, combined raster and vector drawing capabilities” as some examples.
I’m not in the target market for this app, but I’m excited to see Adobe continue to rethink how modern iPads can enable more powerful, yet accessible app experiences than before.
If you’d like to join the Gemini beta when it begins, Adobe has a short survey available for interested testers.
