Federico Viticci

906 posts on MacStories since April 2009

Federico is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of MacStories, where he writes about Apple with a focus on apps, developers, iPad, and iOS productivity. He founded MacStories in April 2009 and has been writing about Apple since. Federico is also the co-host of AppStories, a weekly podcast exploring the world of apps, Unwind, a fun exploration of media and more, and NPC: Next Portable Console, a show about portable gaming and the handheld revolution.

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Favorite Tweets of the Week Dec 6-Dec 12, 2009

I usually tweet a lot of stuff: apps tutorials, news, videos, reviews, hacks and so much more. Everything that’s Apple-related and it’s interesting, it’s worth a tweet.

To keep up to date with all these links you can follow me on Twitter, but in case you missed here’s a small compilation of the best tweets of the past week.

You can find me on Twitter as @storiesofmac.

Enjoy!

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Reeder Goes 1.2. Gets Twitter and Pinboard Support, Lots of Refinements

One month ago I wrote that Reeder was the new best RSS reader for iPhone. Then, some people started criticizing my review, telling me that Newsstand was way better than Reeder: it had more features, better stability and - this is weird - better support from the developer. Now, with the latest 1.2 update that went live last night I’d like to say it once again: Reeder is the best RSS app for iPhone.

Here’s why.

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Apple Files Countersuit Against Nokia

Link

“According to Apple, Nokia is infringing on 13 of its patents. Apple’s lawyer was very blunt in his statement concerning the case.

“Other companies must compete with us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours,” said Bruce Sewell, Apple’s General Counsel and senior vice president.”

Has Apple finally realized that the Ovi Store was a copy of the App Store?



A TableView Just Like Tweetie 2. Innovation and Trends.

Link

“One thing that’s cool about Tweetie 2 is the fresh paradigm to refreshing the contents of a table view. Up until now we had been looking for space to mount a reload button on, sometimes having to resort to adding an extra tool bar for just one view so that you can have enough space. Now if you have a tableview that it sorted reverse chronologically, then you have a natural urge to make new items appear at the top by pulling down the table with extra force.

Loren recognized this need and innovated the Pull-To-Reload paradigm. If you want to refresh a tableview in Tweetie 2 then you simply pull down the table far enough for an additional cell to appear at the top with the instruction “Pull down to refresh”. If you do, then at a certain point the arrow rotates and the text changes to “Release to refresh”. All accompanied by two distinct wooshing sounds and a pop once the reloading action has ceased. The Intuitiveness of this paradigm is so compelling in fact that people who use Tweetie 2 start to try to refresh ALL tableviews like this.”

When someone innovates people start copying. Or just taking inspiration, they say. But when an innovation becomes a standard, are we sure it’s good at all? Where’s the difference between an innovation that gets copied for good and something that gets stolen for the trend’s sake?

The AppStore will tell us.


Setting Up Your Website to Run on iPhone Browser

Link

“According to several researches, the iPhone is the most used mobile to navigate in the Internet. With almost 50% of smartphone web traffic in U.S. and over 30% worldwide, clients are now aware to have their own web page running on iPhone browser. You have be to prepared if requested to create an iPhone web page.

There are many companies offering that kind of mobile services, like MOBIFY and iPhoneMicrosites, but it’s not to difficult to create your own web site running on iPhone browser. It is as easy as making it to run in desktop browsers.”

Awesome tips from Eugenio Grigolon, I think I might use them to develop a mobile version of MacStories.


Cook Delicious Meals with Cookmate. Review and Giveaway.

It happens almost everyday to me: I have the fridge full of many different food but I just don’t know what to cook for lunch. Should I cook some pasta with those beans or just a quick salad? Fortunately, my girlfriens has always some great ideas, but now I can say that there’s an app for that. Yes, Cookmate, which was finally accepted by Apple yesterday, lets you easily decide what to cook - with style.

And we also have a bunch of promo codes to give away.

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