Posts in Linked

Feedly Adds Custom Sharing and “Popular” Section

I’ve been keeping an eye on Feedly since they unveiled their Pro plan earlier this year (I bought a $99 lifetime membership). Their newest additions to the web app are interesting: Popular is an algorithm that detects articles with “engagement” in the Feedly community, and Custom Sharing lets you add your own sharing URL for links.

Here’s how they describe Popular:

Thanks to the engagement and sharing behavior from the community, we are getting a very clear signal of which articles are the most popular within each feed. We added a “Popular” section at the top of each feeds to make sure that you do not miss those articles. If you prefer a chronological view only, this feature can be turned off in the preferences via Preferences > General > Popular.

I just turned on the feature in my account. The first impression is good as it does seem to be recommending articles about popular topics.

Custom Sharing is pretty neat in that it lets you set up a URL to send links to using placeholders for an article’s title and link. I have set up a custom service to bring up the Pinboard add interface, but I’d like to see an option to set up multiple custom sharing services at once (right now, you can only add one, and it doesn’t get a custom icon but a generic envelope one). The feature is reminiscent of Mr. Reader’s custom sharing menu, but for websites, and I think that it is a good addition.

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Facebook 6.6

Out today on the App Store, you can now edit comments and posts from the new version of Facebook for iOS (for posts that contain photos or locations from Instagram, you can only edit the text part of the status update). When leaving comments, you can also attach photos from your device (a feature that was added to the website a while back); at last, Facebook is providing easier access to privacy settings from mobile devices (tap the More tab on iPhone, then tap the lock icon next to your name).

You can download Facebook 6.6 here.

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Marked 2.1 Improves Word Repetition Visualization and Text Statistics

Marked 2’s first point release has landed, and it’s chock full of great improvements. If you haven’t purchased Marked yet, think of it as fancy document preview tool that helps you catch formatting mistakes, catches overused words, and highlights cliché phrases. It’s a mini-editor for your text documents, especially useful for those who write in Markdown and publish text on the web. For those who already have Marked, download the latest update to grab bug fixes and notable feature improvements such as background calculation for text statistics.

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First Look at Editorial 1.1

Ole Zorn:

Editorial 1.1 will require iOS 7. I know that some of you won’t like this, but sooner or later, it’s inevitable, and all iPad models that run iOS 6 also support iOS 7, so this doesn’t mean leaving any older devices behind. iOS 7 is so different from its predecessor that it’s a lot more difficult to support older versions than it was with previous upgrades.

I’m especially a fan of the last point in the “New Features” list. Editorial’s looking good on iOS 7.

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The Prompt: The Federico Special

With Stephen away this week, Federico and Myke spend some time discussing the magic behind iOS automation and URL schemes. They finish the show with a short discussion about Nintendo (of course).

We’re just getting started with iOS automation, and I plan on buying Pokémon Y this weekend. So, expect more soon.

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Glenn Fleishman On Newsstand For Publishers

Glenn Fleishman, writing for TidBITS:

Put bluntly, Newsstand is a ghetto. Readers complain to me regularly about forgetting to read The Magazine, even though we use iOS notifications for each issue. If readers don’t read immediately and don’t remember to tap the Newsstand icon later, they forget about us entirely.

His article comes in response to Marko Karppinen, who writes:

The segregation of Newsstand apps into the Newsstand folder wasn’t ever a positive aspect of Newsstand, but we were optimistic and thought that perhaps readers would form new habits around it. As an industry, we decided to give it a go. Apart from some early successes, attributable to a first-mover advantage, that was a mistake.

As users, many of us complained about the old Newsstand’s folder nature and the inability to hide the app, but publishers aren’t so happy now that it’s possible with iOS 7. I’m curious to see if more publishers will chime in on this.

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Testing The iPhone 5s In Patagonia

This iPhone 5S beats out the 5 in every camera test and in many ways I prefer it to my DSLR. Sure it has its pros & cons… but for the first time ever, I didn’t bring my Canon 1DX and I didn’t regret it one bit. That’s saying a lot.

Austin Mann (via Shawn Blanc) went to Patagonia to properly test the new iPhone 5s camera, and he came back with some amazing photos and videos. Even better, he provides explanations and comparison shots between the iPhone 5 and 5s, showing how the 5s takes better pictures better suited for processing. I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to take pictures as good as Austin’s, but the fact that Apple is hiding complex technology behind the software gives me hope that, when I’ll get my 5s, I’ll enjoy features like SloMo and better Panoramas without having to care about their settings.

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A Ship In Troubled Waters

Ben Kuchera:

These numbers should serve to show you the power and nearly limitless earning potential of Nintendo franchises, and this is why you should never take anyone seriously when they suggest that Nintendo games should come to iOS or Android devices as a way to boost revenue. Anyone who thinks Nintendo would be better off selling $3 versions of games that now move 10 million units at $40, often selling multiple copies to the same family, is insane.

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