Essential iOS Software 2019

Much of what I use routinely on iOS has a Mac counterpart. And as a Mac user since 1993, long before the release of iOS, that’s to be expected. But in reviewing my usage, I realized that some applications have come into my life the other way: they started as iOS apps, and later became Mac applications. Hence the organization of this post; in section one, I list the applications that I have used on iOS that moved from the Mac to iOS. Section two is “Back to the Mac,” as the keynote went. Two apps I chose because I wanted both iOS and Mac coverage, which will increasingly and by necessity be the way many applications are released. Lastly, I list apps that are iOS only.

Mac > iOS

1Password: I went from someone who didn’t understand how a password manager could help me to a person who relies on it. It’s probably the most valuable app to me. What’s more, iOS now allows it to serve as the password database on your devices at a system level, which has improved the experience markedly. Prior to iOS 12, you had to use iOS’s version of Keychain if you wanted password management across the device.

TextExpander: Once indispensable, TextExpander is probably on the chopping block for me. I write less in volume and boilerplate these days, so it does little more than expand dates and my signature. Because it’s the only third-party snippet manager that enjoys wide application support, however, I’m reluctant to give it up.

OmniFocus: I’ve tried many others and have always come back. OmniFocus looks good, is continually improved upon, and is as simple or complex as you like.

Mail: I think it’s the best app for email on iOS for serious users. Others look nice and offer some clever features, but nothing helps you get through the crush like Mail.

Byword: I start most posts in Drafts but I publish from Byword. It has great WordPress and Medium support, and it looks great too, although it’s long in the tooth and possible abandoned. I used iAWriter for a while and I like it for most of the same reasons, but the WordPress support is different (and I don’t prefer it).

DayOne: I started writing some in MacJournal, then tried DayOne. This app syncs across devices, supports various media, and generally makes it easy to jot down ideas and thoughts. You can lock it up nice and tight, like a diary or journal.

GoodReads: I signed up for GoodReads a long time ago as a place to see what others are reading and to share my own reading list. Amazon’s purchase of the service led to integration into its Kindle device and Amazon’s ecosystem, making the service (and concurrent iOS app) far more useful to me as a wishlist aggregator primarily, but also a place to see what I’ve read, and when. The ability to maintain concurrent Kindle store wishlists and GoodReads leads to some inconsistency, though; it would be nice to be able to choose one or the other in the Kindle’s system settings.

Google Apps: As we use Google instead of MS Office at work, I have installed Drive, Docs, Sheets, and Slides on my iOS devices. Using the apps on iOS is not a great experience; knowing that your work is always accessible, however, is hard to beat.

Flickr: Another webservice-come-app.

iOS > Mac

Drafts: Drafts makes your life simple by letting you start there for almost everything: calendar entries, email messages, tweets, to-do items, blog posts… if it starts in text, you can start it in Drafts. As it grows in features, it will be a thing unto itself. There’s a Mac version in beta now, and it threatens extinction of my installation of Bear.

Unread: Unread syncs with Feed Wrangler, but the interface is pure iOS. It’s a great example of the difference between iOS and macOS. You swipe where you should swipe, and tap where you should tap. It’s a great example of a well thought out iOS app.

Notability:The only thing that compares to writing with a nice pen is writing with the Apple Pencil on an iPad in Notability. With the iPad Pro, you get pressure sensitivity, and with Notability, you get a fine writing experience with sync to the Mac version. It OCRs your text for easy search, too. The Mac version is really just a window into the iPad version for me; I don’t use it for note-taking on the Mac, as the metaphor is pen on paper. See my Making the Most of Notes post.

Tweetbot:This app has some strange touch affordances and the navigation gets a little mysterious sometimes, but it looks better than the rest of the third party apps. I was happy with the official client for the Mac for a while, but I like the reading sync between devices.

News: I check News on my phone throughout the day; since I skipped installing FB on my iPhone X, it’s my habitual tap. I don’t use it nearly as often on the Mac, but I do appreciate that the content is there.

So Happy Together

Bear: Bear keeps text notes all together. One day, it might give way to Drafts, I think, but for now, nothing looks quite so nice. The best feature is the pretend/append feature. It puts me in mind of Quicksliver and text files.

DEVONThink: I would have stuck with Yojimbo on the Mac if Bare Bones made a credible iOS version. Together’s Keep It is a serious contender in this space, but DEVONThink was already established when I made the move. Evernote is probably the king of this genre, but I’ve never much cared for it outside of the sheer convenience.

iOS Only

Dark Sky: I don’t need a weather app on the Mac; I just click the link to NOAA or Dark Sky’s web page. Dark Sky provides hyper-local forecast data. (We were on vacation once and Dark Sky informed me that it was going to stop raining in seven minutes. And. It. Did.)

Calcbot: Looks good, but the conversions make it worth every penny.

Downcast: This has been my podcast catcher for probably a decade.

Making the Most of Notes

Taking notes in classes and meetings of any kind used to be a straightforward affair: you either took notes on paper with a pen or pencil, or you didn’t. When you were a kid, you had marble notebooks full of notes. As you moved up from grade to grade, the notebooks grew thicker, their rules narrower, their spines bound with spiral metal coils. As an adult, maybe you had a journal; at the very least, you had a legal pad.

The modern note-taker, however, is faced with a choice: handwriting notes, as discussed above, or typing notes on a device.

Typing on a laptop or tablet offers some clear benefits: typing offers a clear speed advantage for anyone even passably conversant, and immediate cloud sync means you don’t have to worry about losing your notes. And while you might puzzle over what you meant to type, you will certainly be able to read the text. Lastly, typed notes are easy to share right away.

Handwritten notes, however, offer some benefits that might make up for the relative slowness and inconvenience of the practice. There is evidence, for example, that handwriting leads to better encoding (remembering what you wrote). Better encoding means more accurate recall. And the ability to annotate and spatially interject is hard to replicate in a text editor or outliner. Some people just like it better.

But it’s a false dichotomy to say that you can’t have one without the other.

Here’s what I tried:

Notability is a note-taking app for iOS and macOS that offers iCloud sync. I attended a workshop the other day and I took a few pages of notes in Notability using the Apple Pencil. I wrote, I moved things around, I formatted with different colors. I drew lines to other sections on the page. I drew arrows to let me know that one thing led to another. I created boxes on the side with ancillary information or sidebar data. I underlined and used color to distinguish the level of importance.

It was a nice way to work.

Notability

Notability will also spit out sections of handwriting as text. I was able to select sections of the notes and then have the software recognize the characters and turn my scratch into text. I had Notability drop the text into the clipboard (you can also opt for OCR right on the page), and I pasted the result into Bear.

In Bear, I cleaned up the formatting errors that Notability made in formatting and interpreting so that it matched the content of my handwritten notes. Performing this provided a valuable review of the topics and helped me focus on what I wanted to communicate to others at work. The notes are in Bear, where I usually store meeting notes.

Bear

I can’t say that I’ll always use Notability like this. Handwriting on the iPad uses up a lot more battery than typing. I won’t always have the Pencil with me. I won’t always want to review everything. But it does allay the sneaking sensation that typing notes isn’t as effective as my old handwritten method. The printed word forces a structure on the writer: top to bottom, left to right. Sure, you can use an outliner like Omni and drag sections around, but that’s not the same thing. But the digital advantages are very real.

This Fountain of Self-Refuted Boasts

George F. Will–a conservative–on Donald Trump:

It must be misery to awaken to another day of being Donald Trump. He seems to have as many friends as his pluperfect self-centeredness allows, and as he has earned in an entirely transactional life. His historical ignorance deprives him of the satisfaction of working in a house where much magnificent history has been made. His childlike ignorance — preserved by a lifetime of single-minded self-promotion — concerning governance and economics guarantees that whenever he must interact with experienced and accomplished people, he is as bewildered as a kindergartener at a seminar on string theory.

The shabbiest U.S. president ever is an inexpressibly sad specimen – The Washington Post:

DDC Stuff Sheath

Via Tools and Toys:

Sometimes, we just want our shit as “orange as possible.” And we all know what a back pocket on the back of yer jeans will do to a Field Notes memo book, right? So we made a little leather sheath. Just that simple. Just something to protect our latest Field Notes memo book, and, wrangle all the scraps of paper and what not that are always bouncing around in our pockets, or falling out of our Field Notes. Simple moves.

I carry a Moleskine Cahier around and it’s pretty beat up by the time I fill it up (I don’t do a lot of writing on the go; I have a stack of index cards at my desk and those are pretty much what I use for notes). This seems like a great idea.

Link

OmniFocus Notifications

OmniGroup:

OmniFocus 3.2 for Mac brings notifications to the Mac!

In Preferences, in the new Notifications pane, you can set notifications to appear on any combination of due, deferred, and latest start date. You can choose sounds for your notifications, too.

Speaking of notifications, remember Growl? Good times.

Focusing on Due/Flagged Perspectives in OmniFocus

I will readily credit OmniFocus for keeping me from forgetting things that I need to do, and for being able to sleep at night because I’m not worried about what I might have forgotten.

(How to do things, stop procrastinating, and make good choices, not so much.)

OmniFocus makes capture almost effortless. I can send (or forward) an email to a custom email address, trigger an action in MailMate, Force-touch the icon on my phone to reveal a “New Inbox Item” link, or send a string out of Drafts. With Siri Shortcuts, you can skip the typing altogether.

Upon a weekly review, I’m usually relieved to see that I have a pretty good awareness of what I should be focused on, and occasionally jolted by something I would have otherwise forgot. But that’s what the system is there for: to hold ideas.

Two aspects of GTD at the ground level have always tripped me up: the review, and getting down to work.

Review

The review is a matter of time and discipline; you have to decide that at some time during each week, you’re going to look at OmniFocus. You’re going to use the Review feature and go project by project, task by task, and check off things you have done, delete things that you don’t have to do anymore, change project statuses to complete, on hold, or dropped, and move things from your inbox to a project list. For a lot of your tasks and projects, you’re just reviewing them to remind yourself that you still have a commitment to those tasks and to the larger outcome. You review your open loops.

Actually doing work

David Allen’s Getting Things Done recommends working off of your context lists. You have to consider your context: Where are you? Is this a good time to use the phone? You might, then, work off of your phone context list. Are you in a noisy cafe? Maybe you want to process email. In that case, you might work off of your @email context list. Are you out and about? Consult your @errands list.

This approach can certainly work, but anyone who works in an office can very likely make phone calls, process email, and complete writing or brainstorming tasks. Other elements are more instructive regarding what you should work on. Priority, due date, and your energy level are more likely to be your motivating factors when context is less salient.

Of course, GTD frowns on priority–for example, tasks are high, medium, or low priority–as a matter of categorization. And I get it: ever get emails from someone who rates every message (!!!)? You can waste a lot of time deterring what is a !, what is a !!, and what makes a task rise to the !!! level.

OmniFocus now supports multiple tags in instead of single contexts, so you are free to tag phone calls as !, !!, or !!!, as you like. But that’s a GTD no-no.

Flag, Man

The review serves to remind you, in part, about where you need to focus your energies. It reminds you of what is coming at you: due dates, events on your hard landscape, and emergent commitments. It also reminds you of projects on hold, things neglected, and even commitments you need to renegotiate.

So here’s what I do: upon review, if an item has a hard due date, and I didn’t date it thus, I assign a due date. If it’s not something with a hard due date, but I want to work on it between the current review and the next review, I flag it.

It may still be important to winnow down that list into more manageable lists, so I create three custom perspectives in OmniFocus:

  1. Today: all action items that are either due or flagged (or both)
  2. Due/Flagged (Work): all action items that are either due or flagged (or both) for work commitments only
  3. Due/Flagged (Home): all action items that are either due or flagged (or both) for home commitments only

The Today Perspective

Numbers 2 and 3 are essentially the same as Today, but separating work and home-related tasks. (I keep all projects related to each domain in their own folder in OmniFocus.) I toggle between all of these throughout the day, because I can sometimes run an errand during lunch, for example, or on the way home after work. Likewise, I can make a phone call while I’m out and about or during lunch.

The Home Perspective

None of this is perfect; I still forget things. But, as with my use of MailMate to process email, it does help me narrow my focus so that I can see what needs to be done in the near future, rather than looking at 100+ action items and panicking.

The Work Perspetive

Apple’s Not Alone In China

Om Malik, writing about Apple’s revised quarterly guidance:

China slowdown is actually a much wider problem. It is unlikely that the Chinese government will ever talk about problems in its economy. So we are slowly starting to see US companies give their assessment of the Chinese economy. For instance, back in mid-December, when all of us were floating on cloud eggnog, FedEx was reporting earnings that pointed to tough times ahead. “The peak for global economic growth now appears to be behind us,” chief marketing officer Raj Subramaniam remarked on a conference call with investors.

And Trump’s trade war:

The trade war — which has gone from being a tweet to a tornado that has ripped the roof off one of Silicon Valley’s stalwarts. Trade wars obviously have a consequence, and Apple is suffering like every other luxury and fashion brand that has been too reliant on the Chinese consumer. Like Apple, they too have been puking on the side of the proverbial Wall Street. Tiffany, for instance, is down almost 14 percent over the past three months. Coach is performing even worse, almost as bad as LVMH, the company that owns Louis Vuitton, Loro Piana and a whole bunch of others.

Apple isn’t alone in feeling the pinch.

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