six colors

by Jason Snell & Dan Moren

This week's sponsor

Six Colors Recommends: Build a podcast studio for under $100 around the Audio-Technica ATR2100-USB microphone.

Linked by Jason Snell

The Deck is shutting down

When I started Six Colors I was worried about advertising. I wanted to follow the “Daring Fireball model” of weekly sponsorships, plus supplement that income with a classy tile ad from The Deck. I contacted Jim Coudal, the founder of The Deck, and he agreed to take my entirely new site on.

It was an act of faith on his part, and one that I greatly appreciate. The Deck has helped keep Six Colors afloat during its first couple of years of life, but it’s shutting down at the end of the month.

I will replace The Deck, at least in the short term, with an ad network with a similar look and feel, while I assess what the long-term plan should be. (To be honest, these are trying times for web advertising on small sites like this one; the support of members is increasingly important.)

Thanks to Jim Coudal and The Deck for helping independent blogs and other small websites, including this one, make ends meet for many years.


Ads via the Deck


David Pogue’s FlightTrack replacements

You may remember that my favorite flight-tracking app died recently, and I’ve vowed to check out some of the replacements. In fact, I’ve got a folder full of them on my iPhone and will be using them as I travel to the UK and Ireland over the next couple of weeks.

But if you’d like the perspective of another FlightTrack Pro user’s search for the best replacement, Yahoo’s David Pogue has revealed the results of his own search. (The short version: FlightView and Flight Update Pro are Pogue’s favorites, along with the excellent—and probably overpriced—App in the Air.)


Podcast

Clockwise #182: Sorry, My Brain Crashed

Clockwise

On the 30-minute podcast that all the kids are listening to, we discuss technology failures and the fears they spawn, the future of internet privacy in a world where our browsing activity is for sale, products or companies we’d like to see acquired, and brain-tech interfaces. We’re joined by Georgia Dow and James Thomson.


By Jason Snell

The dream of converting podcasts into text

I love podcasts. But you can’t use Google to search for something that was said during a podcast. And if you can’t listen—because of physical disability, personal preference, learning style, or any other reason—you’ll never know what’s being said. An entire vibrant, conversational, fun corner of the digital media world is closed to you.

The solution is clear: Create a text transcript for every podcast! I’m pretty sure that this will eventually happen, but we’re not there yet. Speech-to-text technology just isn’t good enough, and human-created transcripts are more expensive than most podcasts can afford.

There are services that offer human transcriptions of podcasts—I’ve used both CastingWords and Rev, but they aren’t cheap. The cheapest I’ve seen is $1 per minute. That’s not unreasonable if you’re a highly capitalized commercial podcast with a big budget, but I’d wager that 98 percent of podcasts would lose money if they had to pay $1 per minute for transcripts.

But beyond that, these human-based transcription services still generate transcripts that are full of errors, misunderstandings, and nonsensical statements. The more arcane or technical the discussion—or the more voices on a podcast—the worse it can get. If you really want your transcript to be good, you have to go over it yourself, preferably by listening along—and that takes time. The cost just went up even more.

The great hope lies in software transcriptions, which can either ease the burden of human transcriptionists or replace them entirely. There are a few platforms currently offering speech-to-text transcriptions—I used Google’s API via the Auphonic service—and they cost a lot less than paying a human to transcribe them. But as you might expect, the results are comical at best1, unintelligible at worst.

I ran last week’s Six Colors Secret Subscriber Podcast through the Google engine, just as a sample. Here’s something Dan said, which I transcribed and edited:

Right, and I think the hugest win here is this idea that Workflow succeeded in an environment where Apple did very little to foster anything in that area. From the scripting side and the Automator side, I think they were always kind of awkward because you could be very good at automating or scripting, but it always felt to me like a weird middle ground where people who are not technical… there was just no chance that they were going to sit down to write an AppleScript. And then for a lot of people who are very technical—we know many programmers and I’m one of these people who did work in programming—I have the hardest time grokking an AppleScript.

And here’s what the machine presented to me:

Right and I think that’s an amazing and the sort of like you just win here is this idea that you know workflow succeed in an environment where Apple did very little to sort of foster anything in that area from the scripting side in like the automator side I think they were always kind of awkward because, you could be very good at automated or automating or scripting put it always to me felt like a weird Middle Ground where people who are not technical like there was just no chance like, we’re going to sit down to write an apple script and then for a lot of people who are very we know many programmers who and I will I’m one of these people who did work in programming I have the hardest time cracking an apple script

And that was one of the cleaner passages. I cleaned it up by going over the audio and correcting all of the mistakes (and making some editorial judgment to remove some filler words and false starts).

This also points out another problem with text transcripts of talking, namely that we don’t talk the way we write. Even the most conversational of writers 👋🏻 will be more direct than a transcript of how people speak. The way our brains process speech is very different from the way they process writing. If I were to “translate” Dan’s statement into writing, it might look like this:

Perhaps most impressive is that Workflow succeeded despite Apple doing very little to foster automation on iOS. On the Mac, AppleScript and Automator always seemed awkward to approach if you weren’t already a fairly technical person. I used to work as a programmer, and even I had trouble figuring out how to use AppleScript.

Here’s the good news: While these machine translations aren’t readable, they are getting good enough to fuel search engines. A great proof of concept is this one from David Smith, which covers seven different podcasts.

I’m a little baffled why Google hasn’t just indexed the contents of every podcast on the Internet and poured it into the Google search engine. David’s engine works well because the computerized transcript is attached to a time code for that podcast episode, so when you find a search result you can click to hear what was really said, rather than relying on a baffling transcript.

This could go a long way to addressing the searchability of podcasts, which is why I’m hoping to (slowly) add automatic transcripts to all my podcasts. They won’t be great reading—which is why in the long term this technology needs to get much better in order to support people who are unable to listen at all—but they will help feed search engines and make it easier to find that moment when I first had Matt Fraction’s “Hawkeye” recommended to me.


  1. “Goodnight everybody for listening to be uncomfortable I’ve been your Hostess and smell but really I Batman.” ↩


Linked by Dan Moren

Xcising Xcode

When running the slew of updates yesterday, a new version of Xcode popped up on my MacBook Air. Which, naturally, reminded me I had Xcode installed on it, despite the fact that I’ve never really used it other than for a few one-off tasks. Xcode takes up a lot of space and—really, more annoyingly, means I either have to install updates or be constantly plagued by that notification badge on the Mac App Store. So I decided to uninstall it.

Now, to uninstall something you can generally just delete the app from the Applications folder, and you’re all set. Xcode, though, is a little more complicated. After looking around a bit, I found MacPaw’s tutorial for rooting out all the development-related files that hide in various places. Naturally, the company would prefer you use its CleanMyMac app for the job, and while that might be more efficient, it graciously also provides the instructions for removing everything manually. I ran through them, and they appear to work just fine—plus they free up a decent amount of disk space.

One note: Among the last instructions in that guide is a suggestion to delete the contents of ~/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backup. That happens to be where backups of your iOS devices made in iTunes are stored, which you may not wish to delete—so just keep that in mind. (I didn’t delete them, and I don’t think it will cause any problems.)


By Jason Snell

Six Colors sponsorships open

Just a reminder that if you have a product or service you’d like to promote to a really good crop of readers, Six Colors Sponsorships are available, and at the moment, very available.

Email me at jsnell@sixcolors.com if you have any questions or interest.


Linked by Jason Snell

‘The final 2017 emoji list’

Jeremy Burge at Emojipedia has the details of the final list of new emojis for 2017:

Changes from past drafts include the flags of England, Scotland, and Wales. These join previously approved candidates such as vomit face, orange heart, and T-Rex…. Unicode continues to work on functionality and documentation relating to Emoji 5.0 and Unicode 10.02; however the emoji list is now frozen.

There are some great ones in there, including a curling stone, baseball cap, zombie, bearded face, and socks! Also, while the specification is recommending that flags for England, Scotland and Wales be supported, any national sub-division flag could theoretically be supported, including U.S. states. Send someone a Maryland flag emoji and you might get a vomiting face in return.

Anyway, here’s the complete list of 2017 entries. I’d expect to see most of them supported by the time iOS 11 and the next major macOS release arrive this fall.


Podcast

Upgrade #134: Steal Its Bezel Thunder

Upgrade

This week on Upgrade, the revival of the iPad name leads us to speculate about a new phase in Apple’s product approach, and what it tells us about the future of the iPhone. We also discuss where the iPad Pro might go next, and what Apple’s acquisition of power-user app Workflow means about the company’s approach to iOS for professionals.


By Dan Moren

Apple software updates galore: iOS 10.3, macOS 10.12.4, more

Apple’s released one of its deluge of updates today, with new versions of operating systems for Macs and iOS devices, as well as revisions across the board to the iWork suite of apps. Here’s a quick rundown of what’s out there and what’s new.

macOS 10.12.4: The One with Night Shift

The Mac gets the Night Shift feature introduced in iOS 9.3. Basically, at night it’ll shift to the “warmer” (read: yellower) end of the light spectrum, to go easier on the eyes. As on iOS, you’ll be able to set a schedule. Other additions include cricket scores and stats in Siri, dictation support for Shanghainese, and bug fixes for PDF rendering and annotation problems.

iOS 10.3: The One With Find My AirPods

If you have Apple’s wireless earbuds, you can now use your phone to play a sound on them when you inevitably misplace them, via the Find My iPhone app. It’ll also save the last known location of your iOS device when the AirPods were connected. Also in iOS 10.3 comes the ability for developers to respond to customer reviews, a new settings view for your Apple ID, the ability to report calendar invites as junk, and—trumpets—Apple’s new APFS file system. (So be extra sure to make a backup before you update this time around.)

watchOS 3.2: The One With Theater Mode

Now you won’t annoy those around you while you’re wearing your Apple Watch in the movie theater: enable Theater Mode and the display won’t light up when you move your wrist, though you’ll still get haptic feedback, and you can turn it on by pressing the Digital Crown or tapping the screen. The update also adds SiriKit support for watchOS.

tvOS 10.2: The One With Better…Scrolling?

I guess you can swipe through longer lists more effectively. (MacRumors says a longer swipe on the Siri remote “activates the new scrolling mode.”) Most of the other improvements are under the hood.

Pages 6.1/3.1 for macOS/iOS: The One With Bookmarks

Now you can create bookmarks in Pages, which let you link between different parts of your document. There’s also LaTeX and MathML notation, RTF import/export, and TouchID security for documents. (Obviously you’ll need a new MacBook Pro on the Mac side.)

Numbers 4.1/3.1 for macOS/iOS: The One With Stock Functions

If you’re looking for a way to track your investments, apparently Numbers is now an option. You can now add current or historical stock info to spreadsheets and there’s a new My Stocks template. When collaborating, you can now work with sheets, and on iOS there’s a new action menu and a new editing interface. Plus it gets the same Touch ID security features as Pages.

Keynote 7.1/3.1 for macOS/iOS: The One With Interactive Presentation Posting

Hey, you can now post interactive presentations on Medium, WordPress, and other websites. Schmancy. Plus, presenter notes on a black background on the Mac and an improved rehearsal view on iOS, Keynote 1.0 import support, and the aforementioned Touch ID security features.

Apple TV Remote 1.1 for iOS: The One With iPad Support

Yep, you can now use Apple’s revamped TV Remote app—which came out in August of last year—on your iPad. There’s also a revamped Now Playing interface, with lyrics and playlists for music, plus chapters, audio tracks, and captions for movies and TV shows.

[Dan Moren is a tech writer, novelist, podcaster, and the Official Dan of Six Colors. You can email him at dan@sixcolors.com or find him on Twitter at @dmoren.]


Jason Snell for Tom's Guide

25 Coolest Things Apple’s Workflow App Can Do ↦

The Workflow app for iOS was always widely recognized as one of the platform’s most powerful apps. And now, it’s a part of the platform, after Apple bought Workflow and made the app available for free. Because of that, there’s never been a better time to give it a try. Here are 25 of the coolest things you can do with Workflow.

Continue reading on Tom's Guide ↦


Dan Moren for Macworld

Apple’s acquisition of Workflow could bring automation to iOS ↦

After this week’s news that Apple had acquired iOS power user app Workflow, you’d be excused for being a bit confused about the future of automation on Apple’s platform. After all, it was just last November that Sal Soghoian, Apple’s product manager of automation technologies, left the company when his position was eliminated.

And yet, Apple snapped up Workflow, an app that many had compared to Apple’s own Automator, which was introduced way back in 2005’s Mac OS X Tiger. So what gives? Is there still some life in automation and scripting features on Apple’s platforms, or is this merely a case of Apple acquiring useful talent?

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


Linked by Jason Snell

‘Apple II Forever’

Peter Hartlaub of the San Francisco Chronicle did some of his usual excellent diving through the photo archives and came up with a bunch of gems from the 1984 launch of the Apple IIc:

The April 24, 1984, press and exhibitor gathering was late to start and later to finish. Apple executives sat on the kind of metal folding chairs that one would find at a recreation center singles dance. Steve Jobs — hair feathered gloriously — hadn’t quite settled into his permanent turtleneck-and-jeans uniform yet, choosing a bow tie, suspenders and Velcro-strapped Nike high-tops.

But even at this early public launch of the Apple IIc computer, the marketing panache that would infuse countless future Apple events could be seen.

This is definitely Steve deep in his bow tie phase.


Jason Snell for Macworld

The $329 iPad could be just the thing for the education market ↦

This winter has been packed with speculation about the future directions of the iPad product line, but nobody guessed that 2017’s first iPad announcement would be what we saw on Tuesday: An unexpected return of the original iPad line and the discontinuation of the iPad Air. The move was hardly exciting in terms of technology, but it could prove to be a smart and strategic one for the iPad as a whole.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


Linked by Dan Moren

Instagram rolls out two-factor authentication for all

Speaking of two-factor authentication, you should really enable it on every service that offers it. And good news! Instagram has rolled out two-factor authentication to all users. You’ll need to add a phone number to your account if you haven’t already done so, and then, whenever you log in, you’ll receive a text to that number with a code, which you’ll have to enter. To set up the option in the Instagram app, tap the icon for your profile in the toolbar, then the gear icon in the top right. You’ll see an entry for Two-Factor Authentication right below Posts You’ve Liked; select that and follow the onscreen directions.


Podcast

The Rebound 129: Look at This GUI

The Rebound

In this week’s episode, the calm before the storm of minor Apple announcements, we talk Apple’s augmented reality plans, the possible futures of the Mac Pro and Mac mini (or lack thereof), Samsung’s new virtual assistant, Apple’s diversity problems, and Dan and Lex’s favorite new game. Also, planning begins on our musical episode.


Linked by Dan Moren

Apple says iCloud and Apple IDs not compromised, despite ransom attempt

There was a story going around the other day that a group of hackers calling itself “Turkish Crime Family” were holding some 500 million Apple email and iCloud accounts ransom unless Apple paid it a bunch of money.

Which sure sounds scary, but in a statement provided to Fortune, Apple says this is untrue:

“There have not been any breaches in any of Apple’s systems including iCloud and Apple ID,” the spokesperson said. “The alleged list of email addresses and passwords appears to have been obtained from previously compromised third-party services.”

Even if it’s not true, it’s still a reminder to make sure your Apple ID and iCloud accounts are as secure as possible, especially by making sure that you’ve enabled two-factor authentication.1


  1. And, because it’s confusing, let’s remind you that Apple’s newer two-factor authentication is not the same as its older two-step verification. Check the link for more.  ↩


Linked by Jason Snell

Apple acquires Workflow

Matthew Panzarino at TechCrunch:

Apple has finalized a deal to acquire Workflow today — a tool that lets you hook together apps and functions within apps in strings of commands to automate tasks. We’ve been tracking this one for a while but were able to confirm just now that the ink on the deal is drying as we speak.

What. WHAT. WHAT?!

Okay, so Workflow is the definitive tool for automation and power-user stuff on iOS. It is spectacularly good. Look at the MacStories Workflow archive for a million examples of how.

So what does this mean for Apple? I’m going to be positive and say that this is Apple acknowledging that this sort of functionality should be core to iOS, and that Workflow (or a successor) could be vastly more powerful if it’s given more power and control than any third-party app ever could. You could, in fact, argue that Workflow is the iOS app that Apple should’ve built itself, but didn’t.

(The pessimist view would be that Apple could acquire the talent of Workflow, let the app wither and disappear, and never really address the need for better automation on iOS.)

I am going to choose to be the optimist here and take this as a sign that Apple’s getting serious about iOS power features.

Federico Viticci shares his thoughts about the acquisition here.


Linked by Dan Moren

iTunes 12.6 enables rent once, watch anywhere

Amongst all its other announcements yesterday, Apple snuck in iTunes 12.6, which most notably enables the ability to rent a movie from the iTunes Store and watch it on any device.1 It does, however, require iOS 10.3 or tvOS 10.2, so those are probably coming sooner rather than later. Kirk McElhearn also notes that iTunes 12.6 restores the ability to open playlists in separate windows from earlier versions. Anybody catch any other changes?


  1. I do rent movies on my Apple TV fairly often, but I don’t really jump between devices, which explains why I was rather surprised to find that this wasn’t already a thing. ↩


By Dan Moren

Go Play: Typeshift

I love word games. Delight in them. I may even go so far as to say I adore them. But I confess that I’ve never been the best at anagrams—it just seems to require a totally different part of my brain from, say, crossword puzzles. But TypeShift from Zach Gage has got me hooked nonetheless, thanks to a few very clever conceits. Gage is an experienced game developer, whose previous titles include popular games like SpellTower, Ridiculous Fishing, and Really Bad Chess.

typeshift

TypeShift is, at heart, an anagram game. Each puzzle gives you columns of letters that you can slide up and down—think of it like one of those horizontal combination locks, but with letters instead of numbers. Your goal is to form words from those letters. The good news is that it doesn’t really require rearranging letters, as in a true anagram.

Within each puzzle, your aim is to use all the letters in the puzzle in at least one word. There are generally a handful of core words that you can use to complete this puzzle, as well as a bunch of extra words that you can discover.1 (Even better, when you’ve solved the puzzle, you can tap on any word to get a definition of the word, right from Merriam-Webster, whose dictionary Typeshift licenses. You can then favorite those words just in case you want to look them up later.)

I really appreciate TypeShift’s Daily Puzzle, which—as with the New York Times crossword puzzle—gets harder as the week goes on, but my heart truly belongs to the game’s Clue Puzzles, which combine TypeShift’s normal play with crossword puzzle mechanics. You’re given a list of clues and must find words among the letters that correspond to those clues. It’s definitely a more Dan-friendly sort of puzzle.

TypeShift’s simple, bold graphics focus on easy readability—you can pick from a few different color schemes—and it makes delightful use of haptics on the iPhone 7 series, giving you little rewarding taps when you find a word, or “clicking” as you spin through the letter options. One thing I found myself wishing as I played was that I could go back and finish Daily Puzzles I’d missed, but if that’s possible, I haven’t found out how yet.

The game is itself free and includes a few packs of puzzles as well as the daily puzzle, but you can buy additional puzzle packs for a dollar or two. If you enjoy words and puzzles, it’s well worth your time.


  1. I seem to usually end up finding a ton of extra words rather than the core words, so I’m definitely no speed demon.  ↩

[Dan Moren is a tech writer, novelist, podcaster, and the Official Dan of Six Colors. You can email him at dan@sixcolors.com or find him on Twitter at @dmoren.]


Linked by Dan Moren

Apple sneaks in new Watch bands

Amongst the hubbub of today’s announcements, one thing went unmentioned: new Apple Watch bands! (Well, new colors, anyway.) You can now grab a $49 Sport Band in Camellia, Pebble, or Azure; $49 Woven Nylon bands in Orange (and blue), Berry, Red (and yellow/gray), and, uh “Pollen”1 (blue/yellow/green). Also, the Nike+ Sport bands in Anthracite/Black, Pure Platinum/White, and Black/Volt, are now available as $49 options—previously, you could only get them by buying the Nike+ edition of the Watch.


  1. Seriously, guys? I’m allergic to pollen. Come on.  ↩