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Espresso 1.1 ‘dropped’, made aware to me by Chris. I was a longtime user of Coda, and tried Espresso months ago, loving it until I tried it’s FTP abilities. It opened a ton of connections to the server (10+) for one file transfer, which was the dealbreaker. Now Macrabbit says they’ve fixed the FTP problems, and I’m back in the game.
Now if only it did Actionscript as well as it does everything else…
Developer Color Picker is a super handy additional color picker for nerds who want to get hex color information. If this doesn’t mean anything to you, skip this post.
Inspected Gadget: MultiClock for iPhone
“Do you enjoy staring at clocks all day? Here’s a pretty one. The MultiClock iPhone app has a few different time visualizations. Not only does this look cool on a docked iPhone or iPod Touch, but I can picture it looking pretty snazzy in fullscreen mode on a docked Apple iPad. Time keeps on ticking, ticking, ticking…”
Scrup is a super handy utility for making public recent screengrabs. It’s self-hosted and only requires a bit of php and some server space. I use it to show people visual ideas for sites or photos in a quick way, without having to mess around with Transmit or lots of right-click-copy type of actions.
Maybe Versions can follow suit?
This post’s title links to some tips on the XFL format, Text Layout framework, code snippets panel, and more.
Looks like a good upgrade. Different than previous versions- give it a go.
Here’s an unsolicited opinion piece I’m going to sling your way. So far, three things have stuck out to me after a day of using Spotify (and about 10 years of iTunes).
Any Song? Really?
Magically, Spotify does seem to conjure up entire albums, tracks, artist info, and you can instantly listen to them in their entirety. iTunes has a store, that’s fairly confusing to get around inside of, and gives you samples taken from arbitrary points in any given song. A great feature of Spotify is the ability to share tracks via URIs. If you want to recommend a track to a friend, for instance, you can right-click, copy the Spotify URI, and when they click it, it’ll fire up that track in their Spotify. No more zipping, posting, Dropboxing, FileShuttling, or whatever means of sharing local files did the trick.
Context
iTunes seems to maintain a clearer ‘current state.’ A user can hit command+L and will be shown the last-arranged or chosen tracklist (the player context) and the currently playing track within that context.
Spotify has search results, which don’t play sequentially. It also has a dynamic ‘play queue’, which functions more or less like the iTunes DJ list. Probably just something to get used to. However, my current queue has a list of tracks filling the screen, with a status message at the top indicating ‘0 tracks queued’. Hmmm.
AirTunes
At home I quite often stream music from iTunes to my stereo system. Spotify can’t do that by itself.
Equalizer
Switching between laptop, two monitors at home and work with different speaker setups, and using AirTunes at home, I keep a few EQ settings in iTunes for bass and treble control, mostly. Command-Option-2 brings up the window in a jiffy. Spotify doesn’t seem to have any EQing at all, so my spoiled fine tunings are simply not there.
Conclusion
Off the bat I feel like I’ll still keep a library of local music files and access it via iTunes. iTunes still holds the cards with the iPhone: syncing, backups and apps. Spotify will see heavy rotation when I want to find new music or socialize playlists. It just has a seemingly infinite amount of music, and after paying the premium fee, the quality is plenty high enough for me. It’s also kind of nerdily rewarding to mess around with new software, so at the very least it’ll definitely function as that ‘new toy’ for a while.
Edit
I added some extra thoughts shortly after posting this one. Check them out here.
As a quick addendum to the unsolicited opinion piece I just posted, I remembered one other thing. Well, a few things, but all related to:
Spotify’s Interface
Not a huge fan of having the current-playing information in the bottom of the window. Really reminds me of Windows start bar. People read top-down, left-right (at least in the West, no offense to the right-to-lefters), so this positioning isn’t ideal for orienting something that should be anchor information.
The icon is hideous. Cmon guys, millions in seed money and you spend 5 minutes on something everyone sees all day long?
Also not a fan of using what seems to be 10+ font weights, styles, and sizes in various purposes. It makes for a pretty hacky feel to the whole thing.
I’d love some sorting options on the People list/sidebar.
And finally, I just have a very vague sense of where I am within the software. Perhaps a drilldown or breadcrumb system, I’m not sure. I feel like I can get lost easily, and solving that with a back button doesn’t really give me a sense of context.
We have more processing power, affordable tools, and combined intelligence right this very minute than at any point in the history of design. We are using it to build shit. It’s time to aim higher.
Yesterday had a lot of attention on Paper, a new iPad app for drawing and arting. I tried it out, and it certainly is nice. Can’t guarantee I’ll continue to use it once the attention has died down (which did happen for me with Penultimate). Here’s a behind the scenes article about it from the Verge.
VSCO cam is a really nice camera/processing app for iphone. I believe it came out today; it’s $0.99 and as far as I’ve reconnoitered is totally worth it.