Introducing: the Unretrofied "Artifacts" Series

Unretrofied Artifacts Series

Image credit: Galymzhan Abdugalimov

A few months ago, National Geographic's photography blog Proof began publishing a series of posts entitled Artifacts. As they describe it:

“Artifacts is a series about physical items that have meaning to photographers in the field.”

I've come across a lot of "everyday carry" blogs over the years, but most aren't as engaging to me as this series. It's not like these photographers are doing anything fancy – in fact the posts are short and sweet – it's just that they happen to carry some very unique and personal items during their travels, and there are often interesting backstories behind them.

The only quibble I have with the series is that its focus (no pun intended) is a bit narrow. There are plenty of other people than National Geographic's photographers who own interesting things, and I want to give them a chance to shine.

With that said, I'm happy to introduce my own Artifacts series, which will take the same idea and broaden the scope of people involved. I've already invited a few of my friends and favorite creative people to share their collections with me, and I'm excited to share them with you too.

I really wanted to find a different name for my series so as not to step on National Geographic's toes, but I just couldn't find another word I liked as much. "Artifact" just feels so right, and it evokes some awesome Indiana Jones imagery in my head. (It may or may not also remind me of the old days when I played Magic: the Gathering...)

I'm hoping they don't mind too much, since a) I'm a comparative nobody, and b) I think these kinds of posts are supposed to be all in good fun, rather than something to be taken super seriously. That being said, I can always change it if they decide to make a fuss.

Anyway, I plan to start publishing some of these very soon, so stay tuned.

Tonx Gift Card Exchange

Tonx Coffee is a favorite service of mine, and for good reason. Coffee fuels a lot of the writing work I do, and having a fresh bag delivered to my door every two weeks is a godsend. I also appreciate the company as a whole, from the excellent customer service to the branding.

Now they're running an awesome promotion where you can put Starbucks gift card balances towards your Tonx subscription, dollar for dollar. As someone who received a few Starbucks gift cards for Christmas, this is perfect for me — and I assume the same is true for a lot of others too. (More info about the promotion can be found here.)

If you're one of those few people who haven't given Tonx a shot yet, I'd sure appreciate if you signed up using my referral link. Think of it as directly contributing to more writing getting published around here :)

'Photography, Hello'

Craig Mod's Goodbye, Cameras was an excellent piece, but he still had a lot more to say about the ongoing cultural and technological shift away from dedicated cameras — so now we have the even more wonderful Photography, Hello:

“The shift to a smartphone for photography scares me because I love the boxes. Love their purpose. Their simplicity. So dearly love knowing I’ve captured all that detail. Love their constraints and all the potential packed within them. But in the end, for me, photography has never been about a box. The box was always a means.

[...]

“From physical to digital film editing, from physical to digital graphic design, from anything to the iPad, and from physical to digital photography, we’ve heard it before: Craft is lost!

My belief is is much simpler: craft inhabits whatever medium or tool you work with, if you let it.”

You'll want to grab a cup of coffee before reading the whole thing.

Resistance

Seinfeld's not the only one who thinks writers should stop making excuses. Steven Pressfield's book, The War of Art, is a master class in combating "Resistance" — his term for the cumulative forces (both internal and external) that aim to prevent us from doing our work.

Here's what he has to say on the matter (emphasis mine):

“Resistance will tell you anything to keep you from doing your work. It will perjure, fabricate, falsify; seduce, bully, cajole. Resistance is protean. It will assume any form, if that’s what it takes to deceive you. It will reason with you like a lawyer or jam a nine-millimeter in your face like a stickup man. Resistance has no conscience. It will pledge anything to get a deal, then double-cross you as soon as your back is turned. If you take Resistance at its word, you deserve everything you get. Resistance is always lying and always full of shit.

Another good quote:

“There’s a secret that real writers know that wannabe writers don’t, and the secret is this: It’s not the writing part that’s hard. What’s hard is sitting down to write.”

This sort of thing is a common theme I see from creative people who are at the top of their respective fields. Yes, there are days when it's more difficult than usual to produce something great, but none of that takes precedence over sitting down and doing the work.

My advice is to listen to these guys. They certainly didn't get to where they are in life by being lazy.

Jerry Seinfeld on Writer's Block

Seinfeld did a Reddit AMA ("Ask Me Anything") and told a bunch of great stories about the making of Seinfeld and Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (which is one of the best things on the internet right now). All the answers are worth reading through, but the best of the bunch was this one:

Q: “How do you deal with writers block?”

A: “Writer's block is a phony, made up, BS excuse for not doing your work.”

“We're Going to Fix This”

Evernote CEO Phil Libin has responded to Jason Kincaid's complaints:

“I got the wrong sort of birthday present yesterday: a sincerely-written post by Jason Kincaid lamenting a perceived decline in the quality of Evernote software over the past few months. I could quibble with the specifics, but reading Jason’s article was a painful and frustrating experience because, in the big picture, he’s right. We’re going to fix this.”

'Evernote, the Bug-Ridden Elephant'

Jason Kincaid loves Evernote, but the service has been letting him down as of late.

“This strategy is tolerable for a social network or messaging app (Facebook got away with atrociously buggy apps for years). But Evernote is literally aiming to be an extension of your brain, the place to store your most important ideas. Its slogan is “Remember Everything”. Presumably the integrity of its data should be of the utmost importance.”

This is exactly the sort of thing that has encouraged me to start moving my archived articles to Pinboard and my other notes to Simplenote.

MacStories' Must-Have Apps from 2013

Federico Viticci has assembled a series of lists for his favorite apps for iPhone, iPad, and Mac that came out in 2013. Lots of good stuff in there, and he's also put together some interesting stats concerning the series.

'The Builder's High'

As usual, Michael Lopp has perfectly articulated some thoughts that have been rolling around in my head for a while. We should all be considering this question for ourselves:

“Why am I spending so much time consuming other people’s moments?”

'Goodbye, Cameras'

I always enjoy Craig Mod's pieces (a previous example being Subcompact Publishing) and this latest one is no different. In it, he talks about his transition from manual cameras to digital ones, and then to the iPhone — and the iPhone is quickly doing away with the old methods.

“Yet if the advent of digital photography compressed the core processes of the medium, smartphones further squish the full spectrum of photographic storytelling: capture, edit, collate, share, and respond.”

He's totally right. I've been longing to buy a mirrorless camera to replace my decade-old DSLR, but it's getting harder all the time to justify such a purchase.

The camera I carry with me every day – my iPhone 4s – is already capable of handling most of my photography needs, including editing. If I upgrade to a 5s, I'm sure it'll be even more difficult to justify carrying a dedicated camera. And so on, and so on.

Things I've Learned in 2013

Inspired by a post Patrick Rhone did at the end of 2011, and another at the end of 2012, I thought I'd put together a list of things I've learned in 2013. In no particular order...

  • It's almost always better to sleep on an article draft and edit it the next day, rather than publish it immediately.

  • Although it sometimes hurts to cut things from my articles, even my favorite and most "clever" bits, they usually turn out for the better that way. Even if it means starting over from scratch.

  • Time spent on fiddling with my blog's design is better spent on writing.

  • It's best to ignore threads about my work on sites like Hacker News and Reddit. Even a large number of compliments can't stop those few detractors from getting into my head.

  • Don't give much thought to pageviews. A huge surge of traffic to the site can seem absolutely crazy for a few days, but really this sort of attention is fleeting. It's better to have a smaller, truly supportive audience that always has your back, than a large one that will bounce without a second thought.

  • Babies will always, always choose to throw a screaming fit at the most inopportune times. This is a universal constant.

  • Some of the most well-received pieces I've published have been the ones I spent the least amount of time editing or put the least thought into. The internet works in mysterious ways.

  • After I lost my job and we started having to budget ourselves more strictly, my wife and I discovered we can get by on surprisingly little money. Eating at home rather than at restaurants has been the biggest factor for us.

  • I have just about everything I need in life, despite having a lot less income. I have a loving wife, a supportive family, a two-year-old son who makes me laugh, and a roof over my head. Like anyone, there are plenty more things I wish I had (more gadgets, a bigger house, etc), but really my life is quite comfortable at the moment. I consider myself extremely lucky.

  • My wife is even more supportive of my writing endeavors than I previously thought. She's amazing.

  • My parents and other family members don't really have a clue what I do for a living, despite my attempts to explain it.

  • It's often better to try calmly talking my son down from one of his hysterical fits rather than lose my own temper about it.

  • Let kids experiment with their environment a little. It might be annoying when they make messes, or that they want to get a cooking pot out of the cabinet and start hitting it with a spoon, but they're just exploring and learning about the world around them. Don't immediately shut them down all the time or you risk stunting their curiosity and creativity. (Unless they're about to accidentally hurt or kill themselves, obviously.)

  • When interviewing people, it's difficult to find the balance between staying out of the interviewee's way and maintaining a certain flow to the conversation, but so rewarding when that balance is found.

  • I need to journal more often.

  • I need to read more books.

  • Audiobooks are more engaging than I thought they would be. I never really gave them a chance until a roadtrip we took earlier this year, and now I wish I'd done so sooner.

  • Being off the internet for a week wasn't so bad, and I hardly missed anything important. I should do this a few more times a year.

As a writer, my goal is to inspire others to be more creative and do their best work. If my writing has helped or inspired you in any way, please consider supporting this site with a modest donation or by signing up for the $3/month membership subscription.

'Hauners'

Sid O'Neill on the increasingly aggressive nature of the internet:

“I’ve worked out that I couldn’t stop thinking about that almost-fight in the woods because my unconscious mind had drawn a parallel with current events that it took me a while to understand. Each time the outrage machine rumbles to life I hear a much more subtle version of that old childhood cry: "Fight! Fight!"”

I urge you to go read the rest. It's a fantastic piece of writing, with a lesson we should all take to heart.

On Podcast Rambling

Yesterday, Ben Brooks wrote about his issues with most podcasts nowadays, and offers some advice:

“So here’s my proposal for making podcasts better: if you want me to spend 1-2 hours a week listening to your show, then you better spend at least that much time preparing for each show. Reading your RSS/Twitter feeds doesn’t count as preparation.”

This caused a bit of a stir with people. Now, I don't have any particular problems with those kinds of shows (in fact, I happily listen to several of them), but I think Ben has a point.

I've often wondered why certain shows just seem to slap together an outline of what they want to talk about, then meander around those topics at length rather than keeping the show tight and focused. It's not that I think every podcast needs to sound super-produced the way This American Life and 99% Invisible do, but I can think of very few shows that wouldn't benefit from a bit more care and editing.

Don't get me wrong, some shows are actually at their most entertaining while rambling a bit. Bionic and The Prompt are good examples of this, because the hosts are hilarious and have good chemistry. And my god, Merlin Mann has made a career of rambling (no offense to Merlin — I think he's very good at what he does).

But for most other shows, think about it this way: would you want to read an article that had very little thought or editing put into it? One that wastes your time and attention with needless repetition rather than getting to the point? I doubt it.

Why not apply the same thinking to podcasting? Food for thought.

Some Awesome iOS Games

Shawn Blanc tasked Chris Herbert and I with putting together a list of our all-time favorite iOS games for The Sweet Setup. The list has a little something for everyone and I had a lot of fun putting it together, so go check it out!

"A False Choice"

John Dickerson hypothesizes that capturing the moment and living in the moment are not mutually-exclusive ideas:

“It's also true, though, that for some people, talking too much or taking a thousand photographs is the way they experience the world. They are not interested in your Zen moments. A life of frantic self-interruption may be their therapy.”

Although I do appreciate having those "Zen moments" myself from time to time, I never feel like I'm missing out on something just because I've taken out my iPhone to film or photograph it. Capturing these moments allows me to later revisit and relive them all over again, and I think that's just as valuable as the memory itself.

'20 Years a Lawyer'

David Sparks (aka "MacSparky") recounts his time as a lawyer over the last twenty years.

“Eventually, I started thinking about law school. Looking back, I really had no idea what it was like being a lawyer, what kind of law I wanted to practice, or even what types of skills I’d need to be successful at it. I just knew that I loved the debate tournaments more than engineering. I think part of the reason for this big move was my own delusion about what it would be like being a lawyer. Coming from a working class family, the thought of becoming a lawyer felt like something special. In hindsight, none of those delusions were correct.”

Great story.

iOS App Store's Best of 2013

Apple just unveiled their 2013 Best-Of charts, encompassing all the types of media found on the iTunes Store (music, movies, tv shows, apps, books, and podcasts). Each category is interesting enough to check out, but being the nerd I am, I was mainly interested in the App Store results.

Some highlights that particularly caught my attention:

  • VSCO Cam was runner-up for iPhone App of the Year, and deservedly so. It's the only photo editor I need, and so it's the only one I've been using for the last several months.

  • Ridiculous Fishing received iPhone Game of the Year. This was also very well-deserved, because it's easily one of the most entertaining games I've ever played on iOS. Maybe on any console. The music alone is so good, I even bought the soundtrack.

  • Editorial was mentioned as one of the top 'Smart Productivity' apps. Can't hit the nail much harder on the head than that. I know that my own productivity and overall writing workflow have gotten a huge boost from this app.

  • Basil, a recipe manager for iPad developed by Kyle Baxter, made it into the 'Beautiful Cookbooks' section. Nice going, Kyle!

Many congratulations to all the developers – of which there are way more than I could comfortably list here – who got into top lists in their respective categories. It's been another exciting year for iOS apps, and I'm looking forward to what's in store for 2014.

More Ideas Than Time: An Interview with Greg Pierce

Introduction

Greg Pierce is the guy behind Agile Tortoise, the development studio behind one of my favorite iOS apps, Drafts, along with a number of other awesome things like x-callback-url. We chatted about the origin story behind Agile Tortoise and the reasons why Greg decided to make the leap into an independent software development career.

* * *

Tell me a little about yourself. Who are you, where are you from, and what would you say you are most known for?

Well, I answer to the name Greg Pierce. I grew up in Maryland, in the DC suburbs, spent some time in New York (at NYU) and ended up in Texas, where I've lived in the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area for close to 20 years.

In real life, I'm the happily married proud father of three boys (11, 11 & 6). During the day I run Agile Tortoise, an indie software development company I founded in 2006. I'm probably best known for my iOS apps, particularly Drafts, and for spearheading the x-callback-url iOS inter-application communication spec.

I also play guitar. :-)

Dallas, huh? Well I hope Matt Alexander's not getting you involved with his madness or anything. So, how exactly did you get started with software development? What initially sparked that interest?

That's difficult to say. I've said it was accidental in the past, but I don't think that's accurate. Perhaps "unintentional" describes it better.


“I don't really self-identify as a "software developer" — I just like to solve problems and build things. Software is how I do that.”


I grew up with computers. My dad is an IBM mainframe programmer, so I had exposure early on with an Apple II, then the first PCs, etc., and I enjoyed fiddling with them and experimenting with programming. I never pursued that interest, however. My bachelor's degree was in music and I was actively pursuing a career in music and arts. My graduate degree is in Ethnomusicology and Folk studies.

All that time, however, I liked to make things. I co-founded a music- and arts-focused magazine in the early 90s (UNo MAS Magazine), and taught myself desktop publishing to support that project. Then I taught myself HTML to bring it to the web. Then I taught myself web development to automate the growing requirements.

After I finished school and entered the workforce, I ended up at a company that was struggling to enter the computer age (this was in 1995), and they gave me free reign to help — so I started building tools for them to manage their business and taught myself database/business programming along the way…so it all just sort of snowballed from there.

I don't really self-identify as a "software developer" — I just like to solve problems and build things. Software is how I do that.

That's pretty interesting, especially given how well-known you've become in the iOS app development world. What about the music thing, then? Do you consider yourself just as much a musician as you do a developer, or is that more of a side hobby?

Music is definitely a hobby at this point. I love music, and the consensus among those who have heard me play seems to be that I am a reasonably good guitar player, but I was more interested in working around music than being a professional performer. One of those things where the pressure of making it work would take too much of the fun out of it.

While my degree is in music, I was actually in a unique Music Business program at NYU that was focused on working in the industry. I got a lot of cool opportunities through that program and got to spend time working at CBGBs, MTV, Rough Trade Records and some other cool places back in the day.

Okay, I've gotta ask: what'd you do at MTV?

Adam Curry's personal hairdresser.

Seriously, nothing glamorous. I worked a couple of days a week doing mostly clerical work in the programming department. It was fun though. I got to sit in programming meetings, and meet a lot of artists that came in to promote new releases. This was in 1988.

Probably the coolest responsibility I had was preparing the daily Dial MTV Top 10 on the days I was there. If you remember that show, it was a top 10 request show compiled from viewer votes (to a 900 number, of course). I'd get the top 50 most requested songs list from the company that ran the phone lines in the morning, run it through a series of rules to determine the top 10 then take care of typing up the list (on Wang word processors!) and getting it to production.

The mechanics of it all were pretty interesting. The "rules" were around keeping the list from getting dull – i.e. the same video could not hold the #1 spot more than 3 days in a row, video were retired from eligibility after a certain period of time and had to on the current MTV rotation list.

Man, for a second I really had my hopes up about the Adam Curry thing...

So, we've got the MTV job in 1988, and then the programming job in 1995. What happened in the intervening time between that time period and the founding of Agile Tortoise in 2006?

During the '88-'95 period I bounced around a number jobs, until I headed off to grad school in 1992 at the University of North Texas. I completed a Masters from UNT, and went to Western Kentucky University for a year to continue my studies.

Turns out I was far less interested in continuing my studies than I was in getting married to my girlfriend Katie, who I had met while at UNT. So I moved back to Texas and we got married in October of '95.


“Having the kids was one of the main driving forces behind me going independent.”


Right around that time was when I started the job I mentioned early where I really taught myself programming. I was with that company for 10 years as IT manager. I also did consulting and side projects along the way. I put out a Mac shareware game in the late 90s (Turtle Dice), and did a lot of development and consulting in Userland Frontier — Dave Winer's scripting platform.

Most of my focus in the 2000s was on family though. We had twin boys in 2001, and another in 2007. Having the kids was one of the main driving forces behind me going independent. Some struggle with the discipline to work at home with kids, but I love being around.

It seems like going independent is becoming more and more common these days, which I think is awesome. I'm hoping I can somehow cobble together an independent career myself someday, and I love hearing the stories about how others have done it.

What was it like, starting your own business and leaving the corporate world behind? Did it terrify you?

I was lucky enough to able to ease my way into it over several years, but there were times when it was scary. As the primary breadwinner for a growing family, I couldn't afford too many lean times along the way.

When I first started a Agile Tortoise, I was doing client consulting and my previous employer was my anchor client. I went to them and explained that I would love to keep doing development work for them, but that I was not interested in continuing the IT administration end of my position. They had grown enough for it to make sense for them to hire a full time system admin. I helped them find a new person, and they outsourced the development to me on a consulting basis.

The development work I was doing at the time was mostly in Microsoft Dynamics AX and .NET. There was a lot of demand for that skill set, so even if being independent didn't work out I felt confident I'd be able to fall into something else. Luckily it did work out.

As it turns out, I still have one big anchor client. I spend about half my time building STEMscopes – a very cool K-12 education site – and about half on my own apps.

So, long story short, I never put myself in a place where I had zero income — and in the modern job market I would find it much more terrifying to be in a place were all my income relied on a single employer.

How long after Agile Tortoise was founded did you begin working on Drafts? What prompted you to develop the app in the first place?

Drafts shipped in April, 2012. I had probably been working on the app for about 4-6 weeks prior to shipping. Mind you the original 1.0 version was much simpler than the 3.0+ version currently in the App Store.

Drafts actually has a pretty clear-cut origin story. I was tapping away at a short email to my wife one day and realized I should text her the message because I needed a quick response. Sounds straightforward enough, but actually making that context switch on the iPhone was pretty painful. Select the text, copy, quit mail, open messages, address the message, paste. A first-world problem for sure, but still a pain.

I thought about it and realized how many other similar moments I had on my iPhone where I wanted to type something and I wasn't sure where it should go yet...maybe to Twitter, or Facebook, or both. Maybe to email or messages. Maybe it would become a calendar event, or maybe it would be better as a todo.

Drafts' primary goal was to remove those barriers by letting you just open it and type. The natural growth path for the app was just to give you more and better ways to act on that text once you typed it, so that's what I've tried to do as the app has grown.

I would say that that's my primary use for Drafts: a quick scratchpad for all those little ideas I think could turn into something cool later. But in the last year or so, Drafts has definitely evolved into something much more than a simple scratchpad.

Back in January, Federico Viticci wrote an article detailing the ways in which Drafts had suddenly become a sort of 'workflow automation hub' for anything text-related (mainly due to the x-callback-url specification you also developed). What inspired you to take Drafts to the next level like that?

It just seemed like the logical evolution of the app. I had already been working on app integration – x-callback-url was developed working on integration between my dictionary app, Terminology, and Instapaper in early 2011 – so it was already an area I was very much excited about.

I had done the work to integrate with a lot of different services, so why not unlock that and make it something you could utilize easily from other apps?

That's a good point. Are there any major plans beyond the upcoming iOS 7 updates for your apps that you've got in the works? Any particular industries you're thinking about getting into?

It's hard to be specific about the future. I have more ideas than time, and I while I love to discuss those ideas, I've learned it's best not to put too much out there since those ideas often get misinterpreted as promises — sometimes they don't pan out quite the way you hoped, and you disappoint people.

So I guess I'm more prone to keep quiet until I've got something close to ready-to-ship before I say too much.


“I have more ideas than time.”


Short-term though, I've been re-writing Terminology. It's been a popular dictionary-thesaurus app but was getting long in the tooth, and iOS 7 provided a good opportunity to refresh that app and add to it some of the things I've learned working on Drafts.

That's understandable, sometimes it's nice not to know exactly what the future holds. Let's switch gears for a second and talk about your setup and workflow. Where do you do most of your work, and what tools do you use to get it done?

I work at home in a bedroom that we use as an office. My setup is pretty austere. A slightly modified Office Depot desk and an exercise ball chair for furniture. I have a retina MacBook Pro hooked up to a Thunderbolt Display – and a great set of studio monitor speakers. I've tried a few other input devices, but keep coming back to the standard Apple Wireless Keyboard and Magic Mouse.

There are dozens and dozens of apps I rely on for things big and small. I was sitting at my kids’ iMac the other day and was faced with the reality of just how many apps I rely on so deeply on the Mac that I take them for granted. Some of them I’ve used for more than a decade.

I start to think of Launchbar, Default Folder, TextExpander, 1Password and the like as features of the OS sometimes. They are so ingrained in my daily flow that I hit hot keys for them on a Mac that doesn’t have them installed and I think the keyboard is broken for a split second when nothing happens.

More recently, I’m finding Napkin to be a great tool to help with app support and documentation, and I’ve pretty much moved all my vector graphics work to Sketch.

iOS is less stable for me. I have some core apps that stick, but as that is my development platform I’m always looking at new things.

What does a typical day look like for you?

My days start early. I’m the morning person, so I get the kids up, get them fed and off to school most days. I’m generally back home around 8:30 and get straight to work.

I try to divide my days up by projects to some extent, though it doesn’t always work out that way. I will typically spend 30-35 minutes on communication first thing. This includes getting caught up on support email, and getting aware of any critical issues I might need to move up on the priority list.

Then I will spend the rest of the morning on one thing. That might be one of my apps, or a client project.


“It’s a nice perk of working at home to have these mini-dates.”


Most days I eat lunch with my wife. We often eat out. It’s a nice perk of working at home to have these mini-dates.

I often shift gears to a different project in the afternoon, and depending on current priorities try to give myself at least one afternoon a week where I work on experimental projects. This might mean exploring a new technology, testing out some new UI ideas, etc., that may or may not eventually make it into a project.

I will sometimes keep up with support issues and such off hours, but I’m mostly a 9-5 type and don’t work in the evenings or on the weekend.

One final question, and I'll make it a fun one: do you currently have any favorite books/podcasts/albums/whatever that you think others should check out?

That’s a tough one. My music tastes are all over the map. Been digging into John Hartford’s catalog on Rdio lately – probably too superficially bluegrass-y for many, but he’s a really great songwriter with a unique blend of optimism and keen observation of people. Closer in spirit to Randy Newman or John Prine than first listen reveals.

NPR’s Planet Money is currently my favorite podcast, both for its interesting take on every day economics topics and for its shorter format, which fits well with my typical listening opportunities.

Excellent! Thank you for stopping by to chat with me, Greg.


You can find Greg on Twitter at @agiletortoise and on ADN at the same handle.