Cody Fink

1547 posts on MacStories since January 2010

Former MacStories contributor.

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Social and App Tabs to Play Big Role in Firefox 5

Mozilla has stepped up to the plate with their launch of Firefox 4, which has now garnered well over 59 million downloads as of its launch on March 22nd. With App Tabs, much improved performance, and some incredible features like Panorama baked right in, I’ve adopted Firefox 4 as my browser of choice for the time being over Chrome and Safari. While I leave my love of WebKit behind (perhaps only temporarily), ConceivablyTech dug into the Firefox UX planning pages to give us a glimpse of what’s next for Firefox 5.

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AViiQ Announces Smart Case for iPad 2

AViiQ has already announced a spectacular 2011 lineup, and today AViiQ is introducing the Smart Case for the iPad 2. Available in in Black, Silver, Red, and in colors to match your polyurethane Smart Covers, AViiQ’s Smart Case for the iPad 2 is designed to work with the hot iPad accessory you already own. The shell protects the back of your iPad 2, while giving you access to all of the iPad’s controls without sacrificing wireless connectivity or function. Designed to match and work in conjunction your Smart Cover, the Smart Case rounds out the full bodied protection you desire. You can pre-order AViiQ’s Smart Case for your iPad 2 right now at AViiQ.com for $49.99. You can catch the press release after the break.

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12 of the Year’s Best Ideas in Interface Design

12 of the Year’s Best Ideas in Interface Design

Flipboard UX Design

Flipboard UX Design

User interfaces, when done well, are the unsung hero of product design. They’re the difference between a printer whose buttons you can figure out without even reading the instructions and one you want to throw across the room. Now, with the rise of personal computing, interfaces are more relevant than ever before, providing the crucial link between physical objects and the virtual world.

Fast Company’s Co.Design highlights some of the most spectacular and promising product designs of 2010, showcasing app favorite Flipboard alongside other notable user interfaces of FLUD and concept iPad app MetaMirror. It wouldn’t be a slideshow about good interface if Mozilla’s Seabird concept wasn’t in there, but two particular physical products, John’s Phone (Engadget review) and the Ref, shy away from our obsession with everything digital and return to the fundamental concepts of human communication, whether it be interpersonal or emotional feedback. We may often focus, and at times become overly engrossed in Apple’s product philosophies and culture, but we shouldn’t forget a world of innovation exists beyond Cupertino in numerous, brilliant ways.

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The Spotify Box

Spotify Box: Package Contents

Spotify Box: Package Contents

Occasionally minds more creative than mine combine technologies physical and virtual to create delightful products that make radio nerds like me ooze with excitement. If the fat grin on my face isn’t enough to show you just how much I enjoy this particular concept, then you must clearly be an American (at least we still have Rdio) or perhaps you can’t appreciate the simpler times when wood vinyl FM/AM radios played fuzzy music from our bedroom dressers. The concept – evolved through research and development from Jordi Parra – bonds RFID tags (which look kind of like poker chips) with a Spotify URL that when attached to the radio playback a playlist or radio station over WiFi. While the radio itself stores the information you assign from Spotify over USB, the RFID tags are nothing more than the “on switches” that relate to the stored playlists. These playlists are associated with colors, thus to play a particular sample of songs you’d simply attach a red RFID tag to the radio for example. The beauty of a concept like this is that it maintains the simplicity of a manual radio, while introducing and integrating with modern and intuitive technologies. The world may be going digital, but there’s still something about being able to touch music with your fingers that emotionally makes the analog experience so much more palatable and personal. Parra’s prototype doesn’t have a name, but the Spotify Box as it’s dubbed on Vimeo is a great reminder that good design doesn’t always have to have a touchscreen, or even an LCD display. It’s a return to the basics, and while I understand a student project such as this would take a considerable amount of effort to produce, I do wish Jordi and his team all the best if something like this gets off the ground. If you do start a Kickstarter, you’ve got my support.

Past the break we’ve embedded the concept video, and you can also check out the project in it’s entirety on Zenona. There’s a Flickr group if you want to see the project from draft to inception, but I have to say: having this much access to the workings of the prototype Spotify Box can drive an author to be a little too giddy, don’t you think?

[Zenona via TNW]

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New iPad 2 Ad: We Believe

But when technology gets out of the way, everything becomes more delightful.

What separates Apple from other companies can be summed up in a single quote. Apple isn’t a company that’s competing on specs, nor do they wish to win the gigahertz war. Quite simply, the answer to the tablet computer isn’t the ability to play Flash media or score the highest on a GPU benchmark. Apple understands that it’s how you use a tablet, and not what it is, that makes the iPad a very real Post-PC device. At the iPad 2 announcement, Steve Jobs said:

Technology married with liberal arts, humanities, yields the result that makes our hearts sing.

This video is a representation of just that. You can catch the video after the break.

[via YouTube]

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Saddleback Now Shipping Next Generation iPad 2 Case

Saddleback Leather Co. makes some of the finest leather products from the Southern United States, rugged enough to haul a day’s load across the Mississippi River twice over and chic enough to protect your MacBook from the hipster-mobs of San Francisco. If you don’t know what the hype is about, we’ve previously taken Saddleback’s Leather iPad Case from the great American educational institutions back to the backpack before leaving the spoils on MacStories for all to see. Built pigskin tough and bound with enough rawhide to turn your aluminum slate into a cowboy’s workstation, the successor to the iPad will need its own set of skin for all of you early adopters. Now shipping is the iPad 2 Leather Case, hand made from the same bull-tough materials and kevlar stitching that’s now tapered to the iPad’s every edge. Available in Carbon Black, Chestnut, Coffee Brown, and Tobacco Brown (pictured) to fit your rugged personality, Saddleback’s iPad 2 Case is available for $104.00 online.


10 more useful iPhone tips & tricks

10 more useful iPhone tips & tricks

5. Screen zooming… To enables this gem, go to your Settings app and tap General. Then tap Accessibility and then tap Zoom. Flip the switch to on and then you can three-finger-double-tap your way to screen magnification bliss whenever your heart desires.

We’re supposed to be iOS geniuses here at MacStories, but a few of these tips & tricks I wasn’t aware of. Mainly some of the obscure ones such as the one above I didn’t know about, and the two finger tap to zoom out in Maps is just awesome. John Casasanta over at tap tap tap has put together a really beautiful and well written blog post about becoming a pro at using your iPhone or iPod touch, and I recommend that seasoned pros and beginners (maybe new Verizon iPhone owners) alike stop by and check it out - I’ve tucked this away for quick reference in Yojimbo myself.

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OS X 10.6.7 Introduces OpenType Text Bug (You’re Not Alone)

If you find yourself scratching your head over jumbled text in (commonly) PDF files after the 10.6.7 update, it’s an issue that’s cropped up and found its way on Apple’s Discussion boards according to the folks over at Macworld. The text bug occurs with OpenType Postscript fonts, which aren’t included by default with your new Mac but can be later added with the installation of third party software (Adobe is noted). The problem seems to only occur in apps utilizing OS X’s rendering engine outside of the Preview application, displaying jumbled text that’s impossible to read. Upon printing, you may encounter an “invalid font error” in rare cases. The bug only crops up if you’re using software such as Adobe Reader, and the PDF you’re reading utilizes the aforementioned fonts. By using Preview or opening documents that use a common font such as Helvetica for example, it’s possible you’ll never see the word scramble in action.

[via Macworld]

Image credit Macworld


Oldie but Goodie: Play External Audio Thru Your Mac With LineIn

If you’re one of my crazy Twitter followers, you’re already well aware that I’ve significantly reduced the role of iTunes in my life thanks to Instacast, which has been reviewed by everyone from Shawn Blanc, to Michael Hurley on Macgasm, and myself on MacStories. Though I could talk about Instacast for ages, the problem I had to solve next was figuring out how to get the audio off my iPod touch and into my office speakers. The big issue is that my setup can’t accommodate more than two audio inputs, and while audio over AirPlay is probably possible with AirFoil, I notice a significant battery drain as I stream both audio from the web and broadcast it to my local speakers in the bedroom. I wanted to avoid this in the office since outlets are scarce, so I needed a way to pipe audio from my iPod touch thru my Mac. Enter an old Rogue Amoeba goodie: LineIn. Not only is it free (who doesn’t love free), but it requires nothing more than a button press to set up and pass my iPod touch audio through the audio line in to the audio line out. There isn’t a close button for LineIn, but you can simply press ⌘H to hide the app when you don’t need it.

It’s a great find, and something that might come in handy for at least one of our dear readers down the road. Download it (and check out other Rogue Amoeba freebies) here.