Day One 2 is out 1 , and Im very happy to say that the team there has offered an easy way to keep Slogger working with it. If youre not familiar with either, check out Day One on the App Store and
Day One, future proofing, and workflows | ig.nore.me
After a long time of hinting at it, yesterday a new version of Day One was released bearing the wonderful name Day One 2. There are a couple of major changes to the way this works compared to the old version that influence how I use it.
Brett Terpstra has posted a number of very cool things that can be done with the OS X and iOS application DayOne. They were so compelling that I gave in and bought the suite. They are all solid and attractive applications but it doesnt fit my workflow as well as plain text files. Logging If I am actively working on a problem, I record notes in Simplenote (big surprise). On Windows, I either use ResophNotes or the Simplenote Web site.
I have 370 days documented and remembered. I know what I did in every single one of of these days. I have evolved my writing to include photographs, some entries having more than one of them. I have made use of the great tagging system and I have started giving my days ratings on a scale of 0 to 10. I have never went below a 5 yet and my most occurring rating was a 7.
Disappointment in My Favorite App: The New Day One 2.0 Medium
I thought about the reasons behind these design decisions, so here are just some of my guesses. Day One 2.0 was supposed to take one year of development but spanned two years unexpectedly. For a team of a dozen developers, this is a huge project. As an engineer myself, just seeing you guys pull off a cloud syncing platform, a universal iOS application (iPhone + iPad), a watchOS app, and a Mac application all with full-fledged functionality leaves me no doubt that this is an excellent team equipped with amazing weapons of productivity.
No Man's Sky's day-one patch dramatically builds out and changes the entire game | Polygon
@adamprocter looks like this dayone patch is great news https://t.co/EFtJ0OR3Hr Al Power (alpower) http://twitter.com/alpower/status/762620207609380864
Favorite tweet: [New Blog Post] Happy New Year journaling tips, templates and development updates. https://t.co/2nj3d22A35 #journaling #resolutions Momento (@MomentoApp) January 2, 2016
Notes with New Text File with Tag 4.0 (nvALT, direct paste, new file in Finder and more) - Share your Workflows - Alfred App Community Forum
Notes with New Text File with Tag 4.0OverviewEasily create new tagged plain text files.Synchronize your notes by selecting a Dropbox folder as your working folder.View your notes, including tags, with an application such as nvALT.SetupYou can configure the workflow anytime by typing the keyword s...
Add and remove alfred:ignore from comments - Share your Workflows - Alfred App Community Forum
Started by , January 17, 2013 5 posts in this topic Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Go To Topic Listing Share your Workflows via Pocket
Welcome to the Drafts Action Directory. Drafts is a quick capture notetaking app for iOS. The Action Directory is a resource for iOS application integration and workflows, with ready-to-install
Ben Brooks: Lets take a normal scenario to see how iOS changes things. My wife and I have been looking at houses on Zillow. Typically, for me, that means [in iOS 9] a lot of copy and pasting, or other hijinks to get a satellite view from Apple Maps (I can do it in the app, but I like to see images hopefully taken at different times Im odd like that, but I have reasons). Its even worse when I wanted to drive by these places because I would constantly be switching apps and pasting in addresses. With iOS 10 this changes a lot, now Maps knows what house and address I have been looking at, and it prompts me to use that address in Maps. Now the workflow is: look at house in Zillow, move to Maps, and tap the address suggested. No copying and pasting, it just is there, and there without Zillow being updated for iOS 10. It was also crazy that the fastest way to get directions to the next event on your calendar, was by tapping the location field in Calendar, not from within Maps completely counter intuitive. Under iOS 10, this again changes, now Maps knows that the location is on the calendar, is your next event, and puts the address one tap away inside of Maps where it should have been the entire time. Theres a lot of little things like this, because for once iOS knows what the other hand is doing and its about time. This is one of the biggest reasons why I say that iOS 10 is going to be a tipping point because now iOS has tangible usability benefits over macOS. Limited still, yes, but significantly better in many ways also. I hadn't noticed that (yet) in iOS 10, and of course the next Mac OSX update (to become MacOS) brings some more cross-platform integration (such as the clipboard, and Apple Watch unlock). But iOS is definitely getting things Mac OS isn't.
Every year there's one or two iOS apps that really elevate the platform to a new level for me. In the early days it was Tweetbot and iThoughts. Then it was Evernote and Editorial, and Workflow. More recently, scanning applications like Scanner Pro or Scanbot have been tremendous new tools.
Automating iOS: How Pythonista Changed My Workflow MacStories
A couple of months ago, I decided to start learning Python. I say start because, as a hobby to fit in between my personal schedule and work for the site, learning the language is still very much a work in progress. I hope Ill get to an acceptable level of knowledge someday. Coming from AppleScript,
iOS Tip: Export PDFs from Print Preview with 3D Touch
Printing to PDF with 3D Touch. Note: this tip was first shared with Club MacStories members over a month ago in issue 16 of MacStories Weekly. We are sharing it today as a one-off sample. Subscribe now and don't miss out on more iOS tips and workflows. A hidden option of iOS' Print feature I've []
Automating iOS: A Comprehensive Guide to URL Schemes and Drafts Actions MacStories
I started teaching myself how to build and run URL actions with Drafts in early 2013, when I decided to attempt to satisfy Federico Viticcis Challenge to chain more iOS apps together than he had. I spent a few days feverishly searching for information on URL schemes, learning how to build actions and run them