Ain't Life Grand

Launchpad Control

Launchpad Control as it’s aptly named is a free app for 10.7 that lets you customise Lion’s new Launchpad feature for presenting applications.
Want to hind any system apps or tidy away ones you don’t use often, this is for you.

Update: I’ve recently just found this article as I was searching for a solution to my rearranging Launchpad icons. If you paste to below command into Terminal it will fully clear Launchpad; now you can start from a clean slate by dragging & dropping the apps you need onto the Launchpad icon to re-add them.

sqlite3 ~/Library/Application\ Support/Dock/*.db “DELETE from apps; \
DELETE from groups WHERE title<>”; DELETE from items WHERE rowid>2;” \
&& killall Dock

I like the Launchpad feature, but in order to make it fully useful, this is a must.

At Ease: Launchpad’s grandfather

A great incite on part of the inspiration/evolution of one of Lion’s many new features, Launchpad.

Today I see aspects of At Ease in Launchpad, one of Mac OS X Lion’s marquee features. The tabs and document support are gone, as well as a UI that commandeers the Finder, but the single-click access to favorite apps is in place.

A review of a reviewer’s review – the iPad smart cover

If you’ve lived under a rock for roughly the past 4 years, you may not know who Marco Arment is; to brief you, he was lead developer at the ever-growing micro-social blogging platform Tumblr until 2010, and now uses his entrepreneurial flare as the sole creator & developer of the essential service, Instapaper. To sum it up, Marco has well earned his rock star status of the geek world1. He also fills his time as an hobbyist tech writer and co-hosts the amazing podcast, Build & Analyse.

It was in one of Marco’s latest pieces “The Smart Cover, a few months in” (which I recommend you read first) that got me thinking about what comments I agree or disagree with.

I’ve broken Marcos article down into the various sections on what we both think about the iPad Smart Cover.

Continue Reading →

  1. Yes, I do refer to something like this Intel advert that makes me chuckle

OS X Lion

The worlds most advance operating system now available from the Mac App Store for £20.99

Google+ A successful route to failure?

I’ve been playing around with Google+ and I like it; it’s clean, fresh and I’m not spammed with events from people I don’t know, or pestered with how many farms you’ve grown. I feel I could enjoy my time there, but is that mainly because it’s quiet?

I really like the idea of circles1, you no longer have to bore your friends with work chat or spam you colleagues with how much you can’t wait until the weekend; it’s easy to select which circle or circles see your post when you publish it. The simple design is easy on the eye and great to use and I’ve also read that hangouts2 work very well.

Despite these unique features and surprisingly nice design, my underlying thought is that Google+ will not succeed.

A major concern for some people may be that Google’s foundations are as an advertising company. In comparison to Facebook 3, who’s goal was social media, this was far from Google’s first intentions. Google hasn’t come up with a great idea for a site, it has come up with a great resource to get information, purely in defence from what information Facebook has on every individual and how it utilises it.

However, I don’t think these privacy issues would stop mass adoption by the average joe, what I do believe would Dave Winer explains perfectly; “As with most social phenomena, social-network success tends to happen more organically and unpredictably than anyone is able to artificially create by throwing money at it.”

Most people will not use multiple social networks and especially two [Google & Facebook] that are very similar. Your friend or family member log on to interact with other friends or family; they look at their photos, see how they are getting on or send them a message. The main reason people are locked in, because Facebook is the social network for the masses 4 and no one wants to spend their time on logging on to a blank wall with no friends on the service, no matter how good the features are or how beautiful the design is.

  1. Circles are a way of grouping the people you know into friends, family, work colleges and any custom categories you wish to create. Any post you make you can specify what circle see’s it.
  2. Hangouts are chat rooms or group video chats between you and your circles that you can jump in or out of at any time
  3. Regardless of what information it now uses from your profile to target you with advertising
  4. Regardless of having a Facebook account, I prefer Twitter but I do believe it is a completely different type of social network. I love the simplicity, i love the 140 characters and I love the interaction I get with some very inspiring people