the official unauthorized blog for oneword.com

or, the unofficial authorized blog for oneword.comâ„¢

  • Review: iA Writer for iPad.

    • 14 Mar 2011
    • 2 Responses
    •  views
    • Apps Reviews dropbox em dash iA Writer iPad iPhone writing
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost

    Writericon175x175
    I love my iPad for many reasons—its capacity for creative writing is not one of them.  

    That all changed the second I fired up this $0.99 pearl. Of course, writing is much more pleasant on my laptop, however, iA Writer at least makes it so I can write on my iPad in a way that doesn't make me want to throw it across the room every five seconds.

    Its Focus Mode and Dropbox Sync features (more on these later) alone are worth the tiny price tag. However, what really sells it is the top row on the keyboard.

    Iawriter

    Attn. Apple: did you not see this at prettyfuckingobvious.com when you were designing the iPad? Take note.

    Nothing derails my iWriting experience worse than having to stop, hold my finger down, scroll over to the iNevitable typos and fix them. Now I can just click the arrow keys and move the cursor—like we have been since the advent of the word processor. You can also scroll by word (which makes a cool sound). The Obvious Bar™ also includes a hyphen button, a semicolon button, a quote button, an apostrophe button, and a brilliant "smart parentheses" button.

    And we're all looking forward to the Em Dash button in the next version (hint-hint).

    It should have taken you about a minute to read this far. How do I know this? Well, screw page numbers—in the digital realm it's all about time—and the creators of iA Writer apparently got the memo, thus incorporating the ever-handy (we're at 1:14 now) Reading Time feature in addition to Word Count (255).

     

    I could go on about Focus Mode, which turns off auto-correct and highlights just the last three lines typed. Or the beautifully designed monospaced typeface (suck it, Courier). Or the fact that it syncs right up with Dropbox—and therefore every other device I own. But I promised myself I wouldn't make this more than 1:43 long so you can hear all about it here.

    (344 words up.)

     

    • Tweet
  • En Droid.

    • 23 Jan 2011
    • 6 Responses
    •  views
    • @glyphboard Android Apple Glyphboard The Chicago Manual of Style dashes em dash en dash grammar iPad iPhone iPod Touch punctuation screw the AP Stylebook sms texting
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost

    Today my friend told me that when he used an em dash (—) in a text message on his iPhone, the message wouldn't go through—at all—on his friend's Android phone. This isn't surprising as the search giant still employs double-hyphens on its own interior pages. Then I noted that we were probably the only people on earth texting with em dashes.

    Even so, there are those times when I really want to text someone something to the exact effect of:

    I'm only available Tues–Thurs. I've already blocked myself out in iCal™

    Note that I'm using an en dash to indicate "through" here and the ever handy trademark symbol. Two things that aren't available on my iPhone or iPad.

    Or are they?

    I came upon this little treasure called Glyphboard:
    (note: the link only works with iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch.)

    Glyphs
    Now I can be punctually annoying from anywhere.

    And other people can put hearts on everything and be just plain annoying.

    So there you have it. Just think twice before you drop a skull-and-crossbones symbol to one of your Android buddies, lest their phone explode.

    • Tweet
  • Can't Touch This. Well, Not Figuratively.

    • 24 Jan 2010
    • 0 Responses
    •  views
    • Apple Branding Motorola Tablet iPhone iRadio technology
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost
    Media_httpblogoneword_rkcpf
    In 2005 I was working on a commercial for Motorola. Being Motorola and all, they had prototypes of phones that had not yet been released, one of which was a rectangular phone with only one button and a touchscreen—sound familiar? I thought it was great, and the client said that it was already popular in Japan, but according to their test marketing, the US wasn't falling for a phone with no buttons. The product in question was a phone that was both an MP3 player, and would stream music via the internet—sound familiar? The iPod already had a monopoly on MP3 players and it hurt to know that all this work I was doing was futile. When they decided on The B-52's song "Roam" (absurd even without the negative cell phone implications), the death knell was deafening. So, obviously, that didn't fly, nor did their touch-phone beat Apple to the punch. And now, I, and the millions, have an iPhone and freaking love it. I can't imagine life without it—I can update this blog, control my home or studio computer from anywhere in the world, record a song demo, read a book, shoot and edit a video—maybe I'll use it to make a call someday. With Apple's ultra-hyped tablet being officially announced this coming Wednesday, I can already see the future of mobile communications, and it has a big Apple logo on it—and I'm glad of it. People who complain about Apple don't know Apple. They do things right, and right is worth paying for. And they've outdone themselves year after year. It's not so much the technology, really, it's the heart that Apple puts into everything they do, from the simple and beautiful packaging to the products themselves to the advertising to their retail stores to the software that runs on their products—it's a shining example of a brand done right. As with the iPhone I'm sure there have been people walking around Japan with similar touch tablets for some time now—more power to them. They will make valuable collector's items one day.
    • Tweet
  • About

    Purveyor of fine words.
    Creative Director at Artifact Studios.
    Creator of oneword.com.

    41284 Views
  • Archive

    • 2012 (2)
      • February (2)
    • 2011 (33)
      • October (1)
      • June (1)
      • May (1)
      • April (2)
      • March (12)
      • February (4)
      • January (12)
    • 2010 (35)
      • December (12)
      • October (1)
      • March (2)
      • February (10)
      • January (10)
    • 2009 (6)
      • December (3)
      • September (1)
      • June (1)
      • May (1)

    Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    Twitter