Weeknote: 12 August 2023

Summer happened. It was on Thursday. Spring before. Autumn now.

Published stuff

Over at Stuff, I wrote What is X, why does Elon Musk want an everything app, and why did Twitter have to die? Technically, it’s an X explainer. (An X-plainer?) But, erm, I may have added snark.

This week’s column is: Packing tech for your summer holiday? Hell-o-day, more like. Which has me reminisce about watching the top third of an in-flight movie while surrounded by smoke, and then moving to modern-day trips, where there’s less smoke, more screens, and – surprisingly – just as much ‘Tetris’ packing.

For TapSmart, I wrote about why Apple should take OS parity seriously and macOS Sonoma features I want on iPhone and iPad.

Other stuff

Despite having had two days off this week, I’m knackered. Primarily because the days off involved packing in summer holiday things for the youngling, in the final days before our Merlin pass runs out. On Thursday, we were at a weirdly empty Chessington. Today: London. All good. But I’m now apparently Gets Tired Too Easily years old, and also Knee Randomly Goes Sproing On London Bridges years old. Tsk.

One major plus this week was that our Chessington trip aligned precisely with the south of England’s ‘summer’. It lasted one day and was glorious. Given that we’d planned the trip weeks in advance, I felt grateful. But I do imagine I’m going to head into autumn feeling robbed about this year’s non-summer. I’ll take it over the horrors of fires and such in the south of Europe, but as someone who has trouble with lack of light, I’m already feeling the evenings drawing in. And there have been so few bright ones this year.

August 12, 2023. Read more in: Weeknotes

Comments Off on Weeknote: 12 August 2023

Weeknote: 5 August 2023

Not-summer in the UK continues. Hoping at some point the rain and cold might stop. In the meantime, send canoes. And fleeces.

Published stuff

Given that it’s the summer holidays and I have a nine-year-old, I’ve been battling Screen Time. So I wrote about it for Stuff: Screen Time = scream time. Parents need more human device tracking.

The latest issue of the print magazine is out, which features my round-up of last-minute holiday apps, a primer on animation with a phone, features on creative kit for illustrators and musicians (which includes my review of the oddball CMPSR joystick thing for making noise), and a fond/snarky look back at the very first Chromecast.

Over at TapSmart, I – with some irony – dig into barbecue apps, and I pit Apple Maps against Google Maps. Issue 281 of our sister mag, Swipe for iPhone, is also out, if you’d like to support our little indie venture.

Upcoming stuff

Next week, I’ll be fully immersed in the murky waters of beta operating systems, as I start work on my annual overviews for what’s coming to iPhone, iPad and Mac. Expect grumbles as I discover Stage Manager still doesn’t do quite what I’d like it to.

Other stuff

A stark reminder, today, about the nature of social media. I read through my Mastodon feed, which was pleasant, chatted to friends on Messenger, and caught up with Threads. Then I opened X/Twitter, and the first DM was from someone who told me to “get f——ed” for some article I’d written. I’ve no idea which one. I suspect it was probably this one.

I do miss what Twitter was, but I don’t care for what it’s become. Musk is making it easier and easier to cut ties with the service, even though many friends still post, and quite a lot of work came my way through it. I don’t have anywhere near the same level of outreach elsewhere (my Threads follower count is tiny). But X feels so angry all the time, and I don’t want to have to deal with that anymore.

August 5, 2023. Read more in: Weeknotes

Comments Off on Weeknote: 5 August 2023

Weeknote: 30 July 2023

Ack. Nearly forgot this week. Anyway: onwards!

Published stuff

Over at Stuff, I wrote X marks the rot. Don’t buy into Elon Musk’s lifelong crusade. My point: an everything app is the last thing we need from a company that can’t be trusted. My implementation: initially dipping into a terrifying future where your life depends on giving Elon Musk a daily X. Yikes.

For TapSmart, I added Device 6 to my classic apps list. Nothing else has for me ever matched this app’s combination of writing, design, style, smarts and full-on touchscreen integration (including some very meta elements). I also wrote about some of the new meaningful sharing features coming to iOS 17.

Upcoming stuff

I spent much of last week buried in a big feature for Stuff that digs into top hardware and services from the magazine’s lifetime. It’s always interesting to revisit tech from a decade or two ago that was revolutionary at the time, but that would be meaningless today.

I particularly fondly remember our Toppy (Topfield PVR). This let us pause TV (handy, since our then puppy always wanted to go for a wee when a show started) and record two channels while watching a third. But even better: it was customisable. You could replace the entire UI and do pretty much whatever you wanted with the device. I miss that kind of flexibility; but I don’t miss TV that requires any kind of planning. On-demand suits me. It is the way.

Other stuff

July in the UK is taking it out of me. I’ve elsewhere described our weather this year as follows:

  • January: January
  • February: February
  • March: March
  • April: March
  • May: March
  • June: July, but imported from Spain
  • July: April

It looks like August is going to be just as grim as July. Cool. Grey. Dull. Obviously, that’s better than the nightmare happening in Southern Europe, but combined with all the horrifying graphs about climate change I’ve seen online, it’s getting me down. I don’t feel like myself right now, and I’m struggling to figure out how to right that.

I did at least get to the second day of Digitiser’s 30th anniversary, in an attempt to cheer myself up a bit. Digitiser was a daily games magazine on Teletext in the UK. To say it had irreverent humour is putting it mildly. The games industry hated it. The traditional publishing industry hated it even more. Readers loved it. The mag was relentlessly fun and creative.

The 30th was a live event, drawing more from what Digitiser has morphed into as a YouTube channel than its games history, although a follow-up to the original Digitiser The Show is now in the works.

Anyway, it was all very silly, with everyone having an awful lot of fun on stage. A little ray of sunshine in a country that has too little of that right now.

July 30, 2023. Read more in: Weeknotes

Comments Off on Weeknote: 30 July 2023

Weeknote: 22 July 2023

Squally April showers here today. Which is mildly annoying, given that it’s July. Oh well.

Published stuff

My column for Stuff this week is: VanMoof’s demise shows how reliant we are on here-today, gone-tomorrow apps. This is something I’ve been thinking about a lot of late, given how many devices and toys can now only be used with an app. And as I wrote last week, it’s not like most apps stick around.

Having recently updated my Mastodon guide and listed 8 alternatives when you want to give Twitter the bird, I turned my hands to Zuckerberg’s latest baby with Get started with Instagram Threads. All you need to know to switch from Twitter.

I’m still finding Threads a bit weird. But I think when it gets a reverse chronological feed, I’ll spend more time there and even less on Twitter. Mastodon remains my social network of choice, however.

I also updated my best upcoming Lego sets feature for Stuff, while making pining noises at all the great stuff coming out.

That’s it for new writing from me this week, but if you’re in the mood for supporting indie journalism, the latest issue of Swipe is out, featuring my overviews of chatbot apps for iPhone, a piece on Procreate, a look at how Apple tackles mental health, and a quick dip into why I want Apple mobile devices to support multiple users.

Upcoming stuff/other stuff

I’m writing a monster of a feature for Stuff, digging into dozens of pieces of tech kit released during the lifespan of the magazine – which goes all the way back to 1996.

The main thing this confirmed to me, having done a lot of research: every single timespan you care to explore over the past 30 or so years has amazing things that happened in tech. For those people heavily immersed in the industry, it might seem like we’re seeing nothing more than endless iteration. That’s not the case.

Stunning shifts happen on a very regular basis. If you don’t feel that yourself, take a step back, get off the treadmill for a while, and see what happens when you return with fresh eyes.

July 22, 2023. Read more in: Weeknotes

Comments Off on Weeknote: 22 July 2023

Weeknote: 15 July 2023

Crazy winds here in the UK right now, where a scorching June somehow gave way to April. There’s a 50:50 chance my house will be blown into the North Sea. So I’d best get on with it.

Published stuff

A busy week over at Stuff. First up, I took a look back at the App Store’s launch 15 years ago – and 15 notable launch day apps. This then took me down a rabbit-hole of trying to find a list of every launch-day iPhone app, which doesn’t exist. I chatted with PCalc creator James Thomson and a cunning plan was formed to crowdsource the list. At the time of writing, there are almost 350 items on the spreadsheet. Nice.

In similar territory, I then mulled: Most of the original 500 iPhone apps and games have gone – and that’s good news. Mostly. The ‘mostly’ there is doing heavy lifting. This is really a piece about the inherent tension that has long existed in the App Store between evolution and its own history, with the former winning out. It was stark when making my list to discover how few of the original App Store entries remain – something John Voorhees also dug into over at MacStories.

With Elon Musk continuing to set fire to Twitter, I also took the opportunity to suggest eight Twitter alternatives and spruce up my Mastodon explainer.

Finally, Blaze Entertainment announced two new pocket-sized devices, which I just had to write about. The Super Pocket has proved controversial, though. Some folks are angry the people behind Evercade have moved away from a physical carts only policy.

I don’t see it that way. Clearly, Capcom and Taito won’t allow cart versions of these games. But Blaze saw an opportunity to create inexpensive handhelds they could add value to by way of Evercade compatibility. And it’s not like Blaze isn’t churning out new Evercade carts anyway – most of which comprise collections of rare and interesting stuff. So I think the Super Pocket is a win-win.

Anyway, TapSmart published some pieces by me this week as well: a round-up of text-based ‘AI’ apps, a column on Apple thinking iOS 17 has the solutions to help you relax, a gripe about the lack of multi-user mobile devices from Apple, and a piece on Procreate, the latest entry in my classic apps series. Phew!

Other stuff

It’s been an odd week of things rattling around my brain. In part, this has been down to post-birthday season. (Our entire family’s birthdays are squashed together into a three-week space.) And also because it’s now very grey and dull here on Normal Island. Lots of time for thinking.


The horrors of Prime Day got me thinking about advertising, given that Amazon still wants me to buy an electric toothbrush every time I visit. Because I bought an electric toothbrush a few years ago. Electric toothbrush ads follow me around the internet. They won’t leave me alone.

It never used to be this way. When I read mags in the 1980s, they were packed full of ads, but they felt relevant and you’d often refer back to them. Now, websites bombard you with ads in an obnoxious manner, driven in part by the immediate, ephemeral nature of the medium. But dumb tracking systems creepily bug you about goods ads think you want.

I this week figured out what this is: web ads are the uncanny valley of personalised advertising. You can have that one for free.


I last week wrote about Threads, but this week one thing has changed with the social network: Meta is clamping down heavily on usage in the EU, attempting to turn it off.

I get that Meta blocking access in the EU frustrates people. But the anti-EU takes from primarily US-based people are astonishing. The EU prioritises guardrails and safety. Yes, that can sometimes lower agility. But it does mean eg food quality and safety tend to be higher. And it means tech companies have less opportunity to ride roughshod over its population.


The other tech concern causing a row is ChatGPT, with discussions trending towards extremes. In many people’s eyes, it’s either magic or evil. For me, it’s neither. ChatGPT remains fancy autocomplete.

What it kicks out is generic boilerplate mush that’s full of errors. Which means it’s useless, right? Well, no. Throw a short outline at it and ChatGPT can sometimes output a workable draft a skilled editor can quickly bash into shape.

I don’t often use ChatGPT myself. It doesn’t work for consumer media outlets (I’ve done A/B tests* with articles I’ve already filed.) It can sometimes be useful, though, for rewording a specific paragraph that sounds clunky, if you’re tight for time and having a brain fart.

But I do work with a company that is very keen in its use in workflow. And for corporate copy, it can help you quickly blaze through ideas. That’s not a bad thing.

* One of the most stark of these was for the Wired Space Invaders origin feature. Once that was live, I threw the original interview with Tomohiro Nishikado into ChatGPT’s maw and prompted the service to write a piece.

The result was eye-wateringly awful. It was too short, despite me providing a word count. The copy was dull. The quotes were messed up. It included made up ‘facts’. It would have taken me longer to bash it into shape than write from scratch. But if I were a PR putting together some boilerplate emails…

July 15, 2023. Read more in: Weeknotes

Comments Off on Weeknote: 15 July 2023

« older postsnewer posts »