Entries in ipad (6)

Thursday
May262011

Writing Kit: Write & Research in One App

Text editors have enjoyed a renaissance on the iPad. Especially with a bluetooth keyboard, the iPad is an ideal tool for bloggers and other writers on the go.

There is no shortage of terrific iPad text editors from which to chose. Many early text editors focused on creating a stripped down writing environment with simple formatting tools similar to the distraction free writing environments that have become so popular on the Mac. As iPad text editors have evolved, many have expanded to add support for services and tools like Dropbox and TextExpander to further ease the writing and publishing process.

London-based developer Anh Do stepped into this crowded field with Writing Kit adding a whole new dimension to the genre -- integrated research tools.

It's a Text Editor. . .

First and foremost, Writing Kit (iTunes link) is an excellent text editor with deep Markdown integration. Markdown, which was developed by John Gruber and Aaron Swartz,

is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).

(via Daring Fireball: Markdown) Writing Kit is not the first text editor to add Markdown support, but its solution is particularly elegant. Like Elements, Writing Kit includes a preview mode that displays your source markdown text as fully-formatted HTML. But Writing Kit also adds a row to the top of the Standard iPad keyboard that adds nine types of common markdown syntax, including syntax for headings, bold, italics, links, images, code, block quotes, bulleted lists and numbered lists, completely obviating the need to drill down two keyboard levels to find, for instance, the hash tag needed to create a heading.

Writing Kit also demonstrates that there is still room for innovation in the crowded text editor field. Tap with one finger in the left margin to move the cursor one character to the left. Tap with one finger in the right margin and the cursor moves to the right one character. But use two fingers in the left or right margin and the cursor jumps a whole word to the left or right, respectively. This is a fantastic way to ease navigation without further cluttering up the UI.

Also interesting is the ability to adjust the type size by pinching and zooming. This is a clever feature, but it's a little hard to control precisely and the animation is a little laggy, both of which take away from the experience.

Although Writing Kit does support TextExpander, its main shortcoming is its lack of Dropbox support, which has become a feature that text editor geeks expect. The good news is that the developer's website says Dropbox support is coming soon. Until then, Writing Kit supports export through iTunes file sharing or email and uploading to a number of blogging services such as Tumblr and Posterous as well as Evernote.

With Research Tools Built In

What really sets Writing Kit apart is its integration of research tools. There are two primary paths into the research tools. The first is via a Quick Research button in the navigation bar, which triggers a popover search field. Search on a term and Writing Kit provides a definition, Wikipedia entry and search results from the Duckduckgo search service. Highlight some text, tap it and Writing Kit gives you the option to copy it into your document complete with a link and attribution (see the quote from Daring Fireball above for an example).

The second research tool is a full in-app browser. As you research, you can queue up links for later review, add items to Instapaper or Read It Later, open previously-saved Instapaper items, convert web pages into easy-to-read text using Readability, manage links in popular bookmarking services and share items through a host of services. The brilliance of this approach is that it eliminates one of the most distracting and onerous aspects of writing on an iPad -- the constant switching between apps to consult reference material. With Writing Kit you can do all of your research in the app, accessing links and articles saved elsewhere, and then publish directly to a number of popular services like Tumblr, Twitter and Facebook.

I have experienced a couple of crashes and at one point could not invoke the full browser without first fully quitting the app, but aside from those hiccups, the in-app research experience has been excellent.

Like Peanut Butter & Jelly

Writing Kit's solid markdown support and powerful research tools go together like peanut butter and jelly. I can see this becoming the go-to app for many bloggers and when Dropbox support is implemented, you should be able to combine Writing Kit with Notational Velocity for a great desktop/iPad writing combo. Writing Kit is a terrific 1.0 version that brings a number of innovative features to the party that cannot be found elsewhere. With the promise of DropBox support in the near future, it's a tool that should be in every writer's arsenal.

You can buy Writing Kit for $4.99 on the iTunes App Store here.

Monday
Mar292010

IPhone/iPad SDK 3.2 Goes Gold

The iPhone SDK gold master was released today and is available on the iPhone Development Center site. Although this is a GM release, it remains subject to the developer NDA so you won't be seeing any technical details for a while longer yet. Hopefully with the release of the iPad next weekend, the NDA will be lifted and secs can start to share their tips and tricks publically.

Friday
Feb262010

iPad Stencil Now Available

Design Commission already had a big hit on its hands with its great iPhone stencil.  I bought one several months back and it has been a great way to prototype iPhone apps.  I’ve tried OmniGraffle and other prototyping methods, which I also like, but sometimes nothing can beat sitting down with a cup of coffee, a pencil, some graph paper and my iPhone stencil.  

Now Design Commission has released an intriguing iPad stencil that appears to have the same great build quality of the iPhone stencil.  The scale of the iPad scale is 1 to 1, unlike the iPhone stencil and includes an interaction technique table on the back.  Design Commission even includes a .7mm Zebra Mechanical Pencil and two stickers with the stencil.  The iPad stencil is $17.95 and is available on Design Commission’s web site here.  

Friday
Feb122010

Is the iPad Apple's End Run Around Your TV?

By most accounts, the AppleTV has not been a hit.  I've got one and love it, but for most people it just hasn't struck a chord.  

Probably the AppleTV's biggest problem is its restrictions on video content.  Movies are rarely available day-and-date with DVD releases; TV shows are too expensive to replace cable service for most people; and other than YouTube, internet video is unavailable unless you hack your AppleTV to run Boxee or something similar.  Each of these limitations is largely an artificial construct of "old media" companies that are  designed to perpetuate out-dated distribution models.  Movie rental limits protect the DVD supply chain; TV show pricing protects network and cable distribution as does limiting access to internet video.

If you're Apple, this has got to be frustrating.  the iPod was a runaway success because of its tight integration with content available through iTunes, whether you bought your content on the iTunes Store or ripped material from elsewhere.  With the AppleTV, Apple built in tight integration with iTunes, but the AppleTV was designed to share the same screen that movies and TV programming have used for decades: your TV.

Enter the iPad.  The weak link in the AppleTV universe is the fact that it competes for screen time on your TV with traditional TV service, DVDs, game consoles and more.  The iPad may never compete with a 50" LED TV, but it won't need to do so.  The iPhone OS interface is a known quantity.  Millions of users already use it every day to consume content.  With the iPad's larger screen and portability, watching TV or a movie won't have to take place in the living room.  The iPad will provide such an intimate experience that in many contexts, it will be more convenient and natural to simply consume content on the iPad instead of a TV.  And if it is true that TV networks are considering selling TV shows for $1 and episode, a substantial number of viewers won't even think to turn on their TVs.  

The AppleTV will continue to serve a useful niche as an iTunes client tied to your big screen, but iPad will carve out an entirely different space that will capture screentime from your TV in a way that laptops and other devices have so far been unable to do.

Thursday
Feb042010

iPad UI Conventions

Fraser Speirs has posted a terrific set of iPad UI screenshots on Flickr annotated to highlight the UI conventions of the iPad.  Have a look here.

Wednesday
Feb032010

Beginning Devs: Start With iPhone or iPad?

The iPad opens up a whole new exciting world to developers and because it shares the iPhone OS with the iPhone, those who have been developing for the iPhone should have no problem transitioning to the iPad.  But what about the someone just starting out with the iPhone OS?  It will be interesting to see how things play out, but I suspect those just starting out will be far better served coding for the iPhone before they attempt an app on the iPad.

It all comes down to constraints.  When you are just learning the tools for developing for the iPhone, the constraints of an iPhone app are a big advantage.  Even with those constraints, it is possible to go overboard and allow feature creep to consume your iPhone app as Smashing Magazine pointed out here.   With the iPad, however, the temptation to fill that gorgeous 9.7" screen is quite likely to lead a number of developers to go nuts and throw everything but the kitchen sink into their app.  I expect that successful iPad apps will take a different approach, flattening out the view hierarchy of existing iPhone apps and taking advantage of the added screen real estate to give users more, and more richly presented, information than is possible on the iPhone.

Read more:

Smashing Magazine Article

Removing Features by Lukas Mathis