Henrik Carlsson's Blog

All things me.

Archive by topic, not date

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Joost de Valk wrote a good article the other day called ”Archive SEO: archive by topic, not by date”. (My skepticism for the term SEO will be discussed some other time, however Yoast is good at what he does.) I followed his advice from the article, so now this blog uses tags to order old posts by topic and content, not date.

Eagles on iTunes

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I just found out that The Eagles’s back catalogue is now available in the iTunes Store. Anyone and everyone who loves music should make a visit and purchase.

HTML5 Audio Player

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This is a great run down of how to use the audio element from HTML5 alongside jQuery to create an in-browser audio player. Perfect as an introduction to <audio>.

Perch – A really little CMS

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Recently I’ve been more and more interested in exploring a new CMS besides WordPress. Last week I checked out Perch which really seemed right for a future project.

New domains registered

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I’ve just registered two new domains. Exciting things will likely happen this summer.

Why Instapaper still matters to me

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A few days ago Apple opened its WWDC with a keynote showcasing some of the news in iOS 5OS X Lion and the semi-new service iCloud. One of the features that was announced was Safari Reading List, a special bookmarks folder inside Safari where you can save pages for later reading. This is more or less in direct competition to one of my very favorite iOS apps; Instapaper.

If you by any chance haven’t heard of Instapaper, here is a quick explanation. Instapaper let’s you save articles from the web to a list of things to read later. You can do all your reading for free on instapaper.com, or you can buy (for $5 i think) the iOS app that also downloads the articles you saved so you can read them offline (perfect for people like me who chose the WiFi iPad).

I could go on and on about the greatness of Instapaper because it’s an app and service that is absolutely essential to the way I browse content on the web, but I won’t. There’s however one more thing I have to explain about Instapaper before I get to the point of this post and that is the way you get articles to Instapaper. Thera are a few different ways to do this. The most important ones (according to me, off course) is:

Safari Reader uses more or less the same approach as the second point. Though not a bookmarklet it will be a special menu alternative inside Safari. The first item in my list is not really something that the user of Safari Reading List will miss since it is not necessary because Reading List is inside Safari. You do not interact with another app.

For some people this might replace the functionality of Instapaper. Marco Arment, the creator of the Instapaper software and the owner of Instapaper LLC (and also the host of the brilliant 5by5 podcast Build and Analyze) has commented on it, both in his blog (link to Marco’s blog post), in his podcast (link the the episode ”Circling Birds”) and in some other tech related news. He brings up a lot of valid arguments why Safari Reading List might actually prove to strengthen his business. However I think he misses one very important feature where Instapaper will likely kick Reading Lists ass; The API.

The Simple Instapaper API allows third-party applications to add URLs to Instapaper.

And a lot of third-party applications on iOS and OS X does this. As far as I know every respectable RSS-reader or Twitter-client (again on iOS and OS X) is integrated with Instapaper via the API. Whenever you stumble upon an article in you RSS-feed that is too long to read right now, just send it to Instapaper. When you browse you Twitter-stream and find a link to an article but haven’t got time to follow the link, send it to Instapaper. Especially for twitter this is great for me since I usually check my twitter-feed when I’m on the go or have a few minutes break. It’s enough time to see what’s new, but not to do any quality reading. (Yes, I know that by now I’m starting to sound like an Instapaper commercial.)

So that’s that. Quite a lot of text to make a small point; Instapaper’s API is it’s best feature compared to Safari’s Reading List, for me and probably for a lot of other geeks.

Reeder for Mac is in the App Store

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Apparently the awesome RSS reader Reeder has finally left beta and is now available in the Mac App Store. The iPhone and especially iPad version is great and I’ve been using the Mac beta for a while and I must say I love it. So don’t hesitate, buy!

The blog now has WP Super Cache

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I’ve just enabled WP Super Cache on this blog. This is the first time I use a static cache on a WordPress blog. Hopefully it will speed things up and make it more fail safe.

Silverlight and IE9

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You are running a browser that may not be fully compatible with Microsoft Silverlight.

Well, I’m using the latest version of your browser. Nice work Microsoft.

Microsoft Windows 8

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A few days ago I saw a video showcasing Windows 8. I think it’s a week or two old but to me it was news. (You can watch the video here.)

I must admit I am a bit impressed. It’s been a long time since I used Windows a lot, and an even longer time since it was my one and only operating system. However, this demo really got me curious. I’ll most likely not switch back to Windows, but I see a silver lining for Windows as a platform, even greater that the light in the tunnel that Windows 7 seems to be.