The hobby tier is a great stepping stone from the free tier to their new standard tier and well priced as well.
Might get my head blown off for this but I’m glad to see Heroku are scaling back on their free tier. They are a business after all.
I can understand people’s grievance with the limits on the free tier if they have side projects but is $7 per month really too much to pay?
Heroku’s decision to curb the free tier and introduce a hobby tier is a great move. Am I in the minority here?
That was one helluva season finale to the The Walking Dead.
Switch to Pocket from Instapaper hasn’t been that great. I can see me switching back to Instapaper and Pinboard pretty soon.
Managing Your Time Online with Automation and Filters
Left unchecked, you could easily waste away your time online. Posting, bookmarking, pinning, reading, uploading, downloading, torrenting and streaming. We've entered into an era of the Internet where there's growing demand for you to be connected to anything and everything. If it's not managed properly you could easily get sucked into an almost endless zombie state of clicking, scrolling and swiping. It's something that I've grown more aware of over the years, but with kids in the house, you suddenly become more aware of how much time you spend being connected. I don't want my kids to remember their parents as "those two with their heads creaking into their phones".
With this in mind, I've started being a little bit more selective of how I manage my time being connected. This doesn't necessarily mean that I only class the time I'm on the Internet, this can include any form contact with my laptop and smartphone. Cutting back on the this time is the key, but how do we do this?
In the last couple of weeks I've made a few changes to the apps I'm using and how I use them, and I've found that there's two key places where you can improve severing that attachment to technology. Automation and filtering.
Automation
Automation is the ability to take a number of manual steps and make them run on their own without any human intervention. Sounds a bit daunting to start with, but there are in fact a number of great services that can make detaching from technology easier.
I've used IFTTT for the last couple of years to automate a few things between different services I use. I wouldn't call myself a power user, but it's easy to set up recipes means that you can schedule all manner of action between the different channels you might use.
I've only just started using Zapier in the last couple of weeks. IFTTT is great but I've heard good reviews about Zapier as well. My first impressions of it are good, and while they don't cover all the same channels that IFTTT does, they do have a vast catalog of services that you can hook into.
Using tools like this can handle the mundane tasks for you, like backing up your photographs to Dropbox or builing lists on Twitter for an event you're attending. Each step might only take a few seconds to do, but given that you'll probably end up repeating these steps time and time again, it's worth looking at tools like IFTTT and Zapier to handle them for you.
Filtering
Filtering is where we want to pick out the signals from the noise. What's the important stuff? It's something I haven't used much in the past, but I've finding it to be more and more useful to limit my time online.
Perhaps the first place you might have came across filtering is on a number of Twitter clients. Tweetbot and Echofon allow you to mute keywords in your stream. This comes in handy when you don't want to see tweets about a particular topic. I recently muted keywords for the Apple Watch event a couple of weeks ago and recently also blocked tweets from the SXSW event. Both topics weren not in my interests and so to stop my timeline being polluted with links to these I muted them in Echofon.
The last place I've seen filtering avaialble but haven't used yet is in the RSS reader application, Feedbin. For each of the RSS feeds you have, Feedbin gives you the option to mute a feed. I haven't used this yet but knowing this feature is here means that I'm abit more open to subscribing to other RSS feeds. I can mute feeds that are perhaps covering a specific topic over a number of days or weeks and if it's something I'm not interested in, I can mute for that period of time.
This is just a couple of ways in which I manage the daily onslaught of information. I would be interested to hear of other suggestions that you use to manage and reduce your time being connected to the digital world.
Drew Houston ...
... and his drive to keep Dropbox being a successful product.
Excellent interview with Dropbox's founder. I've been a happy Dropbox user for years. I see it's single biggest benefit has being platform independent. You can run Dropbox on Windows, OS X and Linux. If and when I decide to switch from OS X, it's good to know that I can take everything with me.
Cycling in Amsterdam
Lots of cities could learn a thing or two when it comes to figuring out how to get the best of both worlds for drivers and cyclists.
Being Boring With Technology Choices
The nice thing about boringness (so constrained) is that the capabilities of these things are well understood. But more importantly, their failure modes are well understood.
— Choose Boring Technology by Dan McKinley
I'm always keeping an eye on the future for the next "best thing" in programming, but to be honest I'm finding it hard to justify picking up a new language on the basis that it might take off. Rails is seen as old hat now but it's also tried and tested and perfectly suitable for building web applications and services. Yeah it's not on the edge anymore but then I know what to do when something goes wrong.