Horatio
Recovering Madden addict 17 years
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2012
- Messages
- 3,631
- Reaction Score
- 14,702
Strictly for stealing art references bro. Im a part time Illustrator. Lol.lol living the high life Horatio.
Strictly for stealing art references bro. Im a part time Illustrator. Lol.lol living the high life Horatio.
What do you people like for weather apps? I have the “Weather” app that came with my iPhone and it is too basic and lacking in many ways, and I have the Weather Channel app that is better and more detailed but still not great. I like Weather Underground’s website but when I tried their app it was clumsy and slow and much less useful than their website. So I am looking for better options.
Answer my text, dammit!Top left Brahz.
The best
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Your unread emails just sent about 75 gallons of cortisol through my body.
Weather underground was good back in the day but they got bought by the weather Channel a few years ago and offers literally the same insight as weather.com. I’ll go in with everyone else and say dark sky. I’m a bit of a weather nerd and can’t stand the sensationalism of most websites. 50 MILLION PEOPLE IN PATH OF SNOWSTORM is weather.com’s way of saying. “Snowy weather from Philadelphia to Boston”What do you people like for weather apps? I have the “Weather” app that came with my iPhone and it is too basic and lacking in many ways, and I have the Weather Channel app that is better and more detailed but still not great. I like Weather Underground’s website but when I tried their app it was clumsy and slow and much less useful than their website. So I am looking for better options.
Wolfram alpha. Welcome.My daughters homework is 4 digit x 2 digit numbers these days. When they do them in a normal fashion I can look and see if it’s right. When they do it the dumb common core way I check it with the calculator.
Your unread emails just sent about 75 gallons of cortisol through my body.
I have a hard time anytime mine reach double digits. But people use email differently.
damn I thought my 18,000 messages was bad.
I have to look at this app. When I commit to wwalking my dawg into the Preserve across the street it is a minimum 60 minute endeavor. I have been caught out there a number of times in the rain using WTNH radar images. Not fun for either of us.
Years on this board and I never realized there was another Westchester guy on here. But yeah, I use Waze but Google Maps is more consistentI agree.
In Westchester, I have better luck with Google Maps or Apple Maps.
Strictly for stealing art references bro. Im a part time Illustrator. Lol.
Works great in my trucks console. When I plug my phone into the console via USB, the trucks console says "loading", and Walla it's ready for verbal commands, Google Maps, make a phone call for me, order a pizza, gives me the answer if I ask it what is the square root 2 or 2 divided by zero.lolBought a 2016 Mazda and Android Auto only works (spottily) if you hack the system. It's the most infuriating thing ever. Your post made me check to see if they made it backwards compatible yet (rumors were they might). And it looks like late this year they will!
Huge downside is it cost $500 to retrofit. WTF. I can see Apple Carplay, as it requires more hardware, but AA only needs software to work.
I want it integrated to my car so bad I can't even tell you, so I might pay up. Still pisses me off. I might try to hack it when it's out.
What do you people like for weather apps? I have the “Weather” app that came with my iPhone and it is too basic and lacking in many ways, and I have the Weather Channel app that is better and more detailed but still not great. I like Weather Underground’s website but when I tried their app it was clumsy and slow and much less useful than their website. So I am looking for better options.
For the car (CarPlay), I mainly use Overcast (podcasts), Audible (books), and Apple Music. I alternate between Apple Maps (no traffic) and Waze (navigating around traffic). It's useful that Apple Maps gives the next turn/haptic feedback on your watch as you drive.
On my phone, my go-tos are probably:
Definitely some others that I can't remember at the moment, but those are some that just make things I would do anyway a bit easier. A chunk are iOS only because I've been pretty bought into the ecosystem for a while now.
- Things 3 (productivity)
- Spark (email)
- Nuzzel (news aggregation)
- Google News
- News Explorer (RSS)
- Forecast Bar (I prefer this to Carrot, which is the typical recommendation for an Apple Watch)
- Habitfy (habit stuff)
- Tweetbot
- Apollo (Reddit client)
- Fantastical (calendar)
- Notability (love this with the pencil and handwriting recognition)
- Stocard (digitize all your membership cards/store cards so you don't have a janitor's keychain/Costanza wallet)
- AnyList (groceries)
Your unread emails just sent about 75 gallons of cortisol through my body.
I'm a huge Spark fan, too - once they added the desktop client I was all-in. I've always found that inbox zero just makes my life more manageable, and it's super easy and stress free with a quick swipe. I used Airmail for a while, but their search was basically non-functional. Not sure if that's improved, but I need a useful search in an email client.We have very similar tastes.
I love Spark - I moved most of my office to iPad Pros last year and Readdle software really made most of it possible. We use Spark, PDF Expert, Documents and Scanner Pro - just a remarkable set of software. I’ve talked to them often about feature requests, bugs, etc. Really nice people.
I use Fantastical on the iPad Pro, but I’m using Calendars 5 on the phone right now. That’s another Readdle program. Is it as good as Fantastical? Not really - the month view is a little wonky, but it works better for me than Fantastical.
For notes, I use the stock Notes program which is actually pretty darned good. I also use Drafts because the watch app is so convenient. My handwriting was just too challenging for Notability.
I stopped using Tweetbot when Twitter ruined their API. I do use AnyList - the recipe import feature is genius - but my preference for lists is something called MinimaList. It’s dead-simple.
I'm a huge Spark fan, too - once they added the desktop client I was all-in. I've always found that inbox zero just makes my life more manageable, and it's super easy and stress free with a quick swipe. I used Airmail for a while, but their search was basically non-functional. Not sure if that's improved, but I need a useful search in an email client.
Fantastical is definitely looking long-in-the-tooth these days, and I think a big update is coming soon (probably explains the deep discounting I've seen lately). My main use for it is still its original use case - natural language input right on my menu bar. But it's definitely not worth the price for MacOS anymore, especially with natural language available on the stock app (and many others) these days. I'm always messing around with different calendar apps.
Not sure how recently you've tried Notability, but I've really been surprised with the handwriting recognition lately. My handwriting is utter trash - such garbage that I've tried every "paperlike" screen protector under the sun to try to get some resistance (they're all awful) - and it's really been good about getting most of my indecipherable nonsense accurate.
At this point the reason I stick with Tweetbot is that I love being able to sync my feed location across devices and I really hate ads. And the new update (I think they're up to five) provides some really nice themes (with like a 99 cent donation). I wouldn't pay for it again given the API issues but since I've already got it I end up using it.
I'll definitely check out MinimaList - hadn't ever heard of it. AnyList has long been my favorite app - just so solid. I always like supporting independent developers who are really responsive and care about their product (the guy from Carrot being a great example). This post just reminds me how much I've spent at the app store. Good lord.
Tons of good stuff right there. I can't believe I missed 1Password, too. Something like LastPass is functional, but 1Password is just next level. The best feature of iOS 12, to me, is the password autofill option for third parties.This is how I justify spending money on apps....I remember a time when I had to plunk a $400 copy of Office on everyone’s desk. With that background, the fact that I’ve probably paid for 30 weather apps seems like a rounding error. Plus, I would rather pay for an app that I love than endure a free app that I don’t. And I don’t want to see an ad in an app....ever.
I’m sure iNotability has gotten a lot better, but my handwriting is so bad. So, so bad.
I’ve set up my work flow so that I rarely ever have to take a pen or even the Apple Pencil in my hand. I don’t even sign contracts or proposals anymore - just stamp ‘em in PDF Expert and send them back out in Spark.
I have two iPad Pros. At meetings, the larger one is in split screen with an app called Agenda on one side and usually Excel on the other side. Agenda is what it sounds like - it’s the meeting agenda. The smaller iPad Pro is usually open in Notes, but if what we’re doing is more complex and I have to import anything into my meeting notes, I’ll use Drafts. Drafts is a Swiss-Army knife of a text editor. It’s almost overkill.
Inbox zero is critical. No idea how these people exist staring at red badges.
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I need an IV of ativan just looking at that home screen.
I need an IV of ativan just looking at that home screen.
In a case like this (even looking at your MapMyRun), is there a value at all to having notifications turned on for those?
