Federico Viticci’s response to John Gruber’s response to Matt Birchler’s look at Android’s current array of app designs is making the rounds today. You’ve likely read it already. Many folks seem to be coming to the same conclusion: The Mac is a powerhouse computer and doesn’t get in the way of what you’re trying to do, while the iPad is that unicorn computer with brimming potential that falls flat on its face year after year. Put me in the same boat. My 11-inch M1 iPad Pro is by and large my kids’ first computer after being relegated to the sidelines. I’m tired of waiting.
The Practicality of Art in Software●
Thursday, Feb 02, 2023
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It’s Not You, Matter, It’s Me
Thursday, Feb 02, 2023
There is only so much an app designer can do when it comes to licenses. Fonts, symbols, terms… — I speak with little knowledge of the issue, but it’s clear there are times when an app maker is forced left or right with little to no control over the outcome.
Matter for iPhone and iPad is one of the prettiest apps on the planet. The folks making the latest read-it-later tool truly understand what it takes to make a delightful reading app. For the longest time, I was saving everything to Matter to read, simply because it was so beautiful to look at.
There are many design decisions the Matter team have made to make the app so beautiful. One of those outside their control realm was Bookerly, Amazon’s exclusive font which has little to no licensing terms available for use. Great design decisions combined with the world’s best reading font made for a $10/month subscription I joyfully signed up for. Matter was truly the most beautiful reading app ever made.
But the Matter team had to move away from Bookerly in the latest update. Alongside the Bookerly removal came a slew of new fonts —some which are nice enough — and a few new theme packages to better suit a variety of tastes. The new Matter app icon options are equally or more impressive; I especially love the latest purple/plum app icon.
This single font change though has me at a crossroads. I have to turn right or turn left, given the $10/month subscription fee. I’m not ready to fully turn my back on Matter already, but this one font change has me downloading Readwise’s Reader once more and moving all my read-it-later material to Matter’s competitor.
Again, there’s nothing the Matter team can do about this. I get it.
I just wish the app hadn’t come this far with a font they weren’t really allowed to use. And frankly, with a font that became so core to the app’s identity.
For that, I’m (at least currently) exploring other options.
I’m Back in the Plus Club
Monday, Jan 30, 2023

It’s been a few years, but I’ve returned to the Plus Club. I think the last maximum-sized iPhone I used was the iPhone XS Max. It’s sort of one of those “prodigal son” stories — “I was lost, but now I’m found” sort of thing. In the meantime, I used the iPhone 11 Pro, jumped off a cliff with the iPhone 12 mini (though I tested the iPhone 12 Pro), returned to form with the iPhone 13 Pro, and spent the last four or five months on a dynamic island with the iPhone 14 Pro.
Over the course of that time, I continually put a lot of weight on “carry-ability”. I never wanted carrying my iPhone to be a pain.
I also put great emphasis on one-handed use — something about holding a baby and using a phone at the same time, or something like that.
Either I was wrong or times have changed. I think the latter. But I’ve quickly returned to form with the iPhone 14 Pro Max. The bigger keyboard, more information on each page, the better (though surprisingly disappointing) battery life — all are elements I hadn’t realized how much I was missing for a number of years.
There is only one circumstance where I miss the smaller-sized iPhones: photography. It’s a pain in the neck whipping out a Pro Max-sized iPhone from a coat pocket or a bag pocket to snap a quick photo. The Pro Max’s size alone makes it the poorest Pro-level iPhone for photography (I say “Pro-level iPhone” because I spent a year with the iPhone 12 mini and I genuinely missed having that third camera each and every day. All Pro-level iPhones are better for photography than the smallest iPhone.)
On the flip side of this, editing photos on the larger Pro Max display is quite enjoyable. I still tend to do a lot of photo editing on the iPad Pro, as the combination of the Apple Pencil and big, inviting display make for a truly excellent photo-editing experience. Where before I would use the iPhone in a pinch to quickly edit photos for Glass, I now tend to do regular editing on the Pro Max iPhone when I’m bored and looking for something to do.
Of course, the larger iPhone brings back the larger keyboard for my workflow, unlocking new ways to respond to messages and emails throughout the day. For the most part over the last four or five years, my iPhone has only been a notification-delivery mechanism for email. I would never respond to an email on the iPhone. I’d read something, mark it as unread to be addressed later when I was at my Mac, and that was it. The Pro Max’s larger, more comfortable keyboard means I can bang out responses a little quicker and hone in some of my more focused Mac-time to truly productive work rather than email responding. I like this addition to my work life, no doubt.
My last first impression anecdote: battery life on this Pro Max is truly disappointing. For years, I read about stories of folks’ Pro Max iPhones lasting 2 or 3 days between charges. I ran across numerous jealousy-inducing tweets suggesting someone worked 10 hours on their iPhone Pro Max only to have 50% of the battery remaining for the next day.
Either they were all lying or the iPhone 14 Pro Max’s battery is considerably worse than its predecessors. I have put the Pro Max to the test on a weekend day where I’d spend more time on my iPhone away from a charger. Where the equally new iPhone 14 Pro may end the day with 15% or 20% on the battery, the iPhone 14 Pro Max ended the day with 30%. Final minus initial over initial says this is a 50% improvement, this isn’t exactly mind blowing either.
I’m looking forward to the summer when I tend to have less coat pockets for carrying large items to give the iPhone 14 Pro Max a true review. I suspect I’ll still be happy — with an Apple Watch Ultra on my wrist handling notifications, I think the iPhone 14 Pro Max will continue to do what it’s doing right now: typing, photo editing, and nearly all-day work.