πŸ—» James Van Dyne

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  • β›°Tanzawa
  • Jul 21, 2019
    by James

    A Father and son are waiting for a haircut. Dad steps out for a smoke. Son goes for the complimentary coffee and has put 4 packets of sugar and a few creamers in it. He’s going to bouncing off the walls.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Checkin to Komeda's Coffee (γ‚³γƒ‘γƒ€ηˆη²εΊ—)

    Komeda's Coffee (γ‚³γƒ‘γƒ€ηˆη²εΊ—) 35.412583 139.504671
    Jul 20, 2019
    by James
    in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
    Maru Cheesecake type thing and coffee after some exploring in Totsuka.
    πŸ”—permalink
  • Jul 20, 2019
    by James

    Checked in at Komeda's Coffee (γ‚³γƒ‘γƒ€ηˆη²εΊ—). Maru Cheesecake type thing and coffee after some exploring in Totsuka. β˜•οΈ

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Giving Apple Maps a Try Again

    Jul 20, 2019
    by James

    I quit Google search and Chrome a number of years ago and switched to DuckDuckGo and Firefox for privacy concerns. Google maps on the other hand has managed to keep its place in my life. It's pretty good about knowing where things are and makes it easy to find a nearby cup of coffee when I'm in an unfamilair place.

    After a poor experience with Apple Maps when it first launched, I've mostly ignored it. But I’ve decided to switch to Apple maps and see how it has improved. As far as the app itself, it's a joy to use. It’s more fluid and feels like an iOS app should.

    My main concern is navigation. The last time I used it in the US the routing wasn't great. But I'm in Japan now. I've heard that Apple's routing is better in Japan than Google. Google's routing has a tendecy to route you down super small, maybe not legal to drive on roads.

    Google’s default navigation in Japan can pronounce Japanese better, while Siri seems to be pronouncing Japanese like English by default, which makes place names nearly uncomprehenciable.

    The jury’s still out if the promotion to my dock willI stick, but so far I'm enjoying the Apple experience a lot more.

    ![](/uploads/2019/6c5cd0f284.jpg)

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Jul 19, 2019
    by James

    Writing in pure English, without mixing in Japanese like I do when I speak, is surprisingly difficult.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Waiting for trains 🚞

    Jul 18, 2019
    by James

    Ever since Leo started being obsessed with trains, we always walk along the tracks on the way home from the station. Today not a single train passed and as we got close to the guard rails he started mimicking the noise they make. So we waited with a couple of other kids for the next train to go by. It’s the simple things that make life fun.

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Checkin to Starbucks

    Starbucks 35.688891 139.702477
    Jul 17, 2019
    by James
    in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan
    πŸ”—permalink
  • Jul 17, 2019
    by James

    Checked in at Starbucks (Starbucks Coffee)

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Jul 17, 2019
    by James

    When I take the train to Tokyo in the morning there’s this guy who is around my age, but dresses like an old man. Keeping with the theme, he uses a _Walkman_ to listen to music on the train. He’s my hero for today. πŸ™ŒπŸ»

    πŸ”—permalink
  • Designed for the Mac

    Jul 16, 2019
    by James

    As the Mac has become more popular the cohesiveness of the platform has declined. This is partly because the apps were simpler i.e. we didn't expect a single developer to support their app across of variety of devices and that the developers who chose to develop on the Mac had a similar goal: make software for the rest of us.

    Over that same period our workflows have changed tremendously. Everything is connected to the internet and users expect to be able to access their data instantly, no matter the device they're using. No longer is a native Mac app enough. At a minimum you also need a mobile, as well as the services to authenticate and sync data between the apps.

    In practice what this means is that rather than developing native apps and web-services to power them, the majority of applications have moved to being web apps entirely or to electron-style, web-app masquerading as a native apps.

    The result is a computing experience that feels patched together, rather than designed. Each app has its own design language and way of doing things that is different from each other.

    As a user of the Mac, there isn't much I can do to reverse the trend. But what I can do is to find and support smaller, simpler applications. Find and support applications that are designed *for* the Mac, not just *on* the Mac.

    πŸ”—permalink
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Web developer living in Japan.