An Alternative to OopsieFocus: Use an Alfred Custom Search

Today Shawn Blanc released OopsieFocus, a script which solves the problem of hitting the OmniFocus quick entry keyboard shortcut only to discover that OmniFocus wasn’t running (and thus, nothing happened).

One alternative if you’re an Alfred user1 is to setup a custom search that allows one to add OmniFocus tasks directly from the Alfred input window. I have mine setup with the keyword “omni”, so when I want to add a task I hit the Alfred key, type “omni Some task goes here” and I’ll have a new task in my inbox with the title of “Some task goes here”.


  1. If you’re not an Alfred user, you should really look into it… 

App Haiku: Elements

App reviews can be found anywhere. But here’s my take: App Haiku.

Today’s haiku is about Elements

Real men use plain text
Sync, markdown, Text Expander
Easy power tools

Buy Elements on the iTunes App Store. Check back again soon for more App Haiku or browse past App Haiku poetry.

Other People Said Interesting Things: June 17th

As I wander the web I find interesting things. I share:

What have you seen lately that’s interesting?

Sharing Button Clutter and a Non-Solution

I think we’ve reached the saturation point for sharing buttons that we’re supposed to embed on our websites.

  • Twitter “Tweet This”
  • Facebook “Like”
  • Facebook “Share”
  • Google “+1″
  • Delicious “Add”
  • Pinboard “Add”
  • StumbleUpon “Submit”

And those are just the big ones.

Enough is Enough

It’s not realistic that every web publisher is going to add a new button each time the new social network de jour enters the fray. It’s similarly absurd to expect that users are going to hunt through a dozen icons to find the button they want to press. I’m not the first to notice this.

The Problem with Simplification

Some users (such as myself) have a presence on Twitter, Facebook, Google, Pinboard, and a variety of other networks. Others may spend most of their time on one site.

My first thought about how to solve this issue involved some sort of centralized button service. Much like Gravatar provides a global avatar, this service could serve a single button that would post to a user’s social network(s) of choice. The idea has a fatal flaw in that users don’t always want to share in the same way. Depending on a particular article, I might want to share it with my Twitter followers, or on Facebook, or perhaps I simply want it saved to Pinboard (perhaps to end up in one of my other people say compilations).

Darn, that sounded like a good idea.

So what’s the solution? Services such as AddThis make it easy to add the buttons as they arrive, but it doesn’t solve the clutter issue, or the fact that users must make multiple moves if they want an article in more than one place.

We need some sort of magic button. I don’t have a solution, but the current situation is messy.

If you liked this article, please press some buttons! (grr)