Not promoting an app that gives NPR way too much information about viewers listening and usage?
Not promoting an app that involves an amazing amount of poking and swiping to get to the content you want?
Sounds like a good plan.
I prefer listening to NPR more anonymously. I prefer less "curation" (a disturbing term on a bunch of levels) and more choice. We pick which NPR stations to support (and we do support them) and then we listen to their mp3 streams at the bitrates we want to. If we want to listen to podcasts, we have choices and RSS feeds for that, too.
NPR One is NOT the solution. Glad to hear less about it.
Actually TextEdit consistently pleases and amazes me with what it can do (including open most MS Word.doc files)...and it integrates images in a way that I only wish Word could do.
The idea of an all-cocoa Appleworks-like product is just wonderful.
Not promoting an app that gives NPR way too much information about viewers listening and usage? Not promoting an app that involves an amazing amount of poking and swiping to get to the content you want? Sounds like a good plan. I prefer listening to NPR more anonymously. I prefer less "curation" (a disturbing term on a bunch of levels) and more choice. We pick which NPR stations to support (and we do support them) and then we listen to their mp3 streams at the bitrates we want to. If we want to listen to podcasts, we have choices and RSS feeds for that, too. NPR One is NOT the solution. Glad to hear less about it.
Forces! Pushes! Yeah, I guess the less accurate 'requires' is just so much less attention-getting.
....let's just go back to that Open Apple key instead. That's what Woz said, right?
Actually TextEdit consistently pleases and amazes me with what it can do (including open most MS Word .doc files)...and it integrates images in a way that I only wish Word could do.
The idea of an all-cocoa Appleworks-like product is just wonderful.