What becomes a favorite app is personal, complicated, and evolves over time. Favorites can be brand-new apps that debuted this year, old standbys that you go back to over and over, or newly-discovered apps that have been around for a while. With the end of the year in sight Alex, Jake, and I got together and each picked a handful of our favorite Mac apps that we used in 2016 to share with you.
Our Favorite Mac Apps of 2016
Astra Brings Amazon’s Alexa Voice Assistant to the iPhone
I use my Amazon Echo a lot. Since importing one from the U.S. last year, I’ve started using web services that provide native integration with Alexa, the platform that powers Amazon’s speaker. Whenever I come across a new web service I could use, I check if they have an Alexa skill too. I like Amazon’s take on the home assistant so much, I recently added an Echo Dot to my setup, which has further increased my usage of Alexa and connected services.
There’s one big problem with the Amazon Echo, though: Alexa has no iPhone presence, and Apple is never going to give up the prime spot of Siri on their devices. Amazon has an Alexa app, but it’s a clunky wrapper for a web view that has no voice functionality whatsoever. So while Siri has improved with iOS 10, it’s still behind Alexa in terms of third-party integrations. I often find myself wishing I could ask Siri what I ask Alexa to do for me at home. I have to confess that I even considered an Amazon Tap – the poorly reviewed portable speaker with Alexa support – only to have some way to summon Alexa when driving.
Thankfully, developer Thaddeus Ternes sees this as a problem as well, and he created Astra, an iPhone app to issue requests to Alexa via voice. You might remember Ternes from Lexi, the predecessor of Astra that also allowed you to use Alexa on the iPhone. Lexi was pulled from the App Store and it’s coming back as Astra, which sports a new design, support for timers and alarms, and background audio. After testing Astra for the past two weeks, I decided to put it on my Home screen and it’s quickly become one of my most used iPhone apps when I’m not at home.
Connected, Episode 121: Software Update Therapy→
AirPods are shipping, Mario needs the Internet and Myke has a story.
A fun episode of Connected this week with a good variety of topics. You can listen here.
Sponsored by:
- Foot Cardigan: Fantastic socks delivered to your mailbox every month. Get 10% off any subscription plan with the code WORLD
Apple Improves Support Experience with New App
Following a soft rollout last month in the Netherlands, Apple has now launched a new Support app in the U.S. App Store for both iPhone and iPad.
This new app is the latest sign of Apple’s efforts to provide easy and convenient ways for its users to get the help they need with support issues. It follows an expanded presence on Twitter in the last year, where the company started with an Apple Music Help account , then later replaced it with a more wide-reaching Apple Support account .
Support serves many of the same functions as Apple’s Support website , but within the simple interface of an app.
Pastebot Reborn as a Powerful Mac Clipboard Manager
You may remember Pastebot as an early iOS clipboard manager. That app is no longer available, but Tapbots has brought Pastebot back in the form of a macOS app. Pastebot for Mac can store up to 500 of your most recently copied items, including text, URLs, images, and files. The clips are stored chronologically with the most recent ones on top. That makes finding recent clips easy, but even older clips that are buried under recent items aren’t hard to find thanks to Pastebot’s smart search functionality. In addition, you can save frequently used clips to custom pasteboards and manipulate clips with filters.
A Computer for Everything: One Year of iPad Pro
I wasn’t sure I needed a 12.9-inch iPad when Apple announced the iPad Pro in September 2015. And yet, over a year later, the iPad Pro is, by far, the best computer I’ve ever owned. I’ve never felt so satisfied with any other Apple device before – but the transition wasn’t easy.
Credits
My thanks to the following people for their feedback and for helping me find the right focus and motivation:
- Silvia Gatta
- John Voorhees
- Stephen Hackett
- Myke Hurley
- CGP Grey
Apps
Apps mentioned in the story: 50
- 1Password
- Airmail
- Annotable
- Bear
- Blink
- Coda
- Copied
- Crashlands
- Deliveries
- DEVONthink To Go
- Documents 5
- Drafts
- DS file
- DS get
- DS video
- Editorial
- Ferrite Recording Studio
- Fiery Feeds
- iA Writer
- iCab Mobile
- iFinance 4
- Inbox
- Infuse Pro 5
- iThoughts
- Launcher
- Linky
- LongScreen
- MindNode
- Oceanhorn
- Opener
- PCalc
- Pinnacle Studio Pro
- Pixelmator
- PlayMira
- Plex
- ProTube
- Pythonista 3
- Scrivener
- Spark
- Television Time
- Textastic Code Editor 6
- Timepage
- Todoist
- Transmit
- Tweetbot 4
- Ulysses
- VideoGrade
- Workflow
- Working Copy
- Yonomi
Amazon Hardware
Hardware products mentioned in the story: 17
- Anker PowerCore 20000
- Apple Apple 29W USB-C Power Adapter
- Apple MKQ42AM/A USB-C to Lightning Cable (2M)
- B&O Play Beoplay H7 Over-Ear Bluetooth
- B&O PLAY by Bang & Olufsen Beoplay H6 Over-Ear Wired Headphone, 2nd Generation
- Beats Solo3
- Gamevice Controller for iPhone 6/6 Plus and iPhone 6s/6s Plus
- Logitech Harmony Elite Remote Control, Hub
- Razer Mechanical Keyboard Case for Apple iPad Pro 12.9 inch
- SanDisk iXpand Flash Drive, 64GB
- Sennheiser Momentum 2.0 Wireless
- Shure BETA 87A Supercardioid Condenser Microphone
- Sony HTCT380 300W 2.1-Channel Sound Bar with Wireless Subwoofer
- SteelSeries Nimbus Wireless Gaming Controller
- Synology DiskStation 2-Bay Diskless Network Attached Storage (DS214play)
- TASCAM US-2x2 USB Audio Interface
- Twelve South ParcSlope for MacBook and iPad Pro
Workflows
Workflows linked in the story: 6
- App Store Link
- Combine Images
- Download in Documents
- Download
- Pick, Rename, and Save Extension
- Publish to WordPress
Apple Releases macOS 10.12.2 and watchOS 3.1.1
Today, Apple updated macOS Sierra 10.12.2 and yesterday, it updated watchOS 3.1.1 with the usual unspecified bug fixes and performance enhancements, but there are also a few other nice perks that are likely to attract customers to the update.
The macOS and watchOS updates both feature the same emoji added to iOS 10.2. The 72 new emoji, approved as part of Unicode 9.0 in June 2016, include new smileys, animals, food items, professions, sports, and more. Apple has also redesigned many of the existing emoji with a slightly more three-dimensional look and greater detail. As has been the case in the past, the new emoji added to macOS and watchOS should encourage adoption of what are otherwise primarily maintenance updates to each OS.
In addition, macOS adds four new wallpapers called Abstract Shapes, Color Burst 1, Color Burst 2, and Color Burst 3. The Color Burst wallpapers were first seen at Apple’s October MacBook Pro event and have since made cameos in advertisements for the new MacBook Pros.
Apple Publishes Super Mario Run Podcast
Two days out from the release of Super Mario Run for iPhone and iPad, Nintendo’s marketing onslaught continues unabated, this time with a podcast.
Apple has published a new podcast featuring an interview with Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of the beloved Nintendo character. The podcast’s official description reads:
Join the video game designer and creator famously known for Super Mario Bros. and other iconic Nintendo games for an insightful chat on the making of Super Mario Run. He’ll be in conversation with TV personality Katie Linendoll to share the importance of fun and the inspiration behind the gameplay.
The Super Mario Run podcast is available in both video and audio formats. It is unknown at this time whether future episodes can be expected, or if the one episode available now will remain a stand-alone.
Pitchfork’s Year-End Evaluation of Music Streaming Services→
This year should be the first time that music streaming revenue meaningfully exceeds download revenue. According to Pitchfork:
Going into 2017, streaming will no longer be a niche for music but the new normal. The big question is no longer whether streaming is the future, but what form that future will take, who will benefit, and what that might mean for listeners.
To mark this pivotal moment in the music industry’s history, Pitchfork published a survey on the state of music streaming. The article goes into depth about each of the major players, evaluating the highlights and lowlights of each and considers what the future may hold.
Apple Music gets high marks from Pitchfork for solidifying its number two position behind Spotify through exclusive deals with artists, but it also points to missteps that angered customers and artists this year. As for the future, Pitchfork predicts more exclusives and algorithmic playlists for Apple Music and concludes that:
Apple was too late to streaming to hold anything like the stranglehold iTunes had over downloads (at least, not yet). Instead, Apple Music’s battle with Spotify may be more like the Mac vs. PC debate: a corporate presentation of chic tastefulness versus an ostensibly techier rival.
The on-going battle between Spotify and Apple will be interesting. Spotify has never turned a profit and Apple has the cash to weather a long, drawn-out fight for the hearts and minds of customers. With the bulk of music revenues now coming from streaming, it looks as though 2017 could turn out to be an interesting year for the music industry.








