• Apt Apps: My Favorite Software of 2011
Wednesday, December 28, 2011 at 5:53 PM
Nick DeMartino in 2011, 2011, Internet, apps, apps, best, best-of, data, goodreads, lists, opinion, social-media, software, software, technology, television , tips
The “Appification” of software is undeniable, not only on mobile platforms like iOS and Android, but within web browsers (themselves software), platforms (Facebook, Twitter, Amazon) on the desktop (Apple and others sell software directly to consumers), and for the cloud (the ultimate client-server arrangement, or so it would seem if you keep up with the tech blogs). As with many aspects of our digital lives, Apple has created an easy-to-understand moniker with the stupefying success of its App Store. 

By necessity, this review of my year in software is quirkier and more customized than any other of the other year-end lists of favorites (books, television, movies). Some of the products I’m mentioning are, indeed, not even new this year! I make no claims of omniscience: I have not researched every category extensively and test-driven the competition. In other words, I’m no Walter Mossberg or David Pogue.

And yet, I have found in conversations with even my geekiest friends that my software preferences seem to be useful. It’s no wonder, given the sheer tonnage of choice confronting the user – more than half a million in Apple’s App Store alone. We all need a little help from our friends.

I myself have accumulated more than 250 apps for my Apple devices, split between iPhone, iPad and Macintosh, and that doesn’t count miscellaneous widgets and hidden apps that I probably don’t even think of as software. 
So, in no particular order, and with no great sense of “BEST”, I offer you this year-end excursion through my software life. Please comment. I mean it.

Productivity

News & Sharing

I started my career as a journalist, and all journalists are pack-rats, albeit rodents that like to share. Like my idol I.F. Stone, I was an ink-stained wretch who had, for years, file cabinets filled with newpaper and magazine clippings (I love the image of Izzy with his hands full of clippings in the 1973 documentary, “I.F. Stone’s Weekly.” 
Over the years, my assistants dreaded the task of turning my giant pile of clippings into neat, Xeroxable files, to be distributed throughout the organization by interoffice mail. With the migration of print publications to the web and the proliferation of blogs as a legitimate publishing enterprise, content discovery became more centralized within the Web. RSS technologies (really simple syndication) made quick content scans possible via news readers (I used Net News Wire. I now use Google Reader). Soon, my assistants were assembling my recommended reading electronically, and distributing by means of truly humongous PDF files. 

With the arrival of FriendFeed in 2007, I could use a single web-based tool to create my own aggregated RSS feed for distribution to the audience in my little world. I also converted my recommendations, sometimes with comments, into a WordPress blog – functionally, I was tweeting before Twitter, actually.
  

A Delicious App

  1. I would have to say that my “single most useful application” is probably Delicious, the venerable “social bookmarking” website. I use Delicious’s browser-based widgets to save and tag almost every web site, blog post, news story, and item of interest that I encounter on the web – 2,602 and counting in my account.
  2. Later, I go back to tagged lists of web links for research on topics for columns, clients, and just general interest. These “playlists” can also be added to posts, which give ongoing life to topics over time if I expect to continue to curate links (For instance, I have over 200 links to “transmedia”, virtually all of which were tagged this year. I suspect the list will continue to grow, as will my interest). 
  3. Delicious was bought from Yahoo this year by YouTube founders Steve Chen and Chad Hurley, with the intent of transforming the site, long neglected by Yahoo. They are busy changing the interface and adding social functionality. I hope they don’t screw up its incomparable useability. (Of course, we’ve seen a welter of competitors in the Age of the App, including Read Later and Instapaper. But my existing database in Delicious keeps me from starting over elsewhere). 

On the Couch

I bought my iPad primarily to consume media on the road, with enough connectivity and interaction so that I could leave my laptop at home, which I was able to do. But in 2012, the iPad quickly became my indispensible couch companion. Here are the apps I use the most:

iPad Crashing

Recently, my iPad routine has been severely disrupted by tech problems, not only connectivity, but on my iPad, which seems to crash constantly – certainly much more than it did earlier in the year. Turns out, Apples iOS upgrade seems to be the culprit, forcing the iPad's cornerstone browser app Safari to crash, due to memory problems. 

I’ve turned to Opera Mini as an alternative browser, but that hasn’t helped with the crashes of other apps that leverage the web such as Zite and Pulse. I've included this simply because we are all, every one of us, dependent upon so many variables beyond software to get the stuff we need (and have paid for.)

Content Databases

One of the great categories (for me at least) are database-driven sites for various categories of content. 

Highly Random and Frequently Used

Conclusion

I have the sneaking suspicion that I’m leaving something out, but this post has gone on too long as it is. Suffice it to say, there’s an apt app for every purpose, and I enjoy discovering and using them. Evidently, like most people, I also enjoy discarding them, as most of those I’ve downloaded have been relegated to the last screen because of disuse. 

Won’t you please let me know what you think of my choices, and give me some of yours in the comments below?
Article originally appeared on (http://www.nickdemartino.net/).
See website for complete article licensing information.