Linked List: March 1, 2014

Picturelife 

My thanks to Picturelife for sponsoring this week’s DF RSS feed. Picturelife is an online platform for photos and video. It starts with seamless backup and deep integration with Aperture and iPhoto — or, just point Picturelife at any folder on your Mac and it’ll sync the photos and videos it contains. Picturelife secures your photos and lets you access them wherever you are — from the web, or their iPhone app.

It’s more than just storage, though. Picturelife has great features: search, versioning, advanced de-duplication, similar shot stacks, importers for Flickr and Instagram, and robust private sharing.

Plans start at just $5, but they have a special offer for Daring Fireball readers: just use this link and you’ll save 20 percent off any plan, for life. I’ve been using Picturelife for a few months, and it’s a great service I’m happy to recommend.

WSJ Runs Excerpt From ‘Haunted Empire’ 

More telling than the excerpt itself, which I found pretty much empty (Tim Cook is a demanding boss, intensely private, and a frugal spender), is the video interview with Kane:

Daisuke Wakabayashi: The one big question that hangs over Apple, anyone who follows Apple, is, have they lost their touch? Is Apple still king of the hill? After two years, what’s your conclusion?

Yukari Iwatani Kane: I think the answer is obvious to me. The answer has got to be yes. This is a company who had revolved around Steve Jobs for so long, I mean that was something that Jobs himself went out of his way to make sure of. And the people there are conditioned to operate, to play off of his strengths and weaknesses. And so now you’ve got this completely opposite guy in Tim Cook, who is I think brilliant in many ways, but in different ways. But so they’re going through some growing pains in that. […]

Wakabayashi: A normal great company, but maybe no longer an iconic company?

Kane: Right.

Everything Bill Drenttel Knew About Business in One Minute 

Great advice.