![]() ![]() I wanted a solution that worked equally well when I’m sitting at my Mac or iPad, allowing me to talk over Skype and record myself locally. With only podcasting standing in the way of my goal of device independence, and no software solution from Apple in the early iPadOS 14 betas, I figured it was time to revisit my hardware options. Although I expect Apple will add that functionality eventually, it’s been 18 months since Safari solved my Mailchimp problem. I also held out hope that iPadOS 13 or 14 would include improved audio routing that would make it possible to talk on Skype and record a local audio track. What held me back, though, was a combination of the complexity, cost, and infrequency with which I assumed I’d use the setup. ![]() Plus, I took my iPad Pro because I prefer it for writing and wanted to stay connected to mobile data as I wrote a story in the car.Įver since Jason Snell wrote about his iPad Pro podcasting setup on Six Colors early last year, and Federico adapted it for his setup when he can’t use his Mac mini, I’ve wanted to try something similar. The setup was perfectly fine, but it felt like too much equipment for recording a few short interviews. As with many trips in the past, I wound up taking my MacBook Pro along, in this case so I could record interviews for an episode of AppStories. I’m not doing as much traveling now, but a recent road trip to Michigan led me to start thinking about my podcasting setup again. I prefer to travel with my iPad Pro, but regardless, I’d rather pick how I work myself, even when I’m at home. When I was traveling more, that left me with little choice but to take a Mac. What made these two tasks frustrating is that they’re both tied to schedules that have limited flexibility. However, when it comes to recording in particular, I didn’t want to change the way I record episodes to work around the iPad’s limitations for the same reasons Federico articulated in Beyond the Tablet. I recognize that there have been ways to accomplish podcasting on an iPad for a while. The second Mac-bound task was podcast recording and production. As I wrote last January, Safari’s updates in iOS and iPadOS 13, which made web apps work roughly the same on my iPad Pro as on my Mac, solved that problem for me. The first was producing the Club MacStories newsletters using Mailchimp’s web app. Still, I’ve historically had two weekly responsibilities where I’ve felt tied to a Mac. I’m fortunate that most of what I do migrates effortlessly from one device to another. ![]() The point is, though, that it’s something I want to be my choice, instead of something foisted on me by the nature of the work itself. Some jobs are more suited to one device than another, and some I just prefer to do on a particular device. I work across the Mac, an iPad Pro, and an iPhone all day long. I’ve seen too many people fall into the trap where improving the process becomes the goal itself.Įarly last year, I decided I was finished with letting tasks dictate how I work. The trick is knowing when experimentation with new workflows is unproductive fiddling and when it’s meaningful exploration. Not solely for the sake of efficiency, but also to improve the results of your efforts. It’s an inertial force that’s hard to resist, but I think it’s important to push back against it. Paradoxically, though, familiarity can also lead to inflexibility, a resistance to change that undermines the very productivity that the solution enabled in the first place. When a workflow is so ingrained that it’s a habit, that’s good because it allows the task to become less about the tools and more about what you’re creating. It’s human nature to stick with a solution that works and is familiar. “Because that’s how we’ve always done it.” Anyone new to a job has probably thought or even asked: ![]()
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