May 17, 2023
Obsidian Image Zoom and Preview
If you use obsidian-minimal theme, good reminder if you image zoom is driving use crazy:
Style Settings > Minimal Theme > Features > Disable image zoom
Iām trying out Obsidian Image Toolkit, and while not pretty, itās an improvement over the default image zooming behavior.
snippets
May 15, 2023
Tidbits for 2023 Week 19
Soulver 3: for iPad is out. I mostly use v2 on iPhone, but very close to upgrading.
Foldie: Transfer files between Android and MacOS. Useful for my experiments with the 2023-03-22 Boox Leaf 2- eInk Review.
Introspect: iOS journaling app that uses ChatGPTās to ask questions about your writing. Very interesting.
Breveto: Yet another writing App for Mac. Looks very pretty, and in active development. Will keep an eye on it.
Table of contents: Safari extension for quickly documents for macOS and iOS. See a list of all headings in the page and click any to jump to it. Brilliant.
Praxis: Block scripts, trackers, and cookies on iOS. Waiting for iPad version to see if I can replace Brave for this use-case.
FSMonitor: macOS app that monitors all changes to the file system.
tidbits
May 11, 2023
Eugen Rochko, on Mastodon Blog:
We believe itās important for Mastodon to be good as a product on its own merits, and not just because of its ideology. If we only attract people who already care about decentralization, our ability to make decentralization mainstream becomes that much harder.
In the context of Dave Winer: I want Bluesky to go away, I thinks this specially great news. For some (like me), the decentralization of Mastodon is a feature, but for many many more, itās a horrible bug. Making onboarding simpler is required for those of us what want Mastodon to continue to grow.
Weāre always listening to the community and weāre excited to bring you some of the most requested features, such as quote posts, improved content and profile search, and groups.
Actually the most interesting part of the post for meāāāquote posts are a big deal in social, and I think an implementation will make it more fun for everyone.
snippets
May 5, 2023
The Nebo team, on Nebo:
So whatās the new plan and how does it affect you? That depends on whether youāre a new or existing user, and which Nebo in-apps (if any) youāve purchased in the past.
The biggest change is that everyone will now be able to access all Neboās features for free.
Nebo has the best HWR of all the iPad apps Iāve tried. In fact, itās how I usually write down my DayOne entry from bed at night.
This is great news for educational and other users with limited budget.
snippets
May 5, 2023
St. Clair Software Blog:
Quick Search: Keyboard-based access to Recent and Favorite Items, including recently-launched applications and recently-used Finder windows.
[ā¦]
Drag and Drop: You can now drag and drop files and folders onto Default Folder Xās icon in your menu bar. When you do, it will pop up its menu so you can select a destination for them.
Every few years I let my 30 days expire DFX trial. Itās an amazing app, but it never quite makes the cut because I need some changes in workflow to take full advantage of it. The two features highlighted above, sound like theyāll get me to finally purchase.
Will wait a couple of weeks until itās in beta, and will give it a try.
snippets
May 4, 2023
Dave Winer, on Scripting News:
I definitely want Bluesky to just go away. I donāt like it because if it gains traction it has potential of replacing Twitter as the festering turd in the middle of what should have been a vibrant growing market that keeps anything else from rising in competition with it.
I agree with Dave Winer on this one. Iāll check BlueSky out when I get an invite, but I enjoy Mastodon.
I do get the Mastodon can get annoying with the anti-twitter vibe. This is out of left field, but it reminds me about moving to Miami from Venezuelan in 2014, and the constant self-justification all Venezuelans that migrated had for leaving. Many could not entertain the possibility that that it wasnāt a binary answer: it was ok to both stay or leave.
Still, as before, Tweetbot/Ivory is my software baggage. Their app is my window to social scrolling services, and whatever they support, Iām game.
snippets
April 30, 2023
Nordic Spawns of Chromium Updates
Jon von Tetzchner, on Vivaldi Browser:
Today, we are thrilled to share new featuresāāāCustom Icons and Workspacesāāāthat will change the way you experience Vivaldi on your desktop. With the release of 6.0, our powerful and personal browser goes even further.
If Arc suddenly went away, Iād probably use Vivaldi that day. Itās a great browser with lots of power features. It used to feel slow, but playing with 6.0 on my Mac, thereās snappinessā¢ there.
Julia Szyndzielorz, on Opera Newsroom:
Opera One is the early access version of a completly redesigned browser that is planned to replace the flagship Opera browser for Windows, MacOS, and Linux later this year. Based on Modular Design, Opera One transforms the way you interact with your browser, delivering a liquid navigation experience which is more intuitive to the user. With todayās release, Opera One also becomes the first major Chromium-based browser with a multithreaded compositor that brings the UI to life like never before. Opera One also introduces Tab Islands, a new, more intuitive way of interacting with and managing multiple tabs.
As always, Opera packs a bunch of interesting features. The new automatic grouping of Tabs being one of them, I just never bother anymore.
snippets
April 27, 2023
Alin Panaitiu, on notes.alinpanaitiu.com:
This is a collection of keyboard and trackpad workflows that I accumulated over the last 7 years of using a MacBook.
Nothing totally new, but great summary of all available tools for macOS keyboard shortcuts. It was a bit surprising that Alin is the developer of rcmd app, and he uses so many other similar apps.
snippets
April 26, 2023
TfTHacker, on Medium:
The Bookmarks feature is similar to the bookmarking feature in a browser, allowing you to save shortcuts to frequently visited files and folders. Obsidian Bookmarks even go further than the browser concept. You can bookmark:
- Searches: using the search panel, you can define a search and bookmark it to repeat that search.
- Headings: Create bookmarks for a specific heading in a file. So we are not just creating bookmarks into files, but can also bookmark a specific line in a file.
Still not out in stable release, so I havenāt played with it. But it looks very powerful. Article gives great overview and some ideas on how it can be used.
Seems inevitable that Iāll adopt this new feature in my workflow.
snippets
April 26, 2023
Carl Sullivan, on Flipboard:
Flipboard editors bring their curation skills to Mastodon with four editorial accounts. Not bots, each of these Desks is staffed by professional curators with expertise in discovering and elevating the best content. Weāre focusing on explainers and analysis ā more the āwhyā and āhowā than the āwho,ā āwhatā and āwhere.ā
Great move by Flipboard. If I didnāt need fewer rabbit holes, Iād download again.
Weāre not trying to replicate all the breaking news services out there, including many bot accounts already on Mastodon. We also donāt want to flood your feed with a kajillion posts. Instead our goal is to give people on Mastodon context for whatās happening in the world.
I subscribed last week to News Desk and Tech Desk, and I havenāt been overwhelmed and no click-baiting. If youāre on Mastodon, recommended follows.
snippets
April 22, 2023
Richard Holden, on Google:
Now, weāre going a step further with a new pilot program for price guarantees in the U.S. If you see a flight with the price guarantee badge, it means weāre confident that the price you see today wonāt get any lower before takeoff.
I use Google Flights religiously for all trips. At least for my summer trip planning, this hasnāt shown up yet. But I do see myself nudged to use this feature.
snippets
April 21, 2023
Jason Snell & Dan Moren, on Six Colors:
To get our automation to work, we had to set up Appleās default Calendar app and log it in to our Google calendars. For such a full-featured app, Fantasticalās lack of Shortcuts actions was really surprising.
While I use Fantastical as my calendar, I had to use Apple Calendar for some Obsidian Shortcuts, because I couldnāt get the data from Fantastical.
Things have gotten better! Flexibits just released Fantastical 3.7.9, which adds a bunch of new Shortcuts actions, including the ability to filter events from a given Calendar Set in a given date range, and the ability to generate a simple schedule for a given day.
Updating the Shortcuts now, and things do look better.
snippets
April 14, 2023
AeroPress PR:
The only coffee maker that combines three brewing technologies in one simple to use press will debut prototypes of the new AeroPress Clear, AeroPress Premium, and AeroPress Flow Control Filter Cap, along with concept art for the extra large AeroPress XL.
Wow. While new products were totally expected after they received an investment in 2021, four at once is a surprise. For the past 15 years, they basically had introduced 3 products: the original AeroPress in 2005, the AeroPress Go in 2019, and the Reusable Metal Filter last year. So this is a like suddenly getting a couple of new Calvin and Hobbes books.
Taking a look at the products announced:
- AeroPress Clear - The AeroPress Clear uses the same breakthrough brewing technology as the AeroPress Original in a new crystal-clear form made of premium Tritanā¢ copolyester. Make up to 4 grit-free coffee types in under a minute - americano, latte, espresso, and cold brew.
Sold. My original AeroPress numbers are long-gone, and the idea of having a mythical transparent AeroPress is fun.
- AeroPress XL - The AeroPress XL allows coffee lovers to brew twice as much smooth, rich, full-bodied coffee as the AeroPress Original, with all the same benefits of versatility, quick brew time, and portability.
Interesting, but Iām already going to have two Aeropress, which should result on the same output. Having a non-standard size, means a different set of accompanying toys.
- AeroPress Premium - Thanks to feedback from our highly loyal global community of Baristas and at-home coffee lovers, weāre launching our first premium coffee press! Crafted beautifully from glass, aluminum and stainless steel and the same technology as the AeroPress Original, the AeroPress Premium is designed with your counter space in mind. Feel free to show off this stunning innovation, combining form and function into one fun, easy to use coffee device.
Will hold judgement and see. Glass does not hold heat well. Letās see how they solve for that.
- AeroPress Flow Control Filter Cap - Eliminates drip through, allowing for an extended brew time, complete control of the brewing experience, and the ability to get creative with Barista-syle homemade coffee recipes.
Likely getting this because I love my Fellow Prismo. However, the reviews on reddit arenāt great. Will purchase alongside the clear Aeropress over the summer.
snippets
April 13, 2023
Tidbits for 2023 Week 14
Wins App: Yet another macOS window management app, but with a few nice touches. My new default app.
AI-Powered Regex Solver: looks good. Havenāt been able to show a work problem at it, but keeping the tab open.
Wavelength Group Chat: Another attempt at group chat. Shows promise, I like the threads model. Not sure how much itāll catch on my tribes. iOS/macOS only for now.
tsr: Simple csv-based timetracker for Raycast and Alfred. Very intriguing. Donāt want to mess with my setup, but worth a look.
OneCast: Xbox remote play for Mac, iOS and Apple TV. Didnāt know this existed, but keeping around for when we get a Flight Simulator Xbox
BoltGPT:Use ChatGPT and Stable Diffusion inside any macOS app.
tidbits
April 1, 2023
Lily Hay Newman, on WIRED:
Almost a year after the crisis began, a senior White House official told reporters today that the United States plans to provide $25 million in cybersecurity assistance to help Costa Rica strengthen its digital infrastructure.
Changed the original Wired title wording from Devastated to Affected. We were here in Costa Rica during all this, and while it was a very big deal, the country did not close down.
Not minimizing it, but if it had affected the power grid, I could see how everything would come to a standstill, but the country managed to continue to operate.
The attacks on Costa Rica were led by the prolific, now disbanded, cybercriminal gang Conti and its affiliates. The group demanded a $20 million ransom and uploaded hundreds of gigabytes of data stolen in the attacks to its dark-web site.
It was bad, and it could have been a lot worse. The best part of this is that it earmarks the amount for cybersecurity. Even if the amount is not enough to cover all the needed changes, it gives strong incentives to start the projectāāāwhich usually is the hardest part for many backend changes needed that donāt provide any features.
snippets
March 31, 2023
Abner Li, on 9to5Google:
Following the launch of iOS 16.4 on Monday, Google Fi today officially announced that 5G service is now available on the iPhone.
Excited to try this next week when I visit the US. Although not sure how much my iPhone 12 mini battery will tolerate 5G.
snippets
March 30, 2023
Arc Release Notes on arc.net:
Weāre thrilled to introduce Arc for iPhone, now available in an App Store near you. Access your Spaces and tabs on the go, save tabs for later from other apps, and much more.
Arc for iPhone actual nam on the App Store is Arc | Mobile Companion, which is appropriate. Still, as an Arc Desktop user, that limited functionality is exactly what Iām looking for: access to my tabs on mobile and, sending tabs or links from mobile to the desktop.
The promotion video is a bit campy, but cute.
snippets
March 29, 2023
developer.apple.com
Mark your calendars for an exhilarating week of technology and community. Be among the first to learn the latest about Apple platforms, technologies, and tools. Youāll also have the opportunity to engage with Apple experts and other developers. All online and at no cost.
June 5th keynote in my calendar, with some buffer meetings before and after. I think this is going to be a good one. If no VR headset is going to be mentioned, I suspect some sort of Apple non-comment will me leak to damper expectations.
Although VR headset might be the big excitement, bigger news for me would be Appleās vision for this new ChatGPT world.
snippets
March 29, 2023
The Overstory
by Richard Powers
The Overstory
This book is like exercising a muscle you donāt usually useāāāawkward at the beginning. Then you get used to it, but it hurts a bit. Itās uncomfortable. Still I kept being drawn to it every night.
It has characters I wouldnāt interact much in the real world, with opinions and beliefs that made roll my eyes. Still, the ones that I would agree with, I liked even less.
However, the main characters in the book, no spoiler, are trees. But not the boring things outside your window, but fantastical Tolkien-like walking magical forests. But hereās the surprise: the tree in your garden, street, park, etc, is magical and fantastical. You donāt need to use your imagination, itās science.
Highly recommended. The multiple storylines collapsing into one is strange, but it works really well. And the writing is excellent.
March 28, 2023
Remembering Alex Hay
Over the weekend, Adam Tow shared that Alex Hay had passed away from cancer.
I didnāt know him, but his Toolbox Pro Shortcuts companion app is an important part of my workflow. More specifically, during the lockdown, when we were āstuckā outside Costa Rica and staying with my parents in Florida, I used his app to quickly scan my morning notes.
It was a simple but important ritual for me. His app made it easy. His work made my life better.
Which made this tweet from him on Sept of last year, felt like a slap in the face:
Whatās coming down the line?
Iām looking forward to the Wool series on ļ£æTV+ (books by Hugh Howey) and The Three Body Problem on Netflix (books by Liu Cixin), which is being made by Benioff & Weiss
Iām looking forward to both things. But it hadnāt even crossed my mind that I might not be able to watch them. I may have chosen to not watch for some opinionated reason, but always as my choice.
So Iāll watch both and enjoy them. Iāll make time for it and be sure to remember a fellow geek that couldnāt, but should have.
Social
March 27, 2023
Keychron S1 Apple fn
Key Workaround
There seems to be some limitation with replicating the Function fn
key on non-Apple keyboard. Iām not sure if this has always been an issue, or was prompted by a recent update.
The issue manifested clearly: as much as I tried to configure my Keychron S1 fn
key as a function key, it wouldnāt detect the keypresses. I did a factory reset, and firmware upgrade on the S1 and nothing. After reading the word patch on some reddit posts, I decided to do a medieval workaround:
- Mapped the
fn
physical key, to the F21 to the Via QMK app:
VIA QMK
- Then mapped the F21 key to the
fn
on Karabiner.
Karabiner setup
This screams of A = B = A
, but Velja prompt works correctly now.
Social
March 27, 2023
Tidbits for 2023 Week 12
Departing Earth: free iOS app to track space launches.
Klack: really fun keystroke sound app for Mac. Works great when away from your mechanical keyboard and need the soothing rhythm for writing.
Little Snitch Mini: Excellent option if you want better control of your Mac network traffic.
Fileside: very interesting file manager with tiling pages for Mac and Windows. Seriously considering buying it.
Folders File Manager: Mac file manager for PC refugees. Not my thing, but nice design if you miss tree-style layout.
Chatterbox: ChatGPT wrapper on Mac with easy screenshots. Purchased it.
tidbits
March 24, 2023
Tiramisu, on ćć£ć©ćć¹:
Rather than beckoning me to write, the perfection of fancy notebooks serves as a source of constant anxiety.
I know they are right, but how I love a BaronFig Confidant notebook. Still, over the past few years Iāve compromised and usually get a Maruman MNEMOSYNE, which is usually less than $10.
I always find myself drawn to the cheapest notebooks I can find, spiral and composition ones that you can get at Staples for a quarter during back to school sales.
I can relate. Around 2014-2015, a time I did some of my most intense work, I mostly used small yellow legal pads that were available in the office. I didnāt have time for anything fancy.
snippets
March 24, 2023
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
by Gabrielle Zevin
Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow
Beautiful book about friendship and creative collaboration. The context is gaming, but it could be replaced with anything. This is one of those books in which the characters stories are stored alongside real people in my brain. Canāt recommended it enough.
March 23, 2023
Mitchell Clark, on The Verge:
Now that Apple has stopped making new small phones, Migicovskyās Small Android Phone petition has evolved into a ācommunity-based projectā ā where that community includes a team working to design and produce the phone that Migicovsky and apparently quite a few Verge readers want.
Not sure if this will workāāābut the idea is sound. The whole things feels more like a hobby project, which is fine.
The team also hasnāt decided on a name for the phone, though its internal codename is āMarvin.ā
Not sure if itās related to the Paranoid Android in H2G2, but fitting codename.
Another option was perhaps too similar to the iPhone Miniās 5.4-inch display, with a very familiar notch cut out at the top. āI would like something a little more Android-y,ā Bryant tells me.
Understand the reasoning for not using the same screen as the iPhone mini, but itās a missed opportunity. An android phone with the same screen as the iPhone mini is a very simple concept to explain to non-techies.
snippets
March 23, 2023
Tom Warren, on The Verge:
Microsoft is now letting anyone preview Microsoft Loop, a collaborative hub offering a new way of working across Office apps and managing tasks and projects.
Looks very cool. Itās not enabled on my work accounts, so waiting for IT to enable it. But I will give it a serious try for document/content collaboration.
snippets
March 22, 2023
Jason Snell, on Six Colors:
[ā¦] Iāve been using a $200 Boox Leaf 2 e-reader on and off for the past few months. Itās a 7-inch reader thatās sized and priced more like a standard Kindle or Kobo. Iām happy to report that in the intervening months, the Boox software experience has improvedābut a device like this is still probably not a good idea unless you are comfortable tinkering with Android apps and utilities.
Iām seriously considering the Book Leaf. I bought a Kindle Paperwhite 6.8in, when it came out and it has beenā¦ meh. I thought the bigger screen would be an upgrade over the my Kindle Voyager, which I still keep in my bag. Every time I read for a while on the Voyager and return to the bigger Kindle, it feels too big and I miss the buttons. Both hardware issues the Leaf 2 addresses.
Iām a bit weary of moving away of the Amazon ecosystem, mostly for sync. I like picking up a book on my iPhone and iPad. Also having all highlights flowing to Readwise. However, thereās the Android application option on Boox:
The Kindle app on Android is actually pretty good, and works well with the Leaf 2 once you get it up and running. But if you use the page turn buttons too soon after you launch it, the Boox software wonāt have kicked in yet and youāll get a volume prompt instead of a page turn. And donāt swipe or tap to turn the page, or youāll get a page-turn animation that canāt be turned off or properly rendered by the E-Ink screen.
Sounds okish, but not great. Specially when I think of the main reading app Iād like other than Kindle, Reader. Which according to reddit posts, is functional, but not great:
Iāve been using Reader on my Boox Leaf 2, it works surprisingly well considering its not optimised for e-readers yet. If youāre launching the app from cold it can take 20 - 30 secs to load but you would typically be loading from memory so thatās no big deal
Iāve been down this rabbit hole before, so not sure where if Iāll really make the jump. But itās fun to window shop a reading devices.
snippets