March 17, 2025
Data Rican, on datarican.org:
Was scrolling through Reddit Ticos and found a couple of threads discussing the best hamburger in Costa Rica. Which to be fair actually meant the best hamburger in the GAM.
After finally getting my masterās done, I had some time to nerd it out so I decided to overengineer it and write some code (i.e. prompt Claude) to analyze these Reddit threads and create a ranking based on upvotes.
My buddy Jose bring the geek and the foodie to the tableā¦ with a burger joints table to visit in Costa Rica. Challenge accepted.
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March 16, 2025
Southwest Airline, on swamedia.com:
Southwest Airlines Co. (NYSE: LUV) is evolving rapidly, implementing new initiatives that support business objectives and create choice for current and future Customers of Americaās largest domestic carrier.1 Initiatives announced today will reward the airlineās most loyal Customers and give all Customers more options for a broader range of travel experiences.
The positive biz speak spin here is pathetic. I didnāt see any comment from Southwest loyal customers that were positive. I used to go out of my way to fly back to Costa Rica with Southwest given its two-bag policy. Now thatās gone, and with it goes any benefit of using Southwest versus any other airline.
CJ, on crankyflier.com:
At the JP Morgan Industrials Conference today, Southwest will announce the following:
- First and Second Checked Bag Fees will be implemented for all tickets purchased from May 28 (elites and credit card-holders still get at least 1 bag free)
- Basic Economy will be introduced with Basic effectively taking over the pricepoint where Wanna Get Away is today
- Flight Credits will once again expire after 1 year from the date of ticket issue (Basic is 6 months from date of issue, soā¦ why bother?)
- Rapid Rewards points will now be redeemed on a variable scale with no transparency (or, um, transfarency?) in what the multiple vs the paid fare will be
In other words, Southwest has erased every single positive differentiator it ever had.
Adam Tow, on tow.com:
Iāve flown Southwest Airlines more times than I can count. Growing up in San Diego, we took Southwest flights to the Bay Area to visit relatives, and later, I relied on them to travel back and forth between college.
[ā¦]
At the end of every flight, Southwest flight attendants usually say something like, āWe know you have a choice when you fly, and we thank you for choosing Southwest. Welcome to San Jose!ā But with these changes, I wonāt automatically consider Southwest my first choice anymore. I understand the company feels the need to increase revenueāor, rather, activist investors are forcing them to. But alienating loyal customers comes with a risk.
May they generate lots of shareholder value.
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March 14, 2025
Tim von KƤnel, Flavio Schneider, on ElevenLabs blog:
Scribe, our first Speech to Text model, is the worldās most accurate transcription model. Built to handle the unpredictability of real-world audio, Scribe transcribes speech in 99 languages, featuring word-level timestamps, speaker diarization, and audio-event taggingāall delivered in a structured response for seamless integration.
Scribe is engineered for precision. In FLEURS & Common Voice benchmark tests across 99 languages, it consistently outperforms leading models like Gemini 2.0 Flash, Whisper Large V3 and Deepgram Nova-3. Whether itās meeting summaries, movie subtitles, or even song lyrics, Scribe delivers the lowest automated transcription word error rate in Italian (98.7%), English (96.7%) and 97 other languages.
Missed this when it came out a few days ago but the claims are impressive. Iāve been able to test it on the Whisper Memos app. Seems to work fine. Hopefully Superwhisper will have access to it and Iāll be able to play with it soon on macOS. Exciting times!
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March 11, 2025
Louie Mantia, on his blog:
Today I want to share with you a new official designation for apps I make, Kadomaru ShÅkai. Iāve been collaborating with Johannes Jakob for a little while now (on a few unreleased apps), but weāre shipping our first one today. Right now.
Itās called Daruma, and itās a goal-tracking app. Itās super simple. Just add an item, begin working on it by selecting the right eye, complete it by selecting the left eye, and burn all your completed goals whenever youāre ready. The process mimics that of real daruma, which are type of Japanese doll. When purchased, they have blank eyes you fill in just as previously described, and at the end of the year, you burn them wherever you bought them from.
Lots of delicious library era vibes here.
Love the opinionated design, especially when itās beautiful and thought out. Iām not sure if Iāll be using it, but Iāll be checking any new app they come up with.
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March 9, 2025
The Great, the Good and the Ugly Apple Air Week
The Apple announcements this week were overall great news. Any year we get speed bumps updates, rather than forgotten devices works for me.
Pair the basically perfect current MacBook Air with the M4 processor, and then also lower the price. Thatās a great machine right there. While I still dream of a 12-inch device, this 13-inch MacBook Air is deliciously easy to recommend.
The iPad Air, on the other hand, is starting to not be the best bang for the buck. If the MacBook Air punches above its weight price-wise, the iPad Air misses the mark, and itās actually the plain iPad the one that becomes easier to recommend.
I donāt have a strong opinion on the Mac Studio, other than being happy that it doesnāt remain a product in the Appleās line-up.
If thereās one complaint for me about this weekās announcement, itās the iPad Air keyboard. Although a iPad Pro-style keyboard is great news, the $269 price and the fact that itās only available in white makes it unrecommendableāāāhence the ugly.
Personally, I think Iām going get an updated Air to upgrade my joby-job M2 MacBook Air. I also see a MacBook Air in Robieās future, as heās developing more in Swift and the 2014 MacBook Pro heās using is borderline unworkable now. Iām hoping to convince him that weāll be able to get a spec-ed out M3 or M2 for a better price.
What should you get?
MacBook: If you have any MacBook intel laptop, the new M4 MacBook is an excelente upgrade. If your M1 version is feeling slow, of you use multiple screen, itās also a great year to update.
iPad: Iāll be keeping an eye on iPad Air M2 prices. Unless the new keyboard is something you really wantāāāa well kept M2 at $450 sounds like a better option.
March 5, 2025
Jack Greenberg, on blog.youtube:
Today weāll begin expanding our Premium Lite pilot to users in the US. Premium Lite gives viewers a new, more affordable way to enjoy most videos on YouTube ad-free for $7.99 per month.
Iām a reluctant YouTube Premium subscriber. Mostly because the amount of rabbit holes it takes me shouldnāt justify the price $14/month. My previous solution via the browser worked because it added friction.
One thing to watch, emphasis mine:
affordable way to enjoy most videos on YouTube ad-free [ā¦]
Whatās most videos? Still, cancelling my YouTube Premium to test this out. Letās see how it goes.
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February 28, 2025
Tidbits for 2025 Week 09
What a couple of weeks. Had a business trip, so I had a chance to start watching Star Trek Lower Decks (itās great), catched-up with Invincible (still good), finished Silo season 2 (slower, but still like it), and looking forward to each Severance (hope they donāt mess it up). Iām also ready to buy my first Linux device/laptop since the Sharp Zaurus SL-5500 PDA and continuously being blown away by AI apps. Happy weekend!
Startup Folder: macOS, run programs at startup by placing them in a special folder; Free. ā® Not sure the benefits versus login items, but implementation looks very elegant.
LocalSend: Share files to nearby devices: LocalSend is a free, cross-platform file sharing tool available for all platforms, offering secure peer-to-peer file transfers. ā® My buddy Federico says I never post anything for Android, this is an olive branch.
Slow Roads: Slow Roads is a free, web-based casual driving game offering an endless scenic journey with no ads, now also coming to Steam for more advanced features. ā® Great for relaxing.
Longplay for Mac (Early Access): macOS app for album playback, available in Early Access for A$25. ā® The iOS version is great. Almost ready to rediscover my iPod library with the macoS version.
stats: FLOSS macOS system monitoring app with menu bar integration. ā® Lots of iStats vibes on this one. But canāt argue with free.
Moves for macOS: macOS app for precise window positioning using modifier keys and the mouse , free. ā® Moom has this, but itās overkill. Iāve been using Swift Shift, but it had a memory leak. This works just right.
Shadow: bot-free AI autopilot service that automates recording and transcribing meetings. Free while in beta. ā® Iāve tried LOTs for transcription summary apps. This is by far the best.
Shortcutie: macOS app that enhances the Shortcuts app with advanced system-level features. $6 launch price. ā® If Sindre releases it, Iāll buy it.
āArt of Fauna: Nature Puzzles: iOS and iPadOS puzzle game featuring vintage wildlife illustrations and educational content; free with in-app purchases.ā® Beautifully designed puzzle game.
āDaily Wallpaper: Free, supports iPhone and iPad, offers automatic daily wallpaper updates from various stunning image sources. ā® Iām too OCD with my wallpapers o the iPhone, but may consider it for my iPad mini.
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February 28, 2025
I Want My DayOne AI
Iād love for DayOne to offer some AI/LLM functionality. I can imagine all the privacy concerns, but in all honestly, this is a case in which because we can, outweighs should-we?.
The simplest use-case is similar to the recently released Readwise Chatāāāin which you can chat/search with your highlights. For me, this would be less cringe-worthy that reading some of my entries.
Other use-case is journaling itself. I can see the benefits of a conversation with my journal at both ends of my journaling modes: when I have nothing to say, and when Iām overloaded with thoughts.
The empty page day scenario is easy, this will give templates a whole new dimension. āHow are you feeling?, did someone say something to make you laugh today? Did you feel you made progress on a project?ā. Replace the generics (someone, project, etc.), and now you move from an ELIZA type conversation, to one when LLMs aware of your Journal can really shine: ādid Bettina say something to make you laugh today? Did you feel you made progress on the Vendor Onboarding project?ā. Have the agent then turn the conversation into a Journal entry, and ta-da!.
At the other end of the spectrum, the Iām-all-over-the-place entry will also benefit. It doesnāt seem hard for a model to be able to steer you towards healthy tracks: what are you grateful for? How did that make you feel? etc.
Sprinkle all this with the benefits of conversational data input, with some sort of personality, and all the privacy concerns seem a valid trade-off for me.
There are already some Apps that are doing this. My hope is that DayOne is looking at the most private way possible to deliver on this. Maybe using some Open Source AI/LLM they can host themselves and be sure doesnāt leak out data. Or a client-based solution in which the model is local, and there are no concerns.
Letās hope itās in the near future.
February 26, 2025
Gaurav Kataria, on atlassian.com:
Say goodbye to scattered to-dos. In the new Trello, tasks can be captured from any interactionāwhether itās a voice note to Siri, a Slack message, or an emailāāāand added to your Trello Inbox.
[ā¦]
With the new Trello Planner, your tasks and schedule come together seamlessly. Connect your Google Calendar now (Microsoft Outlook Calendar is coming soon) to view your availability right alongside your tasks. Effortlessly drag and drop tasks from your Inbox or boards directly onto your calendarāto create focused time slots and meet deadlines with ease.
I used to run my life, work and reading in Trello. When it was acquired my by Atlassian, it slowly Jira_ed itself and I moved on. However, now that corporate life has caught up with me with Jira and ServiceNow being my work tools, Iāll revisit when this new version is widely available.
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February 25, 2025
John Siracusa, on hypercritical.co:
By the end of that week, Iād written a barebones Mac app to do the same thing my Perl script was doing. In the months that followed, I polished and tested the app, and christened it Hyperspace. Iām happy to announce that Hyperspace is now available in the Mac App Store.
Hyperspace is a free download, and itās free to scan to see how much space you might save. To actually reclaim any of that space, you will have to pay for the app.
I love how John made an app out of his geekiness. Tried on my main drive, but it only saved a few hundred MBs. However, cloud storage files are currently ignoredāāāwhich is most of my files. As he eases up on the restrictions, I expect to use this app once-a-year when I get in clean install mode.
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February 22, 2025
Joe, on blog.plinky.app:
Thatās exactly why I built Reminders in Plinky ā so you never lose track of an important link again. The latest update also lets you pin your most important Folders and Tags for quick access. Plus, you can customize the interface to highlight or hide Folders or Tags, depending on how you like to stay organized.
Tried it when it was released but Raindrop.io still worked best for me. But with upcoming import feature and Mac app, Iāll likely take another look.
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February 21, 2025
Lou Plummer, on amerpie.lol:
A Mastodon friend asked me to list the Raycast extensions I have installed. Raycast is a replacement for Spotlight that has considerable superpowers in its vast extension library. I use Raycast as my clipboard manager, emoji picker, window manager and I do quite a lot of image modification with it. As you can see, there are many more features available.
Great list. Iām also a big user. Went with Pro version during Black Friday to support development and hopefully get access to upcoming mobile version. Not getting much use of the AI features yet. Below my list of extensions without much curation:
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February 21, 2025
David Sparks, on macsparky.com:
Amazon is set to disable the āDownload & Transfer via USBā feature for e-books starting February 26, 2025. You can get the full scoop at The Verge. If you feel like buying an ebook should include the ability to download said ebook, itās time to start looking for alternatives.
Not cool Amazon. I use this feature to remove DRM of purchase books to read on my Boox Leaf 2. Writing was on the wall when feature was disabled with new Kindles. I understand that vertical integration requires simplicity, but itās difficult not to see this hostile effort towards the openness of books.
There is something about this that stinks to me. I pay for the books. I feel like I should be able to download them. Iāve bought hundreds of books from Amazon over the years and this push toward cloud-based model data control feels like crossing a line. Maybe this is a thing with me and I should have realized that I was only purchasing a ālicenseā to read the books instead of āownershipā of the books all along.
I agree with David that this is really a turning point for my participation in the Amazon ecosystem. Sadly, thereās no clear alternative if the ability to unlock books is a priority.
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February 19, 2025
Jon Bo, on jon.bo:
The DC-1 is an incredible devices that isnāt quite a full replacement for an existing device as much as it is a new form factor that tries to put us in healthier relationship with light and the outdoors. It values this over having the highest fidelity or perfect accessibility.
As a first generation product, it has its rough edges but at the end of the day, itās a solid deliverable for a company building hardware and innovating on display tech. Iām absolutely stoked to see Daylight Computer explore more form factors next and am grateful to be part of this journey with them.
I almost did an impulse buy on the DC-1, but Iām glad I didnāt. A smaller form-factor with nicer design and lower price might be the sweet spot for me in the future. Still, glad thereās different options in the tablet market.
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February 12, 2025
Benjamin Mayo, on 9to5mac.com:
The app supports the fundamental Apple TV app features users will be familiar with from the app on Apple devices, including the Continue Watching queue, offline downloads and search. Playback progress syncs across all your devices, so you can start watching a show on your TV and then continue in bed on your Android phone, for instance.
Would have thought this was already available.
Rather than a direct port of the iOS app, Apple is using native Android UI components where applicable, such as context menus when long-pressing on an item. However, this is still only a 1.0 release and there are some notably absent features; the Android app does not support notifications or casting for instance.
So sad that Apple gave up on ebook market. I still dream of an Apple Books version for Android that can be used in an eink device.
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February 10, 2025
@AnthropicAI, on anthropic.com:
In the coming years, AI systems will have a major impact on the ways people work. For that reason, weāre launching the Anthropic Economic Index, an initiative aimed at understanding AIās effects on labor markets and the economy over time.
[ā¦]
- We also only analyze data from Claude.ai Free and Pro plans, rather than API, Team, or Enterprise users. While Claude.ai data contains some non-work conversations, we used a language model to filter this data to only contain conversations relevant to an occupational task, which helps to mitigate this concern.
I only skimmed it, but something to keep an eye on. The currently sampling is too small imho, but they need to start somewhere. I see this report becoming an important indicator in a few years.
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February 10, 2025
Eric Migicovsky, on ericmigi.com:
Please donāt get your hopes up that the new watch will have X/Y/Z new feature. Itās going to be a Pebble and almost exactly as you remember it, except now with open source software that can you can modify and improve yourself. More hardware details will be shared in the future.
I appreciate the clarity Eric is providing. Heās been clear on the blog and in multiple interviews that the new Pebbles are literally going to be updated old Pebbleās. This contains my imagination and keeps expectations in-check of what new Pebbles will bring.
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January 28, 2025
Cliff, on seerofsouls.com:
What is Setapp you ask? While Iāll give you a lot more details below, Setapp by MacPaw is a subscription platform that gives you access to well over 240 premium MacOS and iOS apps for one small monthly or yearly price. This allows you to try and use hundreds of apps without having to pay for each individual app.
Good overview of SetApp. Cliff likes it and the numbers make sense for him.
For a long time I didnāt get the appeal of SetAppāāāsince I already owned most of the Apps already. But as itās catalog has grown, I reached a turning point this year where the yearly subscriptions of my preferred Apps made the subscription financially attractiveāāāIām looking at you Hookmark, Bartender, BoltAI.
They also include Apps from Indy Developers like Sindre Sorhus, most I already own, but I donāt mind at all supporting his great Apps.
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January 27, 2025
Eric Migicovsky, on ericmigi.com:
TL;DR Weāre making a new Pebble-style smartwatch.
[ā¦]
This time round, weāre keeping things simple. Lessons were learned last time! Iām building a small, narrowly focused company to make these watches. I donāt envision raising money from investors, or hiring a big team. The emphasis is on sustainability. I want to keep making cool gadgets and keep Pebble going long into the future.
Iām so excited about this. Pebble was my first Smartwatch. Even when the Apple Watch came out, I actually went back to Pebble out of disappointment with the first generation. The failed Pebble Time 2 hardware was a real disappointment at the time.
With Eric founder in the realm, Iām confident that some cool hardware will result. Iām in for the trip.
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January 27, 2025
Upcoming Apps Iām Excited About
Very few things give me a dopamine hit as checking app updates/releases. So much so that my main habit stacking this year is: only allowing myself to check for AppStore updates when I read a couple of pages of whatever Iām reading. With that in mind, hereās the apps Iām currently looking forward to:
- Tapestry: After a successful kickstarter campaign, it looks like launch is imminent. Alongside Flipboard Surf and the new Reeder, the open web unified timeline concept is something Iām excited about. And this will surely bring some great UI/UX gold nugget.
- Micro Social: still in development, but this Swift rewrite of the micro.blog iOS client is going to be a nice update over the current one.
- Quick Reviews: you might know the Webapp, but Matt is working on an iOS version and it looks sweet. When he does add books to āMagic Modeā, Iāll have some decisions to make.
- Pieoneer: a pie menu launcher thingy for the Mac that looks beautiful. Although the concept has already been done by Ryan Hanson with Charmstone, this new approach looks great.
- retroStrip: a re-imagination of the original Control Strip, I love this sorts of Apps. Still in development, but will download for sure if it sees the light of day.
Update 2025-01-27: added retroStrip. I was looking for a link when posting this but couldnāt find one, luckily Mario Guzman shared one today.
January 26, 2025
Tidbits for 2025 Week 04
This week we started watching Silo Season 2 and weāre enjoying it. Also excited by the Superwhisper iOS update. Rediscovered Klack to make writing (sound) fun. Installed Paper now that itās part of SetApp. Almost Almost ready to share new home screen. Some links for you:
FlashSpace: FLOSS workspace manager for macOS in development that looks very fast. ā„ Not ready to mess with the windowing yet, but bookmarked.
LeaderKey.app: Free macOS app with customizable keyboard shortcuts. ā„ Also forcing myself to not go down the rabbit hole of this app, but totally see the appeal.
habby: for iOS and Android, digital bullet journal and habit tracker that helps you set goals and track habits. ā„ Free and nicely designed. I like the restrictions it imposes.
Onit: macOS application offering GPT-powered AI assistance with flexible provider options, available for free. ā„ Very happy with Bolt.AI and the new Chorus, but always good to see new entrants in this category.
Modular CSS Layout: Modular CSS Layout provides customizable layout options for Obsidian on all platforms, enhancing visual organization without altering color themes, and itās free. ā„ Via Noel and his Obsidian Setup, which helped me level up my main vault Overview page.
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January 24, 2025
Simon Willison, on simonwillison.net:
The way I use my link blog has evolved substantially in the eight months since then. Iām going to describe the informal set of guidelines Iāve set myself for how I link blog, in the hope that it might encourage other people to give this a try themselves.
[ā¦]
The point of that article was to emphasize that blogging doesnāt have to be about unique insights. The value is in writing frequently and having something to show for it over timeāworthwhile even if you donāt attract much of an audience (or any audience at all).
[ā¦]
- Ideally Iād like you to take something useful away even if you donāt follow the link itself. This can be a slightly tricky balance: I donāt want to steal attention from the authors and plagiarize their message. Generally Iāll try to find some key idea thatās worth emphasizing. Slightly cynically, I may try to capture that idea as backup against the original source vanishing from the internet. Link rot is real!
Amazing post. Iāve been linkbloging for +15 years, and still found many points which clarified ideas I just barely had notions of.
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January 21, 2025
FindMy Friend
One of the last photos nonch sent me
For the first time since I can remember, Iām not looking forward to the next Apple event or announcement. Two months ago today, I unexpectedly lost one of my best friends. One of those friends that you call brother and mean it. In all honesty, his passing has broken something.
Iām shielded from reality since we live in different countries. Iām still clinging to the hope that we just havenāt talked for too long. But soon, on the next Apple announcement, Iāll get a voice note saying āSo, what do you think?ā, and everything will be alright. Itās important to note that Alonsoās voice notes were the only ones I had to hear at 1x. As with everything about him, his regular speed was just faster.
He was smarter than me, funnier than me, larger than me, both physically and in presence. Nonch had a Graphite iBook just around collegeāāāprobably the first one I ever saw. He was cool like that. He was the center of things. The driver of plans. The sweetest force of nature that ever was. The one that always called.
Soon a new iThingy will be announced, and we wonāt message about it. And Iāll know for sure. Heās gone.
January 18, 2025
Tidbits for 2025 Week 03
Happy new year everyone. Back to my routine after the holidays. Got some great gift this year: NanoFoamer PRO Gen2, Apple iPad Mini 7, with Apple Pencil Pro and PITAKA case, Anker Power Bank USB C Charger Block, Quechua NH Escape 500 23 L backpack, and last but not least COBI Armed Forces A-10 . Iām very spoiled. With that, hereās some links.
fullmoon: Supports macOS, iOS, iPadOS; enables chatting with private and local large language models; free and open source. ā„ Useful if you donāt have Apple Intelligence and want/need to keep data local.
Chorus: macOS, chat with multiple AI models simultaneously, free. ā„ BoltAi is still my main prompt app, but seeing replies from GPT-4o, Claude 3.5 Sonnet and Gemini 2.0 Flash at the same time is very useful.
Keychron Silicone Palm Rest: The Keychron Silicone Palm Rest, designed with sleek and durable silicone, offers exceptional ergonomic support and comfort for extended gaming sessions. ā„ Getting this for my K3/S1 at some point this year. Seems new, and good price.
Keychron Folio Case for Slim Keyboard: Crafted with PU and PC, the Keychron foldable case is designed to protect your K3 Maxā/āK3 Proā/āK3 Version 3ā/āK3 keyboard in style. ā„ Not getting this, but wanting it.
Cupertino: Obsidian theme offering a native experience on macOS, iOS, and Windows, enhancing usability with a clean and minimal design, available for free. ā„ New theme for this blogās vault.
ElevationLab TimeCapsuleā¢ AirTag Case: uses AAA batteries, giving the stick a theoretical 10-Year Batteryā¢ . ā„ Got it already. Looks great. AirTag gadgets are my weakness.
IconKitchen App Icon Generator for iOS, Android and Web apps. ā„ Using this a lot for my new home screen.
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January 18, 2025
Rui Carmo, on taoofmac.com:
Although itās been only a couple of months, the part of me that initially pondered the Nomad as a ābetter notebookā is still reeling, since I feel like Iāve barely scratched the surface, but Iām getting ahead of myself. [ā¦] There is something about doing handwriting on computers that I find profoundly appealingāI used a Newton MessagePad and was obsessed about Palm devices (I still have a working Palm V somewhere), so being able to quickly scrawl out something on a distraction-free device and then re-work it on my Mac later is extremely attractive to me.
Super detailed review. I think the Supernote is getting more love within Mac writers.
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January 14, 2025
A Mouse Tale Update
I wrote about my mice situation a while back. Hereās a quick update.
I did buy the Lenovo Professional Bluetooth Rechargeable Mouse and itās working great at my office desk. Size is large, and arch is comfortable. Itās a bit too light, but workable.
At home Iām using the Microsoft Bluetooth Ergonomic Mouse. Itās a good-enough replacement to its big brother Surface Precision Mouse.
And now some great news, InCase finally launched their Designed by Microsoftā¢ line, and the Bluetooth Ergonomic Mouse is backā¦ for $50. Thatās 2X what I paid for the Microsoft version 4 years ago. Ouch.
I planted a flag on the previous post regarding the price:
At the original $25 it was a steal, but itās not worth anything above $40.
Sticking to it. However, Iāll be following the price and likely will buy one if it reaches $39.99 territory on a sale this year.
December 18, 2024
August āGusā Mueller, on shapeof.com:
Acorn 8 has been released!
This is a major update of Acorn, and is currently on a time-limited sale for $19.99. Itās still a one time purchase to use as long as youād like, and as usual, the full release notes are available. I want to highlight some of my favorite things below.
Insta-purchase for me. Iāve been using Acorn for 16 years, I have no plans to stop any time soon.
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December 16, 2024
Mark Gurman, at Bloomberg:
The good news is, thereās a new Magic Mouse in the works. Iām told that Appleās design team has been prototyping versions of the accessory in recent months, aiming to devise something that better fits the modern era.
I wasnāt looking for a complete rethink of the mouse with the recent update, but anything is better than the flat slap design for my wrist. Great, Iām in. Iāll start saving for WWDC25 when itā¦
As for when the mouse will arrive, I wouldnāt expect anything in the next 12 to 18 months. But the current Magic Mouse is nearing the end of its life, and Apple is working on a full overhaul. Once the design group settles on a final form, it will still take months or years of hardware engineering, software development and operations work to actually bring the mouse to market.
Never mind. Maybe my Microsoft Mouse will be resurrected by then.
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December 14, 2024
Jan Miksovsky, on jan.miksovsky.com:
Today marks two years since I first set up an e-ink display in my momās apartment to help her live on her own with amnesia. The display has worked extremely well during those two years, so Iām sharing the basic set-up in case others find it useful for similar situations.
Touching geeky story. Interesting in multiple levels: hardware, software and use-case. Was a bit surprised he didnāt look for an existing webapp (Trello?), but can understand how heād prefer to own the whole stack.
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December 12, 2024
<!āāāSeth Godin ā>
Seth Godin, on seths.blog:
Iām listening more than reading these days, and I find that a good audiobook can make a real impact on the way I absorb and learn from a book. Itās a once in a century sort of shift in this medium.
My new book is now available in audio. Itās not on Audible, at least not now. Audible has exploited their dominant position and the offer they make to authors is unfair and almost untenable.
Interesting perspective from someone I assume is a voracious reader, and we know is an impressive writer.
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December 12, 2024
Jarrod Blundy, on heydingus.net:
I really should have more to say about this after many years of waiting it out to get one, but the simple truth is that the Magic Keyboard with Touch ID is just a great keyboard. I probably should have caved years ago to purchase one.
Donāt get me wrong; there were things that I quite liked about the Keychron K3 Ultra-Slim keyboard that I used to use ā namely, its fun light-up colors, slick design, and trendy mechanical keys. But no one else can make a keyboard with Touch ID, and thatās the killer feature.
The arrow key layout is a deal-breaker for meā¦ but is it? I respect Jarrodās opinion too much, and heās even coming from basically my same keyboard. I can understand how TouchID will make up for the arrows abomination. But I love the keyboard sound/travel from mine, and I use both plugged, so connections is a non-issue.
At the same, the Apple Watch does cover the most usual TouchID use-case with Auto Unlock and password requests approval. Still, if Apple ever sells a TouchID thingy, theyāll get my money.
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December 11, 2024
From mailo.ameba.co:
TL;DR: Google implemented a new policy that doesnāt allow apps to access the Gmail API unless they are verified by ātrusted third parties,ā which costs time and money. We donāt have either.
Another app affected because of Google increased compliance requirements. Sadly in this case Mailoās is going away. Ever since my buddy Nav had to shutdown Mail to Self because of GDPR, I keep going through possible replacements. Another one bites the dust.
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December 10, 2024
jordanbaird, on github.com:
When I first created Ice, I decided to release it for free and make it open source. I firmly believe it is this decision that has enabled Iceās userbase to grow at the incredible rate it has. While I am immensly grateful for the support Iāve received over the last several months, unfortunately, kind words donāt pay the bills. The reality is, most people who use the app do so without providing a financial contribution. While I want to make it clear that nobody is obligated to give me money, as a human being, I need to be able to support myself financially. As such, I have accepted a full time position with a company, and will be developing their macOS app. While I will try to continue to provide support and updates for Ice, I want to make it clear that most of my time in the forseeable future will be dedicated to my job.
ICE has improved continually over the last couple of months. Itās now a viable replacement over Bartender for most people. All the best to the developer and I hope the app gets another lead dev to continue updated.
My recent subscription to Setapp has led me back to Bartenderāāāand for my very heavy Menu Bar icons useāāāit works a lot better.
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December 5, 2024
Finished Pantheon last night. Really enjoyed it. Itās not uniformly good, but the storyline is solid and absolutely exponential towards the end. You do notice that they knew it wouldnāt be renewed after season 2, and it basically compresses probably a couple more seasons in the last two episodes. Especially on those last episodes, I love the universe created, and would watch or read a lot of, or anything that tells us more about it.
Highly recommended.
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December 4, 2024
<!āāāNaming My Computers ā>
Robb Knight, on rknight.me:
Unlike Alex, I donāt choose a new name when it gets replaced - my iPhone is always called Starlord. Which brings me to the naming scheme: Marvel characters. Some of these make sense, some of them donāt.
This is a response postāāāand both about naming your devices. Who geeks out about computer names? Iāve been using character names from books for the last few years. Itās fun when I set them upāāāa huge mess for anything older than a year.
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December 4, 2024
Adam Engst, on tidbits.com:
I ran across an intriguing app earlier this year that has become my go-to tool for working with CSV files: Modern CSV. When you launch it, it looks like a spreadsheet, displaying data in rows and columns, but it doesnāt require that you write formulas to manipulate data. Instead, it has an extensive set of data manipulation capabilities that you apply directly to the contents of a CSV file.
Great Modern CSV overview. The app is part of my core setup and I really enjoy using it. Iāve tried many alternatives and always come back to it.
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December 4, 2024
WhatsApp.com, on blog.whatsapp.com:
For those moments weāre excited to introduce voice message transcripts. Voice messages can be transcribed into text to help you keep up with conversations no matter what youāre doing.
Transcripts are generated on your device so that no one else, not even WhatsApp, can hear or read your personal messages.
This is extremely cool and useful. I use voice notes in WhatsApp a lotāāādonāt mind listening to podcast notes as others might, since itās better than not hearing from someone. The fact that it happens in-device is also appreciated.
To get started, go to Settings > Chats > Voice message transcripts to easily turn transcriptions on or off and select your transcript language. You can transcribe a voice message by long pressing on the message and tapping on ātranscribeā. Weāre excited to build on this experience and make it even better and more seamless.
Been waiting and finally got access today. Switched the language to Spanishāāāonly supports one language right now. But it works extremely well.
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December 4, 2024
About a month ago kepano, on obsidian.md:
Today, weāre introducing Obsidian Web Clipper a new extension that helps you highlight and capture the web in your favorite browser. Anything you save is stored as durable Markdown files that you can read offline, and preserve for the long term.
Web Clipper is available for all major browsers on desktop and mobile, including Firefox, Safari, Chrome, Brave, Arc, Orion, and many more. Itās also open source under the MIT license.
I started testing the beta a while back, and was intrigued. The release coincided with Omnivoreās demise, which led me to take another serious look.
And then, last week the Interpreter feature was introduced:
Interpreter is a Web Clipper feature that lets you interact with web pages using natural language. Interpreter helps you capture and modify data that you want to save to Obsidian. For example:
- Extract specific text fragments.
- Summarize or explain information.
- Convert text from one format to another.
- Translate text to a different language.
You basically add your OpenAI/Anthropic (and others) keys, and run whatever you selected through the model. This is game-changing. Iām still just playing with this, but now Iām glad my workflow was upended.
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December 3, 2024
<!āāāHere we go: Nilay Patel ā>
Nilay Patel, on theverge.com:
Today weāre launching a Verge subscription that lets you get rid of a bunch of ads, gets you unlimited access to our top-notch reporting and analysis across the site and our killer premium newsletters, and generally lets you support independent tech journalism in a world of sponsored influencer content. Itāll cost $7ā/āmonth or $50ā/āyear
I instantly subscribed. Thereās no real benefit for nowāāāI donāt see ads and Feedbin already generates a full feedāāābut they are my preferred source of tech news and I want to support them.
Hopefully theyāll develop some compelling features over the next year.
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December 2, 2024
Tidbits for 2024 Week 52
Omnivore sunsetting āÆ threw my linking workflow for a spin. For now, Iām sending stuff to my personal space on Arc. Below is a sweep of what I had there. Youāll also notice a Iām playing with some characters (ā, āæ, ā¢, ā®, ā) to separate the link description from my comment.
Swift Shift - Manage your macās windows like a pro: move/resize windows with your mouse without searching for tiny arrows or window titles. ā Moom 4 already has this, but this works better if you want to use Window Tiling and Snapping in Sequoia as default.
Recents - A file launcher designed for Mac: file launcher that gathers all your recent files from across your apps and intelligently sorts them. āæ Would like to use more, but not working with my mental model
Remarkably Organized: Create a custom planner & organizer for the e-ink tablets like the Remarkable 2. ā¢ 2025 is coming, and itās time for a new Calendar PDF. hyperpaper planner is my default, but looking into this free option.
Capture Display: selectively share screen content, zoom in for detailed views, auto-save copied text and screenshots into a shareable PDF, and features a prominent cursor for enhanced audience engagement. ā® Screegle is still my default app screen sharing app, but keeping an eye on this one.
LIMINAL Spaces Wallpaper: Liminal Spaces, a vibrant and minimal cubist-inspired wallpaper series. ā Using this for sure.
TabTab - Supercharged Windows & Tabs Manager for Mac: window switching and tab management for Chrome, Safari, VS Code and more. ā Interesting concept, but tab management will be a bit overwhelming for me.
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November 21, 2024
From satechi.net:
Introducing the new Mac Mini M4 Stand & Hubāāāthe next generation of desktop innovation. Crafted in the USA, this patented design reimagines your Mac Mini setup, combining cutting-edge functionality with Apple-inspired aesthetics.
Product Photo
Mostly marketing content, but features look solid:
- Storage expansion supporting up to 4TB with SSD sizes M.2 /2242/2260/2280.
- Data transfer speeds up to 10Gbps.
- Inclusion of USB-A ports for peripheral connection.
- Front-facing ports for easy connectivity.
- Aluminum construction with heat-dissipating vents.
Last one is important, be cause the previous product did have some reports of disconnecting/overheating. If they can keep the same prices point of $100, thisāll be very compellingāāātakes out his calculator - letās see:
16GB/256GB |
$599 |
|
16GB/256GB |
$599 |
Satechi Hub |
$99 |
|
Apple 2TB upgrade |
$800 |
SAMSUNG 2TB 990 PRO SSD NVMe M.2 PCIe Gen4, M.2 2280 |
$160 |
|
|
|
Total: |
$858 |
|
Total: |
$1399 |
Iāll be pondering over the next few months.
2025-01-14 Update: Andrew Liszewski, on theverge.com:
First announced in late November, Satechi has confirmed that its Mac Mini M4 Stand & Hub will be available in limited quantities starting February 17th, 2025 through its online store for $99.99. A wider release will begin sometime in March, according to an announcement by the company at CES 2025 today.
The hub, made from aluminum with a soft-touch silicone coating, is designed to expand the functionality of the Apple Mac Mini M4 with two front-facing USB-A 3.2 ports, a USB-A 2.0 port, and an SD card reader.
Letās wait for some real reviews. But this looks like a very tempting combo.
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November 20, 2024
From blog.transitapp.com:
Thanks to our clever engineering, we can now predict your location in a subway tunnel using your phoneās vibration signature.
Amazing. I donāt get a chance to travel by subway as much a as I like, but will totally download Transit to my next metropolis visit. To try:
Easy: just find yourself an underground train, open Transit, start a trip with GO, and watch the stations tick down, one-by-one! Weāve helped riders detect 1.5 million underground stations across ~400,000 trips during our initial tests.
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