Just finished watching this video from Tom’s Guide with Apple’s Joz and John Ternus. I paid attention to Ternus’s words and answers while asking myself: is this guy really the CEO Apple should be transitioning to? I think so. I much prefer his tone and more apparent enthusiasm compared to Tim’s.

I believe I decided to build my web apps at the right time1, because if I did it now, it would take two or three times longer due to the current credits consumption rate enforced by Anthropic. I made a little tweak to my dashboard web app this morning, and I’m already at 36% for the current session. It’s really that bad. I wouldn’t pay 200$ a month to get more credits.


  1. In the first three months of 2026. ↩︎

This morning, I realized that managing open issues and bugs on GitHub is advantageous: the more detailed each open issue is, the more effective it serves as a prompt when importing into Claude Code to initiate a new bug-fixing session. Claude Code can also close the issue at my request and link it to a specific GitHub commit.

I’ve been testing the latest release of the Claude Desktop app, and I must say, more than ever, I prefer integration to splitting features across many different apps. I’m also leaving the CLI behind for now.

Gemini App for Mac:

Gus Mueller:

Took a peak at it and … it contains 1,856 Objective-C classes whose class name starts with Java. What in the world are they doing? So I had Gemini analyze Gemini. Looks like there’s a lot of shared Android code in there, but compiled to Objective-C and Swift.

Better consider that 95% of new apps these days aren’t native to the platform.

For all my pending issues across my different Claude Code and web apps, I just realized I could (and probably should) use GitHub for issue tracking instead of Craft. Additionally, I could develop a web app to monitor and manage all open issues across my repositories!