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Crafting something with Craft (#craft #rumours #apple)
In my quest to better understand the full potential of note taking application « CraftĀ Ā», Iāve come up to something different, a website about Appleās related rumours. You can hit this link to have a look. You can leave comments, no registration required. Enjoy.
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Are we digital nomads? (#blogging #internet)
In the last few months, on Twitter and on Micro.blog, Iāve been witnessing something that takes the shape of a small phenomenon: people are moving from one place to another in the digital space. Many are writing about their experience of moving from one hosting site to another. Some are leaving WordPress to return to Ghost. Others are proudly putting together their hosting solutions. The same happens in the newsletters hosting space: people are leaving Mailchimp to go to Substack or Revue. People are looking to get better return on their investment both in time and money. Others are simply trying to optimize their blogging workflow. There is a myriad of reasons why people decide to leave a place for another one.
I find these numeric movements quite fascinating. Are you one of those guys?
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Learning Blot.im the hard way (#blot #selfhosting)
So I started another experiment involving Blot.im. For those who donāt know Blot.im, it is a static web site generator that seems popular among the crowd here. On paper, the process of publishing is very simple: you drag and drop files on a specific folder on your computer and they get instantly published on the web. Sound great, right? Thatās what I thought.
My goal with Blot.im is to do some āmeta bloggingā; a place where I could write about the tools, services and my blogger workflow. So I registered a new domain with GoDaddy: numericcitizen.io. Then, I opened my Blot.im account and stated experimenting. The initial setup is pretty simple. And then challenges pretty quickly started to emerge.
First, I wanted my new domain to point my Blot.im domain. Tried to follow the Blot.im instructions to make it work but all attempts failed. GoDaddy doesnāt support ALIAS DNS records as Blot.im ask me to create. I asked for help from Blot.im support. Still a work in progress.
Second, I chose to use Git as the āclientā to push content on the service because I donāt want to use Dropbox, a service I despise. By using Git, I need a Git client on my Mac. Iām tentatively settled on Nova. So far so good. After cloning the Git repo from Blot.im to my local machine, I can then use Ulysses to write my posts and push them with Nova. The workflow is very geeky: create .MD file in Ulysses, ācommitā within Nova then hit āpushā to publish. Not as seamless as I would like. But here another issue: inserting images with a Markdown file is not as easy as it seems. Again, trying to figure out instructions on Blot.im site doesnāt work. The other thing is that if you drop an image within a folder, it will trigger Blot.im to create its own blog post, something that I donāt want. Not cool. Again, Iām asking support to help me here with this supposedly trivial task.
Third, I would like to use Github as the source of truth. Setting up a new repo is simple and cloning it to my local machine too. But, now, how do I make Blot.im to use the Github repo as the source of content? Again, trying to figure out Blot.im instructions but failing to make it work. Still trying to figure that out.
Fourth, tweaking the visual appearance is not as easy as I would have liked. There is a theme editor and I still need to be pretty knowledgeable in HTML and CSS. I did fork one of the theme to make it mine and started to do some tweak but it is a painful trial-and-error process.
All in all, Iām far from positive about Blot.im right now. I spent way too much time on these issues. Iām not sure where this is all going. If you are using Blot.im, please, do me a favour and chime in!
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Testing, testing, 1.2.3. (#webmention #indieweb #openweb)
Iām still new to the Indieweb world. Today, Iām learning about webmentions. I like the idea of linking reactions back to the origin. So, after enabling a plugin on my main blog, Iām trying to link back to one of my recent post and see what happens. One day, I wrote āThe Journey is the Rewardā. I donāt post personal things very often. Thanks for your feedback.
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Love and hate (#microblog)
Iām in love with Micro.blog. Itās simple, not too busy. Based on open web standards. But today, Iām a bit frustrated with the bad sad of being too simple. My most important grievance is the lack of design flexibility. Built-in themes are too basics and unappealing. You have to be a HTML and CSS expert to try to figure out how to make simple tweaks. This frustration is behind my recent desire to look elsewhere for hosting the whole thing. Iām willing to invest quite a bit of my time to gin control of the appearance of my online presence. Iām patient. The guys behind Micro.blog are working on the next features and I hope they will address some of my complaints.
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Looking behind the scene. (#blogging #Hugo #html #git #github)
It all started with the idea of tweaking my micro.blog visual theme. I donāt like it, but this is the best that I could find from the included themes. After reading for a while and seeing people writing about their blogger workflow, I found out that Micro.blog is using Hugo, a static website generator. Then I started to learn about Hugo by searching for introduction videos on YouTube. Then, I learned about Hugo themes and how they are constructed, and at the center of how a website is displayed. Since static websites need a place to be stored, GIT and Github came into the picture. So, I started to read about GIT and Github. Git and Hugo both can be installed on my Mac mini to locally create content and generate a microblog from that. It a great experimentation place to learn and dig a bit deeper. Github is also a place to find new Hugo-based visual themes. Then I learned that I can import one of those themes on my machine so can change the visual appearance of my local Hugo microblog. Then, came the idea of publishing this content on the web, on Github, for free. To close the loop, services are available to take Github content and generate a static website, again using Hugo, behind a domain name of my choice. Then came the question: why do I need Microblog then? I could own the whole widget! Itās not that simple.
All this because Iām not satisfied with my current Micro.blog visual appearance. The next step is to dig within Micro.blog custom templates and see how I can update them. Iāll have to refresh my memory about HTML and learn a bit of CSS. The latter seems a bit an arid subject. Oh well.
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Dear Micro.blog, where do you plan to go next? (#microblogging #microblog)
Thought of the day for @manton and @jean: there is something that could be improved regarding micro.blog: opening up the evolution and improvement roadmap of the platform. I do appreciate when a service do put out their roadmaps so the community get a better look at where things will be going in the future. Mailbrew, Plausible and Craft are very vocal about their future plans, you just have to find the place where they talk about it.
So, where is Micro.blog heading? In particular, how do you plan to expand on themes support and customizability? Why the web editor doesn’t allow support for Grammarly? Do you plan an opt-in option to see how many followers a user have? Those are just a few questions that I have regarding Micro.blog future plans. Thanks in advance.
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Welcome back to the Mac computer club @mattbirchler (#apple #macbookair #applesilicon)
As much as you can like to work on the iPad, there are edge cases where the iPad falls short. Since I got an Apple Silicon powered Mac, and thanks to many nifty Mac utilities, I rediscovered what it really means to be productive and efficient on a computer platform. This blog post by Matt Birchler is an example of an edge case being better served by a traditional yet powerful computer.
On the subject of small and focused Mac productivity utilities, The list of application purchases I made since moving to this Mac mini is pretty long. Here it goes, in no particular order.
- HazeOver
- Unclutter
- Keysmith
- Bartender 4
- DefaultFolder
- Hush
- StopTheMaddness
- Alfred
- Hazel
- CheatSheet
- PopClip
- Downie
- Permute
- SafariMarkdownLinker
There is something those utilities have in common: in one way or another, they augment the macOS experience. Such things are not quite possible, yet, on the iPad.
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Hey @jack! Let’s start a discussion.š I’m looking at your sites, your work and the tools and services you use. I’m very curious about how it all fit together. I’m curious about this Hugo thing, Github as a storage service and content editors and how they all talk to each other. Maybe others would be interested to discuss their options and workflow too. Chime in!
Let’s start like this: I started to look closely at Hugo and now I do have a better idea of this engine. What is less clear is this. Suppose I’m running an instance of Hugo on my M1-based Mac mini. Where does Github fit? Why I would use it?
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This could be my next... (#iphone #apple #rumors)
As reported by MacRumors, the next major revision of the iPhone looks promising for me:
“Weinbach claims that the always-on display will look like a “toned down Lock screen,” where the clock and battery charge are always visible, and past notifications are shown through “a bar and icons.” When users receive a notification, the notification will “pop up normally except that the screen will not entirely light up.” Instead, “it will display it just like you’re used to right now, except dimmed down and only temporarily,” according to the leaker.”
An always-on display is on top of my wish list. How would Apple take advantage of this, at iOS level, is more interesting. Then comes the return of the Touch-ID. I would love to see go in the power button. A smaller notch? What notch?
As shown above, 9to5Mac ran a poll where more than 7000 people chose what feature are the most interesting to them. The return of Touch ID was #1 request at the time of casting my vote. Does COVID-19 have something to do with it?
Last year I skipped iPhone 12. This year, with iPhone 13, things could be different.
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Two simple yet really useful tricks using HomePod mini (#apple #homepodmini #ios144)
Here are two simple but very useful tricks using an iPhone with a U1 chip, iOS 14.4 and an HomePod mini.
Trick #1: set a timer with Siri on your HomePod mini to, letās say, 10 minutes. Then, bring your iPhone close to the HomePod mini, the iPhone will show how much time is left on the timer (make sure the iPhone screen is on).
Trick #2: letās say music is playing on your HomePod mini, and that you want to, silently, see whatās playing. Again, bring your iPhone close to the HomePod mini, the iPhone will show the currently playing title.
What a great example of: the whole is bigger than the sum of its parts. This is Apple at itās best.
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Bye Bye Spend Stack - I barely knew you (#apps)
It is a bit of a sad day: I decided to delete the excellent expense tracking app Spend Stack from my devices and revert to using a simple Numbers spreadsheet to track my subscriptions. Why did I delete this app?
First, the developer sold the app to somebody else. Since last September, no more updates. Second, there is no clear roadmap announcements by the new owner. Nothing. I canāt rely on ephemeral applications even for simple things.
Sadly, this is something that happens all the time these days. Some developers are building great stuff but on the wrong business model. Others are just finding new priorities in their life which have side effects on their personal development projects.
Iām back to Appleās Numbers and a simple spreadsheet. Sometimes, the best is still in the most basic form and function.
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Who remember Motorola 68000 Assembly? I do. (#apple #history #macintosh)
I did some 68000 assembly using my 512Ke Mac back in the days. Can't remember what was the development environment, though. And I remember these Inside Apple Macintosh books so well. That was a lot of stuff to learn. Time flies.I dug out my ancient Inside Macintosh reference books from storage. Remember when Appleās developer documentation came as paper books? Volumes I-III on the original Mac APIs, IV on Mac Plus, V on color Macs, and the truly massive volume VI on System 7. š
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Looking for Micro.blog friends (#microblog #socialnetwork)
Yes, the title says it all: Iām looking for new friends to follow on Micro.blog. After my big Twitter cleanup, the noise in my numeric life has dramatically decreased. I feel zen and I think this is what Micro.blog is all about: a zen place to meet virtual friends sharing the same passions.
So, Iām looking for friend suggestions. Letās call this āthe community-fed referrals day!ā. To help you make such referrals, please do remember about my passions: Apple, photography, privacy protection and climate change.
This brings me to something that Iād like to see improved about Micro.blog: discoverability. When looking to discover new people to follow, we do see a posts count on each user profile, but we donāt know « how recentĀ Ā» the last post is. We know about stale accounts on Twitter, I donāt want to follow stale accounts here. Next, Iād like to see some kind of « behind the sceneĀ Ā» analysis of how someone could be interesting for me. I do understand that this is entering a dangerous territory of « algorithm fedĀ realityĀ Ā». I guess it is har to strike a balance in that respect. Finally, the categories are lacking a bit of breath. Where is āTechā or āPrivacyā or āClimateā?
So, Iām waiting for your referrals. Thanks for taking some of your time to do so. š
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What happened to my Twitter usage? (#twitter)
I donāt know what happened to my Twitter usage. It fell off the cliff recently. Since Iāve completed my Twitter experience transformation as fully documented here, I barely open Twitter once a day. Do I miss it? Nope. Why? Probably because Iām getting a distant view by using Mailbrew which draws the most relevant tweets for me on a daily basis.
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I think he meant that PopClip should be part of macOS! Instant buy for me!As far as Iām concerned, PopClip is part of macOS.
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On Appleās rumoured VR headset (#apple #rumours)
Here is a simple one: Apple, please, no.
I donāt get the idea of such product. The audience for this seems to be too small for Apple. I do understand that Apple research in VR can have broader ramifications, but to build such a limited appeal product for the mass, I donāt get it.
I think Appleās interests has much more potential in augmented reality products, services or features. Their work is already bearing fruit with AirPods spatial audio and transparency mode. These are much more appealing to the mass than a VR headset.
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Mapping Appleās mapping efforts (#apple #maps)
Apple Maps is so much better than it was when it first launched back in 2012. Itās my go-to apps when in comes to finding my way. I never use Google Maps. Over the years, Apple upped its game. Recently, Apple added the detailed mapping and the look around feature for Canada, and it made such a big difference. But how much different? Well, look no further than Justino Beirneās latest essay: āWHY DOESNāT āLOOK AROUNDā COVER MORE AREAS?ā. It is a massive piece of work detailing Appleās every advances regarding its mapping efforts. I wonder if anyone at Apple ever looked at his work. Itās just mind blowing how much details and analysis goes into this essay.
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I know this feeling really really well.Writing, like so many creative acts, is hard. Sitting there, staring, mad at yourself, mad at the material because it doesnāt seem good enough and you donāt seem good enough. (Ryan Holiday, Ego Is the Enemy)