On Scrollbars

After reading a recent Gruber article about the macOS Tahoe window-resizing issue, I found a setting in Appearance that keeps scrollbars always visible. It’s somewhat odd because of the scrollbar’s thickness. I wish Apple would make them thinner and less noticeable. I’m unsure if I’ll get used to this.

Note: On Windows 11, scrollbars are always visible by default but are less obtrusive. 🤷🏻‍♂️ Apple was once known for leading with excellent design and great visual taste, but this is less obvious nowadays.

Auto-generated description: A computer interface displays settings for appearance customization, including options for Liquid Glass, theme colors, and icon styles.

On Apple’s Deal with Google

Back in November, Google announced Private AI Compute, positioning themselves to offer something like Apple’s Private Cloud Compute. It might be something that OpenAI wasn’t willing to do or didn’t see a fit in their business mission. By offering Private AI Compute, Google might have secured the business with Apple. Anyway, it’s becoming impressive how Google is taking back the lead in AI. Lastly, maybe we will see Google Gemini being added to this week’s next beta of iOS 26.3 to go side-by-side with ChatGPT?

Inspired by basicappleguy on Mastodon, here’s my rating of each Apple product. Design, usefulness, feature focus, maturity, and usage frequency are the key factors here.

  1. iPhone
  2. Mac
  3. iPad
  4. Apple Watch
  5. Apple TV
  6. AirPods
  7. Vision Pro
  8. AirTag
  9. HomePod

On Tahoe Icons

Just finished reading “It’s hard to justify Tahoe icons”, which many UI design pundits and non-UI experts, as well as simple, passionate Mac users, have been referring to a lot recently. I appreciate the documentation effort. It’s really well done. Very convincing. But…

Designers age and are gradually replaced by a younger generation. Whether you like it or not, they bring new beliefs (justified or not), design principles (better or not), and values (questionable or not). Recently, there’s a trend where software appears much less crafted than it once was. Everything seems thrown together, flat. And still…

I like those macOS Tahoe menus with icons (🫣), but yes, there is an absolute lack of consistency.

I am currently testing the Ubiquiti Travel Router in a café near my home. The setup operation is simple, and I have full access to my home wifi network, which is one of the goals of this purchase. The only small drawback for now is the slow startup of the device.

In 2026, I’ll Keep an Eye On…

I’m already turning my attention to 2026, in no particular order:

  • Ghost.org next moves, now that are a better Fediverse citizen.
  • Plausible Analytics, which seems to be overkill for my needs but I might find a use for their service exposure via their APIs.
  • Craft because they finished the year with a bang and I’m super anxious to learn what’s next.
  • Apple because of Apple Intelligence and Siri promised updates. Will they deliver? They are the underdog right now but it could serve them well in the end. Remember the Mp3 players market before the iPod? I do. I don’t want another features rush but a bug-fix bonanza. Will they deliver? I have my doubts. What’s next for Photomator and Pixelmator?
  • Micro.blog might also surprise me with features like RSS reader integration. Who knows.
  • Anthropic and OpenAI offerings… will they keep the pace? Will they slow down? Will they surprise us? Will they crash? Is enshittification on our way?
  • Inoreader is also evolving at a steady pace and I wonder if it will continue in 2026.
  • Things to-do manager: will it turn to version 4?

So much fun is awaiting, I’m sure.

This morning I discovered that I could add RAM to my Synology DS720+, increasing it from 2 GB to 6 GB. This upgrade would make it possible to install an instance of n8n as a container and explore the creation of automations connected to Craft. But, memory prices aren’t cheap these days. 🤯 Trying to find alternatives source for memory purchase and Crucial is no longer selling memory that fit, than to AI data centers demand.

ChatGPT recently launched version 5.2, shortly after version 5.1. The update frequency remains consistent. Why hasn’t Apple upgraded the Apple Foundation Model behind Apple Intelligence? Shouldn’t they be able to push out updates to their models as well? Will this change in next year’s Siri?