• The top-level domain .io may disappear

    On October 3, the British government announced that it was giving up sovereignty over a small tropical atoll in the Indian Ocean known as the Chagos Islands. The islands would be handed over to the neighboring island country of Mauritius, about 1,100 miles off the southeastern coast of Africa. 

    The story did not make the tech press, but perhaps it should have. The decision to transfer the islands to their new owner will result in the loss of one of the tech and gaming industry’s preferred top-level domains: .io.

    This is nuts. I get it, reading through the history of top-level domains there’s good reason to retire a domain based on greater geopolitical changes. 

    However, as someone who has always strove to own my little piece of the internet, and not be at the whims of tech giants and social media platforms, it saddens me that even something as perceivably solid as a domain can still be a shaky foundation to build a business on top of. 

    The IANA may fudge its own rules and allow .io to continue to exist. Money talks, and there is a lot of it tied up in .io domains. However, the history of the USSR and Yugoslavia still looms large, and the IANA may feel that playing fast and loose with top-level domains will only come back to haunt it.

    I really hope so. .io is a fantastic TLD and I hope there’s some workaround. Also, I can’t even imagine what would happen with the businesses built on it, do they have some sort of expiration to work against?

    Via Every.to

  • The Wild Robot

    A few weeks ago I picked up some new books, including The Wild Robot, book 1. Since it’s an easy read I went through a few chapters each night with the kids. 

    Last week we watched the new movie together as a family, and my wife and I were blown away. It’s one of the best movies I’ve seen all year. It has the heart of Iron Giant, and the parenting vibes of Bluey. 

    If you have kids, or a nostalgic attachment to Wall-E, it’s worth watching. 

    Here’s a great write-up if you’re curious to learn more!

  • Satellite Texting

    A reminder to anyone in the path of adverse weather, if you have an iPhone 14 or later, you can upgrade to iOS 18 and text loved ones for free via Satellite. I’ve tested this with my wife on the tallest peak in Idaho and it works amazingly. You just need to give it a little time and be away from any trees or buildings. 

  • Upgrade AirPods to USB-C

    Those of us still rocking AirPods with Lightning ports finally have a way to upgrade them to USB-C that doesn’t require complicated modifications or the cost of completely replacing the case. 

    I threw this weird looking case on my list and thought about buying it. But really it’s a solution in need of a problem. Do I like carrying around lightning and USB-C cables? No. Not really, but since I still need it for my ohter devices, it’s just not worth spending more on this problem. 

    In a few years I’ll be lightning free, but our family is currently running the following devices that require lightning:

    AirPods, AirPods Pro (2x), AirPods Max

    Apple Keyboard (2x), Apple Magic Mouse

    iPhone 12 Pro (attached to the watch my kiddo uses), iPhone 14 Pro (keeping around for a bit as a backup for testing Figma designs)

    Frankly it’s annoying to never know which cable is which until checking both ends, but one day I’ll be USB-C only and I can’t wait for that day. 

    Thankfully I’m 99% there (except for the cars!) with USB-A. 

  • Coding with AI

    Code analysis firm sees no major benefits from AI dev tool when measuring key programming metrics, though others report incremental gains from coding copilots with emphasis on code review.

    I’ve tried ChatGPT and its variants with development tasks. For someone who is still relatively knew at coing, I’ve found it helpful to move me further along in my goal. 

    Reading through the rest of the article it sounds like it’s still a big question mark as to whether AI tools make a difference. 

    However, anecdotally talking to friends who are developers, it sounds like there can be a benefit if you already understand what you’re doing, but want help moving things along. 

    The biggest challenge I’ve felt is forgetting what I know or being blocked in some area I don’t understand. It seems that an AI assistant can help a bit in these areas. 

    VIa CIO

  • Noise Cancelled Sleep

    Sleep is tricky for me, I’m highly alert to any environmental sounds. 

    For over a decade I’ve used a noise maker to sleep. Before that I slept with a fan on.

    Nowadays I generally prop an iPad or iPhone near my pillow and turn on a white noise app. I love Dark Noise and highly recommend the brown noise option. 

    I’ve tested ear plugs, and am somewhat happy with the results, but sometimes it’s just not enough. 

    Beats recently released a new 18 hour earbuds, which are fantastic. The only problem is their bulky size hurts my ears while side sleeping, and they tend to slip out if my ears get sweaty (a problem I think I can solve with some foam tips). 

    I’ve been debating trying the new Pixel Buds Pro 2. But I’m not sure if the cost is quite worth it. 

  • Canvas from ChatGPT

    We’re introducing canvas, a new interface for working with ChatGPT on writing and coding projects that go beyond simple chat. Canvas opens in a separate window, allowing you and ChatGPT to collaborate on a project. This early beta introduces a new way of working together—not just through conversation, but by creating and refining ideas side by side.   

    I’m not sure that I get this tool from the outset, but I’m curious to try it. I’ve been wishing Xcode would have some sort of ChatGPT integration, or use Apple Intelligence of some sort, sot hat I could get help coding simple iOS apps. 

    This tool might be helpful on that front.

    Now, with the writing tools that Canvas suggests, I’m not interested in a tool that will draft up an article from a prompt, that’s not interesting at all. But I wouldn’t mind something that reviewed my longform writing and helped suggest improvements to the structure. 

    A friend recently suggested some writing tools that do just that, and I’m curious to explore them. I haven’t really looked at longform tools in a while, since publishing my last book, but my dream would be something that helps me (as a scattered writer) see an outline of what I have and help me sort and organize it. 

    Via OpenAI

  • Reusing an old iPhone

    I’ve got an iPhone 14 Pro that I no longer use daily, thanks to upgrading to the iPhone 16 Pro Max. 

    I’ve been debating whether to sell it, or find some other use. At some point I’d like to get into video podcasting (or YouTube, as the kids call it), and have been trying to figure out a cleaner way to use the old phone’s camera as a webcam.

    I’ll report back once I pony up for some stands, but so far the Elgato mini mount is looking the best. 

  • WordPress and Automattic

    I’ve heard a lot of passionate takes on the whole WordPress fiasco the last few weeks. But I think I resonate the most with Manton’s post earlier today. 

    Automattic offered a severance package to anyone who took it, and 8% of the company accepted. 

    This is indeed very generous. It’s not often you get a chance to leave a job and walk away with six months of salary. For many people that might be a down payment on a new house, or enough money to pay off debt, or time to travel before figuring out what to do next.

    He then parallels this with some drama at Basecamp years ago, it does feel similar. I’m curious where the future of WordPress will head with all this and, having many friends in the space, hopeful for the livihoods of them all!

    Via Manton

  • A good book

    Few things in life elicit the depths and joys and emotions of a good book (outside of connection with other people of course). 

    There’s something about going on a journey with an author, following a character, living in a different world, being part of something different that evokes a sense of imagination an wonder not found in any other medium. 

    Movies, famously, often struggle to match up to the expectation set when based off a book. At one point I even started a podcast with my friend (and brother-in-law) Caleb to try and capture the sense we both felt upon reading a great book, then watching a movie. There’s something there that’s hard to evoke, and book readers know it. 

    That’s not to say I’m a true book snob. I love movies, and often enjoy movies and books together in concert, taking what I can from each form of storytelling and enjoying them for what they are. 

    A book, though (and yes I count Audible as books. After all story telling started as an oral tradition), has a way of drawing you in, of really diving into the depths of an idea, and following it to its end. 

    I’m not one to easily figure out plot twists, so I’m usually surprised at where things go. At this point in life I’ve just accepted it and genuinely enjoy not knowing what’s going to happen next in a story (my wife on the other hand is much better at this, she usually knows where a story is headed, but also generally keeps it to herself to not spoil me). 

    Today was another one of those moments. I was on a run in the woods, in the middle of a novel series, recommend by my brother, and had to pause the book to just take in the scene I’d imagined in my head while listening to the book. The moment was a build up after hours of anticipation, and it was so satisfying and emotional that I found myself tearing up. 

    Those moments are special. 

    When I find someone who doesn’t love reading, what I’ve found in many cases (of course not all) is that it’s because the person hasn’t read good books yet. 

    If you think this is you, and you don’t like reading, I’d love to suggest a simple test. 

    Pick up a book, any book that suits your fancy, and read for a few minutes. If it’s boring, put it down and try another one. 

    There is absolutely no shame in putting books down. In fact, in the last 15 years I’ve been on an unending book binge, having completed far more books than I’d ever have expected, and also having left unfinished just as many. It’s ok. There’s no rule that says you must complete a story. Life is too short to turn one of the greatest hobbies into a chore. 

    One thing I’ve found, to add onto this, is that switching up the types of books helps to avoid losing interest. In roughly 3-4 month cycles I’ll switch between fiction and non-fiction. Sometimes I’m interested in a fantasy series, other times I want to dive into some religious themed literature, and still other times I want to read history, self-help, pyschology, business, biographies, or otherwise. 

    Always I rotate. There’s no specific timeline or requirement to it, but rather I feel myself full on a certain genre or category, and when that happens I try something different for a while.

    It’s delightful, it’s fun, and it keeps my reading interesting. 

    That’s not to say there aren’t books that take a while to get into, that require more digging to fully appreciate. I love those too, but I don’t force it. I allow myself the time and the setting for what I know I can handle at any given time. 

    Some days that might mean I want to dive into a fifty hour history of World War II, other times it might just be a fun re-read of my favorite novel.

    Either way, a good book is a joy, and I’m glad there’s so many to read. 

  • My iPhone 16 Pro Max Thoughts

    I don’t have a full fledged review of the iPhone 16. Many others have done a fantastic job at that. But I do want to share a few quick thoughts on how the new camera fits into my life in a very practical way. 

    I’ve been using the device, an iPhone 16 Pro Max in Natural Titanium, since Friday. It did take me about 3 hours to transfer over from my previous phone, an iPhone 14 Pro. But once that was done I eagerly wanted to find out what I could do.

    First, like always, I jumped around inside the phone trying to figure out what was new. I tested the camera, the new camera styles, the camera button, and tried to get a sense for what was different. I also tried to figure out if I could trigger Apple intelligence, but it’s mostly unavailable at the moment (I am on a beta so I’m trying out a few things, but that’s not technically public yet). 

    For me, an amateur photographer who barely knew how to use the power of my previous phone, I can’t say that much has changed in a way that I’ll truly be able to capture (yes, intentional), but there’s always a universal truth for me and new phones. 

    Every 2-3 years, when I finally upgrade my device I find that I have a 6-8 month period where I take more photos of my family, along with the occassional landscape. Something about having that new hardware inspires me to go on a photography binge. It’s a bit unnecessary, I could take pictures that were just as good before. But it often feels like the quality is just a little better, even psychologically, and frankly that’s enough. 

    I’m thankful now, as my kids get older, that I went through bursts of photo capturing over the last decade. I’ve got some great pictures of them, and if nothing else part of the excuse I tell myself is that I need a new device to inspire me to capture a bunch of cool pictures all over again.

    There’s something else too, beyond the improved quality. With photography, at least the kind I’m interested in, speed of capture matters. 

    Also, the contrast between what I can catch in low to medium light today and what I could do years ago is crazy. I tested portrait mode with my daughter in some close-to-golden-hour lighting. The results were astonishing. I was able to snap quickly and often, capturing dozens of bokehesque shots of her in different poses.

    Something about kids, and most people in general frankly, is smiles are hard. Most of us instantly put on a specific expression when facing a camera, and the results don’t capture the true essense of who we are. I’ve always struggled with this for myself in photos, and in taking pictures of others.

    With my kids, and in group photos of them alongside their friends, I’ve employed a bunch of tricks to try and see their true smiles. When that happens those photos are truly magical.

    So, with my seven year old daughter, instead of asking her to smile, I simply started talking to her. We had a chat. She knew the camera was rolling, so to speak, but she engaged with me in some silly banter, and I frantically snapped the camera button dozens of times. The result? I was able to catch something that I’ll treasure for years to come. 

    That’s why I’ will keep upgrading my phone for the foreseeable future. When she was little I couldn’t do that. I couldn’t take nearly instant blurry-background pictures of my kids in mid expression, with the real smiles on their face as they laugh at a silly joke, or move in the natural motion of a kid in mid-play. But the fact that I can do that a little better each year, that is magical. 

    Beyond that, I’m thankful for a great battery again, and after two years on a normal iPhone size (at least normal for 2024) I’m loving having a massive screen again. The 6.9” screen feels great for watching things. Yes, I’m one of those suckers who watches movies on my phone at night. 

    The camera control button is interesting, but as Gruber pointed out (and frankly I think he was a little generous), it’s not as good as I’d hope in having a picture ready to take the instant I pull the phone from my pocket.

    Years ago, as a teenager, I bought a digital point and shoot camera with a 20x zoom (or something like that). It was some sort of Olympus camera from Costco. I loved that thing. I’d fiddle with it, take photos, try to capture sunsets, and generally geeked out with what to me was a crazy expensive piece of hardware (about $500 in 2003-2004). I remember upgrading the camera from a previous one, and counting the time in seconds that it took to load up. From the time I had the camera in front of me, to the time it was ready to capture a picture, was about 5 seconds. I knew at the time that was ridiculous, but it was as good as I could get. 

    Now, of course, we’re far from those days. It’s sooo much improved in time-to-first-photo. But still I can’t help but think it could be faster. 

    There’s either some period of time where I’ll need to get used to the new camera capture button on the iPhone, or I’ll just have to accept it’s a little finicky. What I’d hoped for, a button I could literally press as I aimed the camera upward, a movement I sometimes wish to do in less than a second, that doesn’t seem to be what we’re getting with this button. I’ll keep trying though, and report back if I figure it out. 

  • Hope and life

    Hope has been something that has kept me going lately, I have learnt how true the saying is about hope that dies last. But hope needs something to catch, hope isn’t given, it has to be found. But it is difficult to search for something so ephemeral on your own. I tried, I failed, I asked for help, I got help, I tried again and I succeeded. The lesson was learned. That was the moment I decided to come out of hiding once more. Maybe once and for all, who knows, certainly not me.

    I’m glad to see my friend is back at it with writing. 

    In the end, life surprised me once again, providing help and guidance in ways I least expected. But it confirmed my belief that sometimes a word, a short message, a seemingly unimportant message can change everything.

    As always, I find Michal has a way of taking a concept and writing it in a way that embues meaning, often poetically. 

    Glad he’s back at it, and excited to see what he writes next. Also, since I’m weird about RSS, I’ll find out when I randomly type his website into my address bar again (or hear see it posted on Mastodon).

    Via Michal Zelazny

  • Qualcomm Smells a Deal…

    Chip giant Qualcomm made a takeover approach to rival Intel in recent days, according to people familiar with the matter, in what would be one of the largest and most consequential deals in recent years.

    I don’t know what this means, but everything I’ve heard about Qualcomm suggests they’re a relentless organization focused on doing what it takes to win. Maybe that’s bad, maybe that’s good. But eithery way this is an interesting twist in the Intel saga. 

    Via Spyglass

  • If Dieter Rams made an iPhone Dock

    Dieter Rams and his friends (Dietrich Lubs and Ludwig Littman) designed many great looking alarm clocks.

    This is amazing. Fatih goes through the process of designing an iPhone dock, heavily inspired by Rams, and shares the 3D model to print it yourself. I’ve never wanted a 3D printer more. 

  • I don’t want it gone for a month. Go away forever.

    Throughout this Summer I’ve been enduring the notification harassaments from Apple asking me if I’m really reallllllly certain that I do in fact want the app that I’ve used for nearly a decade to absolutely for sure function the way I want it to. 

    I know everyone in tech ridiculed them for this, but maybe Qualcomm was onto something when they talked about Apple’s annoying popups. 

    Recently Jason Snell talked about this very thing, although I can’t remember the exact episode

    So what am I talking about? As a Mac user I regularly use apps to record portions of my screen. Between Loom, Droplr, Screenshot X, Zoom, and others it’s a crucial part of how I do my work that I record my screen. 

    When I go to load one of these Apple puts a popup asking me if I really want the app to do this, and then I can say no, or remind me in a month. There’s NO way to disable this. 

    Apple assumes that I’m not smart enough to know which app I want to use and what it does. So they harrass me week after week (thankfully once a month with the final release of the new Mac update), and ask me if I’m really certain I want these apps to continue doing what they’re doing. 

    And here’s the thing, these notifications don’t actually know whether the app has changed in anyway that might be dangerous for me, it just assumes that I shouldn’t be using them. 

    This is ridiculous.

    Enter Amnesia, a tiny app that makes this disappear forever. Thankfully I can control my device enough to fix this. But it’s incredibly frustrating. 

  • Ticci Tabs instead of bookmarks

    One one of the many tech podcasts I listened to, one of the hosts opined about wanting an app that allowed for browsing the most frequent websites he reads he day, but which would limit him to just those. The idea was to allow him access to the writers he wanted, but limit distraction from infinity wells. 

    It’s a brilliant idea. And, a few weeks later, a Jonathan Ruiz obliged, developing an adorable little app that does just that. 

    I tried it, and it almost worked the way I wanted. 

    See, I haven’t quite made RSS work for me. Email newsletters don’t quite hit the same either. I have a strong streak of getting distracted by apps with infinity wells, and so I still; after all these years, manually type the websites I like into a browser and look for the latest posts from those others. There’s only a handful I’ve done this with, and something like Ticci Tabs feels perfect. 

    It doesn’t quite fit the flow I work in though, so I’ll keep typing da into my browser to auto fill Daring Fireball; like the luddite I am.

    Via MacStories

  • Biking slow

    Years ago I attempted to bike into work as part of my commute. Headed from home to the office was a slight decline or flat all the way there. The distance was about three miles. Depending on the time of year I could arrive relatively unsweaty, in about 18 minutes. Roughly 50% more than my driving time of 12 minutes. Biking back took a little longer, but usually I wasn’t as in a hurry going home. 

    I’m not, however, a bike person. While I did find it freeing, I also found it frustrating. The route from home to work was not bike friendly. I had to decide between the street, which was not anywhere near my comfort level, and the sidewalk. Depending on the time of morning I’d have to dodge sprinklers and ride carefully to avoid a splash line all the way up my rear. 

    I wanted to make it work. But each day felt like rolling the die with a slight chance of a flat tire, something acting up with my gears, and in general having to keep an eye out for crazy drivers. The idea of biking is amazing. It calls me. Much in the way that running daily in the woods energizes me, I love the idea of hopping on a bike and just sailing along a sunlit path through along a river. 

    The reality, though, has often been frustrating times dealing with seat posts, stripping gears, flat tires, sweaty helmets, and struggling to make the temperature work just right. Probably some of this comes from the fact that I’m cheap, never willing to drop the kind of money that may be required on bikes. But it seems like I’m not alone. Biking, at least the kind that is intended for really moving, costs a lot. 

    It’s through this lense that I read the fantastic piece in The New Yorker on The Art of Taking it Slow. 

    In the past forty years, cycling has increasingly been branded as a form of exercise, one that emphasizes speed, optimization, and competition.

    Most new, high-end bikes are compact, lightweight, and hyper-responsive, with carbon-fibre frames, drop handlebars, and disk brakes, some of which are hydraulic.

    That’s a good take, and one that resonates. Some bikes cost as much as my car, and most of the time I don’t want to go fast, I just want to move unencumbered by a large, multi-thousand pound, tank of metal. Just today, during my run in the woods, I thought about the time where I may transition to more bike riding, and immediately felt the weight of all the cost and decision ahead of me. Running is so much easier. Find some shoes and start moving. 

    But, something about bikes still calls me. Maybe it’s the time I’ve spent borrowing an e-bike, or the times I’ve enjoyed long rides through the country with a friend, nothing around us but the rolling hills and setting sun. The distance I can travel in a day, the sights I can see, are just far more than I can reach by foot. 

    [Petersen] is an advocate of pleasurable, unhurried riding—alone, or with family and friends—and is obsessive about comfort.

    There may be another approach I can take, and I appreciate that others are already thinking about this. Where the time on a bike is focused on moving as part of your life, not solely as a way to move from point to point. Also, the bikes referenced in the article are 2-5 grand. Not horrible by some standards, but far more than I’ve spent on a bike up to this point. 

    There may come a point where I switch more from running to biking. We’ll see what the years bring. 

    Via The New Yorker

    Note: I don’t often use Apple News+, except when I need to source from an article where I don’t have a premium subscription. This was such a case. 

  • Thinking with screenshots

    Recently I shared my method for capturing screenshots. I haven’t yet seen anyone else who incorporates this into their normal workflow. Consider this my attempt to spread the great news of screenshots.

    If you spend your day working on a computer, and often have the need to capture visual information, then using a screenshot program might just be one of the biggest wins in helping to retain and save information.

    There are so many times where I’m on a team call and we’re walking through changes that we need to make with a design. A colleague shares their screen and references something, then I reference another thing, and at the end of the meeting I might find myself forgetting what we even talked about.

    The forgetting part was mostly solved years ago by the fact that I type fast and take thorough notes at most meetings.

    However, it’s a lot harder to describe a design change with words if you’re trying to reference a component with two modules inside of it in version three of a Figma file, deep down in page two; and that needs to be matched up with another design in a Linear task from two months ago.

    This kind of matching up is nearly impossible.

    Do I write, “pull the design from the Figma file I can’t remember and match it up to the Linear task I own’t be able to find”? No, I used to do that and it drove me nuts. I couldn’t even decipher my own notes after the meeting. Recording meetings isn’t much better. First, everyone is on edge when you’re recording, and second you have to go back through and watch. Nobody has time for that.

    With a screenshot program I can type a note, press a quick keyboard shortcut and capture part of the screen, paste the url to that screenshot into the note, and keep typing. It all happens in a second and barely slows me down. In fact Droplr is the best at this. For Cleanshot I sometimes do have to pause for a beat, but on the whole both programs are excellent.

    This method of note taking is much quicker to decipher later.

    True, I could open a Figma file or something simiilar for each meeting, take screenshots and drag them around, attaching text notes to the images. But I find a simple Apple Notes doc with a checklist, or even the ever handy TextEdit file, to be far quicker to drop thoughts into, then if need be I can convert all that into a Figma file later.

    Update: I updated the latest version of Droplr and it’s basically unusable now with the way I take screenshots. I don’t see anyway to disable an option that asks you to choose your screenshot type. I might be able to revert to an old version, but I’m skeptical.

  • Pixels and iPhones

    Everyone knows me as the Apple guy, someone who has always used an iPhone. But for years I have been dual-wielding two phones, yes, whatever the current generation iPhone is, but also an Android device of some kind.

    I love the design of this phone. It feels very similar to the iPhone 15 family. It has flat sides but slightly curved edges so as not to feel sharp.

    Google has announced their Pixel line, presumably ahead of Apple’s big event in early September. I got to try out my first pixel for a few months in 2022 and liked it quite a bit. It’s the one phone outside of an iPhone that I’ve been tempted by. 

    I’ve often considered picking up a Pixel again, so that I can dual weld and test apps and devices. Maybe this would be the year to do so. 

    Via Parker’s POV

  • Unfinished VFX

    “During the year or so spent in post-production, working on more than 1,500 VFX shots, we would frequently compare our VFX works-in-progress with the original footage, ensuring we were getting the details right,” Ball tells EW. “I often found myself completely mesmerized by the magic of WetaFX’s work and how seamlessly it translated from the raw dailies. Around the latter half of post, it struck me how fantastic it would be to share this experience with fans like myself — those who relish peeking behind the curtain of movie making.”

    As a huge fan of the Planet of the Apes franchise (more so the ones released in my lifetime), I loved the latest installment of Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes. 

    The VFX real (viewable after waiting for a 30 second ad), showing side-by-side the original footage and final VFX is amazing. 

    I think it helps showcase the work of the actors and the artists alike. 

    Via ew.com