On this episode of Focused, Mike and I consider how the environment affects our ability to focus and share the very different ways we set up our workspaces.
This episode of Focused is sponsored by:
On this episode of Focused, Mike and I consider how the environment affects our ability to focus and share the very different ways we set up our workspaces.
This episode of Focused is sponsored by:
This is a post for MacSparky Labs Members only. Care to join? Or perhaps do you need to sign in? I’ve been playing with a menubar app called, One Thing, which lets you put some text in your menubar. I wanted to use One Thing to post a random inspirational quote of my choosing, so I built a Shortcut on a dictionary action. I also used a simple AppleScript to trigger the shortcut from Keyboard Maestro. Here’s a video explaining the whole thing …
Video producer, script writer, and loving nerd Adam Lisagor is back on this episode of Mac Power Users after a too-long hiatus to share his workflows related to running his growing advertising/video production business. Also, Adam’s writing a script and has news to share on some new tools and workflows.
This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by:
There’s a new version of Keyboard Maestro with plenty of new automation tools. David and Rose use this episode of Automators to share some great ideas of how to take advantage of the new features.
This episode of Automators is sponsored by:
This is a post for MacSparky Labs Early Access Members only. Care to join? Or perhaps do you need to sign in?
I got my second monitor out of mothballs and hooked it up. I need some advice …
There is a story making the rounds today about a secret CIA program for which very few details exist except for the disclosure that it involves a mass surveillance program on American soil that included at least some data collection of U.S. Citizens. It looks like the Wall Street Journal broke the article but Fortune has a good summary.
What we do on the Internet has been commoditized for years. If you’ve been paying attention, you shouldn’t be surprised. If advertisers are figuring out when you’re pregnant, don’t you think the government is also taking notes?
At this point, governments (and companies looking to monetize you) are punching holes in the Internet much faster than the folks trying to protect your privacy can patch them. When I was a lawyer, and a client would ask me how to make sure sensitive data was safe “in the cloud”, my stock answer was, “Don’t put it there.” Reading the story about the CIA’s data collection plan is not shocking. It would be surprising if they weren’t doing it. (I expect numerous foreign governments are doing the same things, if not worse.)
Just think about email, for instance. You send an email, and it goes through the Internet pipes to get to your recipient. It has to. No pipes, no email. Clever governments and hackers can snoop in those pipes and capture copies of unencrypted email as it is in transit—we just kind of live with that. If we rewound the clock several decades and discovered that the government was intercepting and making copies of all the mail that arrived in our physical mailboxes, there would have been riots in the streets. Now we just sort of shrug.
All we can do now is try to make smart choices.
All that said, I’m not sure how you escape it in the modern world. We live in an age of mass surveillance, whether you realize it or not.
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Earlier this week, we did the February MacSparky Labs virtual meet-up. It was a fun hour where we talked about the new Fantastical Features, the 14″ vs. 16″ MacBooks Pro, the iPad mini, task managers, and (of course) Star Wars. The hour went by too quick …
Looking your best isn’t just about what you see in the mirror. When you hand someone your business card, you also want to look your best. Thoughtful. Classy. Refined. Memorable. Is that you?
That’s also Hoban Cards. Hoban Cards is a tiny letterpress printing shop that specializes in minimal printing for creative individuals and small businesses. They not only print business cards but also calling cards, stationery, thank yous, invites, wedding invites and RSVPs, dinner menus, wine lists, coasters, and clothing tags. Watch their letterpress in action craft tiny pieces of personalized art.
You could pay less for something that will come off a laser printer. Or you can take it to the next level with a Hoban Card. There are beautiful templates and typography to choose from. The crisp letterpress impression will make a splendid notable impression when you hand them out. Use “MacSparky” to get $10 off any order. Get yours today.
Ben Lovejoy at 9to5 Mac has an interesting story about Apple experimenting with a folding iPhone and links to a video with some interesting renders from ADR Studio Design. (below) This topic came up on our recent MPU episode with Austin Evans. Austin, who has played with all the folding phones so far, argues that the regular-sized phone folded down to half size is better than the full-sized iPhone that folds up to iPad mini size.
I’ve not used any of the current crop of folding phones, but I can’t help but think I’d prefer that second category. I’d rather have an iPhone that can grow into something like an iPad mini and keep the whole kit in my pocket. The more I think about it, however, the more I’m convinced that if Apple were to ship a folding iPhone, it’d be like one in the video, where it folds down to a smaller phone. That just seems so much more along the lines of Apple’s genetic bent toward smaller and lighter. Regardless, I expect that a product like this from Apple (if it ever ships) will be years from now.
Today Flexibits released Fantastical version 3.6 with several big updates:
This lets you create a link where Fantastical’s web server can see your availability but not your appointments and then let folks schedule appointments with you against that. This is the first time I’ve seen someone pull off a feature like this without requiring you to hand over your account credentials. Nicely done.
These have been in Fantastical for a while now, but this latest iteration also lets you create a link so you can have multiple people weigh in on your proposed times. It even reports the results to you directly in Fantastical.
I’m going to take some credit for this one. I’ve been requesting/begging/harassing the Flexibits team. I like to work in quarters, and there were no calendar apps that would display your calendar in a quarterly view … until now.
I know many folks don’t like the subscription software model, but it is here to stay. I will say, however, that Flexibits is doing it right. All of these features are now just in the app. There is no upgrade fee or requirement for a higher subscription tier.
I made the demonstration videos for Flexibits. You can watch them below.