Satechi’s Clamp Hub Pro


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Satechi, who makes some of the sleekest accessories, is coming out with a USB-C Clamp Hub specifically for the 2021 iMac (24-inch)—sorry iMacs made in 2020 or earlier. To match the 2021 iMac, USB-C Clamp Hub has a modern, aluminum design. It’s got a USB-C data port, three USB-A 3.0 data ports, micro/SD card readers, and an adjustable knob to clamp onto your iMac. It’s not shipping until mid-September, but if you pre-order it now, you can get receive 15% off with the code IMAC15.

I had a similar Satechi Clamp Hub for my iMac Pro and it worked great. The question is whether the convenience of easy access to those ports is enough to justify making the front of your fancy new iMac look kind of ugly.

MindNode’s Outlining Feature Now on iPhone and iPad

Awhile ago, I wrote about MindNode’s Editable Outline feature available on the Mac. This feature has been a real game changer for me and I routinely now work on my mind maps in both map and outline modes in Mind Node. The good news is that the outline feature is now also on iPhone and iPad versions of MindNode. With this update, you can:

  • Interact with the Outline using touch, an external keyboard, or a trackpad

  • Outline and mind map side-by-side, or use the new full-screen Outline

  • Use iOS features like External Screen Support and Scribble with Apple Pencil

Outlining, like Visual Tags, Focus Mode, Notes, Connections, Stickers, Quick Entry, all styling and layout options, is a MindNode Plus feature, which is MindNode’s cross-platform (macOS and iOS) subscription. Plans are available for $2.49 monthly or $19.99 yearly. A small price, I think, for the convenience of being able to gather my thoughts, organize my ideas, and try to make some sort of sense of them. Learn more at their website.



Free eBook – What’s Slowing Down Your Mac


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The fine folks at CleanMyMac have just released a comprehensive ebook on how to speed up slower Macs. It’s got recommendations on how to identify the biggest culprits that slow Macs down, how to clean every corner of macOS, and how to retrieve RAM. They’ve also included some lesser-known Mac productivity hacks such as renaming files in bulk or turning folder icons into emojis to set the right mood. It does happen to mention CleanMyMac as a solution to some of the problems, but it also includes lots of helpful commands and actions that don’t require using additional software. Best of all, it’s free.

MacTrack Legal Conference

MacTrack Legal is back this year from September 24–25 in Orlando, FL, at Disney’s Yacht & Beach Club, so, yeah, I’ll be there. It’s a tech and legal practice conference for lawyers who want to improve their use of technology. I’ve attended and spoken at this conference in the past, and with so many different and new ways to use your Apple technology in the legal profession and not having left my house for over a year, I’m really excited to go and to speak this year.

My talk will focus on the use of Personal Knowledge Management Tools (PKM) for practicing law. I have thoughts! For those running a legal practice using a Mac, iPad, and iPhone, join us!

Mac Power Users 601: Soup Blasphemy with Kathy Campbell

Kathy Campbell is all over the internet, as both a content creator and a business owner. She’s a podcaster, artist, task-doer, and so much more. Stephen and I talk with Kathy on this episode of Mac Power Users about how she uses a mix of an iPad Pro, iMac Pro, and a bunch of apps and services to keep all the plates spinning.

This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by:

  • 1Password: Have you ever forgotten a password? You don’t have to worry about that anymore.

  • Electric: Stop stressing over scattered devices. Get a free pair of Beats Solo3 Wireless Headphones when you schedule a meeting.

  • Indeed: Get a free $75 credit to upgrade your job post.

  • Pingdom: Start monitoring your website performance and availability today, and get instant alerts when an outage occurs or a site transaction fails. Use offer code MPU to get 30% off. Offer expires on January 31, 2022, and can be used only once.

Automators #82: Bad AppleScript with Jason Snell

Jason Snell joins the Automators to talk about his automation journey, some useful automations, and the promise of Shortcuts for Mac.

This episode of Automators is sponsored by:

  • LinkedIn Jobs: Post a job for free by visiting this link.

  • TextExpander, from Smile: Communicate Smarter. Get 20% off.

  • Technology Untangled: Join Michael Bird as he untangles innovation through a series of interviews, stories, and analyses with some of the industry’s brightest brains.

Home Screens — Jonathan Buys


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Jonathan Buys (website) shares his Home Screens this week. So, Jonathan, show us your Home Screens.


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What are some of your favorite apps?

I’m a big fan of the classics. BBEdit is my text editor of choice, I’m subscribed to 192 blogs in NetNewsWire, all my passwords are stored in 1Password, and OmniFocus keeps the madness at bay. I use third-party apps when the first-party apps from Apple don’t cut it, but the truth is that a lot of time the Apple apps do everything I need. Safari, Mail, Calendar, and Notes are daily drivers, I listen to music through the Music app, read PDFs in Preview, keep in touch with friends and family with Messages, and get my work done in Terminal.

When writing, I also use the built-in Dictionary app with a copy of Webster’s Unabridged 1913 dictionary. The language of the definitions are a work of art.

Which app is your guilty pleasure?

Probably Apple News. I try to limit my access to bottomless pits with endless timelines I can scroll, but since I’m subscribed to Apple News+ I still get lost in there from time to time.

What app makes you most productive? 

Without a doubt that’s got to be OmniFocus. I’ve been using it for so long now it just fits with the way my brain works. I’ve tried a few other apps over the years, but only OmniFocus gives me both defer dates and due dates for tasks. I assign due dates to things that have to be done on a particular day, like taking the trash to the curb, but I use defer dates for things that I have the option to work on that day. I was a GTD proponent before OmniFocus, but the OmniFocus Field Guide was instrumental in helping me integrate OmniFocus into my life.

What app do you know you’re underutilizing?

Without a doubt that’d have to be Shortcuts for iOS and soon to be for the Mac as well. I’m not sure if I have much use for it on my iPhone, but since it’s coming to my Mac soon I’m putting in an effort to learn it now.

What is the app you are still missing?

A really great Jekyll blogging app. What I’d love would be something like MarsEdit for GitHub Pages. I’ve thought a lot about building it myself, but there’s only so many hours in the day, and only so many of those that I want to spend in front of a computer and not outside.

How many times a day do you use your iPhone?

Too many! I try to keep my iPhone configured to be a tool and not an entertainment device. From time to time I’ll play a game on it, but for the most part my iPhone is my device for finding information, keeping in touch, and keeping me on track with my personal, professional, and health goals.

What Today View widgets are you using and why?



I actually had to swipe over to check and see what I had on the Today view. Looks like I use the default Smart Stack, the battery use widget, a Notes note(?) that I update occasionally when it makes sense, and the Screen Time widget to keep track of what I’m actually spending my time on.

What is your favorite feature of the iPhone/iPad?

My favorite thing about my iPhone is how I can get to the information I need anytime, straight away. If I want to check the balance of a bank account, that’s a tap and a login with Face ID. If I’m at the hardware store and I need to know the exact model number of my weed eater, that’s in DEVONthink To Go. If we are out browsing at the furniture store and my wife points out a set she likes, I’ll snap a photo and save it in Notes. It’s an information super machine.

If you were in charge at Apple, what would you add or change?

I wrote an article for my blog a few years ago about some changes I’d like to see made to macOS to make it more of a workhorse for knowledge workers. I’d like Siri to find related documents to what I’m looking at or have selected and have that available at a swipe in Notification Center. I’d like Siri to not only find documents for me, but file and name documents for me intelligently. Finally, I’d like iCloud Drive to encrypt everything end-to-end so I could finally use it without having to worry about sensitive company information leaking in what could possibly be career adverse ways!

Do you have an Apple Watch? Show us your watch face tell us about it.



My wife bought me a Series 3 a few years ago and I’ve been wearing it every day since. I mostly use it for fitness tracking, keeping an eye on the weather, and, you know, telling time. I also enjoy how it unlocks my iMac for me 😀. I’ve got my eye on what Apple releases for the Series 7 in the Fall though, I increasingly want the always on screen in the Series 6.

What’s your wallpaper and why?


On my Mac it’s the default Big Sur wallpaper. I like how bright and colorful it is. On my iPhone it’s a photo of some leaves I took in the Fall a few years back, reminds me that this summer heat won’t last forever!

Anything else you’d like to share?

Following Apple and being part of the community has been a fun hobby and a constant source of joy in my life for years. The things we get into here are of small consequence in the grand scheme of things … but it is fun, and I think that fun is enough. The developersdesignerswriterspodcasters, and creators of all kinds that come together to build and share the joy of a near future that we can almost see is something we don’t have enough of. Inside this community, every now and then we get a glimpse of the future, some amazing piece of tech or beautiful new design that inspires hope. The kind of hope that just breathes optimism into us all to consider that maybe we really can build a better tomorrow.

Thanks, Jonathan!

WaterField AirTags


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For a long time, I’ve been a fan of WaterField Designs’ bags and products. They are well-designed and seem to last forever. So, I was curious when WaterField announced their own line of leather-based AirTag products. I was so curious, that I asked to test out a few of them out. Specifically the AirTag Leather Keychain and AirTag Leather Luggage Tag.

The AirTag Leather Keychain

There is, in my mind, a certain aesthetic to WaterField Design products that I think of as rugged honesty. Everything put together in a way that you can see exactly how they did it, and exactly how they expect it to last. I dig it.

The AirTag Leather Keychain is no different. It is full-grain leather sewed together with heavy thread and a metal screw stud closure.

You actually embed the AirTag in the device. There are holes in the leather so you can still hear the AirTag, but it won’t be getting scratched up like it does in the more expensive Apple leather keychain.

There are also several ways to attach it including a built-in ring, an included steel wire ring, and a carabiner. I’ve been using this ring to attach to whatever bag I’m carrying. I keep it next to my wallet and, as I’m heading out the door, I clip it on.

The AirTag has that rugged honesty. It’s already getting a nice patina, and I expect it to last. At $25, I think it’s a great value too.

The AirTag Leather Luggage Tag



The Leather Luggage Tag is bigger than the AirTag Leather Keychain but has the same design aesthetic. It comes in several colors, is made of full-grain leather, and again has the same physical metal stud closure mechanism. In addition to holding your AirTag, it also has a card for you to list your name and contact details and ships with a steel wire connector to secure it to your luggage using a barrel-closure thread.



Like the AirTag Leather Keychain, there are small holes in the leather so you’ll be able to hear your AirTag. To further protect your AirTag (and I suspect make it easer to retrieve), there is a separate leather pouch to hold your AirTag that slides into the Leather Luggage Tag.

This thing looks nice but is built to take a beating. (Have you ever watched airport personnel handle luggage? If not, I recommend against it.) The AirTag Leather Luggage Tag is $50 and looks very nice on your luggage, in addition to giving you all those AirTag features.

All WaterField products are designed and manufactured in San Francisco, and the company stands behind its products. I’ve bought a lot from WaterField over the years and have never regretted any purchase. To learn more, head over to WaterField and check them out.

The Rumored Portrait Mode for Video

Mark Gurman is at it again. This time he is reporting that a focus of the the iPhone 13 will be the ability to de-focus the background with video. Think of it like portrait mode, but for video. This would be created by the depth sensor and even allow users to adjust just how much bokeh is too much bokeh.

If true, this couldn’t come soon enough for me. I’ve been shooting a lot more live video lately with my fledgling Disneyland Field Guide. Thus far I’ve tried shooting with my fancy Sony camera (that is way too heavy and I’m completely freaked out about dropping or breaking) and my smaller camera (an Osmo Pocket) that is good for this job but doesn’t return a blurry background. If the iPhone could give me that blurry background on demand, It’d probably jump to the front of the line as my primary camera for this task.

TextExpander: Type Less, Say More (Sponsor)

I’d like to thank TextExpander for sponsoring the site this week. TextExpander allows you to be more efficient and productive by taking the task of repetitive typing out of your hands. With TextExpander, you can use a keyboard shortcut or abbreviation to insert a snippet. Are you still hunting and searching and copying and pasting that thing you once typed out in email you once sent that would be a perfect reply to the email you’re currently composing? Fuhgeddaboudit.

Once you come up with your perfect response, be it a phrase, a sentence, or a paragraph, you’ve already created your snippet. Just save it in TextExpander, and then the next time you want to use it, type the shortcut or abbreviation, and see the snippet you created automatically expand your text. Do less repetitive typing and tasks by letting TextExpander do the work for you. TextExpander wants you to work smarter, not harder, and they’re offering MacSparky readers 20% off, so try for yourself today.