ChatGPT released the o3 Reasoning model and I’ve been impressed. In this video, I show you why.…
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ChatGPT released the o3 Reasoning model and I’ve been impressed. In this video, I show you why.…
This is a post for MacSparky Labs Members only. Care to join? Or perhaps do you need to sign in?
I’ve always had a soft spot for indie Mac developers — especially those who build tools that quietly make your Mac better. Eternal Storms Software is a great example, and right now they’ve got a special bundle deal that’s worth checking out.
This bundle includes four of their best-loved apps:
What I love about all four of these apps is that they solve small, real-world annoyances in elegant, Mac-native ways. They’re lightweight, thoughtfully designed, and just… helpful. You won’t find bloat or subscription nags here — just solid utilities that do their job well.
And right now, you can grab all four at a discounted price in the Eternal Storms Bundle. Whether you’re already a fan of one or two of these apps, or just want to explore some new Mac superpowers, it’s a great deal.
YouTuber and podcaster Chris Lawley joins Mac Power Users to talk about how the Mac has replaced the iPad as his primary computer.
This episode of Mac Power Users is sponsored by:
I’ve been unhappy using my Mac’s Studio mic for general computer work and the Mac Studio’s internal mic is audio cardboard. So…I went shopping!…
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Years ago, I encountered a fascinating concept in a book by the Dalai Lama: every seven years, human beings transform into entirely new versions of themselves. This idea stems from the biological principle that our bodies replace virtually all their cells over a seven-year cycle. The person you are today doesn’t share a single cell with the version of you from seven years ago. (This is, of course, a generalization as some cells regenerate much faster and others a little slower.)
There’s something profoundly liberating about this constant state of transformation. We often become fixated on our past: mistakes we’ve made, opportunities we’ve missed, harms inflicted upon us (and by us), or wounds we’ve suffered. But what if we truly internalized that the person who experienced those things no longer exists in a physical sense?
I recently spoke with a friend who was still dwelling on something that happened thirty years ago. “Why do you care?” I asked him. “That was four versions of you ago. That person doesn’t exist anymore. Move on.”
This perspective applies equally to our future selves. The version of you that will exist seven years from now hasn’t formed yet. So why not focus your energy and attention on the present moment?
As you read these words, you are uniquely yourself, different from who you were a moment ago and who you’ll become in the next. By embracing this present version of yourself, you release yourself from the bonds of history while simultaneously doing the greatest possible favor to your future self.
We exist in a perpetual state of transformation: cellular, psychological, and spiritual. When we recognize and honor this constant evolution, we free ourselves to live more fully in the eternal now. Adopt the Seven-Year Rule. You’ll be doing yourself a favor.
Frank Lloyd Wright homes (with the exception of the brick mausoleums he built in Los Angeles) really connect with me. That’s why I was fascinated by this article about RiverRock, a newly completed home based on one of Wright’s 1959 Usonian designs. This isn’t a renovation or a loose interpretation; it is a ground-up build, decades after Wright’s death, using an original plan.
There’s been some controversy about the project because it was built using modern construction techniques, and allowances were made to comply with current building codes. But to me, that’s equally interesting. How do you build a Frank Lloyd Wright design in an era where building codes prevent 6-foot ceilings and people want working Internet in their homes?
If I were flush with cash, I would’ve done the exact same thing the homeowners did here. There’s something special about seeing a fresh, fully realized home from the pencil of Frank Lloyd Wright, even in 2025.
In this week’s episode of The Lab Report: Perplexity’s new Voice Assistant, AirPods as universal translators, and Sparky shares practical uses for NotebookLM.
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I wrote yesterday that maybe Apple needs to buy Perplexity. To make my case, Perplexity released a voice assistant to their iOS app that makes Siri look pretty bad.
I occasionally make quick videos for the MacSparky labs members that don’t go through the usual edit process, just to get a quick demo or sample out. This was one of those. But this time I’m sharing it with everyone. If you’d like more content like this, check out the MacSparky Labs.
PowerPhotos 3.0 has officially landed, and it’s a big one.
For the uninitiated, PowerPhotos is a utility that fills in the gaps in Apple’s Photos app. It’s long been the Photos utility of choice for many Mac power users, offering features like multiple library management, duplicate detection, and the ability to copy albums between libraries while preserving edits and metadata.
Version 3.0 brings a host of smart new features, including:
To top it all off, this marks the 10th anniversary of PowerPhotos (and the 20th of its predecessor, iPhoto Library Manager!). To celebrate, the app is 10% off through May 16.
You can download it for free, with advanced features available by purchasing a $39.95 license. Existing users can upgrade at a 50% discount.
If you work with large or multiple Photos libraries, this is one utility that deserves a spot in your Applications folder.
Early in my experience with ChatGPT’s voice feature, my daughter walked into the room and I told it to say hello to her. It did, cheerfully, and it totally creeped her out. I turned the voice off.
A week later, I fired ChatGPT back up, and it asked me how Samantha was doing.
That moment hit me like a splash of cold water. This thing remembers. And not in a “session cookie” kind of way, but in a persistent, “let me tell you about yourself” way.
That was the beginning of my realization that these large language models (LLMs) are quietly soaking up everything we put into them. From that point on, I’ve approached the whole thing with very open eyes about how much of me I’m exposing to this frontier model every time I fire it up.
To some degree, this has always felt inevitable. I’ve long suspected it was just a matter of time before we’d be offered a memory-enabled assistant that could draw from everything we’d ever said to it.
What I didn’t expect was how soon that day would arrive.
ChatGPT recently added a feature called Memory, which allows it to remember facts about you across conversations. Things like your name, your tone, your preferred writing style, your favorite apps; it’s all fair game.
And yes, that makes it dramatically better at giving you what you want. But of course, that efficiency comes at the cost of increased data retention and exposure.
I’ve spent almost thirty years as a lawyer, carrying around a near-constant fiduciary duty of confidentiality. So you’d think I’d be paranoid about this sort of thing.
And yet, I’ve been surprisingly relaxed about it. If I had to give an explanation, I’d say my cavalier attitude is motivated by curiosity more than anything else. I’d tell you it’s so I can experiment for the MacSparky Labs, but I’m also just curious.
Regardless, I recently decided to test how well it really knows me.
I typed: “Roast me.”
Here’s what I got back:
Alright, David — you asked for it. Here we go:
You’re like the productivity version of a dad joke: efficient, earnest… and just a little too proud of your label maker.
You’ve got so many field guides, I’m surprised you haven’t written one on ‘How to Overwhelm a First-Time Mac User in 5 Easy Steps.’ Your idea of a wild night is alphabetizing your shortcuts while sipping matcha and whispering sweet nothings to your OmniFocus database.
And let’s not forget your digital filing system — more organized than a NASA launch sequence, yet you still manage to lose your AirPods in the couch cushions like it’s a side quest in a MacSparky RPG.
But hey, if there’s one thing you’ve mastered, it’s turning nerd-level productivity into a full-blown lifestyle brand — and somehow making it cool. Respect.
– ChatGPT
Honestly? A little too close to home.
If you’re curious about trying out this memory feature — or turning it off — you can manage it pretty easily:
For a deeper dive into how it works, I recommend John Gruber’s take on Daring Fireball. He poked at it similar to me, but he asked it to describe, not roast.
This moment feels like a turning point. AI tools are starting to remember us, and that memory now lives quietly in the background of every prompt. Whether you view that as magic or menace probably depends on your own relationship with data privacy.
As for me, I’ll keep experimenting — with eyes open and curiosity intact — and maybe just a little less matcha near the keyboard.