The audio from two book club sessions on Oliver Burkeman’s 4,000 Weeks is now in the MacSparky Labs podcast feed. This pick was a hit…
This is a post for MacSparky Labs Members only. Care to join? Or perhaps do you need to sign in?
The audio from two book club sessions on Oliver Burkeman’s 4,000 Weeks is now in the MacSparky Labs podcast feed. This pick was a hit…
This is a post for MacSparky Labs Members only. Care to join? Or perhaps do you need to sign in?
Today, Apple took a shellacking in the Epic lawsuit with the court finding the company in violation of its earlier 2021 App-Store-related injunction. The 80-page ruling did not mince words:
“Internally, Phillip Schiller had advocated that Apple comply with the injunction, but Tim Cook ignored Schiller and instead allowed Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri and his finance team to convince him otherwise. Cook chose poorly.”
– Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers
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!…
… This is a post for MacSparky Labs members only. Care to join? If you’re already a member, you can log in here.
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.
… This is a post for MacSparky Labs members only. Care to join? If you’re already a member, you can log in here.
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.