March 11, 2026

WhatsApp Launches Parent-Managed Accounts

Laurent Giret, on thurrott.com:

WhatsApp announced today that it will soon roll out parent-managed accounts, which will let parents or guardians configure accounts for pre-teens with strict calling and messaging controls. The new privacy controls will allow parents to decide who can get in touch with their child on WhatsApp, which groups they can join, and review message requests.

Childs still need a phone-number, so it’s a no-go for my kids and their iPads. It feels icky wanting to give them a WhatsApp account, but it having them talk to their grandparents and family through iMessage doesn’t always work.

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March 11, 2026

Matthew Cassinelli on Monologue for Mac and iOS

Matthew Cassinelli, on matthewcassinelli.com:

I’ve written a short novel’s worth of words using Monologue, a smart dictation app for Mac and iOS that I’ve been using almost every day since I got it in February.

He really likes it. I’m still a Wispr flow user. It’s just consistently works better for me, without actually sending me down a prompt rabbit hole. To which he mentions:

Other modes include Messaging, Email, and Notes, plus you can create a mode — I’ve been testing a Planning mode for Things and Linear, although haven’t gotten much success with my own instructions so far.

I’m hoping to find an alternative among the daily for new apps that are coming out daily - but none work as well yet for me. Will keep an ear out.

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February 25, 2026

YouTube Premium Lite Gets Downloads & Background Play

Sarah Perez, on techcrunch.com:

YouTube is expanding its more affordable, $7.99 per month Premium Lite subscription service with new features, including the ability to download videos for offline access and watch videos in the background, even if the screen is off or you’re using other apps.

Well, this is welcomed news. Doesn’t align with my No YouTube habit checklist — which needed some fine tuning clearly. But specially for trips, this is something that I really felt hurt the Premium Lite plan.

Will be trying it out, specially since I see an escenario in which in conjunction with offline mode, it helps me avoid Shorts rabbit holes.

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February 24, 2026

Raindrop.io AI Assistant Beta

From help.raindrop.io:

Stella is an AI assistant built into Raindrop.io. It answers from your saved content, linking back to the source. It can also manage your library — move, tag, sort, clean up — always confirming before making changes. And if you have questions about Raindrop.io itself, it can help with that too.

Very intriguing. I’ve had mostly positive results from it both on the web and on the app. There are still some rough edges where the links do not seem to open or it doesn’t find something I consider obvious.

I’ll be honest: Raindrop.io search has never been one of its strong points for me. I usually struggle finding links that I didn’t curate carefully enough with tags or folders. Bit this is a net effect of this AI feature is useful and positive for me.

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February 24, 2026

1Password Raises Prices by $12 Annually

Emma Roth, on theverge.com:

1Password is increasing its prices on March 27th, 2026. In an email sent to users, the password manager says it will raise the price of its yearly individual plan from $35.88 to $47.88, and that its family plan is going from $59.88 to $71.88.

As a long time 1Password user, I totally see the value of application and can attest that they have kept their prices stable for many years. However, I took the plunge and and switched to the default Apple Password about a month ago for my personal use, and my work is moving from 1Password to Keeper — both unrelated to the price change, but anecdata is not great.

Sadly their app is no longer a tool I love to use, and support — and it’s now a fine app. Which makes it easier to replace with another fine app.

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February 4, 2026

Voxtral Releases Two New Transcribe Models

From mistral.ai:

Today, we’re releasing Voxtral Transcribe 2, two next-generation speech-to-text models with state-of-the-art transcription quality, diarization, and ultra-low latency. The family includes Voxtral Mini Transcribe V2 for batch transcription and Voxtral Realtime for live applications. Voxtral Realtime is open-weights under the Apache 2.0 license.

As always, curious about how this compares with the other models. Currently I am paying for Wispr Flow, mostly because their fine-tuned prompts, not necessarily the recognition. I do have high hopes for the Apple intelligence update and its ability to bring bilingual dictation/recognition at the same time.

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January 21, 2026

Spotify Testing a Feature That Syncs Audiobooks With Books

Jess Weatherbed, on theverge.com:

Using Page Match will require users to unlock or purchase the audiobook on Spotify and own either the paper or ebook version of the same book. The feature works by scanning the page you’re currently reading with your device camera, using optical character recognition (OCR) to identify passages that are then matched to specific timestamps in the audiobook.

I would love this feature. Even more, I’d love Spotify to make Audiobooks Access available in Costa Rica. It would also be great if Audible also released something similar — but since they will also push for you to buy the Kindle version, not see it likely.

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January 5, 2026

Clicks Communicator and Power Keyboard

Clicks Communicator is the ultimate communication companion, helping you communicate in a noisy world. Compact and pocketable, Communicator is a new kind of 5G phone built deeper context (Signal light & Message Hub), versatile input (premium typing experience and voice input), and greater control (swappable covers, expandable storage, 3.5MM).

Clicks Power Keyboard is one keyboard for all your smart screens: phone, tablet, smart TV, even AR/VR. Power Keyboard is a slide out keyboard and power bank in one, giving you a premium typing experience you can pair with all your smart devices, with power to top up your phone.

I returned my new iPhone 17 Clicks keyboard case and preordered the Power keyboard on the same day. The new keyboard basically addresses all my issues about the case: portability, flexibility being the main ones. However, another big one I haven’t seen mentioned, is my hope that the new keyboard allows for a better weight distribution by making the bottom heavier.

The Communicator was bittersweet for me… as soon as I saw it I wanted to share it with my departed buddy Alonso. I think he’d buy into the concept of a secondary device for communication and he loved his blackberry.

I’m excited about Clicks devices, and a reason behind the preorder was to support them after not being sold on the keyboard case.

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January 3, 2026

The Case for Blogging in the Ruins

From joanwestenberg.com:

The blog, at its best (a best I aspire one day to reach) is Montaigne’s direct descendant. It’s a form that allows for intellectual exploration without demanding premature certainty. You can write a post working through an idea, acknowledge in the post itself that you’re not sure where you’ll end up, and invite readers to think alongside you. You can return to the topic weeks later with updated thoughts. The format accommodates the actual texture of thinking, which is messy and recursive and full of wrong turns.

Social media flattens all of this into statements: Everything you post is implicitly a declaration. Even if you add caveats, the format strips them away. What travels is the hot take, the dunked-on screenshot, the increasingly-shitty meme, the version of your argument that fits in a shareable image with the source cropped out.

Amazing post that crystallizes why the effort to blog is worth it. Also, a great article to read as I struggle with yet another New Year’s resolution about my writing and posting.

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December 8, 2025

Reddit Frustrated Tana Believer

From reddit.com:

The learning curve is treated as a feature, not a problem to solve.

[…]

Rather than investing in intuitive UX/UI that adapts to users, Tana seems to expect users to adapt entirely to it. Customization shouldn’t require mastering a complex system first. Basic functionality such as recurring tasks requires convoluted command sequences instead of simple, discoverable interactions. The absence of straightforward boolean formulas as a property type is a glaring omission for a tool marketed toward power users.

In my recent productivy tools reshuffle, I gave Tana another trial. I just couldn’t get onboard the learning curve. The power is there, supertags are an amazing concept, but having to figure out the setup and learn how to configure it was too much for me.

Also, it helped me realized that I really appreciate native Mac-apps. I resettled in Noteplan.

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December 5, 2025

37signals Launches Fizzy

Jason, on world.hey.com:

Trello put on 40 pounds of cruft. Jira started charging by the migraine. Asana tried to become everything to everyone. GitHub Issues slipped into a steady state of decline. The whole category is a 20 car pileup of complexity.

Their tools are very opinionated, but if they fit your worldview, they’re great. I’ll keep an eye out for some personal projects to try.

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November 30, 2025

Handwriting Recognition Future is Here

Dan, on newsletter.dancohen.org:

At this point, AI tools like Gemini should be able to make most digitized handwritten documents searchable and readable in transcription. This is, simply put, a major advance that we’ve been trying to achieve for a very long time, and a great aid to scholarship.

I use a Shortcut with AI Actions to Transcribe with ChatGPT. My handwriting has been called hieroglyphic, which describes how bad it really is. It’s gotten to the point that the only words it’s marks as [unrecognized] — per my prompt, are ones even I don’t recognize.

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November 26, 2025

Rock Paper Scissors Solitaire

Federico klez Culloca, on klezlab.it:

You could play Rock Paper Scissors solitaire!

All you need is a dice. That’s your opponent. Throw it from your hand and as soon as you throw it form the shape you choose with your hand and see the result of the dice. 1-2 is Rock, 3-4 is Paper, 5-6 is Scrissors.

My maternal grandfather — whom I never met — had a saying that was repeated to me ad nauseam growing up: only the dumb get bored. Which was an early whinning deterrent system in my family.

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November 22, 2025

Homebrew 5.0.0 Released

MikeMcQuaid, on brew.sh:

Today, I’d like to announce Homebrew 5.0.0. The most significant changes since 4.6.0 are download concurrency by default, official support for Linux ARM64/AArch64, timescales for deprecating macOS Intel and removing macOS Gatekeeper bypass behaviours.

There seems to be a renaissance of Homebrew front-ends on the Mac, and I’m extremely happy about it. Applite is still my default tool, because of its App Store-like functionality. But it’s not getting as many updated nowadays.

I’m also testing Peercleaner, and WailBrew as the default way I update1. Using Homebrew to maintain apps up to date feels cool and geeky.


  1. Will likely revisit paid Caskly Updatest also. I suspect it’ll have some extra cool features.↩︎

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November 15, 2025

WhatsApp for Apple Watch is Back

From blog.whatsapp.com:

Today we are announcing a big upgrade for your wrist — the all-new WhatsApp app for your Apple Watch*. This new experience will help you stay on top of your chats without needing to pull out your iPhone.

Great news, but actual usage is meh on my Series 9. Still happy that it exists — again.

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November 11, 2025

Commetjacking Attack Tricks Comet Browser Into Stealing Emails

Bill Toulas, on bleepingcomputer.com:

A new attack called CometJacking’ exploits URL parameters to pass to Perplexity’s Comet AI browser hidden instructions that allow access to sensitive data from connected services, like email and calendar.

After Arc was acquired by Atlassian, I did an AI browser walkabout over the last few months, testing Dia, Comet, and lastly Atlas. In the end, I came out unimpressed with the features, although sadly, I do think that this new AI browsers have the nicest UI and design.

I went back Brave for a few months, but recently switched to Helium, and I’m happy with its Chromium and minimalistic design. Browsers have too much information from the end of end user side. If tracking via cookies is concerning, imagine how much a browser can know about you from your side of the screen. I do think that Apple may be up to something with the whole approach of secure and anonymous LLMs.

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November 1, 2025

Field Notes to Markdown Conversion

Phil Nunnally, on twelvety.bearblog.dev:

But I want to have my cake and search it, too, so the text has to be digitized somehow. The process today is: Grab the notebook throughout the day to log whatever. At the end of the day, take non-fussy photos of the pages on the phone. Use Google Lens to convert them to text and paste them into a yyyy-mm-dd [3-character day of the week].md file in my Markdown notes directory (yep, right in there with all the other files The Archive looks at).

This is cool. I obviously have gone down the eink tablet route with the reMarkable 2 and now the Viwoods AI Notes reader. But there’s so many other ways to skin this cat. I actually believe that better bang for the buck nowadays is a comfortable notebook, a nice pen and just being organized enough to scan it at the end of the day. With most of the AI tools, it’s easy to transcribe this and have it added to your app of choice.

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October 19, 2025

Retiring Windows 10 and Linux Options

Scott Larson, on scottrlarson.com:

Linux Distribution Replacements for Windows 1. Zorin OS: A Windows-like Linux experience, requires modern hardware 2. PopOS: Built for gamers out of the box 3. Ubuntu: All-around desktop, requires modern hardware 4. Elementary OS: For minimalist users 5. MX Linux: For 10+ years, hardware.

Great summary of Linux distributions to keep around when thinking of replacing Windows or in general.

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October 18, 2025

Zed for Windows Now Available

Max Brunsfeld, on zed.dev:

Zed isn’t an Electron app; we integrate directly with the underlying platform for maximal control. The Windows build uses DirectX 11 for rendering, and DirectWrite for text rendering, to match the Windows look and feel.

I’m still a Sublime Text person, but I keep Zed around to try every one of every now and then. If for whatever reason Sublime Text wouldn’t be an option, Zed will be it.

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October 15, 2025

Matt Langford New Mythos Theme

Matt Langford, on mattlangford.com:

After years (wow, that happened fast) of crafting themes for Micro.blog, I’m excited to introduce Mythos Theme — my latest project that represents the direction of my theme development work. Before diving into what makes Mythos special, I want to share some important updates about my existing themes and where they stand moving forward.

Oh man, what a nice looking theme. I would love to have this on blot. Might take a stab at it with one of the vibe coding tools to see how much I can replicate.

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October 14, 2025

Another macOS User Full-Time in Linux

Jack, on baty.blog:

I’m still using Omarchy. I really like the tiling window setup with Hyprland. I sometimes paint myself into a corner, but mostly it makes window management fast and efficient. Workspaces on Linux are so nice.

[…]

So far almost everything has worked without fuss. My Apple Studio Display works, as does its speaker volume, webcam, and microphone. I was able to print to my laser printer straight away, and never needed to install anything for it.

I swear I’m not looking for this sort of post that are arriving in my feed or being boosted on mastodon. It says a lot about Omarchy, but also on the the lack of sharp edge macOS as a tool has lost.

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October 13, 2025

Chris Hannah Sticks with Omarchy

Chris Hannah, on journeysthroughglass.net:

I think that’s the best thing about Omarchy in my opinion. It’s built in a way that it gives you a good foundation, an opinionated (but reasonable) layer on top, good documentation, and a growing community.

It’s not a fad. Geeks are looking for other options on the desktop — since macOS has become the wrong kind of opinionated.

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October 13, 2025

Meh (ctrl alt shift) and Hyper (ctrl alt shift cmd) Key Combinations

creakingstairs, on news.ycombinator.com:

Meh (ctrl alt shift) and hyper (ctrl alt shift cmd). And I bind caps lock to meh on long press and esc on tap.

This gives me plenty of easily reachable hot keys. Eg I can switch between spaces with meh + number. I have terminal hot window bound to meh + space. Moving focus between windows is meh + hjlk.

I bind my right Command key to the Hyper key — but not considered using a Meh key. My caps lock is the Control key. Maybe with a Karabiner I can do short press Control key and long press Meh key. Something to think about.

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October 6, 2025

Table Format and LLMs

From improvingagents.com:

Markdown-KV came out top, hitting 60.7% accuracy and landing roughly 16 points ahead of CSV. (Markdown-KV is our term for a non-standardised format featuring key: value” pairs in markdown.)

Very surprised markdown tables came ahead of csv. But good thing to keep in mind.

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October 6, 2025

T-Mobile Will Soon Begin LTE Phase-Out

Jman100, on tmo.report:

According to a leaked internal document shared with us here at The Mobile Report, T-Mobile will soon begin completely re-farming” their existing LTE into 5G over the next 2+ years. The document is shown below.

I remember being excited about the 3G rollout. Never mind that here in Costa Rica we’re just getting 5G in some areas — by which I mean a couple of meters here and there.

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October 6, 2025

Instant Access to Four Text Files in Obsidian

Ellane W, on ellanew.com:

Four text files form the bedrock of how I’m manually capturing information and organising my time and tasks.

Love seeing how other people automate their note taking. I have a fairly similar setup, but only to my one big daily notes file. For all other notes, Obsidian mobile is so unstable when attempting deep links, that I’ve desisted using it on my iPhone and even iPad.

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September 26, 2025

Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS Beta Download Available

From system76.com:

Pop!_OS 24.04 LTS with the new COSMIC DE, developed by System76, is coming with many new features to explore and discover. Test out the beta as we fine-tune for release.

A year ago I’d be sure that the new Pop!_OS would have ben my Linux distro of choice if macOs wasn’t an option. But, Omarchy has really found a place in my geeky heart. Still, I’m going to give the final version a try on the same hardware — and I expect it won’t be an easy decision.

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September 26, 2025

Louie Mantia on EPCOT

Louie Mantia, on lmnt.me:

I think for a park like EPCOT to be truly incredible, it must constantly be an example of the better world we’re not living in.

Absolutely. Freaking Absolutely. EPCOT should be a consistently on the frontier of the future. I nodded along the whole short post, and it left me thinking. There’s something to explore about the idea of the future being exciting and in in constant renewal. With enough fine-tuning that it doesn’t seem a correction, but relatable enough that it doesn’t appear nostalgic either.

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September 25, 2025

Using iOS Notes as a CMS for a Micro Blog

From albertoprado70.github.io:

I always thought that iOS Notes is the perfect app to take notes.

So, like any developer would, I decided to create a complex setup that allows me to create a website from my notes.

This is great. This is geek. This is pointless. This is great.

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September 24, 2025

Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 is coming to PS5 in December

Tom Warren, on theverge.com:

Microsoft is bringing another big Xbox game to PlayStation 5 later this year. Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, the latest installment in the franchise, is arriving on PS5 on December 8th. Sony revealed the release date for Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 during its State of Play today, and also teased that Asobo Studio is working on PSVR 2 support for Flight Simulator 2024.

This better not awaken anything in me… What can I say? I [keep][2021] [saying][2022] that[ I’d get a][2023] way to play Flight Simulator, and I never do. So just putting this here as a way to troll myself.

That said… the idea of PSVR 2 support is very intriguing.

[2021]:Microsoft Flight Simulator for Xbox Series X / S consoles [2022]:Microsoft Flight Simulator Available on Xbox Game Pass [2023]:Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024

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September 23, 2025

Journaling in iPhone's Photo Captions

Hữu Phong, on phong.bearblog.dev:

That’s where I write my journal entries. It might sound a little odd since I haven’t seen anyone around me do this or even use this feature. Most people would probably choose better-suited things like a dedicated journaling app (Day One, Apple’s Journal, etc), a note-taking app (Apple’s Notes, Notion, Obsidian, etc.), email, or just pen and paper. But for me personally, I love writing here for several reasons:

Yikes. Talk about a pragmatic solution. I did try to use the photo captions with Shortcut’s a long way back as a way to create my own microblog, but it failed. This makes sense really. Most of my objections for things I need my journaling app to do are for stuff I actually never do — I just like to know the features exist.

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September 22, 2025

Cloudflare Sponsoring Ladybird and Omarchy

Mari Galicer and Sam Rhea, on blog.cloudflare.com:

To that end, today we are excited to announce our support of two independent, open source projects: Ladybird, an ambitious project to build a completely independent browser from the ground up, and Omarchy, an opinionated Arch Linux setup for developers.

Great that Ladybird gets some love — it’s important that we have a clean alternative to Webkit/Blink. The Omarchy angle is… cool. But wouldn’t have guessed they even were looking for corporate sponsorship.

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