ChatGPT is a really good teacher. I’m still learning how to ask the right questions — it’s hard to break search engine habits of just using keywords. Spelling everything out like I’m talking to a person has been quite effective.

I just learned how to use white-space: nowrap; for oneamonth.club.

The response to oneamonth.club has been very positive, and it’s so exciting to have folks jump aboard. 😊 I really hope that more people will choose to give ongoing support to their favorite small web projects because it’s inexpensive and easy. And of course I made a shortcut for adding members.

A screenshot of a digital workflow with various actions to collect and process a new member’s details, including name, website, and membership link with conditional checks for specific platforms.

I didn’t really intend to pull an all-nighter, but when you make it far enough into the morning and have an early start anyway, it just doesn’t make sense to get in bed for a couple of hours and then wake up groggy. I’m looking forward to hopping in bed after this morning’s workout though! 🥱

🆕📝 Shortcuts Tips: Creating Fallbacks

As far as advanced Shortcuts techniques go, employing the 'If' action can get you a long way toward creating more accommodating and user-friendly shortcuts.

I just updated my ‘Publish to Micro.blog’ shortcut to version 1.1:

  • Added a setup step to specify your microblog’s ID number so that posts always get sent to the right blog. (Handy if you accidentally leave Micro.blog set to one of your other blogs.) If left blank, it will default to the last blog you used on your account.
  • Added a fallback if no input is passed to the shortcut. It will show your clipboard contents and allow you to edit them and continue or cancel.

Get it from the HeyDingus Shortcuts Library.

If you hover over linked text on my site, you’ll get a nice new surprise. CSS is fun! 😁👨‍💻🎨

🆕📝 One a Month Club

How and why the One a Month Club came to be.

Made a small change to my Replies page tonight to fix something that’s been bugging me for ages. The solution was a lot easier than I expected. Wrote up what I did and how I righted it here. Scratching your own itch is so satisfying!

I was about to swap from Buy Me a Coffee to Ko-Fi for my tip jar solely because I hated how I had to wait to log in with a slowly emailed code rather than a password. It irked me every time. The service was otherwise great. Luckily, I finally found the setting to let me set a password. 🎉 Close call!

Watch out y’all, I’m back in a blogging mood. 📝

This whole thing smelled off from the beginning. Gruber’s timeline clears it up significantly.

I.e., while Apple as an institution granted, revoked, and under public pressure reinstated Epic’s new account, from the perspective of Apple leadership, they only revoked a new account that had been created through an automated system — not for criticism, per se, but for the same reason Epic’s Fortnite developer account remains revoked and Fortnite remains unavailable on Apple platforms worldwide: for the 2020 Fortnite IAP Trojan horse stunt. The “colorful” tweets Schiller quoted and which Apple’s attorney cited were mentioned as proof that Epic hadn’t changed, not as the reason for revoking the new account.

🆕📝 The whole Apple vs. DMA thing has me feeling unenthusiastic, and it could have been so much better

I’m an Apple enthusiast, but this whole saga has me feeling anything but enthusiastic.

🔗 Airbnb is banning indoor security cameras — theverge.com // Emma Roth

The change comes after numerous reports of guests finding hidden cameras within their rental, leading some vacation-goers to scan their rooms for cameras.

Airbnb’s new policy also introduces new rules for outdoor security cameras, and will now require hosts to disclose their use and locations before guests book a listing. Hosts can’t use […] them in “certain outdoor areas where there’s a great expectation of privacy,” such as an outdoor shower or sauna.

A win in my books.

🔗 The end of ice climbing?

Mellor, 70, another long-time Adirondack climber […], points out that the Adirondacks have seen numerous warm spells. He recalls rock climbing in summer clothes during a January thaw in the 1980s. Yet he observes that the long, deep cold spells that used to define the Adirondack winter are long gone.

“With the worry about climate change, ice climbing is so irrelevant to the things that matter,” he said. Yet he envisions a day when Adirondackers will say: “‘They used to ice climb around here.’”

Scary for someone in a budding, weather-dependent guiding career.

🔗 Did I Read That? — gregmorris.co.uk // Greg Morris

This raises the question: Did I read a book if I can summarize it? If I skipped the book entirely and opted for Cliff Notes, does that count as reading? Following my rationale above, it could be the case. I’m not suddenly going to hack my reading and get AI to summarize them for me - but I might consider it for some dull books.

The completionist in me compels me to only count a book as “read” if I’ve gone cover to cover. But to each their own.

I’m going to go out on a limb and say that the rumored “AirPods with cameras” aren’t earbuds at all, but instead are Apple’s take on the Meta Ray-Bans: camera smart glasses that also have great personal speakers.

🆕📝 First Letters with Valerie

Starting off a new month of PenPal letters with @val.

It’s getting easier and easier to recommend Micro.blog to anyone in open web blogging. Auto-OPML files and webmentions too? We’re spoiled by @manton:

Today we’re introducing a new feature: blog recommendations. This was inspired by recent interest in bringing back blogrolls, including posts from Dave Winer, his service FeedLand, the recommendations feature in Ghost, and feedback from Micro.blog users asking for new ways to discover people to follow. It’s a way to curate a list of favorite sites to link to from your blog.

Too tired to write a proper introduction post, but I’m happy to say that oneamonth.club is now a thing that exists! It’s something I’ve wanted to put together since being inspired by @manuelmoreale.com. Please send me more sites to feature! And you can support my site for $1/month at heydingus.net/club. 🫶

🆕📝 7 Things This Week [#135]

Ideas for blogs and weird hardware, computer pain points in the year 2024, and talented artists. Plus a new album and a 'Take a Chance' link that had me chuckling all week.

Go read Bradley’s piece on finding better balance with an iPod. These are things I know I’m struggling with as well.

We all know something is wrong. We all know that this can’t continue. We need to disconnect. We need long periods away from connectivity. We need a break. We need a break for the sake of our mental health.

I knew I needed this, so I started thinking about a change. I wanted to go back in time. I wanted to get lost in the music. Music, Tim, is at the core of who Apple used to be.

🔗 Federico Viticci’s self-made Mac convertible — sixcolors.com // Jason Snell

Some people will call this a silly stunt, but the truth is that for years Federico has been exploring (and pushing) the edges of Apple’s platforms so the rest of us don’t have to. He’s an ergonomic astronaut, floating away into strange places where no one (outside of rooms in Cupertino with blackened windows) has gone before.

And I’m quite jealous of his escapades! Seriously, the MacPad is tempting.

🔗 AI Is Strip Mining the Web — club.macstories.net

Think about what it would be like for that to be the default view in Arc. It’s not a MacStories.net webpage. It’s an auto-generated page that’s an answer to a question. It’s also a page that’s so far removed from the notion of browsing the web that I’m not sure Arc could even be called a web browser anymore if that were the default view. Instead, it’s a parallel, auto-generated web built on top of the existing web that acts as a gatekeeper to the source material.

I didn’t realize this was what felt icky about AI summarizers, but it is.

What can I say? I, too, like to use nice tools.

And when compared to hardware, good software is much more affordable. The price difference between a Lexus and a Suzuki is significant. The price difference between excellent software and basic software is not that significant. After all, there is no software equivalent of Rolex.

🔗 Apple Releases iOS and iPadOS 17.4 with Major Safari and App Store Changes in the EU, Transcripts for Podcasts, New Emoji, and More — macstories.net // Niléane

iOS and iPadOS 17.4 include two new shortcut actions. Using data from your device’s sensors, the ‘Get Physical Activity’ action can return a description of how you are currently moving — such as “Stationary,” “Walking,” and “Running” — and the ‘Get Orientation’ action can return your device’s current orientation, as either “Portrait” or ”Landscape.”

These’ll be nice for conditionals when running from Back Tap or the Action Button.