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Interesting piece at The Athletic today chronicling the national soccer program of Greenland trying to join CONCACAF (the body that runs North American soccer competitions on behalf of FIFA). Worth the time if you are not paywalled. Love these types of stories.

UConn basketball fan Saturday🤯😡 UConn basketball fan Sunday😮🤩

Bird tracks at the feeder

As much as I enjoy seeing KC get mauled (although I don’t hate them), I’d rather have seen the Buffalo Bills… probably get mauled. All my Philly-area family are enjoying this.

I feel like text/chat support was invented to make support phone calls less painful and frequent. And yet it’s become so painfully slow and full of generic responses with Verizon, they’ve become as painful as talking to someone… and a lot slower.

Newcastle decisively through to the League Cup Final! At least that’s one thing going well. #NUFC #HTL ⚽️

I told myself I wasn’t going to watch the next four years minute by minute. It’s not healthy. I’d check in maybe once a day. I paid attention tonight for one hour, and it was already too much. Tomorrow will be worse.

Trump wants to place the United States military in charge of Gaza, and to expel Palestinians.

There better be Vietnam War-style protests to sending our troops to occupy another piece of the Middle East.

While the hype is nauseating, I think there is promise in AI as a human assistant. While the outputs aren’t highly reliable today, I’m starting to think the process of writing effective prompts—intrinsically—is an effective thought tool, because you have to diligently explain your task.

I help a nonprofit in town with their tech needs. I recently got them access to Google’s free Workspace for Nonprofits. This morning I was setting up accounts, and the account has access to ✨Gemini✨, which I used to assist me. Unfortunately, it was only 50% accurate with its responses. 😕

Huskies! Big win. 🏀

Recently thinking about the need for a modern replacement for the newspaper, especially for local news. Comes once daily so you can’t be sucked in throughout the day. I think it’s an .epub delivered by RSS. Read on an e-ink device for best slow news experience. (I very much want an e-ink iPad)

“The last best experience that anyone has anywhere, becomes the minimum expectation for the experience they want everywhere.” - Bridget Van Kralingen

Trucks driving by, or aftershocks?

Yes, earthquake in Maine? Update: USGS revised estimates to 3.9…

Screen capture of USGS Earthquake site confirming 4.1 magnitude earthquake

A map of the northeastern United States features a red dot off the coast near the New Hampshire Maine border indicating epicenter of 4.1 magnitude earthquake.

Earthquake near Boston?

There are a lot of planets visible tonight in the northern hemisphere and my girls decided at 11pm we should go on the back deck with our hand-me-down telescope that none of us know how to use, and we were making stand with the help of a chopstick where a bolt should have been. Had fun anyhow. ✨🪐✨

Now that DEI is dead, we can again have true heroes leading our country! Here’s to Pete Hegseth, a trailblazer with unimpeachable qualifications, hired on merit, with a track record of successfully leading a ~$900 Billion organization with nuclear weapons. 😑

iPhone experiment in progress: a widget-based home screen

Recently, I came across a YouTube video hawking the concept of a widget-based home screen for your iPhone. For me, it’s taken a few years for enough widgets to come out, mostly from third-parties, to make widgets useful beyond a single block on your home screen. But I wrote down the idea, and a few days ago, I decided to try it out.

Long ago I became a convert of the single home screen and using the App Library for every thing else. It’s very fast to flick down and then tap 3 letters to conjure an app by search as well, so I picked my most used 18 apps and made a wide Smart Stack of widgets to go across the top. I turned off most of my anxiety-inducing push notifications red badges years ago. Only a hand picked few notifications ever appear on the home screen, and the remainder get shown in summaries at the start and end of the day. I removed my mail apps from the home screen as well. I do have VIP lists set up so I do get a red badge for truly important emails (which also have permission for push notifications.) But could I further reduce what shows on the home screen?

After four days or so, I’m quite happy with it. My initial worry was feeling overwhelmed by a lot of information. In fact, I feel less like I have a bunch of apps that I should tap into “just to check” when I am there. I do use a lot of apps regularly. The 18 I mentioned above… really are the most used, but there are several apps I use several times daily that still don’t make the previous (or current) home screen cut.

Let’s take a look at how I’m doing this. First thing to note is each block is a stack. I have all stack widget suggestions turned off, but each stack has “Smart Rotate” on (where iOS tried to guess which widget is most important to show you at a given time.)

An image of an iPhone home screen running iOS 18.2.1, with widgets accounting for much of the space available.

Top Left is my weather stack. I have The Weather Channel (for obvious reasons), RadarScope Pro showing all of the KBOX sweep, and Tempest, which shows live weather data from my backyard station.

Top right is a random combo. I use the Wikipedia (official) app daily, and their only widget is “Photo of the Day” so I just went with it. Since I also needed a block to access my Photos app, and the only option there is for it to show you random photos (although you can narrow the randomness to within a folder), I figured let’s stack to the two random photo widgets together to create a little home screen decoration corner.

The next row is a wide widget stack, with Apple Calendar (personal calendars, reminders hidden), Google Calendar (work calendar) and Apple Reminders, set to Scheduled. I am a heavy Reminders user. Lastly, the Contacts widget configured with your family’s avatars and their Find My locations.

Bottom left is my “listening” stack. Apple Music, Apple Podcasts, and a Shortcut widget with two app launchers for apps without widgets that I needed to get on here: Sonos and Live Phish.

From here I had to decide what to do about 6 apps I wanted on the home screen but don’t have widgets, or in one case, didn’t want as a widget (Slack). So I just distributed them as icons across the bottom. A couple years ago I realized that your most frequently used things should be at the bottom for easiest one-handed access.

Left-to-right, top to bottom that’s 1Password, Orion, and Camera, and in the dock, Messages, Slack, and Safari. With the exception of Orion (which I will explain in a moment), these are some of my most used apps. Having them at the bottom for easy thumb access is intentional.

Three important apps were cut from the home screen, and we’ll see for how long: Phone, Drafts, Apple Notes. Although I don’t use my iPhone as a phone a lot, I’m pretty sure I’ve kept it on my home screen anyhow since 2008. I think this is mostly to see red badges for missed calls and unlistened-to voicemail. This visibility is particularly important because I find since switching to Verizon Wireless a couple years ago, late- or no notification of voicemails is fairly chronic, on both my and my wife’s phones. If one of these three apps returns, I’d bet on Phone for this reason, probably in the far-left dock slot.

Drafts and Apple Notes I use a lot, but a little less on my phone than on my Mac or iPad. We’ll see if I miss them on the home screen.

Potential Questions and Answers

Why put the camera icon here? There are so many ways to launch it!

Fair question. You could use the lock screen, Control Center, or the action button on my iPhone 15 Pro to get at the camera. The answer is… I feel like I need it everywhere. My dog will only do that adorable thing for seconds.

Why does someone who supports indie developers use Apple Podcasts? I have paid for Overcast from Marco Arment for… years and years. I wasn’t enamored with his recent redesign, but it wasn’t horrible. Big corporations forced my hand. Tesla added Apple Podcasts integration, and I am a frequent car listener, and I don’t want to be messing with Bluetooth controls while driving. Fortunately, Apple Podcasts is a lot more full featured than previously, so I’m really only giving up Smart Speed (which Overcast does very well) and a slightly nicer UX. Since I don’t want to maintain two lists of the same podcasts for home and auto, Marco had to go. I’m sure he won’t miss me: he certainly never replied to a single bug report or support request of mine, as a paying user for a decade.

What about that widget-only page to the left of the home screen?

I use that too, but rarely. I have four wide widgets there, no stacks. From top to bottom, not pictured, Tesla, Fitness, Files and Batteries.

What’s that Orion app?

Thanks for reminding me to get back to that. Orion is a full web browser made by Kagi. I started experimenting with their browser after hearing Kagi’s founder Vladimir Prelovac on John Gruber’s The Talk Show. I’ve been following Kagi as a company for the past year and am super impressed with their model and philosophy. Late last year, I made a trial account to see if a paid search engine made sense for me. So far I have not searched enough to know the answer.

But for the meantime, since Kagi is not a search engine option available in any of my browsers, I have to use Orion as “my search engine phone app”. They also have an LLM assistant option built in, if your search query has a question mark at the end, it will offer you a summarized response in addition to search results.

Prior to Orion, Arc Search filled this role on my home screen. Arc is my default desktop browser. I’ve been enamored with their mobile search assistant—which strangely is not available in their desktop app. In their mobile app, the assistant interprets your request, sends a query to your engine of choice (which has been DuckDuckGo for the last several years for me, well prior to Arc) and then summarizes, with citations, using an LLM. I may go back to using that.

Should I try a Widget-based home screen?

If you like to tinker with your phone from time to time, this is a worthwhile experiment. If you give it a try, let me know. I’d love to see what you make!

Rocking out at 6°F right now. The TWC model is calling for a low of 4° here overnight, I wonder if we could go lower.

A return to this blog in 2025

I am someone who’s followed the news, and politics in particular, closely since I was a teenager. Since the election, I decided I needed a detox from news media. I still read the New York Times, primarily their morning newsletter, and I still get limited push notifications which are hidden from me unless I look for them, in case something truly “important” happens. I also wake up to NPR, but have turned it off immediately or after the two minute news summary pretty much every day since the election. What’s this have to do with my blog?

Today, Inauguration Day in the US, I simply avoided television news. I scrolled the New York Times homepage just now to see what was happening, and decided I didn’t miss anything meaningful to my life. I just opened up Bluesky and doomscrolled like I used to on Twitter whenever it was a big news day. I did so because it was the first major news day since the massive move to Bluesky, post-election. I didn’t gain any knowledge I will benefit from. (People are debating whether Musk gave two back-to-back Nazi solutes during the “rally” or whether he’s simply too stupid to know he made the infamous hand/arm gesture twice. To be fair, none of the posts seem to think he did so unintentionally). Now I'll go back to keeping a once-a-week max schedule for social services, unless I have a “reason” to go there. Mastodon, which I think is a bit better, but lacks most of the “normies”, I will keep to the same pattern. Quality content or not, while both are better than “X”, I don’t need my brain chemicals spiked by going there.

I’ve taken a step back from my blog and social media in general since November 2024’s election. As you can see from the post you are apparently still reading, I’m going to make an effort to start writing here again, so the web will have more human-written things in 2025. Some posts will undoubtedly about politics. But also some pieces about how I set up my tech, because I always appreciate when other people share their set ups. Others may be about design, music, and other meaningful things in my life.

I’ll see you—quietly and intentionally—on the internet.

I would rather have my teeth drilled than watch the inauguration today. So that’s what I did. I went to the dentist. At least that’s one thing that went well today.

I can’t figure out why Apple doesn’t offer “alarm” as an option for Calendar and Reminders notifications. Most things are well served by a normal notification, but sometimes you need something you absolutely won’t miss.

Anyone ever make the first few notes of Today by Smashing Pumpkins into a ringtone? Does anybody still make ringtones?

If TikTok was a website hosted outside the U.S., could Congress do anything about it? Have we as a nation ever blocked a website, “Great Firewall” style?

An IndieWeb Webring 🕸💍