A 40-minute video explaining how to edit videos from the folks behind MKBHD…? Yes, that’s something I’d like to watch:
I’m sure I’ll find a couple of useful nuggets in there at least.
So what’s the deal with Pixelmator Pro…?
Is it still updated regularly? Is it now something you buy through Apple? Stand alone? Does it mean that in X amount of months its features will be integrated into Apple Photos? Does anyone have an idea?
InvokeAI bought by Adobe
And as if I I needed one more reason to leave Adobe…
InvokeAI, who’s one of the leading and top-quality Stable Diffusion frontends, was aquired by Adobe.
Invoke comes in two flavors: the cloud-based subscription-based, competing with the likes of DALL-E, Gemini, Midjourney, etc, and the open-source community version. I’ve been using the open source version for a while.
There are the usual empty promises that the open-source version will live on, but with Adobe leading the core team, it means just a fraction of the original creators behind Invoke will stay, and the product will quickly fall far behind to rot in the dust. Unlike other frontends like Automatic1111 and ComfyUI, Invoke offered a polished UI with advanced drawing features, including a launcher that made installing and upgrading the product a breeze, and I’m sad to see it go.
For me, AI projects that utilize users' computers instead of corporations like Adobe are important. Instead of paying for companies that don’t respect their users' privacy and artists' work, it’s up to the individual user to decide what to use and how to use it. It offers a level of control that the likes of Google and Adobe would never allow. Unfortunately, most non-tech folks are not aware of this side of machine learning and never will.
I watched the first 3 episodes of Splinter Cell: Deathwatch Season 1 📺. Yeah… not great. I didn’t expect something amazing, but I guess I had hopes for this one. The story fills flat and a bit cliche, rushed. I’ll probably finish it since there are only 8 episodes.
I continue to enjoy this show. Yesterday, I saw Better Call Saul S5E2, 50% Off 🍿. I didn’t saw this show fully when it came out… good stuff.
More in depth consideration of leaving Adobe and Photoshop
About to make a decision to cancel my Adobe subscription. I reflect on a few options for photo editing tools that meet basic needs without the complexities and costs of Photoshop.

It’s a nice day to go to the farmers market.
Photos on the Mac does a decent job cleaning up blemishes and weird reflections. There seems to have been some recent improvements. I don’t have the fancy selection options and layers I have in Photoshop, but it still works for most things. Below, the retouched from yesterday 📷

What are some good photoshop replacements for photo editing on macos? @jack I know you mentioned one… I know you mentioned something
Coffees and teas. Always important to stop for. ☕️🫖

I’m revamping the micro.blog pages on my wiki. Revelation of this morning: I can use Co-pilot to translate org-mode syntax to wikitext (Tiddlywiki’s syntax)…! No more annoying ID tags in the HTML or image tags that need to be cleaned up. Finally, Co-pilot is useful for something.
My mom needs a new iPhone...
A new phone for my mom involves several annoying factors: size, software challenges, language barriers, and the complications of her current Verizon service make for a good grump post. You’re welcome.
Trying to help my mom getting used to Siri and a new iPhone she will get soon. The huge size and the lack of the physical button will throw her off for about a month…
Micro.blog added movies and shows as part of its media collection options. Up until now, I needed to RSS feeds from Letterboxd to review movies. I’m glad this is now going to change, because it caused issues in the past. This platform keeps getting better every day. Now, I just need to watch something…
HTML export to work with TiddlyWiki
For now, the solution I found to write for my wiki in Emacs is to use the org-mode dispatcher to convert to HTML. It gets the job done.
Been away for the last couple of days. A combination of a lot of work and a new tech rabbit hole to explore, with a bit of an eye infection (nothing serious, the eyelid thing, forget what it’s called). Nice to check in on everyone and see all the new features on Micro.blog to explore!
Fixed an issue with Syncthing after upgrading to macOS 26.
I keep thinking about how people go about their lives and just trust things like iCloud blindly, because that’s all they know. We need to make sure people have some minimal computer knowledge.
Another improvement I’m noticing in iOS 26 is for iPhone mirroring. I can copy SMS codes sent to my phone into my Mac’s browser, and other hotkeys work as well (Command + Enter to send a message in Teams, for example). Overall, it’s easier to log into the iPhone as well.
I didn’t realize how many things Apple touched in iOS 26 besides liquid glass. Notes on my watch with export to markdown! Maps now tracks where you go (if you let it) over time! Photos…! And all of these are good added features. I think it’s a must-have for Apple folks.
The right to mix thing up on your blog
Robert Birming in a relatable post, The world’s worst blogger:
“I moved my blog from Bear to Micro.blog because, as I put it, it “started to feel limited…”
“…So I moved here. A place with great features for adding photo collections, logging books, writing both long posts and short ones without titles.”
“Now that I have all these possibilities, I can’t seem to do it. No matter how I try, it never feels right to mix things up. And when I tried running two blogs on the same platform, it just got confusing.”
I used to feel this way about my blog. I came to Micro.blog from a static blog that was hosted on GitLab I maintained for a couple of years. Back then, it was 90% tech-related long posts with footnotes and references. When I moved to Micro.blog, I started to struggle.
At first, I wrote long posts like I used to on the old blog, but writing like that is time-consuming and felt like a chore at times. I became a bit jealous of other folks on the Micro.blog’s Discover channel, who posted interesting photos or quick quotes from other places online. At the same time, Micro.blog was offering podcasts, so I tried that out and got overwhelmed quickly. It felt like I lost my way. I was an Emacs-dedicated tech person who writes about Emacs, and now I was venting about meaningless things.
I’m not sure exactly when (if there was such a quick transition at all), but I started enjoying posting photos on Micro.blog. I always liked taking photos, and Micro.blog gave me an opportunity to “just post stuff.” It was easy to do since I had a dedicated photos section (which comes with Micro.blog by default), so it didn’t feel like “cheating” when I wrote long posts on the main blog section.
The other thing that started changing for me was the integration of Mastodon and Micro.blog. I was active on Mastodon before I went “all in” with the blog. This made it easier to tell myself that I’m just posting short “mind farts” (as I used to call those short out-of-place posts) on Mastodon and using my blog as an archive for those. With time, and also after reading Manton’s book about microblogging, I started to switch gears and make my blog the main source of those quick posts. Having an official name for those quick posts - microblogging - helped me to “allow” myself to write short posts.
Other things followed up. With Micro.blog as my online home for blog posts, photos, and short descriptions of walks and meals I had, it was easy to start talking about movies I had enjoyed watching. Again, Micro.blog made things easy. I could review my movies on a site meant for that (letterboxd) and my review would appear automatically on my blog, and even get a dedicated feed. I was further inspired by Chris Campbell after one of Micro.blog’s Micro camps. Now I can say that the reviews themselves add an incentive to watch interesting movies.
Video games, another activity I spend a lot of time on, followed suit naturally with backlogged, where I try (and fail) to keep up with all the games I play. Just like Letterboxd, the RSS from my reviews there feeds automatically to my blog and gets published there without me needing to post anything to Micro.blog directly.
After I switched themes to Tiny Theme, which comes with quick “micro hooks” to add stuff like a static introduction to a page, I included my old blog and wiki in my About and Archive & Search sections because it made sense to fit those there. Now I’m considering explaining how I’ve done some of these things in my wiki again for other people who want to follow suit, which might become yet another section.
But I feel like I still haven’t answered Robert’s original issue, that “mixing paralysis” he describes. Kimberly KG chimed in at some point in the conversation (as a comment) and explained that it’s hard to get down and personal sometimes, which is what a blog is all about (Is it? I guess it depends who you ask), and this is yet another big topic.
If I was writing for profit or for some sort of a goal, I’d say focus is important and “content delivery” is important, because that’s how you get more subscribers and more traffic and more… more. But this is not why I write.
I still struggle to write some of my more personal posts (who doesn’t?), but I try and push through. It doesn’t happen often, but it does happen more often than it used to. I think that’s one of my personal victories, to be able to tell the world my personal stories.
Most people who follow my blog are techies and Emacs/Linux people, and that’s fine, but I tell myself that every now and then, there’s someone out there who stumbled into my blog and reads something personal that hits home. I know this is the case because I sometimes receive personal emails from these readers. I feel that when I write these things, I write them for myself and for them. I love creating those connections. And it doesn’t just happen through my posts. I write to people who make themselves vulnerable and write about their personal lives from my blog’s email address. They always respond in kind, and we can sometimes start a heart-to-heart talk as if we’ve known each other for years.
This means so much to me. This is what the small web, the personal web, is all about. And it will always be small, it will always be just a small group of people at a time, one reader or two, who reach out about one of the weirder posts, the one you didn’t think much about when you wrote it. It’s hard to describe how good it feels to get a personal email from someone.
So if there’s one reason to justify writing short posts and personal posts, you know, one of those “why am I writing about this” kind of posts, it is this. And Micro.blog is definitely a good place for that.