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Baty.net

A blog about everything by Jack Baty šŸ‘‹

Category: Misc

Back to Fastmail?

My first annual subscription to Basecamp’s

HEY email service is about to expire, meaning itā€™s time to decide whether I will be renewing.

I donā€™t think I will.

This makes me sad, because I really like using HEY for email. Theyā€™ve done a great job re-thinking how we interact with email and most of their decisions have been spot on.

I forward baty.net email from Fastmail to my HEY account and, now that they support SMTP forwarding, I can reply from there as well. Soon, they are likely to fully support custom domains, meaning I could move jack@baty.net directly into HEY and be done with it.

Moom, Minus, and Keyboard Maestro

Using a single 32-inch monitor with my M1 Mac Mini has caused me to re-think how I manage apps and windows. After a few iterations, I’ve settled on the following layout.

This layout includes Finder, iTerm2, Safari, and Emacs. Safari takes up the majority of the center. Finder and iTerm are split equally on the left, and Emacs is on the right, divided into two windows (or ā€œpanesā€ as most other software calls them). All my most-used apps are visible at the same time and Iā€™m not constantly moving windows around.

Renting eBooks

None of the old books on my Kindle mean anything to me. They’re just there. I never see them, I never re-read them. I never

use them for anything. Seems like a waste.

In addition, Iā€™ve recently purchased a couple of hardcover books that I didnā€™t enjoy. So now what? Theyā€™ve gotta sit on my shelf forever? I suppose I could always give them away, but thatā€™s also work. (Advantage, real books, though).

Doom Emacs from scratch

A week ago I decided to cancel

Doom Emacs and go back to building Emacs from Scratch, and once again I was reminded what a terrible idea that is.

Seriously, stock Emacs, even with a leg up from Nano Emacs, gets so many things ā€œwrongā€ that I could spend the rest of my life fixing things and still wanting more. I thought building from scratch would help me avoid Configuration Fatigue. Wow, was I wrong.

Posting from iA Writer

Is this something I can do?

Sometimes I want a better environment for writing and posting to my blog. Ghostā€™s post editor is fine, but not ā€œniceā€. For writing with Markdown, iA Writerā€˜s editor is hard to beat. I thought Iā€™d see if thereā€™s a way to post from iA Writer to Ghost.

There is. First I had to add an ā€œAppā€ in the control panel so Iā€™d have an API token. I entered that and the corresponding endpoint URL in iA Writer. Now, I can write, add images, and post a new draft simply by right-clicking the post and hitting ā€œPublishā€¦ā€.

Book logging in plain text

Of all the ways Iā€™ve logged books, Iā€™m thinking that plain text remains the best. Iā€™ve been adding books to a text (Markdown) file for while now and itā€™s not pretty, but it works. And it will always work.

I publish a copy at www.baty.net/books books.baty.net

Like I said, it ainā€™t pretty. On the other hand, I use it regularly by simply running little searches. If I want to know how many books are read in 2020, itā€™s just grep 2020- books.md | wc -l and I get 14. To see the actual books, itā€™s even easier: grep 2020- books.md which gives me this:

The Leica APO-Summicron-SL 35mm f/2 ASPH Lens

I recently bought a used,

5-year-old Leica SL. I didnā€™t buy any new lenses at the time, as I wasnā€™t sure Iā€™d even like the camera. Turns out I liked the camera very much, so I ordered a Sigma 24-70 f2.8 zoom. I figured the zoom would cover my bases but I also bought the Leica M-to-L adapter so I could use my Leica M lenses.

The M lenses work flawlessly on the SL, and are even easier to focus on it, given the super bright EVF and focus peaking. M lenses are wonderful, but they are manual focus only. I was using the Sigma zoom a lot and falling for the convenience of auto-focus. This got me thinking about prime lenses for the SL. I prefer primes in almost all cases and so the research began in earnest.

The Leica SL2-S = InstaBuy!

When I

bought a used Leica SL(601) recently instead of the newer SL2 , it was mostly because I didnā€™t want to spend $6,000 on a camera that I wasnā€™t sure Iā€™d love. But it was also partly because I really donā€™t need a 47-megapixel sensor. Whoā€™s got the time and space to manage 80MB per image photos?

Iā€™ve had the SL for a month and thatā€™s long enough to know that I love it. Itā€™s big but not too big. Itā€™s an absolute tank, build-wise, and itā€™s fast and fun to use. Iā€™m happy. I can shoot my M-mount Leica lenses on it and am finding it even easier to focus them on the SL than I do on the M10-P. So everythingā€™s good then. I wish it had IBIS, though.

Daily minutiae and record keeping

miĀ·ā€‹nuĀ·ā€‹tia (noun) ā€“ a minute or minor detailā€”usually used in plural

I like the word ā€œminutiaā€. Iā€™ve been thinking about the various little things that happen throughout a typical day as daily minutiae. Things like ā€œPaid the gas billā€ or ā€œHad a minor headacheā€ or ā€œChanged oil in the carā€. Itā€™s all trivial and boring, but I find that I value having a record of these things.

But where to record all of this minutiae? If you know me, you know that I can never settle on one single note-taking app or system. Looking for a ā€œbetter wayā€ is what I like doing, even though it becomes frustrating when I deadlock over the decision. And Iā€™m deadlocked right now about where to keep records of the ā€œminute or minor detailsā€ of my day.

TiddlyWiki is more fun than Roam

I fell in love with

TiddlyWiki almost exactly 2 years ago. I wrote in it almost daily until late August, 2020, when I moved full-time into a public Roam database.

Roam is great and I love it. Iā€™ve tried everything else, and nothing beats Roam for easily taking, linking, and re-using notes. Iā€™m still using a private Roam database for work projects and CRM-type stuff, and itā€™s great for that.

Roam is efficient, fast, cleverā€¦and boring. Easy isnā€™t the same as fun.