I Have Done a Vibe Code

For the last couple of years, I have used Apple’s Reminders app, but over the last few months, it has become clear I needed something with planned dates to better map out future work. Last fall, OmniFocus 4.7 shipped with just that feature, so after years away, I have returned to the venerable application.

When using Reminders, I was also using InstaRemind to add tasks quickly using natural language processing. OmniFocus’ Quick Entry tool is pretty great, but I have found it to be error-prone as you have to tab between multiple fields to enter a task with metadata such as a project, due date, etc:

OmniFocus Quick Entry

I took the chance to complete my first project with Claude. Over a few days, I went back and forth with it to create a webpage that would accept input as I described and pass it to OmniFocus. I can trigger this webpage with Keyboard Maestro:

Vibe Coded OmniFocus Input

You can see two text fields. The top section is for my task and its data, with the bottom text field reserved for any notes to be saved with the task. Tokens get broken out under the text, with reminders across the bottom of the window.

You may wonder why I chose these symbols. Turns out, I still had the Remember the Milk Smart Add shortcuts in my brain, and they came to the surface when working on this. (I used RTM heavily 10-15 years ago!)

I can even click on any metadata to edit it:

Editing metadata

Once I’m ready, I can type Command+Return, and the task is sent to OmniFocus:

Task in OmniFocus

Like many people, I have very complex feelings about AI. It brings both good and bad into the world, and even this little tool makes me feel a little strange, but I am glad I got to explore what Claude can do. At times, it seemed real dumb; I had to tell it several times that I was using Planned dates and not Defer dates. Other times, it felt like I was working with a knowledgeable web developer. That is… weird.

If you want to play with this, I have the HTML file and Keyboard Maestro macro for calling it zipped up here. Since it’s just a local webpage, there are many ways you could use it.

Note that you will need to hard-code your OmniFocus projects at line 260 in the HTML file. I left an example project in the code for you to see.

I am not offering any support for this, nor am I making any promises about whether it’s a good idea to use it. All it’s doing is passing data to the OmniFocus Mac app via a custom URL. It doesn’t make any web calls or rely on external APIs, but if it suddenly springs to life, please tell someone.

A Good Mac Studio is Hard to Find

Zac Hall, writing at 9to5Mac about the on-going challenges of buying a Mac Studio:

If you order an M3 Ultra Mac Studio with the only remaining RAM upgrade today,1 Apple says it will arrive in four to five months.

That means the 256GB RAM option ordered in April arrives in August or September if the shipping estimate tracks.

It’s not just the Mac Studio; it’s easy to build a Mac mini that won’t ship until August. That is bad news if you need a new Mac desktop on short notice. These long delays are not impacting all Macs, though, as the iMac and notebooks seem to all have much better shipping dates.

I assume we will see an update to the Mac mini and Mac Studio sooner rather than later, but I also would bet that Apple is steering its resources into making sure that models like the MacBook Air and Pro are easier to come by in the current climate of component shortages.


  1. Apple dropped the 512GB option back in early March. 

Musk Pushing Grok Subscriptions on Banks and Firms Working on SpaceX IPO

Maureen Farrell at The New York Times:

It’s not uncommon for large companies doing big deals to make demands of their bankers and lawyers.

But Elon Musk has made a particularly bold demand of his Wall Street advisers ahead of the initial public offering of his company SpaceX.

Mr. Musk is requiring banks, law firms, auditors and other advisers working on the I.P.O. to buy subscriptions to Grok, his artificial intelligence chatbot, which is part of SpaceX, according to four people with knowledge of the matter, who were not authorized to speak publicly about confidential discussions.

Some of the banks have agreed to spend tens of millions on the chatbot, and they have already started integrating Grok into their I.T. systems, three of the people said.

Lil Finder is a Star

Our buddy is back! Juli Clover:

Apple has continued posting short videos featuring its new Little Finder Guy mascot on TikTok and YouTube Shorts, taking advantage of the popularity of the anthropomorphized Mac Finder icon.

The short videos promote the MacBook Neo through a series of Mac tips, all of which include Little Finder Guy in cute poses. A video about journaling features the character with a book and a pen, while another about the Passwords app has Little Finder Guy with a magnifying glass.

Searching

I love that Apple is having fun with this, and think it’s some of their best marketing in ages, even if some folks are cranky about it. Anything that makes the Mac more fun and relevant to young users is a win in my book.

Artemis II Crew on Way to Moon

Today, NASA made history by launching the SLS rocket and Orion capsule for the first crewed mission to cislunar space since Apollo 17 returned to Earth in 1972.

Aremis II Launch

Watching the launch was wild. As Jason Snell mentioned to me, it is amazing how much the SLS sounds like a space shuttle, thanks to its mountain of recycled and upgraded shuttle-era components.

That sound — in contrast to footage that looks very similar to the launches of the old Saturn V — really struck a chord in me.

(And if you can watch the video of the stage separation and not feel something, you aren’t hooked up right.)

The crew is made up of Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen. They are now on their way to the moon, set to return in 10 days. Their rocket may be the product of a hugely-flawed program, but right now, that doesn’t matter. They are getting us closer to returning to the lunar surface than we’ve been in 50 years. That’s worth celebrating.

Fifty

Anniversaries and birthdays serve as an opportunity to both reflect on where you’ve been and think about where you are going… whether you’re turning 16, planning your 20-year high school reunion, or celebrating 35 years of marriage.

In the tech world, a milestone anniversary is a chance to revisit a product’s launch or a particularly meaningful update, inviting us to remember how far things have come.

Just like in relationships, as the numbers get bigger, those reflections can get harder to make. Memories fade, and as the decades pass, there are fewer miles on the road ahead.

Apple

Today, Apple marks 50 years in business. In our current era of VC-funded startups and AI-powered workflows, it’s difficult to believe that anything could last that long in the technology industry.

Apple is one of just a handful of modern tech companies with roots in the 1970s, and it’s hard to overstate the differences between the early days of the company and where it is today.

Gone are the days of hand-building computers, replaced by one of the world’s most intricate supply chains. The A18 Pro just beneath the keyboard of the MacBook Neo I am typing on would astound the men and women who worked on the original Macintosh. If the dreamers who designed the Newton were handed an iPhone Air, their heads would explode. Showing someone in the garage a photo of Apple Park would have brought work to a halt for the day.

That is just how things are, especially in tech. The more time passes, the more extraordinary the ordinary things in life become.

This nostalgia can be powerful. For long-time Apple fans, it may come from writing programs on an Apple II after school or flipping through copies of MacUser or Macworld to learn about the move to PowerPC. For me, those early experiences with Mac OS X in high school and college—often set to an iPod soundtrack—still resonate. For younger users, perhaps it’s their first MacBook, iPhone, or iPad.

For those who closely follow Apple, it may be for the days of a smaller company and a more close-knit community of weirdos who love their Macs. Some still wonder what Steve Jobs would do in any given situation.

Whatever your feelings are today, they are valid, even if they are messy.

That is just how things are, especially in the 21st century. Companies like Apple have the pull once reserved for countries. AI — like the Internet before it — has brought both good and evil into the world. Social media and the app ecosystem have generated untold wealth for some and unimaginable sorrow for others. Apple is not merely good nor bad for the world.

* * *

In 2001, I sat down at a beige Power Mac G3 All-in-One at my high school newspaper and began to learn Photoshop and QuarkXPress. I had no idea where things would lead, but the feeling I discovered back then resonates with me today: that technology — especially the Mac — was a tool to express myself. That feeling was only amplified during my years at my college newspaper, where I designed thousands of pages over the course of five and a half years.

25 years later, I still have that feeling when I record on a podcast, publish a blog post, or help release an app update.

In 2007, I was working at my local Apple Store when the original iPhone went on sale. I got to use one a few hours before sales started and was blown away. I remember calling my wife, excited to tell her that I was talking to her on an iPhone. As primitive as the first model was, I knew that the flip phone, iPod, and paper calendar in my employee locker were not long for this world.

Late the following year, I began writing this very website. I wanted to share my thoughts on the Mac and related products with the world, following in the footsteps of writers I had been reading for years.

In March of 2011, I recorded my first podcast with Myke, not knowing that three years later we would launch our own network, and definitely not knowing we would still be doing it 12 years after that.

Just this week, I have had FaceTime calls with friends in other states, been sent jokes from my kids over iMessage, and looked through old photos with my wife at bedtime.

All of those important moments were made possible by the Apple products in my life.

* * *

I’m often asked about tech by friends. What will the next iPhone do that the current one can’t? Is AI going to take our jobs? Should they get a new MacBook Air for their college kid, or let them use an old one for another year? Is social media as bad for us as it seems? Why should anyone pay for more iCloud space?

Some of these questions are easy, while others are not.

That is just how things are, especially when predicting the future. Technology moves both faster and slower than it seems that it should. We don’t have flying cars, but we are carrying supercomputers in our pockets. We haven’t cured cancer, but we have explored the far reaches of our solar system. Apple’s bets on the future haven’t always come to pass, but the products they make have allowed millions of people to make their own bets.

I don’t know what the next half-century looks like, but I’m betting Apple remains a constant — delivering the tools I use to create and cultivating the joy that comes with using a well-made product.

Apple at 50: Ron Wayne’s Other 90 Years

Ernie Smith at Tedium:

Recently, I had the chance to talk with a guy whose life, which is past the nine-decade mark, has been defined by just two weeks of it. You have likely heard the capsule version of his story repeatedly. He’s the man who gave up on one of the largest golden tickets in history. He created the first logo for a company who has been shaped more than any other by its second logo. And as he leaned into other pursuits, the other two people who founded that company with him, each named Steve, became legends in the world of technology. I would like to inform you that Ronald G. Wayne is not just the guy who gave up his 10% stake in Apple after just two weeks. He is so much more than that, a polymath, a creative, a writer, a talented artist, and the guy who meticulously got Atari’s stockroom in order. Today’s Tedium talks about the other 90+ years of Ronald G. Wayne’s 91 years on this planet where he didn’t work for Apple.

I learned a ton about Ron Wayne reading this, and I suspect you will, too.

Apple at 50: The Importance of the MacBook Air

Joanna Stern, writing at The Verge:

It was January 2008, and Steve Jobs had just pulled the MacBook Air out of a manila envelope onstage at Macworld.

Within minutes, Windows PC executives everywhere lost their minds. They grabbed the nearest office envelope, tried to shove in their plastic laptops, and tore straight through the paper. Engineers were summoned. Assistants were dispatched for larger envelopes.

Okay, I have no proof that happened. But we all know what did happen next: imitation. Years of it.

Apple’s history books all hail the iPod. The iPhone. The iPad. And then, somewhere between a sidebar and a footnote, the MacBook Air. But without the Air, the modern laptop doesn’t exist.

Dating back to the early 2000s, it was clear that notebooks were going to overtake desktops, and the MacBook Air had a whole lot to do with that.