Home screen & subscriptions in 2022

I meant to post this on the first, but then forgot. Thankfully, other microbloggers posted their iterations of this genre.

Here’s my iPhone setup.

I only have one home screen. Merlin Mann convinced me on a podcast years ago to keep at least on row empty. I think he was talking about committments, but he said something to the effect that if we’re always operating at 80 or 90 percent, we won’t have anything left when the opportunity of a lifetime arrives. When Apple made it possible to keep the bottom row empty, I did it immediately. I suppose you could call it minimalism, but I learned the lesson elsewhere, from stoicism. (That’s what I get for double majoring in Ancient Greek and Latin. )

  • Fantastical runs as a widget so I can see the days events. I use Busycal on my Mac, like a barbarian. Don’t @ me.
  • Tunnelbear is my VPN. I got a discount on a multi-year plan a while ago and so I’m sticking with it until it expires—and then, who knows. I’ll stay or switch depending on what the market looks like when that happens. But if you’re not using a VPN on public wifi, you should really start.
  • Authy manages all my 2-factor identification with the exception of my university which uses Duo. Thus far, I have not found a way to get my university’s 2FA to run inside Authy. But I keep looking.
  • Vox will play FLAC files on your iPhone. When reviewing my 2021 practices, I was disappointed that I didn’t listen to as much music as I used to. So I unsubscribed from all but three podcasts, moved Overcast to the app library and recommitted. I can talk audiophile gear all day, but suffice it to say, this is overkill for the casual listener.
  • Glass is here because once I decided to delete Instagram, I wanted to commit to this before I decided if I want to keep it or not. I’m unsure if this will last for the year.
  • Gluon is a wonderful Microblog client and I love it.
  • Metatext runs Mastodon. Mastodon is weird, and I think I should quit it. But I’m sticking it out, for now, until I decide if it is worth it.
  • Lichess is a free chess club. I’m not very good, but I still love to play. Chess is honestly the only digital gaming I do.
  • Literal is another service that I’m unsure about. I like it’s layout better than Goodreads, but at times I wish it was more like Goodreads. Like Mastodon and Glass, I can’t form a bigger opinion until I give it more time.

In the dock is Drafts, YNAB, Omifocus, and Scanner Pro, These are the critical and crucial for my day-to-day. Nearly everything I write starts in Drafts. I send links there from Twitter or the web and tag them with what I want to do with them (email, Omnifocus, Microblog); I, er, draft, emails, manuscripts, and reading notes before processing them periodically through the week. YNAB is a budget and expense tracker that my wife and I use; while I’m aware of the kerfluffle over the price increase, I’m not bothered by it because there’s nothing else comparable right now. I’ve been an Omnifocus user for a very long time; you couldn’t pay me to leave them. I’m sure I could find a better app than Scanner Pro, but it’s very useful when I work on a white board while teaching or in my office and need a PDF of it before I erase. I occasionally scan other documents, but most of the tme it’s just this uni-purpose and good enough that I want fast access.

My iPad home screen is a hot mess.

A lot of similar items like Drats and Omnifocus. I have two text editors worth noting, Editorial and iA Writer. Both are good when I need something different than Drafts. iA is great for prose and has more or less replaced Editorial. YMMV. I need to consolidate the various files from both and make space for a dedicated code editor like Textastic so that I can work on R scripts when I’m away from my laptop but still want to get some writing done.

Here, it’s all in the dock and the widgets are helpful. But note that I have two calendar widgets. It’s just an experiment to see which format makes the most sense for my uses. I expect my iPad setup to look a lot different at the end of the year.

What else am I subscribed to?

Anno Domini MMXXII

Yesterday was a lovely, restful start to the new year. Since the kids we’re up late to watch the ball drop in in New York, they slept in. We didn’t leave the house until nearly noon.

The boys insisted they had to take me to the “air plane park,” a small playground near the municipal airport. The playground has plane themes everywhere including a windsock at the top of the structure.

My wife and I rarely have time for us to both go with them to the park. Usually one of us takes them while the other stays home to clean or work on other things. But when we both go, the kids love that they can spread out a little, knowing one of us nearby to serve as a dutiful audience to their fun.

After the park we ran to get some groceries and were home in time to watch the Rose Bowl. I love college sports. And indeed almost never watch professional teams. (A story for another day.) So, I would have watched regardless, but both my wife and I went to The Ohio State for college.

I mentioned a month ago when Ohio State lost to Michigan that the silver lining was that we would end up playing in Rose Bowl with a solid chance to win, and end the season on a high note, as opposed to getting punched in the face by Georgia.

Needless to say, I was not wrong. Easily among the best Rose Bowls of the last ten years. But the ending, was sublime.

Happy New Year, folks.

Daily Stoic Journal

📚 I’m teaching a course on political leadrship this semester (only ten days until classes start!), and among the required books for my students is Ryan Holiday’s The Daily Stoic Journal. It’s a daily journal with prompts and reflections from the stoics. I am integreating it with our readings because I hope to teach them the art of critical self-reflection.

But as a teaching method, I decided I would practice what I preach and do it with them. Although I keep a semi-daily journal of professional things, like research notes, this seemed like a fun challenge. They won’t start until the first day of class. That’s by design, so that I have a head start to think about how the daily prompts are working for me.

Not quite a New Year’s Resolution—more like a new semester experiment. But since it coincides with the new year, I guess we’ll count it but with the asterisk.

☕️ Second pot of the new year. We’re definitely consuming a lot of the good stuff this year.

(Not pictured: the total chaos of the kitchen.)

Resolved, 2022

TL;DR: My changes, and updates for (mostly) personal social media use

I’m very much looking forward to making Microblog my digital center of gravity in the new year. I came back to it in the spring after trying, then quitting it, back in 2018. I relied on it, a lot this year. I expect to be more active in 2022. But, I’ll still be around in other places.

I don’t “do” resolutions, but this year almost made me

I haven’t done a new year’s resolution in over a decade. I forget where I learned it, or heard it first, but I concluded that if you want to resolve to do something, then resolve today. Waiting until the new year is—or, at least, can be—a form of procrastination. It wasn’t Seth Godin, but he once wrote something similar, namely that the most important blog post is the one you write, today.

Moreover, resolutions usually fail, or at least they did for me, because they often aren’t clearly defined SMART Goals. “Lose weight,” or “read more” don’t work because they lack a measurable objective as in “lost x-number of pounds by summer by working out at least three days per week and cutting out fast food runs.” None of this is particularly surprising or revolutionary to anyone who’s read books on contemporary goal setting.

But a new year is a time to reflect, to take an inventory of one’s time and attention. It is a natural break, and it is natural that we all are reflecting on our lives in a semi-collective way. As much as I am loath to read yet another year-in-review post, I am also eager to see what changes and lessons others have learned over the last year.

This year seems to me to be especially reflective as the end of the pandemic seems to be within eyesight. All reasonable estimations that I’ve read think that after this current omicron wave subsides, we should be more or less done with it. (To be fair, they said that before the Delta variant. Hope spring eternal.) If those estimates hold, the pandemic as a social phenomenon will have lasted 2 years (give or take when the first wave hit one’s region of the world). I’ve noticed a palpable sense among almost everyone that January will be a sort-of collective psychological ending to this whole thing.

Sure, we’ll still have to take reasonable pre-caution, and governments may still yet impose various restrictions which may or may be be sound policy; and yes, thousands of people are still going to die from the virus. But even with those caveats, many folks—liberal, conservative, pro-vaccine or anti, religious or secular—seem ready to use the New Year as a mental demarcation point. I welcome that.

Reflections on the year

I got sidetracked from a lot of professional and personal projects. Although I managed to get my first peer-reviewed publication during the pandemic, my book manuscript lingered, and my leisure reading and music listening more or less collapsed to name a few. I ceased being more deliberate about my media consumption and, as a result, I was spending more time aimlessly when I already knew that these apps are designed to do precisely that.

But although I was aware of the friction, I think it provided a way to feel connected even though I was becoming less connected. And besides, I was connecting with old friends who I had lost touch with during my doctorate and early years of marriage. So, I ignored the friction to an extent.

But the friction, man. It took some time to identify what has been bothering me about social media. Much of the social media landscape has changed, often (not always) for the worse. Twitter is an example. Contrary to popular opinion, I don’t think it’s anything the company is doing. Rather, the social landscape has shifted. When I signed up for Twitter in late-2008, it was because a good friend messaged me that there was a taco truck in LA using Twitter to broadcast its location throughout the day. I demurred the thought of microblogging until then. All the way from Philadelphia, they were the first account I followed.

Now, Twitter is mostly a public forum for elites to yell at other elites. (Indeed, the collective yelling distorts reality and doesn’t represent real life.) You’re expected to be “on brand.” That’s fine, but it wasn’t why I originally signed up. I considered quitting it, but I accept that there’s some utility to be had, provided that it is a different value proposition than 13 years ago.

Intentionality

So what am I doing if I’m not making resolutions? Well, I decided to be more deliberate about my digital habits. I synced my Twitter with Microblog, I’m experimenting with Mastodon, and dramatically cutting down on consumption. I’ll still be on Twitter, but mainly to interact with colleagues and friends I’ve made there.

I am, joyfully, deleting Instagram. Long story short, my wife convinced me because I like taking photos but I wasn’t sharing them outside of niche sites like Flickr. (Niche in the sense that outside of dedicated photography circles, few know about it, even now.) But where IG was a great place for photography, the center of gravity of sharing photos is elsewhere. I spent the better part of the other day getting my archive to import to Microblog (thanks, @manton).

Eg., I recently unsubscribed from well over a dozen podcasts, maybe two dozen. Now I have three, tried and true. Between work and the kids (really, just the kids), my disposal free-time isn’t what it used to be. I love that—but I had another friction point in my life (namely feeling guilty about missing this episode or that interview, ignoring the episode for weeks while I do other things, and eventually bulk delete the backlog).

And don’t get me started on email. It took all of December and most of November. But my daily inbox of email is in the single digits. That’s a huge start.

Watched New Year in NYC with the kiddos. As far as their concerned it’s 2022. So, thus, it is for me. Happy New Year, everyone. All my love and prayers to you.

🗞 🎵 Nature in a human crisis pt.3 - Spacewalk Audio

Fastest subscribe I’ve done in a while once I discovered @spacewalkaudio on soundcloud.

Last thing I did before leaving the office today: writing 2022 on the white board for Monday. Happy New Year folks—especially to all of you on the other side of year. 🤙🏽

3-ish hours, for 82 lines of code

Basically—I’m an idiot when it comes to R code.

Winter time bliss in Arizona.

portrait of kiddo

It’s official. In ≈11.5 months, we have a walker. Littlest one is confidently talking 5-6 steps at a time. Just in time for the New Year. So she’s got that to top her list of 2021 accomplishments.

🎶 Earl Jeffers – Resident Adviser, via Soundcloud.

Some evening music while I clean up the house now that everyone is, finally, asleep.

📚 The Economist’s View of the World: And the Quest for Well-Being by Steven E. Rhoads.

Among the best books I’ve read, even after 15 years. Even if you think “economics isn’t my thing,” you’ll be glad you read this.

🗞 Why has classical music declined? - Marginal REVOLUTION

Tyler mentions them, but I’m going with two wars that destroyed European culture and technologies that shifted “music” from the score to the recording (read: personality).

🎵 The Grey Albumn (Remastered) – A classical I recently rediscovered this morning.

Second in as many nights with kiddos awake, sick. One with the quintessential croup barking cough, the other is teething and uncomfortable. Poor kiddos.

Haply Holidays and Merry Christmas, everyone. We got our tree up last night, and are all set for Santa tonight. Kids are stoked.

pan-covid vaccine on the horizon?

US Army Creates Single Vaccine Effective Against All COVID, SARS Variants - Defense One

Walter Reed’s Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle COVID-19 vaccine, or SpFN, completed animal trials earlier this year with positive results. Phase 1 of human trials, which tested the vaccine against Omicron and the other variants, wrapped up this month, again with positive results that are undergoing final review, Dr. Kayvon Modjarrad, director of Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch, said in an exclusive interview with Defense One.

Yeah, I’d take that.