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Working in educational IT since the 90s. Dedicated Mac user trapped in a PC world. Obsidian fanboy. Blogger.
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My Take on Bloom, a Mac File Manager

2025-12-10 21:37:00

Bloom

I've always used a file manager as the center of the way I interact with my computer, much more so than a launcher, dock, or menu-driven UI. I used PathFinder for 17 years before switching to Qspace in 2024. I took advantage of the Black Friday sale on Bloom, a relatively new app, to give it a try. Bloom is a well-designed, affordable app with a lot of promise. It's definitely a tool for advanced users and may be overkill for those who aren't. It's not a Finder clone, so you'll have to reprogram your muscle memory to use it efficiently. The developer is actively adding new features and seems responsive to user feedback.

What I Like

  • Multi-pane layouts
  • Speed of file operations
  • Archive view - see inside compressed files without opening them
  • Paste copied images and text as new files
  • Search is better than Spotlight
  • Built-in file operations for image operations, previewing, and renaming files
  • Portal window, a unique and powerful implementation of the shelf concept

Wish List

  • Auto-mounting of WebDAV and NFS shares. The hooks into conventional cloud storage options are OK, but this is a power user app, and it should improve support for self-hosted services and European services like Koofr and kDrive.
  • To really stand out from the competition, improving its renaming capabilities (with regex and EXIF awareness) would go a long way.
  • Improvements in dual-pane persistence and the ability to save named workspaces.
  • More powerful tab management - pinned tabs, color-coded tabs, tab groups, keyboard shortcuts for more tab operations
  • Integration with Shortcuts, AppleScript, Service Menu, and the addition of a plugin system that other devs could hook into, like they do with Finder.
  • It wouldn't appeal to me, but I can see the app reaching a larger audience by implementing a Finder compatibility mode that mimics Finder's keyboard shortcuts, viewing modality, and folder opening behavior.

If you like this kind of tool, I'd pick up a copy now, for $16. The dev's website says that all future updates will be available to anyone who purchases the app—no subscriptions, no paid updates after a year, or any of that monetization optimization stuff. If you need more features right now and don't want to wait, try Qspace, but keep Bloom in mind.

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Shows from 2025 that Entertained the Hell Out Of Me

2025-12-09 10:22:00

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I am not snobbish about the television shows I watch. I don't declare a new series to be a failure if it isn't the second coming of The Wire. Sure, some shows are just watchable, while others make me count down the days until the next episode. Good old Netflix still releases some quality stuff all at once, and you can binge the whole season in a weekend.

Here are my top picks from the past year. You'll see that I'm partial to shows that are made in or take place in the UK. Six of my top 10 selections fit that bill. I've subscribed to Acorn and Britbox for years. Those shows also fall off the back of trucks and into Usenet and torrent sites just like their American counterparts. IYKYK

  • Blue Lights - This was the third season of a BBC police drama centering on three officers, some Protestant, some Catholic, at the beginning of their careers in the Police Service of Northern Ireland in Belfast.
  • Mayor of Kingstown - I'm so glad Jeremy Renner didn't die when that snow plow ran over him, so he could keep making this show about an ex-con who becomes a fixer and a mediator between the police, the gangs, and the incarcerated in a Michigan town. I spent eight long years working in a prison, and this show is as realistic as it gets for staff and inmates.
  • Trespasses - In another show taking place in Northern Ireland, Gillian Anderson leads a stellar cast in a drama set in the worst days of The Troubles in the seventies about a relationship between a Catholic school teacher and a married Protestant barrister.
  • The Diplomat - This show, about the American ambassador to the UK and her husband, played by Rufus Sewell, a Brit portraying an American, has more plot twists per minute than any show on television. It's as addictive as crack, and I always run out of episodes before I run out of interest.
  • The Institute - We like Stephen King adaptations in our house, particularly when they are as well done as this mini-series. It poses some interesting questions about how much evil is acceptable to stop an even worse evil.
  • Dept. Q - Matthew Goode plays an emotionally damaged detective returning to work in the Edinburgh (Scotland) police department after being shot in an ambush at a crime scene. Prickly and hard to get along with, he's exiled to the basement and assigned to cold cases, including the 3-year-old missing persons mystery at the center of the show.
  • The Righteous Gemstones - This was the last season of HBO's televangelist spoof, and I'd never watched it before. I found it to be exceptionally funny, profane, shocking at times, and as well written as it could be. Danny McBride plays the same character he plays in everything he's in, which is fine because he's funny as hell.
  • MobLand - Helen Mirren playing the coke-sniffing murderous wife of Pierce Brosnan's Irish gangster character, who happens to be Tom Hardy's boss - sign me up for every episode. The whole show drips with tension, and the characters are like members of the Sopranos with posher accents.
  • Adolescence - Every performer is at the top of their game in a four-part drama about a 13-year-old boy accused of murdering a female classmate. Nothing seems contrived, and some of the scenes are hard to watch as the adults struggle to make sense of what happened. Steven Graham is amazing as the boy's father.
  • The Pitt - I've only really liked a couple of medical shows: the first couple of seasons of Grey's Anatomy, and the Freddie Highmore drama about an autistic surgeon, The Good Doctor. This show about the emergency medicine practiced in a teaching hospital in Pittsburgh was better than both of those. I could have watched it in one 15-hour marathon. The show takes place in real time, covering the events of a single double shift on the first day of training for three medical students.

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Subscription Update for the Year Ahead

2025-12-09 02:03:47

Subscription Fatigue

In a move no one could have predicted, I managed to cut my subscription costs this year (by $7). I drastically reduced the number of subscriptions, too. In December of 2024, I had a whopping 55 monthly subscriptions that cost me $193 a month, a number that includes software developers, bloggers I support financially, web hosting companies, network services like my DNS and VPN providers, and pay TV. This year, I managed to pare it down to 43.

The Breakdown

  • Movies and TV: $32.40 a month for Netflix, YouTube Premium, Plex Pass, and Infuse. I don't have cable—I cut that cord a long time ago.
  • App Store Subscriptions: $44.15 a month for 12 different apps, some of which I've been using for years, like Day One, Carrot Weather, and Drafts. The total includes the fee for Apple Music and the iCloud 2 TB plan.
  • Other Software and Tech Services: $79.88 a month for cloud storage, DNS, Usenet, AI, email, RSS, search, and a couple of automation apps.
  • Blogging: $25.91 a month to four different blogging platforms, four domains, and an analytics service.
  • IndyWeb Support: $9.50 a month to seven different bloggers (including Kottke).

Why?

Some of the costs I picked up in 2025 are associated with my decision to de-Google in the name of privacy. I'm now paying for Kagi, a search engine; Fastmail for email; and ChatGPT instead of Google Gemini. Some of the money I saved by canceling all pay TV services except Netflix went towards a subscription to a Usenet provider and indexer. Substantially less of my income is going to billionaires now. I'm not paying a dime to Amazon, Microsoft, Google, or Meta, and they have much less access to my data. Most of my app subscriptions go to indie developers and employee-owned companies.

I no longer subscribe to 13 of the App Store apps that I was paying for last year, mostly because I found that I no longer used them enough to justify the cost; I didn’t rage-quit anyone's app. I dropped a location tracker, a list maker, a couple of quotes apps, two related to movies and TV, and one that went out of business, Pocket. I use Inoreader, my RSS provider for read-it-later services, now.

I'm Not Mad but that Doesn't Mean I Like It

Obviously, I like the stuff I'm paying for enough to let go of some dough. Almost everything I use has some cost incurred by the owner for backend support. Development continues, and new features get added. My most expensive subscription used to be The New York Times at $24 a month. Today, it's ChatGPT, a company whose morals and ethics are suspect but whose product basically taught me the skills I needed to get into self-hosting this year. I don't think I could have mastered Linux as quickly without its help.

I know that it's a privilege to be in a place where I can afford all of this. I'm retired. I drive a 21-year old Toyota. I don't have cable. I don't get a new phone every year. I've lived in the same house since 1996. Testing software is my hobby and, yes, it costs money. Many hobbies do.

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Crucial Track for December 6, 2025

2025-12-07 10:19:05

"Dublin Blues" by Guy Clark

Listen on Apple Music

What's a song you'd want your best friend to hear for the first time? My favorite version of this tune is from a benefit concert for the Interfaith Dental Clinic, recorded live at the BlueBird Cafe in Nashville in 1995 with Guy Clarke, Steve Earle and Townes van Zandt. (plus an uncredited appearance by Emmylou Harris on two songs) My favorite line is "I have seen the David, seen the Mona Lisa too, and I have heard Doc Watson play Columbus Stockade Blues". Me, too Guy, me too.

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That Time I Ended Up on an FBI Watchlist

2025-12-06 19:10:00

Popo

I've mentioned this in passing a few times and sparked some curiosity, so I'm going to tell the story of the time I ended up on an FBI watchlist, which was creepy AF but still a badge of honor for getting under the skin of the man.

I live near Ft. Bragg, the gigantic U.S. Army base that's home to the 82nd Airborne and Special Forces, AKA The Green Berets. I was in the Army in the '80s, and two of my kids are also military vets. The Bush administration's decision to invade Iraq was an abomination, one that I deeply opposed to the point where protesting that war became the center of my life. I was a member of various groups, but my work centered on my relationships in three of them: Military Families Speak Out, Veterans for Peace, and our local group of old Quaker ladies and the usual lefty suspects.

On the first anniversary of the invasion in March of 2004, local folks organized a demonstration against the war that surprised us with its turnout and drew attention from all over because of the proximity to the large local military community. We decided to do it again in 2005, and it quickly became obvious that we had more support than we could imagine. Everybody who was against the war wanted to come. The list included a member of Congress and Cindy Sheehan, a Gold Star mom who became infamous for protesting outside W. Bush's Texas ranch to confront him about the death of her son. The newly formed Iraq Veterans Against the War was there, along with a parade of groups like Code Pink and veteran activists from Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Nelson Johnson, a survivor of the Greensboro Massacre, spoke. Multiple documentary filmmakers contacted us.

It took months of planning. It was clear from the beginning that we were a threat to the pro-war crowd. They definitely didn't like the participation of so many disaffected members of the military community. I got doxxed on a local message board and started receiving hate mail addressed to my house. At work, I started finding pro-war propaganda left on my desk regularly. The rear window of my car was shot out in my driveway. Then the phone calls started.

The callers, always men, presented themselves as active-duty soldiers who were against the war. I'd talked to many GIs who thought the war was bullshit, and they didn't sound like the men who called me. The callers wanted to know if we were going to "do anything," meaning direct action, e.g., trying to enter the military base or "anarchist-type shit." It was obviously a clumsy attempt to gather intelligence on our already very public plans.

The demonstration was a huge success. It was the largest antiwar event outside a military base since Vietnam. We held it at the same park where Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland had once entertained antiwar GIs in the early '70s. The local police called in reinforcements from 11 other agencies, including horse-mounted cops and surveillance units with cameras and telescopes. The following week, a newspaper poll of the community found that 50% of the people in our community were against the war. That was pretty telling in a county where the vast majority of people were on active duty, veterans, or members of military families.

Since the war didn't miraculously end, I kept on organizing, locally and nationally. In early 2006, I got a call one day from a reporter from NBC. He told me he was working on a story about government violations of the Patriot Act. He'd discovered that the FBI was maintaining records of antiwar activists past the legal time limit on such lists. Of course, my name was on the list that had been leaked to him. He wanted to know if I would comment on the record about the information. I gave him a sound bite about the evils of the Bush administration and the similarities to government actions against activists during the days of J. Edgar Hoover.

I didn't hire a lawyer or call Washington with an attitude. It took a couple of days for the shock to wear off, but I took it more as a badge of honor than anything else. It made me happy that our movement was such a threat to the government that they felt they had to use resources to keep tabs on us. I knew that I wasn't doing anything illegal. No behavior modification was needed on my part. I was fatalistic about anything happening to me. Nothing would have made the war machine happier than to intimidate people like me into silence. That wasn't going to happen.

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Crucial Track for December 5, 2025

2025-12-06 05:15:38

"Carolina In My Mind" by James Taylor

Listen on Apple Music

Share a song that captures the feeling of being homesick. I've seen JT perform a couple of times, not far from where he lived as a kid in Chapel Hill, NC. I think he has one of the most distinctive voices in American musical history. My god, he's written some of the most iconic songs of my lifetime and I have listened to them since my Mom played the LPs on a record player at our house in Raleigh.

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