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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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A Deep Dive on Rocket Typist

2026-03-04 01:44:22

Rocket Typist

Every text expansion app promises the same core trick: type a short trigger; get a longer block of text. What actually matters is reliability, friction, and whether the app helps you build real workflows instead of just automating ⌘V.

Rocket Typist is a one-time purchase Mac text expander from Witt Software. It focuses on dynamic snippets built with simple macros, all managed from a centralized library that lets you preview exactly what will be inserted before you commit.

It’s normally $19.99 for the Pro version; it’s currently on sale at BundleHunt for $3.50. It’s also available through Setapp, although some users report bugs in the Setapp version that don’t appear in the standalone release.

The Mac text expansion space is crowded: TextExpander, Espanso, aText, PhraseExpress, and even Raycast Snippets all compete here. Rocket Typist positions itself as a middle ground: more capable than lightweight snippet tools; less complex and less enterprise-heavy than the big subscription platforms.

 


 

What Rocket Typist Actually Does

 I’ve used text expanders for years, and the real value shows up in boring, repetitive work:

  • Standardized responses to common questions, including troubleshooting steps.
  • Email templates for replies I send every week.
  • Frequently used URLs, addresses, and signatures.
  • Blog post scaffolding, AI prompt templates, and structured note headers.
  • Custom autocorrect for words I still can’t seem to type correctly.

Rocket Typist treats snippets less like a warehouse of static text and more like reusable building blocks. That distinction matters once your library grows past a couple dozen entries.


Macro Library

 

 Macros Are the Real Feature

Rocket Typist’s dynamic elements are called macros. These let snippets adapt at insertion time instead of being fixed text.

From the developer: 

“Use macros to add dynamic elements to your snippets… The Labeled Macros Hub provides you a central location to edit and apply macros consistently across multiple snippets… preview your snippets, complete with all macros applied, before inserting them.”

Marketing language aside, three things matter in practice:

  • Multiple macro types: date, time, text input fields, clipboard content, cursor placement, key functions, and more.
  • A centralized Macro Hub for managing and reusing them.
  • Live preview before insertion, so you see exactly what will be generated.

That preview feature is underrated. When you’re inserting variable content into a live email or ticketing system, being able to confirm the output before it hits the page prevents sloppy mistakes.


 How It Works in Real Workflows

Static snippets are useful. Macros turn snippets into a lightweight automation layer.

Concrete examples:

  • Consistent date formatting across tickets and reports.
  • Templates that prompt you for name, ticket number, location, or device type.
  • Standardized headers for blog posts or Obsidian notes.
  • Support responses that insert today’s date, your signature, and a preformatted checklist.

Rocket Typist’s macro library also supports batch editing. If you need to update a common element across multiple snippets, you don’t have to touch each one manually.

Compared to Espanso or PhraseExpress, Rocket Typist feels less like you’re configuring a YAML-driven mini-programming environment and more like you’re using a Mac app. For many users, that’s a feature, not a limitation.

 


Who It’s Built For

 Rocket Typist makes the most sense for solo Mac users. It’s not trying to be an enterprise collaboration platform. 

1) Writers and Bloggers

You can create consistent document layouts with dynamic fields for titles, dates, categories, or boilerplate disclosures. It’s especially useful if you publish frequently and want structural consistency without copying old files.

2) Support Specialists and Repetition-Heavy Roles

In my tech support days, snippets handled:

  • Self-service password change instructions.
  • Campus Wi-Fi connection steps.
  • Clarifying which ticket type users should submit.
  • Equipment loan and purchase procedures.

Macros let you personalize these without rewriting them from scratch.

3) Users Who’ve Outgrown Lightweight Tools

Raycast Snippets are convenient but intentionally minimal. Rocket Typist offers:

  • Rich text and formatted snippets.
  • A dedicated snippet management interface.
  • More robust macro support.
  • Better scaling as your library grows.

If you’ve hit the ceiling with basic snippet tools but don’t want a subscription platform, this is where Rocket Typist fits.

 


 Rocket Typist vs. the Competition

Espanso

Powerful, cross-platform, highly customizable. Also more complex to set up and maintain. Great for tinkerers; heavier lift for everyone else.

 TextExpander

Strong team features, snippet sharing, and administrative controls. Subscription pricing reflects its enterprise focus.

aText

If it already works for you, there’s no urgent reason to switch. Rocket Typist offers a more modern interface and stronger macro tooling at a low one-time cost.

PhraseExpress

Feature-rich and powerful; also more configuration-heavy. Rocket Typist feels simpler and more Mac-native.

Raycast Snippets

Excellent for lightweight expansions inside an already great launcher. Limited dynamic logic and no centralized macro h


Pricing and Versions

 Rocket Typist’s pricing could be clearer. The website describes the upgrade in vague terms:

“Rocket Typist is free to use with a basic feature set. Upgrade to Rocket Typist Pro for the full experience.”

 You shouldn’t have to install an app to understand the feature split.

Rocket Typist Pro (as described in-app)

Upgrading unlocks:

  • Unlimited snippets
  • All snippet types:
    • Formatted text
    • Images
    • Smart snippets
    • Code snippets
  • All macro types:
    • Date and time
    • Text
    • Clipboard content
    • Cursor placement
    • Special key macros
  • Access to future Pro features.

Unlimited snippets plus full macro support is the real value here.

Tiers in Practice

  • Free: Basic feature set with limits.
  • Basic purchase ($9.99): App Store version that adds iOS and iPad compatibility.
  • Rocket Typist Pro for Mac ($19.99; currently on sale for $3.50): Full Mac feature set with unlimited snippets and all macros.

 If you’re considering it, the BundleHunt price significantly lowers the barrier to trying it seriously. 


 Final Thoughts

 Rocket Typist isn’t trying to dominate the enterprise. It’s not trying to turn snippet management into a side hobby. It’s a practical tool for people who type the same structured content over and over and want dynamic flexibility without a subscription.

If you live in email, ticketing systems, documentation tools, or Markdown editors, and you care about consistency and speed, Rocket Typist earns a serious look

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I'm Glad I Revisited Typora

2026-03-03 06:02:16

Typora is a long-established Mac Markdown editor that renders as you type; no dual-pane preview, no “toggle to see what it really looks like” mode. It’s especially strong with tables and code blocks. If you write with math, it’s one of the cleanest LaTeX experiences on macOS. Mermaid diagrams are also straightforward.

It doesn’t try to be everything. It’s not a platform. It’s not a note system It’s not an IDE. It’s a text editor for creating production ready documents.

What It Does

Typora is a Markdown editor built around a single-pane, live-rendered approach. You write Markdown You see the formatted document as you go.

In practice, it feels closer to a word processor than most Markdown editors, but your files stay portable. Typora also exports to a wide range of formats (including HTML, DOCX, PDF, and ePub); if your workflow ends in a CMS, a PDF, or an ebook, that matters.

Where it Fits

Most Markdown apps push people toward two extremes:

  1. Heavy systems: great for linking, research, and long-term knowledge management; sometimes overkill for drafting. Think Obsidian.
  2. Minimal editors: great for flow; often too limited once you want real structure. Think MarkEdit.

Typora sits between those two. It gives you a calm writing surface, but it also handles publishing-oriented Markdown without drama: headings, lists, code blocks, tables, images, and exports.

If you bounced off “note system” complexity but still want more than plain-text minimalism, Typora is the middle ground.

Feature List (What Writers Actually Care About)

  1. Live rendering in a single pane; structure stays visible while you draft
  2. Clean themes and readable typography; long posts are less fatiguing
  3. Document outline; useful for checking structure before you hit publish
  4. Solid support for code blocks, tables, and math (when you need it)
  5. Practical image handling for posts that involve screenshots

Typora isn’t trying to compete with a PKM ecosystem or a full writing suite. It’s trying to be the editor you open when you want to write.

What I Like

A Mature Editor that Stays out of Your Way Typora feels like software that knows what it is. The interface stays quiet; the feature set stays focused. You can move from outline to draft to polish without living in sidebars, plugin browsers, or “workspace” metaphors.

Live Rendering Reduces Formatting Mistakes For review writing, quality comes from structure. Typora makes it obvious while you’re still drafting whether the post will scan:

  1. Headings are consistent
  2. Lists read cleanly
  3. Emphasis stays under control
  4. Code blocks look like code blocks

It Works Well with Markdown as a Source Format If you care about plain files, Typora fits the “future-proof drafts” mindset. You keep Markdown portability without forcing yourself into a spartan writing experience.

It Is Not a Note System If you expect backlinks, daily notes, tasks, or a full “second brain,” Typora isn’t built for that. It’s a document editor.

Export Quality

The real question isn’t “can Typora export?”. It's whether it works with the tools in your workflow.

Typora can export HTML, but paste behavior varies by web editor. Some preserve semantic HTML. Some strip styles; some mangle lists and code blocks. If export matters, test it like you actually publish:

  1. Write a short post with headings, a table, a code block, and an image
  2. Export to HTML
  3. Paste into your CMS/editor
  4. Check what breaks (lists, spacing, code formatting); decide based on that

Details

Latest update highlights — The last major update (September 2025) brought macOS 26 Tahoe compliance and enabled the Share Sheet on all supported systems.

Privacy — Typora is primarily local; your content stays on disk unless you put it in a synced folder. Privacy is mostly determined by your sync choice; not the editor.

System Requirements — Optimized for Apple Silicon and supports macOS v11 and up.

Price — 14.99 for a three seat license. (No subscriptions)

Download — Direct from typora.io.

Similar apps

  1. iA Writer - focused drafting; different philosophy
  2. Bear - excellent notes app; different model than plain Markdown files
  3. Obsidian - outstanding system; heavier for pure drafting
  4. VS Code - capable; feels like the IDE it is unless tailored

Conclusion

Typora is worth revisiting because it stays focused. It’s stable, writes clean Markdown, and helps you ship well-structured posts without turning writing into an app-management hobby.

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Octavo: Real Booklet Imposition Without the Pro Print Tax

2026-03-02 19:48:01

Veteran Mac developer Amy Worrall of Double and Thrice Ltd. recently released Octavo, a focused macOS app for booklet printing and imposition.

If you’ve never dealt with imposition, here’s the short version: it’s the process of arranging individual pages on a larger sheet so that, once printed, folded, cut, and bound, everything lands in the correct order. When you see a press sheet with page 1 next to page 16 and page 2 upside down on the reverse, that’s not chaos. That’s math doing its job.

Historically, tools that handle this well have been aimed at print professionals and priced accordingly, often in the several-hundred-dollar range. Octavo does the same core job for $25. It’s available on the Mac App Store.

You can test it for free. The trial version watermarks output with Octavo branding, so it’s fine for evaluation but not for production runs.

How It Compares

Octavo occupies similar territory to Create Booklet 2, but the experience feels more modern and hands-on.

The multi-pane, task-based interface keeps the workflow linear and visible. You can visually drag margins instead of typing numeric values and guessing. There’s also a source cleanup step before layout, which is especially useful if you’re working from imperfect scans or PDFs that need minor correction before printing.

Compared to something like InDesign, Octavo is refreshingly direct. You’re not jumping to a separate properties panel filled with abstract numeric fields that feel disconnected from the page. You’re also not importing content into a full layout suite just to produce a folded booklet.

This is not a layout engine for designing the book. It’s a tool for correctly imposing a finished PDF so you can print and bind it without gymnastics.

Printer Compatibility

If you’re wondering whether this will work with a consumer-grade printer, the answer is yes.

Octavo doesn’t require a PostScript device or specialty hardware. If macOS can print to it, Octavo can use it. The app relies on standard macOS printing APIs; it reads available paper sizes, margins, and printer capabilities from the system. It can also control relevant print settings such as duplex edge binding where appropriate.

It does not talk directly to the printer firmware. That’s a good thing. It means you’re working within Apple’s printing stack rather than some proprietary workaround.

In practice, that includes:

  • AirPrint printers
  • Basic home inkjets
  • Office laser printers
  • PostScript-enabled devices

If it shows up in your macOS print dialog, it’s fair game.

Design and Fit

Octavo feels like a traditional Mac app in the best sense. It’s focused, single-purpose, and built for desktop workflows rather than a cross-platform abstraction layer. There’s no subscription pitch and no unnecessary feature creep.

Even the icon shows care. Worrall built it in Fusion 360, textured and rendered it in Blender, then finished it in Photoshop. That attention to detail tracks with the rest of the app.

Who This Is For

If you:

  • Print short-run booklets at home or in a small office
  • Produce documentation that needs to be folded and stapled
  • Make zines or event programs
  • Regularly wrestle with page order and duplex settings

Octavo is a practical tool that removes friction from a very specific workflow.

If you’re laying out a 200-page art book with complex typography and bleed control, you’re still living in InDesign or Affinity Publisher. Octavo is for the step after layout, when you need the pages imposed correctly and printed cleanly.

For $25, that’s a niche tool that earns its keep quickly if you actually print booklets.

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Crucial Track for March 2, 2026

2026-03-02 18:15:17

"The Foggy Dew" by Sinéad O’Connor & The Chieftains,

A song that reminds you of one of your favorite places.

Oh, Ireland. This performance of maybe the greatest of all Irish rebel songs always gives me chills. It's the story of the 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin.

View Lou Plummer's Crucial Tracks profile

Crucial Track for March 1, 2026

2026-03-01 16:27:27

"The End" by The Doors

Listen on Apple Music

What song makes you feel like you're in a dream?

If Jim Morrison hadn't been so damn pretty, he'd be better remembered for the true poet that he was than just another 60s rock star. This is truly one of the sings of my life and one I've loved for more than 40 years.

View Lou Plummer's Crucial Tracks profile

OCR Options in macOS

2026-02-28 18:38:43

When you're faced with text that you can't select in the conventional way on your Mac (meaning with the cursor), there are several options. They all work in slightly different ways, and I use the one most appropriate for the task.
 

Live Text Recognition

The operating system has a feature called Live Text Recognition , an on-device computer vision feature that detects and extracts text from images and video so you can interact with it like normal text.

It uses Apple’s Neural Engine to perform optical character recognition; OCR, directly on your Mac. That means you can:

  • Select and copy text from photos in Finder, Preview, Photos, or screenshots
  • Click phone numbers to call via iPhone integration
  • Translate detected text instantly
  • Look up addresses, track packages, or search highlighted words

The key idea is this: pixels become selectable characters without sending your data to the cloud. It quietly turns static images into searchable, actionable information.

Cleanshot X

My go to choice is Cleanshot X, mainly because it's always running on my Mac anyway. Live Text Recognition requires you to open an image in an app like Preview first. Cleanshot X let's you select any region and get text immediately. The downside is that Cleanshot X is a paid app.

Raycast

There is a Raycast extension called Easy OCR that combines the features of Live Text Recognition and Cleanshot X. After you invoke it, Easy OCR can be used on an image you've already captured, the clipboard or an area you select on screen. Just search for it in the Raycast Store.

(Free)

Text Sniper
TextSniper Prefs

Even if you have the tools previously mentioned, there should still be room in your toolbox for TextSniper, an OCR app for YouTube videos, PDFs, images, online courses, screencasts, presentations, webpages, video tutorials, photos, etc.  Like Cleanshot X, you don't have to make screen captures and open them in Preview to grab text. In my experience it works better than alternatives like PDF Pen, Adobe products, Google Docs etc. As long as you can draw a rectangle around the text, it doesn't matter if it's rotating, angled or shadowed.

Unique Features

  • Removes line breaks
  • Built-in text to speech
  • Additive clipboard feature if the text you are trying to capture can't obtained on one go
  • Removes hyphens from words divided across a line.
  • Decodes standard bar and QR codes. Enabling a keyboard shortcut lets you turn those into numbers.

Text Sniper is currently on sale for $2. That should be a no brainer. It is also available as part of SetApp.

OCRmyPDF

OCRmyPDF is an open-source command-line tool that adds a text layer to scanned PDFs while keeping the image intact. It creates searchable PDF/A output. You can use it via this Apple Shortcut..

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