Many apps I used to install with apt now seem to prefer AppImage. I understand AppImages are easy to use and are always up to date, but it doesn’t seem like a good blanket solution for everything.

I’m finding it hard to enjoy video games recently. They all feel… the same. I keep playing World of Warships (that’s more of an addiction) and Helldivers here and there, but I want something with a story, and even though there are a couple of options, I can’t seem to be interested in anything in particular.

Nature takes over… good day for a walk today. 📷 Auto-generated description: A black lamppost stands by a paved path surrounded by lush greenery and trees.

Some good news:

www.eff.org/deeplinks…

It’s a drop on the bucket, but it’s something.

“In every state other than Montana, if police want to know where you have been, rather than presenting evidence and sending a warrant signed by a judge to a company like Verizon or Google to get your geolocation data for a particular set of time, they only need to buy that same data from data brokers”

I’m considering freezing or canceling my Adobe plan.

It’s supposed to be $10 for Photoshop and Lightroom, it’s now $16 after tax and some other thing, and I don’t use it enough to justify it. For what I need, built in tools in Photos, Gimp Krita and Darkroom are more than enough.

Two Eamcs tweaks I forgot about (most of you will know these):

Use Consult’s recentf to see a list of files that were edited recently:

  (global-set-key (kbd "C-x C-r") 'consult-recent-file)

Consult’s org-agenda (jump to heading) is quicker than what I usually do, which is to list all ACTIVE keywords in emacs (this is how I list my projects), and then go down the tree to find the specific TODO header I want.

Since I often know what I’m looking for within active projects, I can use consult-org-agenda, which narrows headers dynamically as I search. Much faster and clutter-free:

  (global-set-key (kbd "C-c C-h") 'consult-org-agenda)

Something good happened when I got my new TV. I started enjoying movies and TV shows more. I know, what a surprise, right? There are a few things at play here.

The apartment’s natural darkness and quiet make it ideal for watching movies. We also got two headsets connected to it (this required a Bluetooth hub, which works great), which adds to the experience. The Sony TV’s color depth and detail make 4K resolution really pop. And last but not least, I connected my old Mac mini to it to watch whatever movies I have saved on my backlog.

With all of that, I started catching up on shows and movies. For now, Nat and I started watching Severance, and I caught up on Better Call Saul, which I never followed up on; I’m happy to see all the episodes are still on Netflix. We’re also finishing up on the second season of Bear when we get the chance.

With video games I want to follow up on, movies, and books, there’s a lot to keep track of. There are good websites for some of these things, like letterboxd for movies and backlogged for video games (and I’m on both), and of course there’s Micro.blog for books, but it’s challenging to follow up media on all these different sites which are set up differently and have their own accounts - so I turned back to a suggestion I once read on Lou’s blog: Sequel.

Everything I want to follow on, whether a TV show (down to each episode of each season), a video game (with release dates), a book, or a movie - it’s there. It has a beautiful interface that makes it a breeze to find and add something. Oh, and it’s available on macOS and iOS, so I can mark the latest episode of Better Call Saul I just watched from the sofa.

For posts on this blog, I still need to review movies with letterboxd and games with backlogged, because the sites' RSS feeds goes directly to the blog, but Sequel is great to keep track of it all.

One of the things I realized (again) on this staycation: I am curious and my hunger for technology didn’t go anywhere. It was just squished under layers of workload.

A paved path leading into a park. Surrounded by lushly green leaves a d a tree.

I’m relying increasingly on Journelly to save quick links and notes. It’s swift, and it’s easy to add to org-mode as a project or the agenda

Warfare, 2025 - ★★★½

I decided to watch this on a whim today, and I'm glad I did. This is a difficult movie to watch, not just because of the subject matter but also because there's no real plot or story. I think that's part of the point.

This is an authentic story (as much as I can gather) of one of many instances - and just that, one moment (well, a 90-minute-long moment) of the war in Iraq, with all its horrors. It was created as a memory, like a journal note, of how things were back then for the people who were there; it's not the kind of movie you watch in a theater, eating popcorn.

What I appreciate about this movie is that it doesn't attempt to draw politics in. There's also no attempt at heroism or really any symbolism. It's a simple movie that makes a simple delivery.

Emacs' windows navigations and some Emacs zen

Turns out I didn’t know and forgot about all sorts of built-in fucntions in Emacs that help you navigate windows better. A bit of help from System’s Crafters video and I wised up quite a bit.

Windows in Emacs probably come to you as second nature now, as it does to me, but imagine how it looks to people from the outside for a minute:

Look at the diagram on the screen. Read the explanation. Look at the “huh?” expression of David of System Crafters (awesome channel for Emacs learning by the way)… Need I say more? 😂

I love Emacs, don’t get me wrong, but when it comes to managing its windows…

A blog check list

A checklist (in org-mode, but it doesn’t have to be) I use to keep my blog perrrrrty. (ok, yes, I need to actuall use it now, I know…)

We started watching Severance, episode 1 of season 1. I only vaguely know what it’s about, but it’s intriguing, so I want to keep at it.

Emacs window management tweaking

Tweaking Emacs’ window management as a way to get tired and go to bed again.

Today I had a switch flip in my brain: what does it take for /me/ to realize that things have gone to shit, and I need a backup plan? I thought about it more calmly over a shower, and I think I’m going to come up with a list.

I just uninstalled the Reddit app again. I use Reddit it and enjoy the community ,but the official Reddit app is a disgusting ads billboard coated with politics I didn’t ask for nor can I block affectively (they come back). On the desktop, there are extensions that work better.

Sleep’s been back to six hours or so a night. Not sure why. I have quiet (besides exicted birds in the morning, but that’s nice), it’s dark enough until later in the day, and I have good air flow. Work is stressful, but not /that/ stressful. Hmm.

I love Emacs, org-mode, and Journelly.

  1. Show thumbnails in dired so you know which pictures you want to resize, no problem.
  2. Resize 20 pictures with dwim by mistake because you marked ALL of them. Oops.
  3. No problem: dired-mark-files-regexp, mark all files that end with x750, delete with one keystroke
  4. Round two, mark the ones you actually want this time.
  5. Move them all to the download folder with one keystroke.

Then to organize all my journal entries from journelly.org to journal.org, sort them by the order in the journal, just mark them all and use org sort alphabetically. Poof, done.

A whole day full of notes with pictures is now organized in a way I understand, with work-related notes filed into their tasks neatly, with an org-id link connecting them to the meeting header I have tomorrow.

Can you be more organized than that? Show me one program that does all of that. I didn’t pay anyone, and the software is free.

A month with Journelly

I’ve been using Journelly for a month and have established a workflow. Here are the details, especially the integration between Journelly and Emacs.