Notes on the Liquid Glass Tsunami

Following my little saga with the , I upgraded a few of my Apple devices, including one of my Macs, to the final release versions of all the “26” operating systems, and… It’s even worse than I thought.

First of all, the good bits:

  • Surprisingly, my can now run multiple windows (which I wasn’t expecting, although they’re obviously neither abundant nor performant).
  • Spotlight now hits most of the sweet spots I used to enjoy with almost a decade ago and lets me search for and switch to terminal tabs, which is… almost wonderful in the middle of the whole mess.
  • Terminal can now do 24-bit color and glyphs, although I haven’t really tried weaning myself off .
  • The windown tiling hotkeys almost make sense, to the point where I turned off to see how much I can do without it.
  • The 15 minutes I spent fiddling with the new container feature were fun. It has potential, even if the tooling isn’t all there yet. (Update: I’ve just found out about socktainer and will see if it gives me enough functionality to fool VS Code’s container handling).

Now for the downsides:

  • I can see four five different sizes of window corner radius on my Mac desktop. The overall visual design for menus and dialogs is still a joke, and is so badly executed that Apple should be ashamed of shipping it.
  • There is a huge amount of wasted screen real estate in every single modernized application window. Even worse than what I saw on the iPad, and significantly impacting information density.
  • System Preferences on the Mac is still horrible to use (sluggish, apparently overly dependent on web views, and has at least two different styles of control spacing).
  • Every single device I have feels slower. Part of it is certainly the post-install reindexing, but… I fear for my iPhone’s battery life. (Update the morning after: my iPad mini is severely impacted and I can actually watch the battery tick down as I read morning news).
  • Sadly, hotkeys for moving windows to other displays (let alone an option to have a “three up” layout) are nowhere to be found.
  • Relying on the Globe/Fn key for window management was a mistake because it tends to switch keyboard layouts on me, so I guess people at Apple are neither bilingual nor good testers.

Like I wrote several times over the past few months, I am really happy I have been using GNOME on for a couple of years, because it currenly looks so much better than the Mac (and I use so much cross-platform software these days) that if there were better business software support (like an official Windows Virtual Desktop client able to do corporate MFA) I would probably have switched by now.

If only I worked at a software company that… .

Notes for September 8–14

I’m now fully back to work, so there hasn’t been any free time for anything but finishing overdue posts. I have, however, managed to sneak in a few leisurely half-hours in the mornings reading work e-mail from my balcony before my calls start, which has been a great way to enjoy the lingering summertime.

I am, however, pretty certain someone will spoil that for me with more project management calls any day now.

Playing With Video

Nevertheless, I’ve spent a few hours this weekend trying to get and KDEnlive to work via RDP inside my cluster (for science!) with… dramatic results.

Resolve (which has a reputation of being fiddly in Linux overall) crashed the NVIDIA drivers and the host several times, but KDEnlive actually ran surprisingly well with just VAAPI and Intel QuickSync—and it was able to do so directly on my NAS, which saves me time and energy managing video clips and assets.

I have a vested interest in doing video editing “remotely” because my Macs (especially my desktop Mini) don’t have enough storage for handling videos, so this was an interesting experiment. But I suspect I will eventually fire up Final Cut Pro and investigate how good the UX is with network-mounted media (the workarounds I knew about used to require setting up sparse bundle images in the NAS, which is just stupid).

I can always revisit the notion of paying for it again on the iPad and get a Thunderbolt SSD, but… why?

Update: I just remembered that can do video editing as well, and I have it installed everywhere, so I am going to give it a try since it ticks an important box: it’s fully cross-platform. And it isn’t picky about GPUs, drivers or file locations, although there is no hardware video encoding. And guess what, I can even use it on with… well, relative ease:

Editing footage directly from my NAS
Editing footage directly from my NAS

Entertainment Notes

Lack of free time to do my projects is one thing, but my evenings are still manageable, so I was somewhat surprised that Foundation ended the season in such a weird way (fine, we all know it’s not canon Asimov, but still… some plot twists just don’t make sense) and pleasantly amused with the end of this season of Strange New Worlds, which is well on its way to be the best modern Trek (although that isn’t hard given recent history).

I’d watch a full original series reboot if this trend keeps up.

The Cudy AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 System (with OpenWRT)

As I’ve been writing about or , I’ve recently upgraded my Wi-Fi after an attempt to use ISP-provided equipment to replace my remarkably long-lasting (and extremely reliable) base stations.

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The Chuwi AuBox 8745HS

As regular readers will know, I am quite fond of the various Ryzen APUs that have hit the market over the past couple of years, and I take a look at them whenever I can, since they have proven to be quite popular options—partially because of the high core counts and partly because of their increasingly powerful iGPUs.

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The iPhone 17 Event

This time I actually forgot to watch the live event.

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Notes for September 1-7

Summer break is now completely over, so I did my usual Summer “cleansing”—disabling notifications from annoying apps, unsubscribing from a few more online services, ditching a half dozen YouTube channels, and (surprisingly) keeping my Twitter/X account afloat. I also poked at BlueSky with a metaphorical stick, only to find it very much alive.

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Notes for August 18-31

It’s been a pretty crowded couple of weeks—the most intense part of summer break: a few days at the beach, some in the countryside, plus plenty of walking and reading.

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iPadOS 26 Beta Update

I’ve spent most of the past couple of weeks using my M1 iPad Pro, and have some follow-up on that might be interesting.

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Notes for August 11-17

Most of the week was spent rummaging through storage to get rid of obsolete hardware and troubleshooting ISP and Wi‑Fi issues, so there isn’t a lot of interesting stuff to report.

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The LattePanda Mu

Even though my current preferences in the “Intel” space actually lean towards AMD, I’ve been keeping an eye on industrial x86-64 for a while. But not too closely, so I was pretty surprised to get my hands on a LattePanda Mu, and it feels like a fresh take on the entire compute module concept.

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