Manton Reece
About Photos Videos Archive 30 days 90 parks Reading Search Also on Micro.blog
  • I’ve posted an update to the Micro.blog 4.0 beta for Mac. You can download the new version here. There’s no “Check for Updates” for the beta. It improves bookmarking and also adds collecting anonymous machine stats for the first time, so we can have a better sense of what Macs people are using.

    → 2:34 PM, Jun 9
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  • Haiku, Sonnet, Opus, Mythos, Fable. I’m not a fan of Anthropic’s business but I’m a fan of their names. So nice.

    → 12:33 PM, Jun 9
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  • Siri AI context

    Instead of thinking about on-device models and cloud models, a better framing for Apple vs. everyone else is on-device context and cloud context. Apple is focused on apps, privacy, and security, at the expense of speed and universal access anywhere.

    There can’t really be a web version of Siri AI. There can’t be a fully-featured HomePod version either, except in limited areas where Apple could sync its own data. Siri will continue to be fragmented across platforms.

    I personally want an assistant that knows a lot. Yesterday, I asked ChatGPT whether 7-Eleven carried a certain medicine. In its answer it included a map because it knew I was traveling, and it also included a minor health tip based on something I had told it last week about an x-ray. Some people will find this creepy and invasive. They’re not wrong. But I think it should be my choice whether I let my assistant know these things.

    Apple’s strategy will resonate with a lot of people. Perhaps it is the best approach when you have billions of users. It doesn’t really excite me, though, because I can see what is possible when you instead put the context and memory in the cloud, where an ambient assistant and its helper agents can get to work for you.

    I also might be wrong about the limitations. For example, Siri AI could manage memory in the same way that OpenClaw and Codex do, with on-device data that then syncs between platforms. In that world, memory could feel universal even if it is never stored in the cloud.

    Apple should continue to do what they are doing. OpenAI and Google should continue to do what they are doing. Every approach is a trade-off. Apple reasonably trades ubiquity for privacy. Each company following its own path is the best way to give users choice and discover what works in practice.

    → 11:06 AM, Jun 9
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  • Congrats to the Iconfactory on 30 years! 🎉

    → 10:30 AM, Jun 9
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  • I’m impressed with what Apple has come up with their most advanced on-device model. From the Machine Learning blog:

    Built on cutting-edge Apple research, this 20-billion-parameter model uses a sparse architecture, activating just 1 to 4 billion parameters at a time depending on the request.

    → 10:20 AM, Jun 9
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  • Long day but really good day. Felt like it had a little bit of everything. Still coming down after that Spurs game, really good. Tomorrow need to unpack a little more of what I glossed over during the WWDC announcements.

    → 11:50 PM, Jun 8
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  • Go Spurs Go! Big game in NY. Found a sports bar to watch a little while in San Jose. Mostly Knicks fans here but a few Spurs fans too. 🏀

    → 5:57 PM, Jun 8
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  • OpenAI announces draft S-1 in an oddly direct, brief blog post:

    We recently submitted a confidential S-1. We expect it to leak so we’re just announcing it. We have not decided on timing yet; it may be a while because there are things we want to do that are likely easier as a private company.

    → 3:45 PM, Jun 8
    Also on Bluesky
  • Catching up from yesterday’s post from John Gruber about SwiftUI:

    There’s something really wrong with SwiftUI. Amongst the apps I use, the best example is Apple Journal. Basic stuff that’s worked reliably for decades — some things that heretofore had worked forever — are dangerously broken.

    Apple should’ve unified AppKit and UIKit years ago. SwiftUI could be purely a wrapper for the core framework, plus support for watchOS. Maybe too late to correct this now.

    → 3:25 PM, Jun 8
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  • Seeing this screenshot on Mastodon from Finn Voorhees, sounds like Apple doesn’t want big companies to use private cloud compute. Which means it probably won’t even work with Mac apps like mine that are distributed outside the App Store. Apple’s going to lock this down.

    → 12:44 PM, Jun 8
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