Melbourne, Australia || 14th October 2020 || 8:21 PM
Walking around my neighbourhood collecting resources for the Niantic game, Catan: World Explorer.
This is for the #ADayInTheLife photo challenge on micro.blog. Read more about it here.
Melbourne, Australia || 14th October 2020 || 8:21 PM
Walking around my neighbourhood collecting resources for the Niantic game, Catan: World Explorer.
This is for the #ADayInTheLife photo challenge on micro.blog. Read more about it here.
I read a lot of web series, whether they are webcomics or web novels, so I created this Shortcut script to keep track of which chapter/episode I’m up to.
I also created a subsequent script that would extract and load the latest chapter from your reading log.
I’m sure you can tweak this to keep track of your web TV shows too.
An individual Drafts note is created for each web series you want to track.
When you run the “Log Web Reading” script and select “^New Reading”, Shortcuts creates a new Drafts note for the web series you want to log.
The Shortcut script would extract the URL of the website you were on when you activated the Safari Share Sheet and save it to the Drafts note4.
The next time you run “Log Web Reading” and select an existing web series log, Shortcuts would find the original Drafts note it had created and append the latest URL to the note.
When you run the “Load Web Reading” script and select the web series you want to read, Shortcuts would find the latest entry in the Drafts note, extract the URL and load it in Safari.
For every web series you track, a Drafts note is created with the following properties:
– Titled with the name you entered in the prompt (name of the web series)
– tagged with “bookmark” and “log”
– is flagged
– is archived
Every time you run the “Log” and “Load” scripts, they would search for all the notes that match the above criteria and extract the titles to populate the web series drop-down menu.
In fact, when you run “Log Web Reading” for the first time, a note is created with the title “^New Reading” and all the above properties – which is why you have the “^New Reading” option in the drop-down menu.5 So don’t delete that note.
I create a Drafts Workspace that shows me all my reading logs – this makes it easy to manage my logs (see below)
When you’re finished with a web series and you don’t want to it to show up on the drop-down menu anymore, simply remove the flag from the Drafts note6.
For some unknown reason I decided to revisit the Buffy – Once More, With Feeling soundtrack. 🎵
I still shudder at the line “Till they pulled me out… of heaven”.
This page is inspired by Derek Sivers.
I recently discovered a number of pretty cool music Twitch streamers – they’re great to listen to while working from home. 🎵
So a couple of days ago, I discovered the WidgetPack app through HeyScottyJ’s
OmniFocus Widgets 2.0 with WidgetPack post.
I guess it doesn’t need to be said, but I’m now down a new rabbit hole.
Fellow journalers/planners, do you use digital or analogue tools? If you use both, how and when do you use which?
I’m trying to justify when to use my fountain pens and when to use Day One.
As a stationery snob, I admit to caring a lot (maybe too much) about the pens and papers I use.
So it would come as no surprise that news of Tomoegawa using a new machine for manufacturing their Tomoe River paper is causing me no small amount of concern.
It does not help matters that reviews show that things I love about the TR paper – paper thinness, ink shading, ink haloing and ghosting (I love ghosting!) – are all supposedly worse in the new paper.
I am now wondering to what extent I would go to to get my hands on some of the new stuff so I can test it out for myself.
It might result in me buying a lot of notebooks now in an attempt to stave off the inevitable.
Oh, first world problems…
It wasn’t completely terrible, just predictable, filled with cringe-worthy dialogue and kind of boring. But, if all you wanted was something in the background while you’re doing something else, and you miss 90s rom-com, this ain’t too bad.