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marcel.io
Marcel · 2024-03-10 · via Ye Olde Blogroll — Firehose

The more I think about it, the more AirPods with cameras in the stems make sense to me. Long-term readers of this blog know that I’m bullish on AR as the future of interfaces, and until recently I considered glasses, or later on contact lenses, to be the primary interface to an augmented future.

But contact lenses are quite a way off, and we haven’t even managed to put high-quality screens in glasses that don’t make you look like a dork.

Now imagine wearing an Apple Watch, having an iPhone in your pocket, and using AirPods with cameras that somehow have a 360-degree view of everything around you. That could enable so many incredible use cases, all without you having to strap something new to your face.

Wearing AirPods is incredibly easy. I do it for hours each day. If they could see the road I’m walking on and tell me to “turn right just after that blue Toyota,” that would augment my reality quite a lot.

They could also do all the vaporware Google announced a year ago. The cameras could remember where I put my wallet, and I could ask Siri for its last location. A buzz on my wrist could show me a photo of the street corner and my wallet’s location on my Apple Watch or iPhone. There’s not much benefit in overlaying that information on top of what I’m actually looking at right now.

Other examples:

  • Warnings when someone is overtaking you on a bike: “On your left.”
  • Asking what that bookstore was called that you went into yesterday
  • Finding the shampoo from your shopping list on a crowded shelf

The cameras obviously wouldn’t work well for people with long hair unless it’s tied back, and I doubt the photos or videos would be worth much anyway. But tying your hair into a ponytail and not taking creepy shots is a lot easier than wearing a weird-looking pair of glasses on your face all day, especially if you don’t normally wear glasses. And keep in mind that plenty of people already wear AirPods for hours every day.

I’m a bit surprised by this, but this could actually be a cool product.

Today is my 37th birthday! I really can’t complain. I’m surrounded by people I love, I enjoy the city I live in, I have a job I’m happy with, and hobbies that keep me entertained and engaged.

All is good. I hope I’ll be able to write the same thing a year from now. If I can keep this up for the rest of my life, it will have been a good one. 🎂

This is an amazing documentation about Art Spiegelman, his most famous work "Maus" and how it was created and how he now looks at his legacy.

I’ve been drawing daily journal comics for 100+ days. Now there’s a weekly recap with all comics from the past week, in one email. The first one goes out tonight. You can sign up here. ✌️

This somehow snuck up on me, but today is day 100 of 2026, the Year of Art. I’ve drawn an entry for my visual diary on every single one of those days. Not a single day missed.

It’s one of the best projects I’ve ever taken on. It continues to challenge me while giving me small wins every day. It strikes the perfect balance between a relaxing hobby and something that actually demands effort.

I’m not sure if I can keep this up forever. Every day I think this will be the day I run out of ideas, but it hasn’t happened yet. So I’ll keep going and hope for the best.

Eight years ago, somewhere on the outskirts of Berlin, a random cat gave birth to a litter of kittens. A couple of weeks later, I took two of them home, and they’ve been living with me ever since.

Photo
Gigabyte
Photo
Millimeter

They’re great. I love them, and I wouldn’t want to be without them, even though having pets isn’t always easy. They’ve helped me through some hard times and make my life better every single day. I love sharing my day-to-day life with them.

Happy birthday, Gigabyte and Millimeter! 🎈

It took me nearly 100 days of daily drawing (and buying pens) to land on a pen that doesn’t leave me wanting more.

I follow a lot of artists who’ve come to very different conclusions, and I’ve tried plenty of their recommendations. None of them did for me what the Tombow Brush Pen Fudenosuke with soft tip does. This is obviously very subjective, so no promises you’ll feel the same.

But for me, it just works. It looks good, feels great, gives me a lot of control over my lines, and it’s surprisingly cheap.

I’ll let you know if that changes. That would be breaking news.

I love everything about this. How he talks, how he got to where he is and his work and wisdom.

A few quotes I liked:

Talent, I believe, is a mostly myth because I hear that a lot. ‘Oh, you’re so talented.’ And it’s not really true.

Your greatest asset isn’t your good looks, it’s not your education, it’s not who you know, it’s none of those things. Your greatest asset you have is your persistence and it’s the one thing that you’re fully in control of.

When you see someone who really excels at something, it’s persistence and staying with it and repetition over a long period of time. That’s what you’re looking at.

I never set out to have an unconventional life. I just kept avoiding things that suffocated me.

I know that all of you are on the edge of your seats, waiting for my opinion on Liquid Glass. iOS 26 was released more than six months ago, and I had the strong feeling that it would take some time to really understand whether it's a good redesign or not.

It is. I like it.

All the criticism of it is valid, and I understand that if you think about it, Apple's arguments for the redesign don't make sense. But this isn't only about thinking. It's about vibes.

And the vibes are great. It feels good and modern, and contrary to my initial reaction, I don't think it'll age quickly anymore.

I added a new feature to this site. I can now embed posts into posts. This will only work on the site itself. If you're reading this via RSS, you might want to come over.

Here's an example:

Marcel

Marcel

Lately, despite my best efforts, I've noticed more gray hairs at my temples, recurring fashion trends, and a sharp memory of events from two decades ago, all of which frequently …

But that's not all. Here's an example of a post that contains an image:

Marcel

Marcel

A couple of months ago, I wondered if micro-blogging and journaling could be combined. Something about sending off small posts feels different from crafting a whole journal entry. …

Introducing Zeitgeist, the journal that feels like a feed

But I didn't stop there! I can embed dailies, too. Because why not! See here:

I'll never enjoy flying. It's against nature and shouldn't be possible.

And because embedding seems to be the theme of the hour, here's an embed for a tag. It shows the most recent entries with that tag and links to the tag detail page.

  1. Buying Art Supplies
  2. Introducing Dailies
  3. The Year Of Friendship in Review
  4. The Year of Friendship

Shoutout to Codex for doing most of the work on this!

I’m going to be honest with you: I love buying stuff. I don’t do it often because I don’t like having stuff, but finding things, buying them, and then playing around with them is one of my favorite pastimes. Unfortunately, I’m not hedonistic enough to indulge this desire all the time.

But my yearly theme, The Year of Art, makes it easy to justify buying a new sketchbook every couple of weeks, or trying out a new medium or a different kind of brush.

I love it. I can go down endless rabbit holes, figure out exactly which kind of gouache paint was used for a piece I like, and then buy it for a couple of bucks and experiment with it. The same goes for pencils, brushes, and paper.

The Year of Art is going great.

I don’t need a PlayStation 5 Pro. Not yet, that is. My plan was to buy one at the end of the year so I could play GTA 6, if it gets released.

The other day, Sony announced yet another price increase for all PlayStation models, and the PS5 Pro is set to cost €150 more. That’s a 20% price increase for a two-year-old console. Absurd.

Being as economical as I am, I ordered a PS5 Pro at the old price, and it’ll arrive on Tuesday. This wasn’t the plan. I don’t want to spend more time playing video games right now. But I can’t say no to a “deal.”

Amazon already increased the prices (days before Sony’s deadline), and the PS5 Pro is sold out.

Weird times.