PhilipMat

Good designs converge

Wonderful essay by Paul Graham: The Brand Age. I learned a lot about watch history from it.

I like how he positions branding and design as opposite:

Branding isn’t merely orthogonal to good design, but opposed to it. Branding by definition has to be distinctive. But good design, like math or science, seeks the right answer, and right answers tend to converge. […] It’s the same if you want to set your designs apart. If you choose good options, other people will choose them too.

Which shortly leads to pointing out that religion also has its followers do inconvenient and unreasonable things:

Indeed, the conflict between branding and design is so fundamental that it extends far beyond things we call design. We see it even in religion. If you want the adherents of a religion to have customs that set them apart from everyone else, you can’t make them do things that are convenient or reasonable, or other people would do them too. If you want to set your adherents apart, you have to make them do things that are inconvenient and unreasonable.

Ties in well with:

Brand age watches look strange because they have no practical function. Their function is to express brand, and while that is certainly a constraint, it’s not the clean kind of constraint that generates good things.

TIL: Adding custom wallpaper folders to macOS

A nice, notarized program, that makes adding a wallpaper folder as easy as /usr/local/bin/wallpaper-folder add ~/Pictures/Wallpapers

AI Summary

The article explains how macOS wallpaper folder handling changed in macOS 26 and how that broke simple scripted approaches admins used to add brand or custom wallpaper collections. Previously you could drop images into /Library/Desktop Pictures (which placed them after built-ins) or add a user folder entry in ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.systempreferences.plist (DSKDesktopPrefPane:UserFolderPaths) using tools like PlistBuddy; those techniques worked across macOS 13–15.

In macOS 26 the wallpaper configuration moved into a container at ~/Library/Containers/com.apple.wallpaper.extension.image/ with embedded plists and a WallpaperAgent daemon, making shell-based edits impractical. To address this, the author created WallpaperFolderManager, a Swift utility/package that generates the required files and encoded plists, restarts cfprefsd and WallpaperAgent, and exposes commands to add, list, and remove wallpaper folders. It’s available as a signed notarized pkg, standalone binary, or Swift package, has options for verbose output and skipping service restarts, and was tested on macOS 15 and 26 (with fallback behavior for 13–15).

Source: TIL: Adding custom wallpaper folders to macOS

TIL: GitHub 10x+ Commit Surge in 2026

Kyle Daigle, COO of Github, responding to an tweet with some data about the insane amount of code GH sees as the result of AI:

There were 1 billion commits in 2025. Now, it’s 275 million per week, on pace for 14 billion this year if growth remains linear (spoiler: it won’t.)

GitHub Actions has grown from 500M minutes/week in 2023 to 1B minutes/week in 2025, and now 2.1B minutes so far this week.

TIL: Setting a minimum release age for packages

I learned, in the light of the axios compromise that a good deal of package managers support setting a minimum release age for packages:

~/.npmrc
min-release-age=7 # days
ignore-scripts=true

~/Library/Preferences/pnpm/rc
minimum-release-age=10080 # minutes

~/.bunfig.toml
[install]
minimumReleaseAge = 604800 # seconds

For Python with uv (which by now should be the default):

~/.config/uv/uv.toml
exclude-newer = "7 days"

Alas, pip only supports filtering by date, and only in version v26.0 and later, with:
pip install --uploaded-prior-to=2026-03-31 SomePackage.

That is a bit annoying so a shortcut for the 7-day gating would be
pip install --uploaded-prior-to=$(date -v-7d -u "+%Y-%m-%d") SomePackage.

There’s also pip-time-machine which helps you find out version for packages before a certain date.

TIL: Getting VS Code running on (fresh) Linux Mint v22.3

The first step of Visual Studio Code install is deceptively simple: download the .deb file, double-click to open.

Trying to log into accounts causes a notification/error:

You’re running in a GNOME environment but the OS keyring is not available for encryption. Ensure you have gnome-keyring or another libsecret compatible implementation installed and running.

The keyring troubleshooting page provides some clues but it’s a bit clumsy to figure it out.

  1. Problem 1: libsecret is not installed on a fresh Linux Mint v22.3.
    Solution: install with apt install libsecret-1-0 libsecret-1-dev libsecret-tools (not sure all of them are required).
  2. A bit buried in the docs is this bit: “and ensure the default keyring (usually referred to as Login keyring) is unlocked”.
    Problem 2: there was no “Login” password keyring visible in Seahorse (the keyring manager).
    Solution: First, it’s very possible a restart (of gnome-keyring) after installing libsecret might have auto-fixed this issue, but I went ahead to try to create that and failed: the UI was not showing the new keyring, so restart was in the cards anyway.
    After restarting the computer, I was able to create the new Login password keyring and Visual Studio Code worked without any issues. It didn’t even require the --password-store="gnome-keyring" argument or startup setting.

Also thanks to this SO answer and this one too.