![]() It should come as no surprise that I love newsletters. When I was done with apps and links, I turned my attention to email – specifically, newsletters. I reorganized apps on my Home screen I deleted old shortcuts with LaunchCuts and installed custom icons for my frequently used ones I fixed metadata for certain albums on my Sony Walkman (a process I want to write about on the site) and moved all my Pokémon links to Raindrop.io. You can find out more about Club MacStories and subscribe here.Īs I’ve mentioned in previous Club MacStories newsletters as well as my Must-Have Apps story, I used the holiday break as an opportunity to do some cleanup of various kinds of digital cruft on my devices. ![]() As a new member you’ll receive the latest newsletters, have access to our full archive of over 250 back issues, and enjoy other perks throughout the year. If you enjoy MacStories but want even broader and deeper coverage from the MacStories team, please consider joining Club MacStories. You can read a free newsletter sample here. MacStories Weekly is packed with our favorite apps, app collections, shortcuts, answers to Club members’ questions, longform stories, interviews, Home screens, and tips, while the Monthly Log adds even more longform stories. We wanted to share it as an example of the type of longform stories exclusive to Club MacStories members.Įvery year, we publish around 60 issues of MacStories Weekly and the Monthly Log for Club MacStories members. The following story was originally published in the January issue of our Club MacStories Monthly Log newsletter. I’ve also created shortcuts to reopen the watch later queue in the YouTube app, copy app links from the App Store, and copy a webpage selection from Safari as rich text.įurthermore, exclusively for Club MacStories members, I’ve created an advanced shortcut to upload images to a remote FTP server and copy their public URLs to the clipboard. Following this week’s launch of NetNewsWire for iPhone and iPad, I’ve adapted an existing shortcut to let you subscribe to feeds using the popular RSS client. The Shortcuts Corner is a regular section of our MacStories Weekly newsletter, exclusive to Club MacStories members, where I share advanced shortcuts and respond to readers’ requests for automation.įor this week’s installment of the Shortcuts Corner, I’ve prepared quite an assortment of miscellaneous shortcuts to share with MacStories readers and Club MacStories members (because I’ve been spending all my time at home due to the state of emergency in Italy, I’ve been reorganizing my entire Shortcuts library, among other things). If you’re a new Readwise Reader user, I recommend checking out Unread 3.3, which is available on the App Store for iPhone and iPad. ![]() Essentially, this is a way to turn Unread into a quasi-read-later tool: the app’s parser will extract text and images from the webpage, which will be then be saved as a ‘Saved Article’ in Unread Cloud, Local feeds, or NewsBlur, or as a ‘Page’ in Feedbin. The second feature is the ability to save any webpage from Safari as an article in Unread, even if you’re not subscribed to that website’s RSS feed. To start using it, you need to be an Unread subscriber and paste in your Readwise API token. Sure, the Readwise Reader extension in the share sheet is one of the best ones I’ve seen for a read-later app (you can triage and tag articles directly from the share sheet), but if you’re in a hurry and checking out headlines on your phone, the one-tap custom action in Unread is phenomenal. As I explained on AppStories, I decided to go all-in with Reader as my read-later app (at least for now), and this Unread integration makes it incredibly easy to save articles for later. The first one is the ability to set up an article action to instantly send a headline from the article list in the app to Readwise Reader. There are two features I want to mention. Unread, the elegant RSS reader by Golden Hill Software that we’ve covered before on MacStories, received its 3.3 update today, and it’s an interesting one I’ve been playing around with for the past week. Saving an article from Unread to Readwise Reader.
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