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Hi Friend, I've been thinking a lot lately about teaching. I've taught the Productivity Field Guide workshop three times now. Each year it gets better. Not because I'm a better teacher, though hopefully I am. The workshop gets better because my students make it better. The act of teaching it live sparks magic. Participants ask questions I didn't anticipate. People get stuck on concepts I thought were obvious. They have breakthroughs on exercises I almost cut from the program. Every single one of these moments changes the content (and me). This year we spent a lot of time on role statement exercises. I've used role statements for years, but watching a room full of smart people work through them, watching the moment it clicks, watching them rewrite their own statements forced me to think deeper about why this actually works. Teaching forces clarity. When I'm writing alone, I can let things slide. I can tell myself the idea is there, even if the explanation is fuzzy. But in a workshop, there's nowhere to hide. If my explanation doesn't land, I see it immediately. So I try a different angle. I find a better example. I cut the stuff that doesn't matter and expand the stuff that does. The questions also help me. Someone asks why a particular workflow matters. I try to answer but I can see it didn't really land. I have to dig deeper, articulate what I actually mean. Often, my answer ends up better than anything I would've written at a desk. The struggles matter too. When someone can't make a technique work in their own life, that's information. It tells me where the gap is between theory and practice. This is why I'll keep teaching workshops even though it's more work. The content gets better. My understanding gets better. And the people in the room get something more useful than they would if I'd just written a book and mailed it to them. Teaching forces you to question your thinking and assumptions. If you want to get better at something, teach it. Your pal, David P.S. Do you want to help me out? Why not recommend this newsletter to a friend? Read this post on macsparky.com Global Delight sponsored this post. Check out Boom for iPhone for yourself. I spend a lot of time listening to music and podcasts on my iPhone. Walks, workouts, flying. And I used to accept that what came out of my AirPods was just what I got. Then I tried Boom. Boom is a bass booster and equalizer app from Global Delight that makes your iPhone audio genuinely better. Not "slightly tweaked." Better. It uses patented 3D Surround Sound technology that works with any pair of headphones. You don't need to buy new hardware. You just need to stop settling for flat, lifeless audio. The equalizer is the real star. Boom gives you a full 16-band EQ so you can fine-tune your sound to match exactly what you like. If you don't want to fiddle with sliders, there are 29 handcrafted presets that cover everything from Dubstep to Classical. Pick one, adjust the intensity, and go. There's also a built-in music player that works with your local library, plus access to over 40,000 radio stations and podcasts from 120 countries. And if you're a Tidal subscriber, Boom integrates directly so you can apply all its audio effects to your streaming music. What I appreciate most is how simple it is. You install it, pick your headphones, choose a preset or build your own EQ profile, and suddenly everything sounds richer. The bass actually hits. The mids don't get lost. It's the kind of improvement that makes you wonder why you waited so long. Boom has over 10 million downloads and regularly sits at the top of the Music category. It requires iOS 13.0 or later, so any reasonably modern iPhone will run it. If you listen to anything on your iPhone through headphones or earbuds, Boom is worth trying. Right now it's 60% off. Your ears will thank you. |
In a world where technology is increasingly conspiring to steal our focus and attention, my goal is to teach you how to be more productive with Apple technology. I want to help you achieve what is most important to you and enjoy your life at the same time using technology instead of becoming another one of its victims. Pretty much everything I make points at that North Star. I believe in this message so much that I’ve staked my livelihood on it.
Hi Friend, I've been buying Macs forever. For most of that time, the conventional wisdom was simple: Get as much memory as you can afford. Back then, everyone was doing video editing or photo work. Memory was expensive. So you bought as much as your budget allowed. More memory always made your Mac snappier. Then the world changed. Solid state storage got cheap. Cloud services got fast. Most people stopped doing local heavy lifting. They stored their photos in iCloud. They edited video in the...
Hi Friend, I’ve been using the term “donkey work” a lot lately, and some of you have been asking what I mean by it. Fair enough. Let me explain. When I started paying attention to AI, I realized pretty quickly that I didn’t want it writing for me. I didn’t want it making my videos or drafting my newsletters. That’s the work I love. That’s the stuff I wake up wanting to do. If I hand that off to a machine, what’s left? But I also realized I spend hours every day on stuff that has nothing to do...
A MacSparky Dispatch Hi Friend, I built the AI assistant I’ve always wanted. Then I shut it down. For the last few weeks, I’ve been experimenting with OpenClaw, an open source project that started as ClaudBot, then became MultBot, and now goes by OpenClaw (lawyers!). It’s essentially AI plumbing for your computer. You install it, and suddenly you have an independent artificial intelligence agent that can work without your supervision. It can run on its own schedule, doing tasks while you...