Issue #101 | Subscribe

For some reason, our brains love complicated things.

Even if there's a straightforward solution right in front of us which gets the job done, it doesn't feel adequate. It feels too simple.

While this trait is handy sometimes and pushes us to add more depth and thoughts to our craft, it can sometimes be overkill.

Here's an example:

I've been using a mix of CMS, like Ghost or WordPress and static site generators like Gatsby or Eleventy to power my blogs over the years.

And one of the quirks of the static-site route is writing the blog post details in a specific format known as the frontmatter.

Writing frontmatter is repetitive and could be automated or at least morphed into a template.

At first, I thought I could build a webpage where I would write my blog post and add the post description, and it would generate a markdown file ready to be published as a blog post.

But, this would take an unjustified amount of effort and time that I didn't want to invest in this little quality of life improvement.

The next option was to build a plugin for my text editor, which would help me generate the blog post frontmatter in a few clicks.

This, again, required even more effort than my previous solution.

And then it clicked. I had been seeing this problem from the wrong perspective.

The text editor I was using allows me to create live templates which could generate blocks of text with dynamic elements such as today's date, name of the file and more.

So, that is what I did. I created a template which automatically turns the blog post file name into a frontmatter containing today's date, the file name transformed into a neat title and an empty description field every time I write fm and press Tab:

It's a simple solution that gets the job done, and it took me only 10 mins to build.

Wildly, my mind didn't focus on this solution because it likes to overcomplicate stuff.

And I've seen this trait at work, too, where people unnecessarily overengineer their code, which then makes it hard for others to comprehend.

Try this approach the next time you feel like you're overcomplicating things.

Imagine what could be the simplest and lowest-effort solution that could get the job done to an acceptable level.

The simplest solutions are often the best ones.

Now, on to the rest of this week's newsletter issue:

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Your Next Read

Smarter Faster Better

A book that'll teach you how to focus better, make calculated decisions and be more productive through plenty of gripping anecdotes.

Personal Growth

Apps & Services

Arc Max

Helpful AI features baked into your browser

Arc Max brings five extremely helpful AI features into the lovable Arc browser. With Max turned on, you can ask an AI anything on the page you're currently on, have 5-sec summaries and more. Available on macOS and is free to use.
new.space

Your low-overhead and temporary sharing board

Create a disposable and easily shareable board to share quick mockups with a client, documents with a friend, or your recent trip photos with a family member. No account is needed, and everything gets auto-cleaned after 14 days. Available on the Web and is free to use.
Folder Tidy

Quickly sort unorganised files into folders

Folder Tidy lets you take a messy folder full of unorganised files and sort everything into an organised category-based folder structure. I ran this app on my Downloads folder, and it sorted all files into Images, PDFs, Videos and more. Available on macOS and costs a one-time fee of $4.99.

Handy Shortcut

Shift

A

Quickly attach a file to your new email in the macOS Mail app.
•••

Interesting Reads

Why I Moved to Apple Reminders from Todoist

8 min read

Longform

After using Todoist every day for over two years, I turned to the stock Apple Reminders app for my daily to-dos. Here's why I switched and how Reminders is better than other to-do apps in some areas.
Okay, but why?

2 min read

Firesides

This new Firesides post is a short reminder and story around the importance of asking ourselves a fundamental question before jumping on any trend train — but why?
Career Advice

9 min read

Moxie Marlinspike, the founder of the popular messaging app Signal, throws in some excellent advice for anyone looking to hop in on a new career or switch some old ones.
Buy wisely

5 min read

I loved this framework of boiling down a purchase decision into objective numbers and understanding when shelling out a couple of extra bucks might be beneficial in the long run.

Videos

An excellent 5-min explainer on the concept of Ikigai and how it can improve our lives.

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