{
  "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1",
  "title": "Apps on Focustivity",
  "icon": "https://avatars.micro.blog/avatars/2024/03/139989.jpg",
  "home_page_url": "https://focustivity.blog/",
  "feed_url": "https://focustivity.blog/feed.json",
  "items": [
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2026/06/28/ive-been-trying-out-siri.html",
        
        "content_html": "<p>I’ve been trying out Siri AI over the past few days. Overall, I’m very impressed and see the potential.</p>\n<p>However, it seems the one thing the old Siri was really good at got nerfed. All I want to do is set a reminder, but Siri AI rewrites it and doesn’t always set the date and time correctly.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2026-06-28T14:13:42-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2026/06/28/ive-been-trying-out-siri.html",
        "tags": ["AI","Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2026/01/11/default-apps-january.html",
        "title": "Default Apps - January 11, 2026",
        "content_html": "<p>Below are some apps, services, and hardware that I currently use. The idea became popular through the <a href=\"https://listen.hemisphericviews.com/097?ref=focustivity.blog\">Hemispheric Views podcast Episode 97</a> and then further through Robb Knight&rsquo;s <a href=\"https://defaults.rknight.me/?ref=focustivity.blog\">App Defaults</a> directory.</p>\n<p>This time around, I copied my previous <a href=\"https://focustivity.blog/default-apps-october-24-2025\">default apps post</a> and updated it, striking through things that have changed. Hopefully, it&rsquo;s still readable. I find it useful to see what changes over time.</p>\n<h2 id=\"ai\">AI</h2>\n<p>I occasionally use <strong>Google Gemini</strong> on my phone for quick searches or voice actions. I&rsquo;ve been leaning more toward using Kagi Assistant, though.</p>\n<p>I use <strong>Microsoft Copilot</strong> for work. It does an outstanding job of pulling together meeting notes, helping me summarize conversations, and finding things across the organization. It sucks at everything else.</p>\n<p>On the personal side, I tend to use <strong>Kagi Assistant</strong> in my browser&rsquo;s sidebar when I want to do something with AI. It usually starts as a quick search in <strong>Kagi</strong> , and I jump to Assistant when I need more.</p>\n<p>I also use <strong>GitHub Copilot</strong> a bit in <strong>Visual Studio Code</strong>. Not something I do every day, though.</p>\n<h2 id=\"blogging\">Blogging</h2>\n<p>I use <a href=\"https://pagecord.com/?ref=focustivity.blog\">Pagecord</a> to host my personal blog and handle my weekly newsletter. I tend to use my email for creating quick posts and the web interface for longer posts.</p>\n<h2 id=\"browser\">Browser</h2>\n<p>I use <strong>Microsoft Edge</strong> (with about 23 custom profiles) for work and <strong>Helium</strong> for personal use on my Windows PC. I&rsquo;m experimenting with some browsers on Android.</p>\n<h2 id=\"calendar\">Calendar</h2>\n<p>My family events are in our <strong>Apple Family Calendar</strong> , work events are hosted in our company <strong>Outlook</strong> (Exchange) Calendar, and personal events I keep in my <strong>Google Calendar</strong>. <del>I use the default Samsung Calendar app on my phone to consolidate them. My Outlook for work also pulls in my personal calendar, so I can see everything overlaid.</del> I&rsquo;m trying out <strong>Hey Calendar</strong> on my phone to see how it works out.</p>\n<h2 id=\"email\">Email</h2>\n<p>I have a couple of custom domains that I use for some emails. These are hosted through <a href=\"https://migadu.com/\"><strong>Migadu</strong></a> (because it&rsquo;s dirt cheap), which then forwards to <a href=\"https://www.hey.com/\"><strong>Hey</strong></a>. Hey is then configured so I can receive and respond to emails from addresses in these custom domains. <del>I tend to use a custom domain for accounts and services and my Hey email address for everything else.</del> I have a custom domain email for my websites but have been using <strong>Hey</strong> email for everything else.</p>\n<h2 id=\"news\">News</h2>\n<p><del>My news consumption is primarily</del> <a href=\"https://focustivity.blog/kagi-news\"><del>Kagi News</del></a> <del>. I subscribe to a few categories' RSS feeds, and they show up in my feed. I love that it only updates once per day and is formatted to provide a simple summary, highlights, and sources.</del>  I may listen to a podcast here and get a newsletter here and there that covers the latest news in more detail, but overall, I found myself not looking at news (or social media) much. When I do, I still go to <strong>Kagi News</strong>.</p>\n<h2 id=\"notes\">Notes</h2>\n<p>I jump between various note-taking apps, so I don&rsquo;t have an extensive collection of notes (since they&rsquo;re scattered all over). My favorite robust notes apps have been <strong>Obsidian</strong> and <strong>Reflect</strong>. <del>I&rsquo;ve hopped between both quite a bit.</del> But today, I tend to use paper for quick notes. Recently, I started carrying around a <strong>Plotter</strong> personal-size notebook for jotting down notes.</p>\n<p><del>I started using a</del> <a href=\"https://supernote.com/products/supernote-nomad?ref=focustivity.blog\"><del>Supernote Nomad</del></a> <del>for handwritten notes.</del> My <strong>Plotter</strong> is where I write ideas, personal tasks, and anything else that comes to mind. For work notes, I use the Plotter A6 refill paper that sits on my desk (without the binder), and anything I want to keep I stick in a cheap A6 6-ring binder that sits on my shelf.</p>\n<h2 id=\"reading\">Reading</h2>\n<p>I often switch between the convenience of Kindle and the physicality of physical books. Currently, I&rsquo;m mostly reading non-fiction in <strong>physical books</strong> , and fiction I tend to listen to on <strong>Audible</strong>.</p>\n<p><del>For RSS, I&rsquo;m a big fan of</del> <a href=\"https://feedbin.com/\"><del>Feedbin</del></a> <del>.</del> I&rsquo;m still a fan of <strong>Feedbin</strong> , but I&rsquo;ve actually been cutting back on RSS and using the <strong>Hey</strong> Digest feature for content I want to receive. <del>I currently save articles to read later in</del> <a href=\"https://www.instapaper.com/\"><del>Instapaper</del></a><del>, though I&rsquo;m not set on that workflow yet (I haven&rsquo;t been using it long). I used Readwise Reader for a while but found it too much (in terms of functionality and price) for my needs.</del> I started using <strong>Raindrop</strong> again for bookmarks and also for things I want to read or watch later.</p>\n<h2 id=\"reminders\">Reminders</h2>\n<p><del>I use Samsung Reminders because it is the default on my phone, but primarily because it can be configured to have full-screen, in-your-face notifications, which is what I need.</del> I&rsquo;ve been using the default <strong>Google Task reminders</strong> on my phone since I switched from a Samsung to a Pixel a couple of months ago. I&rsquo;d love to find an alternative where I can hold the button on my phone to input a reminder. It honestly doesn&rsquo;t get used much.</p>\n<h2 id=\"search\">Search</h2>\n<p>I&rsquo;m a fan of <a href=\"https://kagi.com/\">Kagi search</a>. </p>\n<h2 id=\"social-media\">Social Media</h2>\n<p>While I have accounts on many platforms, I haven&rsquo;t been using social media. Instead, I&rsquo;m in favor of posting anything I want to say to the world through my blog and having discussions with people through email. This intentionally limits my interaction with the outside world.</p>\n<h2 id=\"tasks\">Tasks</h2>\n<p>For work, most of my tasks are in <strong>Azure DevOps</strong>. Personally, I don&rsquo;t have very many and have started using my <del>Supernote</del> <strong>Plotter</strong> to manage these. I consider “reminders” as anything that needs to be done at a certain time and “tasks” as things I&rsquo;d like to do reasonably soon.</p>\n<h2 id=\"writing\">Writing</h2>\n<p>I&rsquo;ve been intentionally trying to write more. Writing helps me think. I write in many places.</p>\n<p>I try to stub out ideas in my <strong>Plotter</strong> notebook.</p>\n<p>Blog posts are either created via email ( <strong>Hey</strong> ) or directly in the <strong>PageCord</strong> UI.</p>\n<p>Online, I feel like I need a decent grammar-checking tool because I&rsquo;m a mess. I&rsquo;m currently using <strong>LanguageTool</strong> since it doesn&rsquo;t seem to get in the way and provides the basics without overwhelming AI (looking at you, Grammarly).</p>\n<h2 id=\"other\">Other</h2>\n<p>I&rsquo;ve been using <strong>Niagara Launcher</strong> on my Android phone in place of the default launcher. It&rsquo;s a very minimal UI with many great features.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2026-01-11T15:49:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2026/01/11/default-apps-january.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2025/12/22/cookedwiki.html",
        "title": "Cooked.wiki",
        "content_html": "<p>I read a <a href=\"https://olly.world/app-defaults-2025\">post</a> from Olly and found <a href=\"https://cooked.wiki/\">Cooked.wiki</a>, an app that converts any web recipe into a short and useful one. It looks wonderful and has promising features. It’s free unless you want the AI features to auto-organize and do other things.</p>\n<p>I’ve been using ReciMe for this purpose and likely won’t switch. It is nice, but occasionally a bit slow when processing recipes.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2025-12-22T18:11:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2025/12/22/cookedwiki.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2025/11/28/kagi-assistant-impression.html",
        "title": "Kagi Assistant Impression",
        "content_html": "<h1 id=\"kagi-assistant-impression\">Kagi Assistant Impression</h1>\n<p><a href=\"https://blog.kagi.com/kagi-assistants\">Introducing Kagi Assistants | Kagi Blog</a></p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Kagi’s Research Assistant happened to top a popular benchmark (SimpleQA) when we ran it in August 2025. This was a happy accident. We’re building our research assistants to be useful products, not maximize benchmark scores.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>I continue to be more impressed by Kagi Assistant as I use it. While not a full replacement for something like ChatGPT or Gemini, it certainly gets the job done. I think the results are drastically better simply because Kagi provides cleaner, more relevant search results.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2025-11-28T18:12:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2025/11/28/kagi-assistant-impression.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2025/10/24/default-apps-october.html",
        "title": "Default Apps - October 24, 2025",
        "content_html": "<p>A few weeks ago, I created a dedicated page that lists all the apps and hardware I&rsquo;m currently using. I decided to move that page into its blog post. The idea is to repost this content (whenever I&rsquo;m in the mood) with an updated list. This approach allows me (and you) to look back over time.</p>\n<p>Below are some apps, services, and hardware that I currently use. The idea became popular through the <a href=\"https://listen.hemisphericviews.com/097?ref=focustivity.blog\">Hemispheric Views podcast Episode 97</a> and then further through Robb Knight&rsquo;s <a href=\"https://defaults.rknight.me/?ref=focustivity.blog\">App Defaults</a> directory.</p>\n<h1 id=\"ai\">AI</h1>\n<p>I occasionally use Google Gemini on my phone for quick searches or voice actions. </p>\n<p>I use Microsoft Copilot for work. It does an impressive job of pulling together meeting notes, helping me summarize conversations, and finding things across the organization.</p>\n<p>On the personal side, I tend to use Kagi Assistant in my browser&rsquo;s sidebar when I want to do something with AI. It usually starts as a quick search in Kagi, and I jump to Assistant when I need more.</p>\n<p>I also use GitHub Copilot a bit in Visual Studio Code. Not something I do every day, though.</p>\n<h1 id=\"blogging\">Blogging</h1>\n<p>I use <a href=\"https://pagecord.com/?ref=focustivity.blog\">Pagecord</a> to host my personal blog and handle my weekly newsletter. I tend to use my email for creating quick posts and the web interface for longer posts.</p>\n<h1 id=\"browser\">Browser</h1>\n<p>I use Microsoft Edge (with about 23 custom profiles) for work and Vivaldi for personal use. </p>\n<h1 id=\"calendar\">Calendar</h1>\n<p>My family events are in our Apple Family calendar; work events are hosted in our company Outlook (Exchange) calendar; and personal events I keep in my Google Calendar. I use the default Samsung Calendar app on my phone to consolidate them. My Outlook for work also pulls in my personal calendar, so I can see everything overlaid.</p>\n<h1 id=\"email\">Email</h1>\n<p>I have a couple of custom domains that I use for some emails. These are hosted through <a href=\"https://migadu.com/\">Migadu</a> (because it&rsquo;s dirt cheap), which then forwards to <a href=\"https://www.hey.com/\">Hey</a>. Hey is configured so I can receive and respond to emails from addresses in these custom domains. I tend to use a custom domain for accounts and services, and my Hey email address for everything else.</p>\n<h1 id=\"notes\">Notes</h1>\n<p>I jump between various note-taking apps, so I don&rsquo;t have an extensive collection of notes (since they&rsquo;re scattered all over). My favorite robust notes apps have been Obsidian and Reflect. I&rsquo;ve hopped between both quite a bit. But today, I tend to use paper for quick notes.</p>\n<p>I started using a <a href=\"https://supernote.com/products/supernote-nomad?ref=focustivity.blog\">Supernote Nomad</a> for handwritten notes.</p>\n<h1 id=\"reading\">Reading</h1>\n<p>I often switch between the convenience of Kindle and the physicality of physical books. Currently, I&rsquo;m mostly reading non-fiction in physical books, and fiction I tend to listen to on Audible.</p>\n<p>For RSS, I&rsquo;m a big fan of <a href=\"https://feedbin.com/\">Feedbin</a>. I currently save articles to read later in <a href=\"https://www.instapaper.com/\">Instapaper</a>, though I&rsquo;m not set on that workflow yet (I haven&rsquo;t been using it long). I used Readwise Reader for a while, but found it too much (in terms of functionality and price) for my needs.</p>\n<p>My news consumption is primarily <a href=\"https://focustivity.blog/kagi-news\">Kagi News</a>. I subscribe to a few categories' RSS feeds, and they show up in my feed. I love that it only updates once per day and is formatted to provide a simple summary, highlights, and sources. </p>\n<h1 id=\"reminders\">Reminders</h1>\n<p>I use Samsung Reminders because it is the default on my phone, but primarily because it can be configured to have full-screen, in-your-face notifications, which is what I require. I only have a few recurring reminders and occasionally the ad hoc time-based reminder. Likewise, I don&rsquo;t use it for managing “tasks.”</p>\n<h1 id=\"search\">Search</h1>\n<p>I&rsquo;m a fan of <a href=\"https://kagi.com/\">Kagi search</a>. </p>\n<h1 id=\"social-media\">Social Media</h1>\n<p>While I have accounts on many platforms, I haven&rsquo;t been using social media. Instead, I&rsquo;m in favor of posting anything I want to say to the world through my blog and having discussions with people through email. This intentionally limits my interaction with the outside world.</p>\n<h1 id=\"tasks\">Tasks</h1>\n<p>For work, most of my tasks are in Azure DevOps. Personally, I don&rsquo;t have very many and have started using my Supernote to manage these. I consider &ldquo;reminders&rdquo; as anything that needs to be done at a certain time and “tasks” as things I&rsquo;d like to do reasonably soon.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2025-10-24T16:02:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2025/10/24/default-apps-october.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2025/10/12/publish-your-blog-posts-by.html",
        "title": "Publish your blog posts by email using Pagecord",
        "content_html": "<p>There are quite a few personal blogging platforms available today. Of course, there are the big dogs, like <a href=\"https://wordpress.com\">WordPress</a>, <a href=\"https://ghost.org\">Ghost</a>, <a href=\"https://www.blogger.com/about/\">Blogger</a>, <a href=\"https://www.squarespace.com/\">Squarespace</a>, <a href=\"https://www.blogger.com/about/\">Medium</a>, <a href=\"https://www.wix.com\">Wix</a>, and even <a href=\"https://substack.com\">Substack</a>. But for those looking for something simpler, we have options like <a href=\"https://micro.blog?ref=focustivity.blog\">Micro.blog</a>, <a href=\"https://pika.page?ref=focustivity.blog\">Pika.page</a>, <a href=\"https://bearblog.dev?ref=focustivity.blog\">Bear.dev</a>, <a href=\"https://write.as?ref=focustivity.blog\">Write.as</a>, <a href=\"https://scribbles.page?ref=focustivity.blog\">Scribbles</a>, <a href=\"https://blot.im?ref=focustivity.blog\">Blot.im,</a> <a href=\"https://svbtle.com/about?ref=focustivity.blog\">Svbtle</a>, and I&rsquo;m sure there are many more. You can even get nerdy and host your site generated using <a href=\"https://gohugo.io?ref=focustivity.blog\">Hugo</a>, <a href=\"https://www.11ty.dev?ref=focustivity.com\">Eleventy</a>, <a href=\"https://nextjs.org?ref=focustivity.blog\">Next.js</a>, or other static site generators.</p>\n<p>I recently came across <a href=\"https://pagecord.com?ref=focustivity.blog\">Pagecord</a>. I actually found the link in my bookmarks, so I must have picked it up from someone along the way, bookmarked the site, and forgotten about it. While scanning through my bookmarks one day, I happened to come across the link again.</p>\n<p>{{more}}</p>\n<p>Pagecord caught my attention because of its unique feature: the ability to post to your blog by simply sending an email. This means you get a unique email address for your account, and you can use any email client to send a blog post (as long as the email comes from your email address). This eliminates the need to log in to your admin site and create a post from there. It&rsquo;s super simple to create and publish a post from any platform.</p>\n<p>When I tried Pagecord, I found it was much more feature-rich than I expected, with features like simple analytics and automatic weekly post digest emails to subscribers.</p>\n<p>But my favorite feature of Pagecord is that it&rsquo;s run by an <a href=\"https://olly.pagecord.com?ref=focustivity.blog\">independent developer</a> who actively pushes out updates and is very responsive to email. You get unlimited posts for free, and for only $29 per year, you get private analytics, an email newsletter, a custom domain, and other premium features.</p>\n<p>It&rsquo;s difficult to pick between these great blog hosting platforms, and I admit I switch between them more often than I should. The ability to create posts from email is a feature I wish more blogging platforms would support.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2025-10-12T09:57:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2025/10/12/publish-your-blog-posts-by.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2025/01/02/starting-with-the-reflect-notes.html",
        "title": "Starting 2025 with the Reflect notes app",
        "content_html": "<p>On the surface, <a href=\"https://reflect.app/home#connected\">Reflect</a> is as simple as it gets. When I open the app, I&rsquo;m right on my daily note, when starting a new note, I get a blank screen. No toolbars, no bright shiny Share buttons, no distractions.</p>\n<p><img src=\"https://ericgregorich.blog/uploads/2025/reflect-new-blank-note.png\" alt=\"A screenshot of Reflect.app with a new note created.\"></p>\n<p>Under the covers, there is a lot to like:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>End-to-end encryption</li>\n<li>Markdown support</li>\n<li>Keyboard shortcuts</li>\n<li>Backlinks</li>\n<li>Image and PDF OCR</li>\n<li>A simple tasks interface</li>\n<li>Voice note transcription</li>\n<li>Built-in AI (OpenAI or Anthropic) for manipulating text, creating custom prompts, or even chatting with AI about selected notes</li>\n<li>Readwise (or direct Kindle) sync</li>\n<li>Import and export of notes in Markdown and other formats</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Reflect feels like writing in the default notepad app on my OS, but with superpowers. The one big downside is the price tag: a $120 annual subscription. I&rsquo;ve been using Reflect for a year and tried switching to Obsidian, but I keep coming back.</p>\n<p>The <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/@reflect-notes\">Reflect YouTube channel</a> is a great resource for anyone interested.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2025-01-02T20:10:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2025/01/02/starting-with-the-reflect-notes.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2024/12/22/obsidian-web-clipper-works-on.html",
        "title": "Obsidian Web Clipper works on iOS",
        "content_html": "<p>I just discovered that the Obsidian Web Clipper also works on iOS! I&rsquo;ll need to use Safari since it&rsquo;s a Safari extension, but that&rsquo;s okay.</p>\n<p>I struggled with importing my settings. I had to import each template manually, and configuring the Interpreter was a bit of a pain, but it works!</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2024-12-22T12:07:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2024/12/22/obsidian-web-clipper-works-on.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2024/12/20/default-apps.html",
        "title": "Default Apps 2024",
        "content_html": "<p>Inspired by the <a href=\"https://defaults.rknight.me/\">Hemispheric Views podcast</a>, here is my annual list of Default Apps for 2024. My list seems pretty boring (to me). It&rsquo;s changed a good deal over the year, but this is what I&rsquo;m currently using and what seems to be sticking with me for now.</p>\n<ul>\n<li>📨 Mail Client: Hey <sup id=\"fnref:1\"><a href=\"#fn:1\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">1</a></sup></li>\n<li>📮 Mail Server: Hey <sup id=\"fnref:1\"><a href=\"#fn:1\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">1</a></sup></li>\n<li>📝 Notes: Obsidian <sup id=\"fnref:2\"><a href=\"#fn:2\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">2</a></sup></li>\n<li>✅ To-Do: Things 3 iOS</li>\n<li>📷 iPhone Photo Shooting: Default camera app.</li>\n<li>🟦 Photo Management: Apple Photos</li>\n<li>📆 Calendar: Apple Calendar</li>\n<li>📁 Cloud File Storage: Apple iCloud</li>\n<li>📖 RSS: Readwise Reader</li>\n<li>🙍🏻‍♂️ Contacts: Hey <sup id=\"fnref:1\"><a href=\"#fn:1\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">1</a></sup> and Apple Contacts</li>\n<li>🌐 Browser: Edge on Windows. Orion on iOS</li>\n<li>💬 Chat: Apple Messages. Signal.</li>\n<li>🔖 Bookmarks: Obsidian <sup id=\"fnref:3\"><a href=\"#fn:3\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">3</a></sup></li>\n<li>📑 Read It Later: Readwise Reader</li>\n<li>📜 Word Processing: Obsidian</li>\n<li>🛒 Shopping Lists: Our Grociers iOS</li>\n<li>🍴 Meal Planning: N/A</li>\n<li>💰 Budgeting and Personal Finance: YNAB</li>\n<li>📰 News: RSS</li>\n<li>🎵 Music: Apple Music</li>\n<li>🎤 Podcasts: Overcast</li>\n<li>🔐 Password Management: 1Password</li>\n<li>🔎 Search: Kagi <sup id=\"fnref:4\"><a href=\"#fn:4\" class=\"footnote-ref\" role=\"doc-noteref\">4</a></sup></li>\n<li>🌍 Blogging Platform: Micro.blog and Pika</li>\n</ul>\n<section class=\"footnotes\" role=\"doc-endnotes\">\n<hr>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"fn:1\" role=\"doc-endnote\">\n<p>I like Hey, but is it worth $99 a year? I&rsquo;ll reevaluate when its time.&#160;<a href=\"#fnref:1\" class=\"footnote-backref\" role=\"doc-backlink\">&#x21a9;&#xfe0e;</a></p>\n</li>\n<li id=\"fn:2\" role=\"doc-endnote\">\n<p>I&rsquo;m working on transitioning all of my notes (worth keeping) from Apple Notes, Upnote, Reflect, Evernote, Drafts, and anywhere else I may have them stored.&#160;<a href=\"#fnref:2\" class=\"footnote-backref\" role=\"doc-backlink\">&#x21a9;&#xfe0e;</a></p>\n</li>\n<li id=\"fn:3\" role=\"doc-endnote\">\n<p>I&rsquo;ve been using Obsidian Web Clipper to save bookmarks into Obsidian. It&rsquo;s lacking on mobile though.&#160;<a href=\"#fnref:3\" class=\"footnote-backref\" role=\"doc-backlink\">&#x21a9;&#xfe0e;</a></p>\n</li>\n<li id=\"fn:4\" role=\"doc-endnote\">\n<p>I love Kagi, but have been experimenting with Perplexity and even ChatGPT Web search.&#160;<a href=\"#fnref:4\" class=\"footnote-backref\" role=\"doc-backlink\">&#x21a9;&#xfe0e;</a></p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n</section>\n",
        "date_published": "2024-12-20T15:35:00-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2024/12/20/default-apps.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      },
      {
        "id": "http://focustivity.micro.blog/2023/05/18/microsoft-outlook-has-made-significant.html",
        
        "content_html": "<p>Microsoft Outlook has made significant progress in recent years. The recently released <a href=\"https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/getting-started-with-the-new-outlook-for-windows-656bb8d9-5a60-49b2-a98b-ba7822bc7627\">Outlook client (preview)</a> for Windows has seen remarkable development in the past few months. While the features are largely taken from the Outlook web client, I am highly impressed with its progress.</p>\n",
        "date_published": "2023-05-18T12:54:40-04:00",
        "url": "https://focustivity.blog/2023/05/18/microsoft-outlook-has-made-significant.html",
        "tags": ["Apps"]
      }
  ]
}
