Quarto is a great blog framework but its documentation can be a bit thin. Here’s how we added HTTP headers to this blog to prevent click-jacking.
No more pasting links to add feeds to Apricot (unless you want to). Now you can search for feeds by name and really see the power of cross-platform content.
Let’s see how Bard does vs. ChatGPT, without preconceptions or hype. One person’s totally unscientific, anecdotal, but realistic field experiment.
Apricot is built for browsers like Safari, but you can install it on your iOS home screen just like a native app.
Apricot is built for browsers like Chrome and Firefox, but you can install it on your Android home screen just like a native app.
Apricot recently added images to feeds. Images add a lot of information about individual items but they take up a lot of screen real estate. Here’s how to hide the images to scroll faster through a feed.
Apricot’s browsing modes are built to serve three common use cases.
With all the hype about large-language model AI, this totally non-AI-powered feature might be Apricot’s biggest time-saver yet!
We launched ChatGPT-powered summarization for Substack a couple weeks ago, to help users see through click-bait. Now you can do the same with items from any RSS feed or subreddit. Check it out!
Apricot recently launched the ability to batch import feeds from an OPML file, which makes it super easy to switch from RSS readers like Feedly.
Apricot’s mission is to help users focus their time on the most relevant content. But not just any content; it’s not about search or real-time communication. What Apricot is all about is staying in the loop.
Apricot is officially ChatGPT-enabled. Generate AI-powered content summaries in Apricot, to see through the clickbait and save your time for the good stuff.
Apricot is the best way to subscribe to web content and to surface the things that are most relevant to you. Here’s how to get started.
Social media has been the de facto way to browse content for years. It’s time for something better. Enter Apricot.