Uses
The tools I actually reach for.
A boringly honest list. Nothing is sponsored; I bought everything below with my own money, and I'd buy most of it again.
Workstation
Hardware
- Mac Studio · M2 Max — the daily driver. Silent, fast, never thinks about it.
- MacBook Pro 14" · M3 — travel + couch driver, doubles as the "test on a smaller screen" machine.
- Studio Display · 27" — colour-accurate enough, single cable, low-effort.
- Magic Keyboard with Touch ID — yes, the Apple one. Yes, it's fine.
- Magic Trackpad — gestures, gestures, gestures.
- Sony WH-1000XM5 — for trains, planes, and meetings I'd rather not be in.
Where the work happens
Coding
- Xcode — for everything Apple-platform. Yes, all the betas.
- VS Code — for the web, Python, and quick edits.
- Ghostty / iTerm2 — terminal of the week.
- Tower — visual Git for the inevitable rebase that goes sideways.
- Proxyman — for inspecting whatever I claim is "not making any network calls".
- SF Mono — still the only monospace I love.
Pixels
Design
- Figma — for everything that needs sketching first.
- Acorn — for App Store screenshots and quick image work.
- Apple's SF Symbols — the secret weapon of every good Mac app.
- RocketSim + QuickRecorder — for screen captures and demos.
Running the studio
Admin
- Things 3 — task list of record.
- Apple Notes — long-form thinking, links, half-baked ideas.
- Linear — for client-side project work.
- 1Password — for everything that needs a password.
- Plain text + Git — for everything that doesn't.
Inbox & talk
Comms
- Apple Mail — yes, really. With SaneBox.
- FaceTime / Zoom — depending on who's asking.
- iMessage + WhatsApp — for everything async.
- Cal.com — for booking calls without the email tennis.
Tiny upgrades
Mac utilities
- Raycast — replaces Spotlight, half my muscle memory, runs almost everything.
- Rectangle — window management without thinking.
- HazeOver — dim everything but the current window.
- Bartender — the menu bar's bouncer.
- PrivacyStage — when I'm sharing my own screen, of course.
Updated whenever I notice it's gone stale. Tools come and go; the ones above earned their place by surviving an Apple-platform upgrade cycle.