What a beautiful weekend! Saturday and Sunday were chilly in morning, sunny, and then exemplars of a warm, dry May weather. You could do worse than have a glorious, full-throated, naturally aspirated American V8 engine in your car on a day like today.
Bellview Winery was an obvious choice for our Saturday, considering the weather, but they had a ticketed event, so we stayed home and had cheese and salami and raided our cellar (which is on the second floor in a cheap fridge). Joe was working, but Rhonda, Aaron, and I nipped out for dinner at the Turkish joint around the corner. It’s really good!
It occurred to me that the genesis of Sunday Serial was to recommend things to my readers. I haven’t invoked the mission in writing for a while, so here it goes:
Here are a few things to check out!
BetterTouchTool
I’ve been using BetterSnapTool for over a decade to manage the windows on my Mac. It originally was one of the few utilities to add Windows Snap-style functionality to the Mac. Apple did eventually add a similar feature to Sequoia, but there are still advantages to third-party utilities, such as programmable keyboard shortcuts..
BetterTouchTool has long offered the same features, in addition to giving users a path to creating custom mouse and touchpad gestures. In a recent blog post, the developer described a new beta feature: a Spotlight-like Launcher. His hopes were high that Apple would eventually add third-party support to Spotlight, and while the latest version of Spotlight that ships with Tahoe brings some feature enhancements, it was not what he was looking for. With that, BetterTouchTool joined the crowded field of excellent third-party launcher utilities.

You can use BTT’s launcher to fire off custom actions, launch apps, see running apps, create and use widgets, search for files, use Soulver to make back-of-the-napkin calculations, and lots more. I’m excited to finally create some custom gestures with my trackpad, and avail myself of BTT’s ability to manage windows.
[BetterTouchTool’s new Spotlight Like Launcher (BETA)]
Lamy Safari Rollerball Pen
I had to return some pants Rhonda got for Aaron at Staples today, and I browsed the pen aisle to see what they had; Staples has always been an OK spot for Fisher Space pens and more. I spied a Lamy Safari Ballpoint in bespoke packaging on one peg, and gave it a quick ogle. I didn’t take me long to decide to purchase one.

It’s preloaded with a black ink cartridge, but I’ll order a refill in the near future and make it blue. It’s got that great thick barrel that I love from my Safari fountain pen, as well as the rounded wire clip. I was hoping for a gel pen, but this does write nicely.

Shoreline Vintage & Toy Show 2026
Joey and Aaron clued me in to Shoreline Vintage’s show this weekend; since adding Farpoint IIto their collection of vendors, they’ve been throwing great shows every summer, usually around Memorial Day. We got up early because Joe had to work and headed over for a bit of shopping.

Toy Shows are always an eclectic gathering of enthusiasts. There were people in costumes, some cross dressing, and plenty of eagle-eyed shoppers. Joe and Aaron split off and browsed the tables. It was, as usual, a great show with lots to see.

I’m excited that Aaron’s eye was bewitched by a used Nikon DSLR. We went back to the table a few times to try to get more info about the camera, and as we walked the grounds, I learned that the Nikon D3500 is not a new camera, but is one of the last in the line of consumer-focused DSLRs and not mirrorless. It was a kit with an 18-55mm f/3.5-5.5 lens, probably a standard Nikon kit lens, but also a 70-500mm f/4.5-6.3 zoom lens. That’s pretty close to all you’d need, save for a nice prime lens with an aperture around f/2 or a little lower.

I told him we could figure something out if he wanted to buy it without exhausting his budget; my notion was that we’d eventually get him a Panasonic or a Olympus so he could use my lenses, but he seems to be drawn to Canon and Nikon. I’m curious about APS-C and Nikon’s software interface on their cameras, as well as the physical controls, though. I suggested that we could negotiate the price, and Aaron went for it: he suggested a price, and the seller readily agreed. Proud of this guy!

So yeah: he’s got a Nikon, and there’s an f/1.8 35mm on the way from Ebay.







































