Exporting My iPhone Texts to Clear Space

I started running into the issue of running out of space on my iPhone and Mac, even with larger storage options, due to an ever-growing collection of text messages. Instead of paying for more iCloud storage and dealing with performance issues from having 10 years of messages, pictures, and videos on my phone, I decided to export and backup the messages. I then set the “auto-delete after 1 year” option in my iPhone settings to clear up my storage.

The process was a bit complicated, so I wrote a guide on how to do it and published it on my wiki at tehguide.com. If anyone else is facing the same issue, check it out here:

https://tehguide.com/export-iphone-text-messages


Not What I Expected

I ended up at an open mic last night. It was mostly people trying their hand at being comedians.

There was one guy who went up to do a set. I actually sat next to him when I first arrived. Mid 20s, white, great hair, so fit he looked like a bodybuilder. Apparently he was diagnosed with brain cancer (recently or not, I forget that part of the story – he didn’t seem like he was lying, before someone suggests that).

He was joking about the fertility clinic, after the doctor told him that he needed to bank some sperm if he doesn’t want his future kids to have child defects. Something associated with the cancer, or maybe the medication? His jokes were about how he was the only dude in a waiting room with lots of moms, and how they said he could have company if he needed it and how there couldn’t be any lube or saliva in the sample. It was pretty funny, even if my reprinting of it isn’t.

Seemed like a genuinely positive guy, who wasn’t going to let brain cancer have any part of his life as long as he could help it (unless it helps him in comedy of course).

I don’t really know what to make of it, honestly. Just one of those unexpected moments where you sit down next to someone, and they turn out to be a little more complicated, or impressive, or strange than you’d expect. And then they go up on stage and make a room full of people laugh about something that should be devastating. I’m still thinking about it.