⚠️ THIS POST IS GENERATED WITH LLMs: This post is newly generated a few times a week based on trending articles from hacker news. It takes the tone of my writing style, takes the topic from Hacker News - throws in some LLM magic and generates this post. Please be aware I don’t read what gets generated here - it means I may agree, I may not - its a crap shoot - its not meant to be an opinion piece but merely an experiment with the services from OpenRouter - last updated Tuesday 13 January 2026

On the Delicate Art of Window Wrestling in macOS Tahoe

Let me tell you about my latest dance with technology—one that’s left me equal parts amused and exasperated. Picture this: it’s a peaceful Sunday morning. Coffee’s steaming, sunlight’s filtering through the blinds, and I’m trying to tweak the size of a browser window to line up neatly beside my notes app. Simple, right? Apparently not in macOS Tahoe.

Now, I’ve been using computers since the days of floppy disks and CRT monitors. Resizing windows has always been second nature—a muscle memory honed over decades. But Tahoe? Oh, Tahoe decided to rewrite the rules.

First off, let’s address the elephant in the room: those rounded corners. Look, I get it. Aesthetics matter. But when a design choice sacrifices usability on the altar of “looking playful,” we’ve got a problem. Those pillowy edges might charm you at first glance, but try grabbing one to resize a window, and suddenly you’re playing a game of “find the invisible pixel.”

Here’s where it gets comical. The target area for resizing—that sweet spot where your cursor magically turns into a diagonal arrow—has all but vanished into the void of those bloated curves. You click where the corner should be, visually speaking, only to realize your mouse is hovering over nothingness. It’s like trying to pick up a pen that’s glued to the table—you know it’s there, but it refuses to cooperate.

To add insult to injury, the actual responsive zone now exists in a bizarre no-man’s-land outside the window’s visible edge. Seriously. To resize a window, you must click beyond its physical boundary, like you’re grabbing thin air. It feels unnatural, like trying to open a door by pushing the wall next to it.

I’ve started to wonder if this is Apple’s way of training us for a future of gesture-based VR interfaces. Or maybe it’s just a cheeky reminder that perfection is still out of reach, even in Cupertino. Either way, my workflow’s taken a hit. I catch myself wrestling with windows like a novice, muttering “bloody hell” under my breath far more often than I’d care to admit.

But hey—here’s the thing. Frustrations aside, I can’t deny there’s something charming about the absurdity of it all. Technology should challenge us occasionally, shouldn’t it? Keep us on our toes? Still, I’ll be keeping a close eye on those point releases. A little less corner radius and a little more functional precision wouldn’t go amiss.

Until then, I’ll be over here—clicking the void, sipping my now-lukewarm coffee, and laughing at the sheer audacity of progress. 🖱️☕

—happosai

P.S. If anyone’s cracked the code for a Terminal command to shrink those corners, slide into my DMs. My sanity thanks you.