December 10, 2019

Needham analyst Laura Martin, who downgraded the California-based tech giant to “underperform”, believes Netflix will have to add a lower priced service to compete with competitors including Apple Inc’s Apple TV+ service and Walt Disney Co’s Disney+.

I don’t buy it. If all Netflix did was show old re-runs of shows, then this analysis would make some sense, but that’s not the only thing Netflix does. It’s original programming is among the best in the industry right now. Apple, Disney, and Amazon are add-ons to Netflix and I don’t see that changing in the next year.

MKBHD shows off the original Macintosh, with guest stars Bill Nye and iJustine

Marques Brownlee:

Everyone knows the 1984 Macintosh computer was a game changer for the tech industry. But why was this particular computer so iconic? I learn how Steve Jobs and his team took on computer giants IBM, changing personal computing forever. Living legend Bill Nye the Science Guy joins me to play Asteroids on an original Macintosh. And fellow YouTube creator and Apple expert iJustine explains why the 1984 Macintosh was able to beat its competitors.

This is just SO good. Old school!!!

A number of items that were stolen from the family of Ozzy Osbourne’s late guitarist Randy Rhoads were recovered early Sunday when an Eyewitness News viewer spotted them in a dumpster.

Someone had broken into the Rhoads family music school in North Hollywood on Thanksgiving night and stole irreplaceable instruments, memorabilia and photos.

I’m so glad the family got these items back. Randy was one of the great guitarists of our time.

Eye-popping read. Impossible to me that this is real, but it is.

Interesting to dig through the top level application for the rack mount version of the coming Mac Pro, if you like that sort of thing.

But follow the headline link to this sub-page, then scroll through the PDF to page 10 for an image of the rack mount Mac Pro in the wild. Sweet setup. Insert joke about Ikea, color choices, wheels, etc. here.

Benjamin Mayo, 9to5Mac:

The 6% cashback offer is only available on Apple hardware purchases made in-store or online. This means outright purchases of iPhone, AirPods or a new Mac for example. 6% cashback is a good promo for Apple, but if you are hunting for the best deal then you are still probably better off looking elsewhere.

Assuming the new Mac Pro is eligible, at a floor of $5,999 for the base model, that’s $359.94 cash back. No small potatoes.

Bloomberg:

The company’s senior director of privacy Jane Horvath will be speaking on a “Chief Privacy Officer Roundtable” on Jan. 7, according to the CES agenda.

And:

Apple’s last major official appearance at CES was in 1992 when then Chief Executive Officer John Sculley gave a presentation at a Chicago version of the summit to introduce the failed Newton device.

Back in the day, Apple regularly appeared at conferences, highlighted by keynotes at Macworld Expo. Apple’s disappearance from Macworld and CES was a jarring change, but signified a change in controlling their message, with announcements at conferences and events that they controlled completely, including WWDC.

December 9, 2019

The New Yorker:

Gibson was far from the first sci-fi writer to explore computers and their consequences; a movement, soon to be known as cyberpunk, was already under way. But “Neuromancer” changed science fiction by imagining a computer-saturated world that felt materially and aesthetically real. Gibson’s hardboiled prose was fanatically attentive to design and texture.

The ten novels that Gibson has written since have slid steadily closer to the present. In the nineties, he wrote a trilogy set in the two-thousands. The novels he published in 2003, 2007, and 2010 were set in the year before their publication. Many works of literary fiction claim to be set in the present day. In fact, they take place in the recent past, conjuring a world that feels real because it’s familiar, and therefore out of date. Gibson’s strategy of extreme presentness reflects his belief that the current moment is itself science-fictional. “The future is already here,” he has said. “It’s just not very evenly distributed.”

When I was a kid, I loved Isaac Asimov’s view of the future. As an adult, I understand and expect Gibson’s brilliant writing to be more representative of it.

PCMag:

In the US, 20 percent of small businesses can’t make it a year, half are dead in five years, and a full 70 percent can’t make it past a decade, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Success is even harder if that business is all about one particular product—especially if that product is tech-related.

That’s what we’re here to reflect on: 10 years of tech product failure. Not the small ones like those above, but the products and services you came to love, or wanted to love, or can’t understand why they didn’t get any love. Some are great ideas that never went anywhere. Some were incredibly flawed products that never should have made it past prototyping. A few are glorious vaporware—products rumored, promised, or even guaranteed, but that never came to be.

Great list. Hard to argue with many of them.

Two years ago, Apple unveiled Intelligent Tracking Prevention for Safari which aimed to protect users of the browsers from unwanted tracking. It was yet another in a long-running move towards more privacy on behalf of the company for its customers, and this technology, in particular, seems to be having a major impact on the advertising industry.

The ad industry has hated Apple’s implementation of privacy features for its users from the very beginning. To be absolutely clear, the only reason we needed these types of features in the first place is because of the slimy way the ad industry tracked us in the first place.

Apple’s Siri Remote has always been a bone of contention for Apple TV users. And with Swiss fiber TV company Salt giving Apple TV 4K boxes to its subscribers it was only a matter of time before they complained. And when they did, Salt made an alternative.

It’s cool, but for my uses right now, the ATV remote seems to work fine.

US only. Enter an address, check the list of available stations.

Click on a callsign for details. Drag the location around the map to check out other places.

This came out a few weeks ago, but I had some fun playing with it over the weekend.

From the Apple support article:

Apple Music Replay uses your Apple Music listening history to calculate your top songs, albums, and artists throughout the year. Apple Music Replay also uses a variety of other factors to determine the music that you’ve played this year such as:

  • Music played on any device that’s signed in to Apple Music with your Apple ID
  • Not including music played on devices that have “Use Listening History” turned off in Settings
  • Counting only music that’s available in the Apple Music catalog
  • Songs played in your library must be synced with your Apple Music subscription
  • A minimum amount of plays and time spent listening to a song, artist, or album

Interesting that this is only available on the beta Apple Music web app. You can save the playlist and share it, just like any other playlist.

A very young Woz talks about Apple’s first foray into patents

Old school folks may recognize some of these early Apple employees (does the name Steve Capps ring a bell?). So weird to see Woz without a beard.

Came across this on Reddit over the weekend. An archive of an Apple VHS tape.

Apple has been nominated for big awards before, taken home some significant hardware. But this is the first of this sort of recognition for Apple TV+, an important step for the service.

And if they win? Huge recognition, huge validation.

The Golden Globes are January 5th on NBC.

December 8, 2019

MacRumors:

Apple plans to release the new Mac Pro and the Pro Display XDR on Tuesday, December 10, according to “Save the Date” emails that Apple began sending out to some customers this afternoon.

Apple in November confirmed that the ‌Mac Pro‌ and Pro Display XDR would come in December, but until now, the company had not provided a specific date. Apple’s emails say orders will begin on December 10, so presumably shipments will begin soon after orders open up.

I saw this email and thought, “Oh cool!” Then I realized I’d have to sell significant body parts to afford one.

December 6, 2019

CNET:

When you buy a new lightbulb, you know that it’s energy efficient and will last for a while because of an Energy Star label on the package. But when you buy an internet-connected lightbulb, there’s almost no way of telling if it’s secure from hackers.

Underwriters Laboratories, the electronics safety organization, is looking to fix that by introducing security ratings for internet-of-things devices. UL is known for its safety standards certifications for products, ensuring, for instance, that the charger you bought online isn’t a counterfeit that’ll set your house on fire.

Now UL wants to set the security standard for cybersecurity threats — a notorious issue for IoT devices.

I’m betting nothing actually gets done until there is a major security breach.

The Dalrymple Report: Billie Eilish, Activation Lock, and MacBook Pro

Thanksgiving is over and Dave and I are back at it. From Billie Eilish to MacBook Pros shutting down, we talk about a variety of topics and have our usual amount of fun doing it.

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The “I’m a Mac” Microsoft spoof that opened WWDC back in 2007

This is how 2007’s WWDC opened. Pretty great stuff, especially if you loved the “I’m a Mac ad campaign”. Stick around to the end when Steve brings up Intel’s CEO.

Just in case you didn’t know you can do this, here’s the how-to on creating folders on your Apple TV. It’s intuitive, once you’ve done this in iOS.

Jeff Benjamin’s video review of the 16-inch MacBook Pro

I generally enjoy Jeff Benjamin’s video reviews, have posted a number of them here. But this one really struck me, mostly because of Jeff’s reaction to the new MacBook keyboard, and his take on the old one.

If you are not into unboxing, skip to 2:50 for the machine itself. Good stuff, Jeff, makes me want one.

Amazing how an autograph can transform the value of a piece of memorabilia. Interestingly, if the memorabilia itself is valuable, a signature can actually lower the price.

Some good pics in the post.

Been playing around with the new version this morning. Nicely done, lotta fun.

Had to force the update by hand (reminder, the App Store update tab is gone, tap your account pic in the upper right corner to get to updates).

December 5, 2019

HairLove

I’m not crying. You’re crying.

AppleInsider:

Apple has said that the iPhone 11 family is using location data to regulate Ultra Wideband emissions, but is not collecting the data, and everything is being done on-device.

Apple has issued a statement to AppleInsider and other venues in response to security researcher Brian Krebs discovering that the iPhone 11 Pro appears to periodically utilize its GPS module to gather location data in the face of user wishes.

Krebs was unable to replicate the potential security issue on an iPhone 8 —which makes sense now, given Apple’s statement about UWB management.

As is so often the case, the media set its hair on fire over this issue instead of simply waiting for a reasonable response from Apple.

Introducing “The Deep Sea” – an interactive visualization of the ocean

Agarwal has done it again – created a website that compels you to keep clicking and clicking and clicking. Great stuff.

First things first, take a look at this article from iFixit, provocatively titled, Apple’s Activation Lock Will Make It Very Difficult to Refurbish Macs.

Every month, thousands of perfectly good iPhones are shredded instead of being put into the hands of people who could really use them. Why? Two words: Activation Lock. And Macs are its next victim.

“We receive four to six thousand locked iPhones per month,” laments Peter Schindler, founder and owner of The Wireless Alliance, a Colorado-based electronics recycler and refurbisher. Those iPhones, which could easily be refurbished and put back into circulation, “have to get parted out or scrapped,” all because of this anti-theft feature.

That’s an astonishing number. Four to six thousand locked iPhone a month? Wow!

My immediate reaction was, where do these phones come from? How is it possible that so many people didn’t take the time to wipe/unlock their phones before they turned them in. Just wondering what percentage of these phones are stolen.

From the article:

“People don’t realize that if you don’t properly reset your device, that phone is effectively bricked once you send it to me,” Schindler explains. “They’re just not thinking through the steps, or don’t connect the fact that [Find My iPhone] is a permanent, neverending lock on the phone. They think, ‘Oh, well, I turned the phone off, Find My iPhone must be turned off too.’ They don’t associate it with bricking the phone.”

And that leads to this comment from Walt Mossberg:

My two cents: Activation Lock is not the villain here. Lack of education is the villain.

If the recycling company made unlocking the phone part of the process of accepting a phone, this would be a non-issue. Every link in the chain of getting the phone from the user to the recycler needs to push this back up the chain, make sure every phone that leaves a user’s hands is unlocked, as a matter of course.

This is a great, detailed look at Time Machine and how it has evolved over time. Especially important is how Time Machine deals with the challenges of each new macOS X release, especially with the introduction of APFS and Catalina’s Volume Groups.

If you depend on Time Machine, take a few minutes to read this.

Caught red-handed by a pinging Apple Watch. Amazing.

Hollywood Reporter:

Billie Eilish’s big 2019 is culminating as she nears a deal with Apple TV+ for a documentary that comes with a $25 million price tag, according to multiple sources.

The film, which has already been shot, was directed by R.J. Cutler and produced in collaboration with Eilish’s label, Interscope Records, for a budget that one source pegs as being between $1 million and $2 million. It is expected to follow the 17-year-old singer-songwriter in the wake of the release of her debut album, When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, in March of this year. Cutler was granted deep access to Eilish’s private moments with family and behind-the-scenes of her public appearances.

Last night, Billie Eilish did a show at Apple’s Steve Jobs Theater, broadcast live via the Music app. Eilish expressed her appreciation for Apple several times during the show. They’ve been behind her since the beginning. I suspect this documentary will draw a wide audience.

Last night’s concert was beautifully produced, the sound and visuals crisp and clear. Eilish and her brother were engaging, clearly comfortable in the setting. Apple did a terrific job bringing this together, making it easy to watch.

I hope we see many more of these shows. If you missed last night’s performance, fire up your Music app and look around for Billie Eilish Live at the Steve Jobs Theater. It’s pretty heavily promoted, should be easy to find.

Tip: If you’re watching on your phone and don’t see the video, turn your phone sideways.