May 4, 2017

Ars Technica:

Apple plans to create a $1 billion fund to invest in “advanced manufacturing” jobs in the United States. CEO Tim Cook made the announcement last night in a CNBC interview with Mad Money host Jim Cramer, and he says that Apple plans to announce its first investment later this month. Cook wants the new fund to create a “ripple effect” in the job market—he says that the manufacturing jobs created directly by the fund will also create service jobs needed to support them.

“Advanced manufacturing” is a bit vague, but generally speaking, it’s an umbrella term that encompasses creating technologically advanced products or improving the processes by which those products are created.

Apple doesn’t say exactly what “advanced manufacturing” is but I’m betting it means chip fabrication. Apple is going to make its own silicon in the US.

Matt Gemmell:

No company has done as much damage to the perceived value of software, and the sustainability of being an independent developer, as Apple.

Not that other companies wouldn’t have done the same thing — they would have. It’s just that Apple was the successful one.

It’s resolutely the fault of us as consumers, and it’s actively encouraged by the App Store.

While Gemmell will be perceived as biased, he’s not far wrong. It must be disheartening for developers to see the race to the bottom on the iOS app store where people bitch about paying $4.99 for an app and complain about paying for updates/upgrades in the form of new versions.

Digital Photography Review:

The Canon EOS Rebel T7i/800D is the latest incarnation of Canon’s hugely popular mass-market range of DSLRs. This latest model is built around a 24MP sensor that uses Canon’s Dual Pixel AF system to offer improved autofocus in live view and video (more on that later).

At its core, it shares a lot with the more expensive EOS 77D but the differences become apparent when you first turn them on: both models feature a simplified ‘skin’ over the user interface, but only the T7i has these guiding functions switched on by default.

I’m a Nikon guy but, if you’re in the market for your first DSLR or to replace an older one, you can’t go wrong with the latest Canon Rebel. The Rebel line is the best selling camera for good reason.

Wired:

Deep inside the mountain, a crew of humans toils in one of the nation’s most secure military installations. Shielded by 2,500 feet of granite, these people gather and analyze data from a global surveillance system, in an attempt to (among other, undisclosed things) warn the government’s highest officials of launches and missile threats to North America.

Their military mole-city, completed in the mid-1960s amid Cold War worries, is—when fully buttoned-up—highly resistant to nuclear bombs, electromagnetic bombs, electromagnetically destructive behavior from the sun, and biological weapons. It’s designed to do its job, and let those inside do theirs, in the worst of worst-case scenarios.

This place has always fascinated and terrified me in equal measure.

iLounge:

The dual lens system on the iPhone 7 Plus is a pretty useful feature — you get the benefits of an 2X optical zoom whenever iOS decides it’s appropriate — but unfortunately due to the differences between the two lenses in both aperture and physical position, this can cause a “glitch” in your video if your iPhone switches to or from the second lens as you’re zooming in or out. The good news is that Apple has tucked away a setting that will allow you to avoid this problem by preventing the iPhone from automatically switching lenses during video recording.

This is a great tip for those of you who shoot video with your iPhone 7 Plus.

[VIDEO] Tim Cook on Mad Money

Video of Tim Cook’s interview on Mad Money from last night, posted in two parts, both embedded below.

Glenn Fleishman does a nice job digging into the details of the File Vault 2 boot process and recovery key settings. Worth a read just to understand these mechanics.

Apple’s job creation web site:

The numbers tell the story. Apple is one of the biggest job creators in the United States, responsible for two million jobs in all 50 states. Last year, we spent over $50 billion with more than 9,000 U.S. suppliers and manufacturers. Since we launched the App Store in 2008, U.S. developers have earned over $16 billion in App Store sales worldwide. And we’re just getting started.

The site breaks the job numbers up as follows:

  • 80,000 Apple employees
  • 450,000 Jobs through our U.S.-based suppliers
  • 1,530,000 U.S. jobs attributable to the App Store ecosystem

The site also breaks the numbers down, state by state.

Yesterday, we posted about a widely spread, relatively sophisticated Google Docs phishing attack. Google has taken steps to disable the accounts behind the attack, but that is a bit of a whack-a-mole problem. Attacks like this are a part of life.

One thing you can do is periodically check out what apps and sites have access to your Google account by clicking on this link:

https://myaccount.google.com/security?pli=1#connectedapps

See anything there you don’t recognize? Click the Manage Apps link and revoke that sucker.

Straits Times, about the recently unveiled signage above the soon-to-open Singapore Apple Store:

The barricades in front of the upcoming Apple Store at Orchard Road’s Knightsbridge mall came down on Wednesday night (May 3).

But the store has not been unveiled. Instead, three icons – Apple, Love, Red Dot – adorn the tall store’s tall glass doors. It means Apple loves the little red dot, or Apple loves Singapore. There is also the wording Apple Orchard Road – the official name of the Apple retail store – below the icons.

Check out the pictures. I find the signage charming, some insightful localized marketing on Apple’s part.

[H/T Mr E]

May 3, 2017

There are two reasons why this thing is so tricky. For one, it looks legit: An invitation to view a Google Document appears to come from an existing contact. But when a person clicks on the link, the attack immediately replicates itself—meaning, it has the potential to spam all of that person’s contacts with the same message. The second reason it’s so tricky is that it’s unclear what the attack is attempting to do. Phishing is often a way for bad actors to gain unauthorized access to a person’s email or other private accounts, but it’s not yet clear what’s motivating this attack.

I received this about 30 minutes ago. I didn’t open it.

Hulu joined the ranks of those companies offering Live TV through its mobile and Apple TV. I think I want to be a cord cutter, but maybe I’m not a good candidate. I just don’t find any of the offerings on the market that appealing. If this is something that interests you, have a look at Hulu’s page.

Motherboard:

A massive phishing campaign targeting Google accounts is ripping through the internet right now.

Several journalists, as well as people working in other industries, have said they’ve received emails containing what looks like a link to a Google Doc that appears to come from someone they know. These, however, are malicious emails designed to steal your Google password or hijack your account.

The emails all appear to look like this one, and are addressed to “[email protected]” with recipients BCCed.

For the time being, do not click on any Google Doc links.

The ride-services company is contesting Waymo’s accusation that former Waymo engineer and current Uber executive Anthony Levandowski took technical secrets from Waymo and used them to help Uber’s self-driving car development.

If it were proven that Levandowski and Uber conspired in taking the information, that could have dire consequences for Uber, say legal and ride-hailing industry experts. Uber’s $68 billion valuation is propped up in part by investors’ belief it will be a dominant player in the emerging business of self-driving cars.

The man at the heart of this dispute, Anthony Levandowski, was given $250 million worth of Uber stock the day after he left Google’s self-driving program. While suspicious, that in itself doesn’t mean Uber is guilty of anything. Google also says that Levandowski stole 14,000 confidential documents before leaving the company. That one could hurt.

A timelapse & hyperlapse “Gift from Rome”

Not only is the photography amazing but the technical skills to create this video are even more so.

Tim Cook to appear on CNBC today at 6pm ET

According to CNBC, Apple CEO Tim Cook will appear on CNBC’s Jim Cramer on “Mad Money” show which airs today at 6pm ET. While CNBC doesn’t specify what the two will chat about, it’s pretty obvious that Apple earnings will be the main topic. It’s always very interesting to listen to Tim talk about Apple and how he feels the company is doing, not just financially, but with its products, the environment, and the future.

Road Racing World:

The American Motorcyclist Association is issuing a special appeal during May, which is Motorcycle Awareness Month, to motorists to be aware of their driving environment, check mirrors and blind spots before changing lanes and watch for motorcyclists.

“With its warmer weather and increased riding, May is an opportune time to educate the non-riding public about the safety issues that motorcyclists face on every outing,” said AMA President and CEO Rob Dingman. “Our hope is that calling special attention to motorcyclists early in the prime riding season will keep motorists on alert through the summer and fall, as well.”

This is a personal plea from me to all of you folks out there who drive cars. Now that spring is here, there will be more motorcyclists on the roads. Please keep an extra cautious eye out for us. I know some motorcyclists act like jerks but they are only a very small minority. The vast majority of us are respectful (and fearful) of car drivers and we just want to enjoy our bikes safely. You can help.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, even though motorcycles account for less than five percent of registered vehicles in the US, “Motorcyclists were more than 26 times more likely than passenger car occupants to die in a traffic crash. And “75% of two-vehicle crashes involving motorcycles were motorcyclists colliding with vehicles in front of them. They are more likely to crash with other vehicles turning left, while the motorcycles were going straight, passing, or overtaking passenger vehicles.” So please, use a little extra caution.

AirPods, song skipping, and volume

I love my AirPods. I am happy with the sound quality and I love the convenience and the cleverness of the design. Clearly, a tremendous amount of thought has been put into the many and varied AirPod use cases:

  • Open the case near your iPhone and you are connected automatically.
  • Pull an AirPod out of your ear and the music or video you are playing pauses.
  • Drop the AirPods back in the case and they charge automatically.
  • Double-tap to interact with Siri.

There are two use cases, however, that just didn’t work for me.

  • Skip to the next song (something I do reasonably often)
  • Adjust the volume (either due to a song being mixed loud, or my circumstances/environment changing)

In either case, the only way to address this via the AirPods is to summon Siri, and that experience is just too slow, especially when you compare to the speed of pressing a dedicated button to skip or adjust volume, as you do with wired EarPods.

The approach I’ve settled on is way quicker than via Siri, but with more friction than a hard-wired button. I added Apple’s Now Playing app to my Apple Watch dock. When I want to change the volume or skip a song, I press the side button on my Apple Watch (the button, not the Digital Crown) which brings up the dock. I bring up Now Playing, tap away, problem solved.

Here’s a link to Apple’s dock management support page.

This is an OK solution, but I’d really love one with less friction. One path would be for Apple to add buttons to the AirPod case, but that would require adding Bluetooth to the case itself, along with buttons, not a reasonable expectation.

Another path would be adding a skip to next song gesture to the AirPods (I’m fine managing volume via my Apple Watch). I’ve read that a lot of people find the Siri double-tap unreliable. I did at first, but now I find that if I point my finger straight up, then double-tap the rear of an AirPod, it works consistently (And I love this tweet).

And if Apple does go down the add gesture road, why not expose the gesture in Settings so I can tie the gesture to other things. Perhaps Apple could tie AirPods gestures to Workflow, let me pull up a workflow from my AirPods. That too crazytown?

All that said, let me go back to where I started. I love, love, love my AirPods. Great tech, clever design. Glad to have them.

UPDATE: Great suggestion from Eduardo Garza Santos: On your Apple Watch, add the “Music” complication to your favorite watch face. Tap the Music complication, then spin the Digital Crown to change volume, or tap the arrows to skip forward or backwards. About as frictionless a solution as exists, though this won’t help someone without an Apple Watch. Also, though the volume part of the Music complication will work with most (all?) apps, the skip arrows will only work for music, not for podcasts, or even Spotify. But it’s something.

Antonio Garcia-Martinez:

For two years I was charged with turning Facebook data into money, by any legal means. If you browse the internet or buy items in physical stores, and then see ads related to those purchases on Facebook, blame me. I helped create the first versions of that, way back in 2012.

And:

The ethics of Facebook’s micro-targeted advertising was thrust into the spotlight this week by a report out of Australia. The article, based on a leaked presentation, said that Facebook was able to identify teenagers at their most vulnerable, including when they feel “insecure”, “worthless”, “defeated” and “stressed”.

Facebook claimed the report was misleading, assuring the public that the company does not “offer tools to target people based on their emotional state”. If the intention of Facebook’s public relations spin is to give the impression that such targeting is not even possible on their platform, I’m here to tell you I believe they’re lying through their teeth.

Hard to know what to make of this. Antonio no longer works at Facebook, so automatic grain of salt there. But a compelling read, nonetheless.

Much ado about nothing? Something, but a well known, obvious something? Certainly interesting.

Android Police:

Google has updated the developer dashboard for May, giving us an overview of the Android device ecosystem. Nougat continues to inch upward at a respectable rate—it’s now over 7% of devices.

True, that is significant growth for Nougat, absolutely, but compare to iOS 10 adoption, which last reported (back in February) at 79%.

Apple Pay growth not just steady, it’s phenomenal

Tim Cook on yesterday’s earnings call:

Apple Pay is experiencing phenomenal traction. With the launch of Taiwan and Ireland in the March quarter, Apple Pay is now live in 15 markets, with more than 20 million contactless-ready locations, including more than 4.5 million locations accepting Apple Pay in the U.S. alone. We’re seeing strong, growing usage as points of acceptance expand with transaction volume up 450% over the last 12 months.

In the UK, for example, points of acceptance have grown by 44% in the last year while monthly Apple Pay transactions have grown by nearly 300%. In Japan, where Apple Pay launched last October, more than half a million transit users are completing 20 million Apple Pay transactions per month and we’re always excited to see our partners bring their customers new ways to use Apple Pay. You can now even send a Starbucks gift card via iMessage with just a touch.

One number stands out there:

  • Apple Pay transaction volume up 450% year-over-year

More users, more iPhones/Apple Watches, more places that accept Apple Pay, fueled by Apple finding more ways for a merchant to take advantage of Apple Pay. I expected steady growth, surprised by that blossoming transaction volume.

Michael Tsai pulled together some coverage of Microsoft’s new Surface Laptop.

There’s this bit from Bloomberg:

Microsoft has already cracked the professional and creative markets with inventive tablets and a desktop that turns into a virtual drafting table. Now it’s chasing another category many believe is Apple’s to lose: the $1,000 laptop for everyone.

That’s one side of the coin. Me, I found this bit telling:

Click on the image to bring the animated GIF to life. Watch the flex on the screen, note the hand required to keep the screen from pushing over backwards.

May 2, 2017

Apple Watch sales, along with AirPods and Beats headphones have hit Fortune 500 level, which means they’re bringing in over US$5 billion to Apple’s “other products” category. Company CEO Tim Cook shared that detail during the company’s second fiscal quarter earnings report on Tuesday.

I know some people question whether these products are successful or not, but come on, That’s an incredible amount of sales. I vote successful.

Vintage Oil Can Guitar

This is actually a nice sounding guitar.

In case you wanted to read Tim’s comments on this quarter’s earnings.

Apple reports second quarter results

Apple on Tuesday reported its fiscal second quarter results. According to the company, it had quarterly revenue of $52.9 billion and quarterly earnings per diluted share of $2.10. These results compare to revenue of $50.6 billion and earnings per diluted share of $1.90 in the year-ago quarter.

“We are proud to report a strong March quarter, with revenue growth accelerating from the December quarter and continued robust demand for iPhone 7 Plus,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “We’ve seen great customer response to both models of the new iPhone 7 (PRODUCT)RED Special Edition and we’re thrilled with the strong momentum of our Services business, with our highest revenue ever for a 13-week quarter. Looking ahead, we are excited to welcome attendees from around the world to our annual Worldwide Developers Conference next month in San Jose.”

According to the financial results, Apple sold 50.7 million iPhones, which is down slightly from the 51.1 million in the year ago quarter. The company sold 8.9 million iPads, down from the 10.2 million in last year’s quarter, and they sold 4.2 million Macs, up from the 4 million in the year ago quarter.

Apple said international sales accounted for 65 percent of the quarter’s revenue.

Apple closed up 0.93 at $147.51 today, but is down 1.78 at $145.64 in after hours trading.

How a Zippo lighter is made

I still remember the very first Zippo lighter I ever got. My dad was stationed on the HMCS Iroquois, a Canadian Navy destroyer and I went on a deployment with him. He gave me a Zippo branded with the ship’s crest that only the ship’s sailors could buy. I treasured it for years.

Metro:

Sheeple is now an official word and iPhone users are being used to illustrate it.

Respected American publisher Merriam-Webster listed it in the dictionary for the first time and for some reason decided Apple fans were the best example.

Many of you will already know it refers to people who mindlessly follow trends so the definition might be offensive to iPhone users.

Screw you, Merriam-Webster.

PCWorld:

It took months of hemming and hawing before I finally broke down and bought a password manager—and soon after I did, I couldn’t believe I waited so long. Thanks to 1Password (there are other top-notch choics as well), I’m no longer jotting down passwords on scraps of paper, nor am I forgetting passwords or using the same password for multiple accounts.

Like its fellow password managers, 1Password boasts mobile apps for Android and iOS, perfect for accessing saved passwords wherever you go. Once you master 1Password’s nifty mobile tricks, you’ll have no problem retrieving your new super-strong passwords at the precise moment you need them.

I’m a huge fan of 1Password on the Mac but don’t use it on my iPhone. These tips might just get me started.

Charity Buzz:

Bid now on this opportunity to have lunch with Apple CEO Tim Cook at Apple Park in Cupertino, California! Valid for 2 people. Experience will be approximately 1 hour. Cost of the meal is included.

Apple has been doing this for several years and will raise money for the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Group.