September 5, 2016

GQ:

It has been playing, ceaselessly, for three decades now, and it will stay lodged in your brain, like a barnacle made of synthesizers and cocaine, for hours after you read this article. (Don’t blame us—blame Starship.) This is the true story of how “We Built This City”—the most detested song in human history—got built.

If you play this song in my presence, I will smash whatever device this sound from hell is coming out of.

Ken Segall:

Did I mention how much I loathe this naming scheme?

From a marketing standpoint, Apple has simply been shooting itself in the foot every other year, muting expectations by putting an S on the box.

Even when an S model introduces a breakthrough feature, it comes in the context of “this is an off-year.” I’m trying to think of any marketer who has ever chosen such a course before, but I’m coming up blank.

Segall thinks more about this stuff than I do (and knows a hell of a lot more about it) so it doesn’t bother me nearly as much but he makes a good point. The S models always have had the perception of being “not as good”.

September 4, 2016

National Geographic:

Queen Victoria, one of the last surviving old matriarchs in the Samburu National Reserve in northern Kenya, died of natural causes in 2013, with her family members close by.

Victoria headed an elephant group known on the Samburu Reserve as the Royal family, a group of about 20 elephants all named after kings, queens, and other royalty around the world.

(this) 15-minute video of the elephants’ investigation, made available exclusively to National Geographic for the first time, is an important new addition to the growing body of research about the complexity of elephant thought and perception and their responses to death. The video not only captures an important ritual of elephant behavior, but reveals new insights about the strength of social bonds.

Sad but remarkable video. I don’t know if the elephants are grieving in the human sense but they are certainly acknowledging the passing of their matriarch.

Rene Ritchie:

The iPhone 7 may take a leap forward when it comes to pocket photography, with rumors of a dual-lens assembly, better low-light, and an event invitation that hints at significant depth-of field effects.

We’ll get all the details next Wednesday, but there’s one aspect we can take for granted right now: The type of photography Apple is going to focus on.

Pundits keep trying to say that the iPhone will take over from the DSLR. That’s ridiculous. But the iPhone continues to be a very capable camera for the vast majority of people. Apple will make it even better on Wednesday.

Vimeo:

Infinitude is a meditation on the cosmic evolution of matter and energy over time.

Experimental filmmaking techniques such as time-lapse, high-speed, and stop-motion photography were used to photograph handmade props, fluid dynamics, and angular momentum. Infinitude is a handmade representation of the exponential growth of complexity in the cosmos.

If you need a video to blow your mind and test your speakers, this one should do the trick.

September 3, 2016

Apple Music adds new playlists based on listening habits

Apple on Saturday added two new playlists to its Apple Music service, which are both based on your listening habits on the service.

“My New Music Mix” is a playlist with new music from artists Apple thinks you will like. This playlist is updated every Friday. My playlist was very good this week, although it did have one “Dance” song in there—not sure where that came from.

New Music Mix

“My Favorites Mix” is based on songs you love on Apple Music. Other songs will be added if they feel it matches songs you’ve already loved.

My Favorites Mix

Both playlists are in the “For You” section of Apple Music.

These are great additions to Apple and just what I think Apple should be focused on to improve the service. Well done.

September 2, 2016

Macworld:

There’s no shortage of predictions over what Apple will discuss at its upcoming September event, but here’s one thing that the company probably won’t spend any time on, even though perhaps it should: iCloud storage.

Inevitably, when my friends and family talk to me about tech problems, iCloud is among the most prominent culprit in their tales of woes and frustration.

iCloud is a great idea – in theory. In practice, there are far too many issues for far too many people.

Apple:

This document describes the security content of Security Update 2016-001 El Capitan and Security Update 2016-005 Yosemite.

This is another of those DO IT NOW! security updates.

9to5Mac:

Google today has updated its Snapseed photo editing app for iOS with a handful of new features and improvements. The update bumps the app to version 2.9 and brings a new face editing tool, RAW support, and more.

First off, the update adds a new tool that will help users bring better clarity to faces in their images. Google says that this new “photogenic” tool will help users better focus on faces in images, as well as smoothen skin and add clarity to eyes.

Next up is support for RAW images.

Snapseed is my favorite iOS photo editing tool. It’s remarkably powerful yet still very easy to use.

Well done.

Matching the low-profile floating design from our Apple Watch Dock, iPhone + Apple Watch Dock adds functionality with a place for your iPhone. A combo dock ensures less clutter in a beautiful package.

This looks really nice.

You’re welcome Samsung users.

Ireland’s cabinet agreed on Friday to join Apple in appealing against a multi-billion-euro back tax demand that the European Commission has imposed on the iPhone maker, despite misgivings among independents who back the fragile coalition.

The EU clearly overstepped here.

September 1, 2016

The sensors, which rest just under the ball’s laces, can capture information like velocity, acceleration and distance, and send that info back to computer monitors in just half a second. The League has been using the sensors during preseason games this summer, but hasn’t yet decided if the sensors will be used in the regular season.

It is amazing how much data leagues and teams can get.

In the previous article I demonstrated how to make an element rotate to follow the position of a cursor or a touch on the screen. At the time, I explained that the technique was not necessarily limited to a single element: in this article, I’ll show how to apply the code to two elements simultaneously, in the form of eyes that follow the mouse / touch position.

Who doesn’t love googly eyes.

He attached a tiny remote controlled tugboat to his Kayak to tow him around.

This is awesome.

Following reports of exploding batteries in its latest smartphone, Samsung is expected to announce an “unprecedented” recall of the Galaxy 7 Note less than a month after it first debuted.

Be safe Samsung people.

We love helping customers discover innovative, useful, and exciting apps on the App Store. With more than 2 million apps available and around 100,000 new and updated apps submitted each week, there’s something for everyone. To make it easier for customers to find great apps that fit their needs, we’re implementing two suggestions from the developer community starting September 7, 2016.

Phil Schiller continues to make improvements.

Quartz:

If you got an email from Dropbox asking you to reset your password earlier this week, it’s a good idea to do it. Nearly 70 million stolen Dropbox passwords are circulating online, according to Motherboard, which obtained the data. The file-sharing service has confirmed the passwords are linked to a breach that took place in 2012, although it said the theft only involved user email addresses at the time.

If you want to check whether your password’s floating around online, you can check at Have I Been Pwned. It’s safe to enter your email address there to check against the databases from well known security breaches it maintains. The site is run by Troy Hunter, a Microsoft security executive who performed an analysis of the Dropbox password cache and confirmed they’re authentic.

I used the Have I Been Pwned site to check several of my email addresses to check if they have been compromised. Sadly, some had been and I made changes ASAP.

Explosion at SpaceX launch pad destroys rocket as well as Facebook satellite

The very definition of a bad test.

The Ringer:

Hot chicken was a dish created for the express purpose of bringing a man to his knees. Its origin myth wasn’t the result of a mistake, like chocolate chip cookies, Coca-Cola, or the French dip sandwich. Hot chicken was premeditated; to this day, every bite of Nashville hot chicken is touched by the spectral presence of a betrayed lover.

The finished product has a lurid, reddish hue that, depending on the spice level, ranges from California sunset to the bowels of hell. Hot chicken is served with two mandatory accompaniments: a slice of plain old white bread upon which the bird is perched and a few pickle chips skewered to the chicken with a toothpick.

I lived in Nashville for several years and loved it. I ate at Prince’s Hot Chicken Shack once – and only once. I’ve never understood the penchant people have for eating food that causes them physical pain.

TekRevue:

Apple has made it easy to keep your Mac up to date with the latest apps and patches. Once per week, the Mac App Store checks for any updates to Mac OS X and any App Store apps and notifies the user that an update is available. In recent versions of OS X, the Mac App Store can even install new updates for you automatically.

But sometimes one week is too long to wait for the newest features and latest security updates.

Great little tip for those of us who want/need to know about the latest updates as soon as possible.

Trucks carrying wind turbine blades to a mountain top

I’ve often wondered how 172 ft long, 12 ton wind turbine blades get to the tops of mountains. This video shows how they do it in China.

Macworld:

The best iOS calendars in the field don’t just look great, they offer their own unique concepts, distinguishing themselves by how they handle and present our data. Whether it’s event input, intelligence, social integration, or notifications, calendar app makers have added a wealth of features and functionality to the stock iOS calendar, to the point where Apple has even begun to borrow popular features just to keep up.

My life isn’t busy enough to need a powerful calendar app but I have used and liked Fantastical in the past.

Credit: https://wettenohneanmeldung.de/

Irish Independent:

Apple chief executive Tim Cook has angrily dismissed Brussels’ tax accusations as “political crap”, suggesting that Ireland is being “picked on” and is a pawn in a wider European Commission agenda to harmonise taxes across the EU.

In an exclusive interview with today’s Irish Independent, Mr Cook also said that Apple will “go forward” with an expansion in Cork, despite misgivings over future investment across Europe.

Unusually strong words (for him) from Apple’s CEO.

August 31, 2016

Instead, Jobs was going to focus his energy on one very specific, secret project: Apple’s reinvention of TV — including the TV set itself.

Walt Mossberg, Recode’s editor at large and an executive editor at the Verge, says Jobs called him on the night he announced he was formally handing over control of his company to Tim Cook, and told him about his TV ambitions.

“I think we figured out a way to do it, and it’s going to be fantastic,” Jobs told Mossberg, and invited him to see what he was working on.

Steve said that he had “cracked it” to his biographer. I wonder how much he shared with Apple.

I don’t know who put this site together but it’s brilliant. Ever gotten into a discussion or wondered when and where Apple announced a particular product or a service or where Apple made announcements? Well, wonder no more.

Our (un)reasonable expectations of Apple

Apple is in a very unique position in the tech industry in that expectations of the company are much higher than those of its competitors. Let’s be honest, when was the last time you heard someone talk about Dell or HP product releases with the exuberance that we talk about Apple. That also puts Apple in a tough position of meeting, what are sometimes, inflated expectations from Wall St. and consumers.

To be clear, some of those lofty expectations are Apple’s own doing, but there is a big difference between them and other companies. Every company wants to be the best—they talk about how innovative they are and how their products are the best. For the most part, we can see that for what it is—marketing talk.

When Phil Schiller, Eddy Cue, Craig Federighi, or Tim Cook say they want to make a better product or a better experience, I believe them. I think what they’ve done over the years with iPhone, iPod, iPad, and Mac shows they believe it too.

With the exception of Craig Federighi, I’ve interviewed the other Apple execs over my 20 years of reporting on Apple. I’ve also interviewed a lot of other tech executives and can see the difference in not only what they say, but how they say it. There is genuine belief from Apple that they are doing the best thing for its customers, whether that’s building a better product, or standing up for privacy.

Our Responsibility and Reasonable Expectations

Despite their belief, sometimes Apple products aren’t what we expect them to be. I do believe that we have a responsibility to let them know in the strongest possible way that they have fallen short of our expectations and their promises to us.

I have been a very harsh critic of Apple Music since it was released just over a year. For me, music is a very personal thing—it permeates every aspect of my life. I wanted Apple Music to be exactly what they promised when it was introduced. Sadly, they fell short of what they promised, and way short of what I expected.

Apple is a company that typically under-promises and over-delivers, but sometimes that doesn’t happen.

Having said that, the music team has made incredible strides over the past year to fix all of the problems with Apple Music. They deserve a lot of credit for that, and I’ve been just as vocal with my praise as I have been with my criticism.

I think that’s fair.

You can take my stance with Apple Music and put it to any other product that Apple makes that you are happy with or dissatisfied with. We should be critical, but fair.

Holding Apple to a standard that they set for themselves is more than a fair and reasonable measurement of how they met our expectations. I would argue that Apple Music (insert your favorite product here) did not meet those reasonable expectations.

Our Unreasonable Expectations

While there are many reasonable expectations for Apple, we also have a lot of unreasonable expectations. Let’s look at MacBook Pro.

We all want a new MacBook Pro. However, expecting Apple to release a new product when it’s not ready is unreasonable.

Apple could have released a new MacBook Pro in June at WWDC. It probably would have had the same processor and maybe a couple of upgraded chips. Would that have been enough to satisfy our expectations? Absolutely not. People would have lost their collective minds over a minor upgrade.

I don’t see using Intel’s Skylake as an alternative for Apple. There were shortages in the chips, which would have made for MacBook Pro shortages. Worse still, the Skylake chips had a major flaw that affected processing.

It would have been a disaster for Apple to release a MacBook Pro based on those chips, but people still kicked up a fuss. That’s not reasonable.

Fairness

We expect Apple to make some decisions for us. We expect that when a MacBook, iPhone, iPad or any other product is released, it will work flawlessly. For the most part, Apple has not let us down with that, especially with hardware.

While it is completely reasonable to hold Apple’s feet to the fire when they disappoint us with a product, it is not fair to expect the company to release products that are not ready for the public. Whether it’s their technology or the technology from another company like Intel.

Many people continue to wonder about Apple’s ability to release another blockbuster product. To be clear, most companies have one blockbuster product in their entire history—Apple has had several.

Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod, and Apple Watch cover just the hardware. You can argue what rises to the level of blockbuster, but all of those products have sold well and are widely considered to be the best in their category.

No company can release a revolutionary product every year or two—it’s just not possible.

The only way you can lose faith in Apple is to think that the executives are not pushing the company forward and trying to innovate with every product they release.

I don’t believe that for one second.

Our expectations of Apple are higher than any other company in the market. For the most part, they have met—and exceeded—those expectations time and again.

You can bet against Apple if you like, but I believe there are a lot of great things still to come out of Cupertino.

David Chartier pulled together this list of important, but lesser known, features coming in iOS 10. Solid list.

Variety:

Season 2 will debut in 2017 and will consist of 9 episodes, in comparison to the first season that spanned 8 episodes.

The news comes hardly as a surprise, as the supernatural drama has become arguably the buzziest series of the summer. Insiders tell Variety that work on the second season has already been underway for quite some time.

Really glad to see this.

Here’s the teaser trailer: