Apple today released seven (!) new Apple Watch ads highlighting some of the features and capabilities of the wearable. Each of the ads is just 16 seconds long and is perfect for catching the attention of TV viewers and giving them a message… before they get bored.
I’m still not completely sold on this new ad campaign. Not sure what it is but they just don’t grab my attention the way other previous efforts have.
There are updates available for iOS (9.1) and watchOS (2.0.1). I just got done installing both, timed the installs, figure that might be useful info to have.
I did the iOS update first. On my iPhone 6s Plus, it took 11 minutes from the moment I started the download until the Hello message came up on my iPhone once the update was installed.
The Apple Watch update took longer, as it usually does, but not nearly as long as past updates. From the time I started the download until the update was installed and my Apple Watch asked me to enter my security code, it took 30 minutes. Tack on another 4 minutes for the automatic Apple Watch restart that happens after you reenter your code.
Now it’s on to the iTunes 12.3.1 and El Capitan 10.11.1 updates. I won’t be timing those.
Apple and Dropbox said Tuesday that they do not support a controversial cybersecurity bill that, according to critics, would give the government sweeping new powers to spy on Americans in the name of protecting them from hackers.
The announcement by the two companies comes days before the Senate expects to vote on the legislation, known as the Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act, or CISA.
“We don’t support the current CISA proposal,” Apple said in a statement. “The trust of our customers means everything to us and we don’t believe security should come at the expense of their privacy.”
This is and will continue to be an ongoing battle. It’s great to see companies like Apple, Dropbox and others drawing a line in the sand and pushing back on the government’s attempts to access our private information.
Apple isn’t just a technology company. It’s increasingly becoming a luxury brand in its own right.
Apple’s sponsorship of the 2016 Met Gala and exhibition—announced last week— further underscores this shifting identity. Dubbed “Manus x Machina: Fashion in the Age of Technology,” the exhibition will highlight the intersection between machine-made fashion and handmade haute couture.
I sat down with Apple Chief Design Officer Jony Ive, Vogue Editor-in-Chief Anna Wintour and Costume Institute Curator Andrew Bolton to talk about the gala and exhibit, how technology and fashion can work together, and the future of the two worlds.
Apple’s move into the “luxury market” is interesting but fraught with pitfalls. The fashion world is notoriously fickle. So it’s always interesting to hear from Apple’s principals about what they think and how they are going to navigate this minefield.
I didn’t know Steve Jobs during the early parts of his career — his first stint Apple and then his time running the failed NeXT — which take up most of the movie. And I know very little about his relationship with his daughter Lisa.
But the Steve Jobs I did know — the one the movie never shows — balanced his strong views and his impatience with a willingness to listen to others and to change his mind. In our many conversations, he loved to debate product and tech issues. Yes, we had some shouting matches, but we also had a lot of serious, calm conversation and even some laughs. And, unlike the man in the movie, I saw him listen to, and eventually agree with, contrary views raised by an employee.
Every review I’ve seen of this movie is similar – that it would have been a good movie had it been about an entirely fictitious character. In particular, reviewers have raved about Fasbender. But every person who knew Jobs echoes what Mossberg said – the movie is unfair to Jobs and doesn’t do the entirety of his life — or even the period portrayed — justice.
Ally Kazmucha, writing for The App Factor, walks through the various settings that can impact Facebook’s drain on your iPhone battery. Even if you don’t use Facebook, this is still worth a read, just to get a sense of the basic approach that might apply to other apps you do use.
This list was based on a survey and, like all lists of this type, it’s subjective. That said, I love lists like this. Just like a list of the best movies of all time, its real value is in finding something new.
Spend some quality time going through this one. My favorite description is this one, for The Ihnatko Almanac:
Tech journalist Andy Ihnatko delivers extemporaneous and knowledgeable soliloquies about comic books, movies, technology, photography, and dozens of other topics. Like a very nerdy Roger Ebert. Co-host Dan Benjamin hardly gets a word in, but he’s there just to wind up Ihnatko and let him go.
Did you know that the earbuds that came with your iPhone are actually called EarPods? Here, see for yourself.
Name aside, this article, written by Christian Zibreg for iDownloadBlog is jam packed with useful information about your EarPods. Even if you are an EarPod ninja, I’ll wager there’s a trick or two in this post that is new to you.
My favorite:
Summon Siri: Press and hold the center button, then make your request.
To be clear, you press and hold the center button to summon Siri, then let go of the button before you start speaking. Siri will ignore you until you release the button.
Stephen Aquino, writing for iMore, hasn’t yet got his hands on one of the new Apple TVs. Nonetheless, he uses the tvOS specs to lay out the accessibility elements built in to the new Apple TV, including Voiceover, Zoom, Bold Text, Increase Contrast, Reduce Motion, and much much more.
On one of the most important accessibility features:
I think Siri is going to be game-changing for accessibility on the Apple TV. If it works as well as advertised, I can foresee myself using voice to drive the UI so that I can save my vision for the actual content. Overall, though, Siri on the Apple TV has the potential to be a lifesaver for those with physical and motor impairments, for whom using the remote may be difficult.
Apple Inc told a U.S. judge that accessing data stored on a locked iPhone would be “impossible” with devices using its latest operating system, but the company has the “technical ability” to help law enforcement unlock older phones.
Apple’s position was laid out in a brief filed late Monday, after a federal magistrate judge in Brooklyn, New York, sought its input as he weighed a U.S. Justice Department request to force the company to help authorities access a seized iPhone during an investigation.
In court papers, Apple said that for the 90 percent of its devices running iOS 8 or higher, granting the Justice Department’s request “would be impossible to perform” after it strengthened encryption methods.
And:
Apple told U.S. Magistrate Judge James Orenstein it could access the 10 percent of its devices that continue to use older systems, including the one at issue in the case. But it urged the judge to not require it to comply with the Justice Department’s request.
“Forcing Apple to extract data in this case, absent clear legal authority to do so, could threaten the trust between Apple and its customers and substantially tarnish the Apple brand,” Apple’s lawyers wrote.
Also at stake is a precedent that would be set if the judge forces Apple to turn over this information on an older phone. A wedge in the crease that might be used to pressure Apple to change the current encryption policy.
Two months ago, The New York Times ran a bruising expose on Amazon’s workplace, with this memorable quote:
Bo Olson was one of them. He lasted less than two years in a book marketing role and said that his enduring image was watching people weep in the office, a sight other workers described as well. “You walk out of a conference room and you’ll see a grown man covering his face,” he said. “Nearly every person I worked with, I saw cry at their desk.”
Amazon protested, but the Times stuck by their story. Time passed.
On Monday, Jay Carney, Senior Vice President for Global Corporate Affairs at Amazon, wrote a direct response to that expose in Medium, called What The New York Times Didn’t Tell You.
With those two pieces as background, go read this brilliant analysis by Stratechery’s Ben Thompson. There’s too much in Ben’s piece to summarize in a few words, but here’s just a taste:
The importance of Amazon’s response is obvious: unlike days of old, when corporations or individuals in the news had to resort to letters to the editor (which may or may not have been printed) and angry calls to the editor-in-chief, Amazon can go straight to the public with their complaints; it may sound cliché to say that “everyone is a publisher” but for the fact it’s true. Moreover, like anything else on the Internet, Amazon’s response was immediately available to everyone in the world: we take that for granted today, but compared to not that long ago when distribution required printing presses and delivery trucks this is truly an astounding development.
From the Matcha Tea blog comes this fascinating discussion of the influence Japanese culture had on Steve Jobs and, as a result, on Apple and the design of Apple products. Much of this has been discussed before, but this particular paragraph really struck a chord:
Apple enables productivity without requiring it, and this certainly played a role in the popularity of the devices with consumers. While they offer high reliability for business functions, they also offer convenient functionality for personal use. Where Microsoft saw itself rising to dominance partly with the success of its Office suite as being productive in traditional western business roles, Apple saw itself rising due to occupying a special place within culture as a range of devices suited towards normal life.
In case you missed it, here’s the trailer you’ve been looking for.
I found it interesting that this trailer was officially rolled out at halftime of a football game. An odd mix, that. I’ve watched it eight nine times already. Fantastic. Can’t wait.
This image is posted with permission of its unlucky owner, Satyender Mahajan.
Damn, that is one unlucky drop. Sorry Saty.
Saty’s watch dropped from a height of 2.5 feet (.76 meters) and had a glass screen. Wondering what happens to an Apple Watch with a sapphire screen under similar circumstances? Here’s your answer.
Rene Ritchie, writing for iMore, pulled together a nice collection of details on Apple’s new Magic Keyboard. Among other things, you’ll learn how to pair/unpair the Magic Keyboard to your Mac, iOS device, and Apple TV, as well as check its battery life in various configurations.
Apple today removed more than 250 apps from its App Store that were using software from a Chinese advertising company that secretly accessed and stored users’ personal information. The firm, called Youmi, provided app makers with a software development kit that would glean which apps a user had downloaded, that user’s email address, and the serial number of their smartphone, according to mobile security company SourceDNA. The apps in total received 1 million downloads.
The app makers that relied on Youmi’s SDK, most of which are based in China, may not have knowingly violated Apple’s security and privacy guidelines. “We believe the developers of these apps aren’t aware of this since the SDK is delivered in binary form, obfuscated, and user info is uploaded to Youmi’s server, not the app’s. We recommend developers stop using this SDK until this code is removed,” reads SourceDNA’s blog post.
Vigilance. This part of Apple’s app review process is incredibly important. Detecting this sort of obfuscation is critical.
I connect my iPhone to my Mac for a number of reasons. Sometimes, I’m downloading an app from Xcode. Sometimes, I’m doing a backup, other times an iOS update. Sometimes I’m using QuickTime Player to create a movie, using my iPhone as a source.
When I plug my iPhone into my El Capitan driven Mac, I can count on one thing. Photo will launch. And if I’m doing a screen capture, Photos will keep launching each time I hit the end of a capture session.
Painful.
If you share my pain, read this, and suffer no more. Simple, but well hidden. Thank you Kirk!
Christian Zibreg, writing for iDownloadBlog, pulled together this excellent exploration of OS X System Preferences. This is one of those articles where the value lies in that one or two tips you never knew existed.
Bookmark and pass this along, especially to folks who are new to the Mac, but will become the next generation of tech support/power users.
Daisuke Wakabayashi, writing for The Wall Street Journal:
Speaking at WSJDLive, The Wall Street Journal’s global technology conference, Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook said the company has 6.5 million paying customers for Apple Music and 8.5 million customers on three-month trials.
In August, Apple senior vice president Eddy Cue, who is overseeing the rollout of Apple Music, said it had 11 million people on the trial version of the service. That suggests that nearly 60% of those users agreed to pay for the service after the trial period ended.
By comparison, Spotify AB, which launched in 2008, says it has 75 million active users and 20 million subscribers.
Embedded below are a few clips of Tim Cook’s interview.
Cook will be interviewed by Gerard Baker, The Wall Street Journal’s Editor in Chief. They will live-blog Cook’s interview on stage beginning at around 11:30 p.m. ET, 8:30 PST.
This should be an interesting interview. I’ll miss it though because I will be caught up in the exciting Canadian Election results. To all my fellow Canadians – get out and vote!
The current set of videos in the list include imagery from China, San Francisco, Hawaii, New York City and London. Interestingly, there are multiple variants for each location as well as separate day and night shots. It seems like the Apple TV will dynamically show a contextually-relevant video for the user’s time of day. It’s also interesting just how many different sequences Apple has for each same location and time.
There are some gorgeous videos here. I look forward to seeing them on my TV and seeing Apple update them for more locations.
What if you could get 5% of your day back? What would you do?
You already have enough work to do today and shouldn’t have to waste time looking for the things you need to do your job!
Igloo can’t solve the conflict in Syria but it can help with conflict with coworkers. Igloo’s not just for your traditional intranet stuff like HR policies and expense forms. It lets you work better together with your team. Stop digging through your inbox for that file from 3 months back and give yourself the tools you need to do your best work.
Send your IT guy to try Igloo Software and see for yourself why Igloo is an intranet you’ll actually like.
Recently, I was asked by a games mag you’ve probably all heard of to write about Apple TV and gaming, largely from a development standpoint. As ever under such circumstances, I went through my list of email and Twitter contacts, seeing this as a good opportunity to offer some exposure to indie developers whose work I’ve enjoyed over the years. One response came back very quickly, albeit from a name I didn’t quite recognise. The message was in fact from a developer’s wife; the person I was trying to get in touch with had died the previous week.
The developer in question was Stewart Hogarth, who’d lost his battle with congenital heart disease; he was just 34. We’d only been in touch a few times, but I’d been captivated a couple of years ago by his truly excellent 8-bit tribute I Am Level for iOS and Android. This was a smart, charming, entertaining title that married eye-searing Spectrum-style graphics, old-school single-screen platforming challenges, and modern mobile tilt-based controls. It was still installed on all of my devices, and it was strange and very sad to think that the person who created it was no longer with us.
And:
Once a developer account lapses through non-payment, the apps are gone forever, which feels wrong.
Came upon this story in this post on MacStories.net, by Federico Viticci.
Federico says:
I genuinely believe that, years from now, apps and games will be studied as interesting data points and references for our society, behaviors, and sociological traits. Today, quite paradoxically, in many cases it’s actually easier to preserve physical media than digital app store (lowercase, as it applies to every company) content and developers’ back catalogues. Servers that eventually disappear, expired contracts, apps that are no longer supported on the latest OS – it doesn’t make much sense to me that the rules and limitations of software make it harder to preserve apps than something which physically decays.
I continue to believe that app preservation is a topic worth discussing, and Craig is touching on an important aspect of it.
If the developer of your favorite app stops paying for their developer account, when Apple cancels the account, do the apps immediately get pulled from the app store? Does Apple have a policy that covers this?
There’s the core of the story, a drummer recovering his ability to drum again after losing his arm. But this goes deeper, into the world of robotics and the very essence of music. Is Jason’s newfound musical ability robotic in nature?
More work over the weekend, adding new Safari content blockers, updating the codes for each listing and the footnotes at the bottom of the list. Big thanks to Carlos Oliveira for his efforts to keep this list current.
When your device is enrolled in the Apple Beta Software Program, you will automatically receive new versions of the public beta from the Mac App Store or iOS Software Update. At any time, you may unenroll your device so that it no longer receives these updates. You may also choose to leave the program entirely.
If you are enrolled in the beta program, you’ll get app store or software update updates for every beta that comes along. This is problematic if you don’t want to install an update. The beta notification will be stuck in your queue, like a piece of corn in your teeth.
Bookmark the page in case this every comes up for you.
Twitter can bring the worst part of humanity to a laser focus. Frequently, that focus is on a single person.
iOS developer Brent Simmons has been on the receiving end of that merciless pile-on and shares his perspective. Please read this and, if you share Brent’s sentiments, pass this along.