September 27, 2015

Moon Connection:

Now you can have accurate, attractive Moon and Sun details at your fingertips. View a beautiful real-time image of the current Moon phase, complete with technical data. Quickly see if the Moon is above the horizon on the Lunar Position screen, along with Moon rise and set times and precise Moon position in the sky. If you also want to know Sun rise and set times, look at the Solar Position screen.

Tonight’s total eclipse of the Super Harvest Moon could be spectacular, depending on the weather in your area. Use this free app to figure its position in your night sky.

September 25, 2015

I’ll be posting more about this camera, but I’ve been using it and it’s so great.

Kirk McElhearn, writing for Macworld:

A friend recently showed me an iOS app called SoundShare. This free app lets you play music and, if you want, share it with your friends. You can follow people, as you would on Facebook or Twitter, and see what they’ve listened to, while sharing what you’ve heard.

I’ve been beta testing SoundShare for a while now and, I have to say, it is a brilliant complement to Apple Music and my go-to app for new music discovery. You can see what’s trending on SoundShare, explore various top music charts (iTunes included), check the song of the day, or see what your friends are listening to.

This was very similar to the way my friends and I, both in the record store and at each other’s homes, would turn each other on to new music. Bob and I were talking on Skype while doing this, each in a different country, and we were able to share music essentially in real time by adding songs to a shared playlist. Sure, you could tell someone to search for something in Apple Music or Spotify, but this is more immediate. Other users can also see what you’ve listened to, and you can see their listening history.

SoundShare includes a sharing extension for Apple Music that lets me add an Apple Music song to a SoundShare playlist. I can share that playlist with any SoundShare user and they can add their own songs to that same playlist. The point here (and I think this is a big point) is that I can use SoundShare to share music with my friends, even if they don’t have Apple Music. SoundShare is the bridge, the glue that brings all my musical worlds together.

Another cool feature of SoundShare is the compatibility with your TV. Because every SoundShare song has a link to a YouTube video, you can AirPlay your iOS device to your TV, then start a SoundShare playlist. SoundShare will automatically play a video for every song in your playlist. I have yet to stump SoundShare (YouTube, really) with a song that didn’t have some sort of accompanying video.

SoundShare is a great idea, and it’s frankly what’s missing in Apple Music. You can make playlists with Apple Music, and your friends can subscribe to them, but there’s no two-way sharing in Apple’s service. As with any social networking app, SoundShare will live or die according to the number of users it can attract.

My hope is that folks at Apple will take SoundShare for a spin. This is a terrific approach to sharing music.

Walk along the bedraggled queue of people, and pillows and discarded bottles of water bore the same bright blue color and were emblazoned with the hashtag #NextIsNew.

“They were given to us by Apple,” a person in queue told International Business Times. A friend of his, however, was a little more savvy, quietly informing him: “No man, it was Samsung, I did a little research.”

What the fuck is wrong with this company? Instead of these types of stunts, why not try to build a better product—that philosophy is the one thing they haven’t copied from Apple.

Ryot:

The film tells the story of one citizen from Jalouzi, one of the largest slums in Haiti, who is determined to bring color to the impoverished area by helping paint the entire town, literally.

Believing that color has the power to transform his community, he’s helping to paint everywhere – on houses, on buses, and the entire hillside. Armed with brushes of bright blues, pastel pinks, and sunshine yellows, he’s helping to mobilize citizens of all ages, determined to turn the grey town into a rainbow full of color to lead the way to a brighter Haiti.

I don’t care much that it was shot on any particular device. But it is a wonderful film full of hope for the future of one of the most impoverished places in the world.

September 24, 2015

The Wall Street Journal:

Eyeo GmbH, the company behind popular desktop ad-blocking tool Adblock Plus, now accepts payment from around 70 companies in exchange for letting their ads through its filter. Eyeo stipulates that they must comply with its “acceptable ads” policy, meaning their ads aren’t too disruptive or intrusive to users. In total, ads from some 700 companies meet the acceptable ads policy, an Eyeo spokesman said.

Eyeo is now reaching out to developers of other ad-blocking tools to cut deals that allow certain ads to pass ads through their filters, too, in exchange for payment.

(Dean) Murphy (who created Crystal, an application to help users block ads on Apple Inc.’s mobile devices) said he has taken Eyeo up on its offer, and plans to implement an option within his app whereby “acceptable” ads will be displayed to users. The feature will be switched on by default, Mr. Murphy said, and he will receive a flat monthly fee from Eyeo in return.

This is a predictable situation and it will only get worse or better depending on your point of view.

Pixelmator for iOS 2.1 update includes support for iOS 9, multitasking on iPad via Split View and Slide Over, 8K resolution support, Open in Place and Save to Photos features, and more.

I love and use Pixelmator on iOS and Mac, and have for years. These guys make great apps.

Flo Gehring made some great wallpapers available for users to download free. I really like the water droplets.

Pew Research:

Test your knowledge of science facts and applications of scientific principles by taking our short 12-question quiz. Then see how you did in comparison with a nationally representative group of 3,278 randomly selected U.S. adults surveyed online and by mail between Aug. 11 and Sept. 3, 2014 as members of the Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel.When you finish, you will be able to compare your scores with the average American and compare responses across demographic groups.

I got 11 out of 12. I should have aced it if I had only thought a little longer about one of the questions. According to Mental Floss, only 6 percent of Americans aced this basic science survey. How did you do?

CBC:

Mounties from the southern Saskatchewan detachment became a viral hit when they got wind of a weekend party involving local youth and posted about it on Facebook.

They warned the students they could face hefty fines if there were any laws broken, such as underage drinking or littering.

They also said officers from the detachment would show up with chips and salsa.

It turns out they weren’t kidding.

Another in a long line of reasons why I love my country.

Dan Moore:

> Ultimately, I decided that the most important thing you should be aware of before trying to ship my car to California and moving to San Francisco is this: the city is changing, quickly. Mechanisms of gentrification have upended neighborhoods with the abruptness of lightning strikes, dividing the citizenry. This is important, because from the day you get here, you’ll find yourself in the middle of this divide, caught in anxious, awkward suspension between two worlds: one that’s losing control of its identity and one that hasn’t really figured out what its identity is yet. I should actually amend that statement: you’ll feel like you’re strung in the middle of two worlds. This will not be so. > > See, the world that hasn’t figured out its identity yet is probably better known as the tech community. This community consists of people whose move to San Francisco was made possible by way of companies related at least peripherally to the technology industry. Yes, this means you. What this also means is that many of your neighbors won’t see you as a benevolent outsider caught unknowingly in the middle of what is, essentially, a class war. You have, by association, already chosen your side. And the association will be your shame. Some people will assume even before they meet you that you care only about your company’s app; that you don’t appreciate the more intrinsic aspects of your new home; and, moreover, that you don’t respect the impact that your being here is having on it—namely, accelerating the ultimate selling out of San Francisco’s soul.

I love San Francisco. I went to school in the area, learned to drive a stick there (those hills!), learned a lot about life there. I hate the divide that appears to be more and more a way of life for people in this great city.

I’ve been gone a long time. Is this really the way things are now?

David Chartier, writing for FinerTech, presents a TL;DR list of cool new iOS 9 features/observations. This is a quick, bulleted read.

Wish there were more of these. Very dense, not a big investment to get to the heart of the matter.

Tim Bajarin, writing for Tech.pinions:

This younger generation does use PCs. However, they actually spend the most time on their iPhones and iPads and Macs are mostly relegated to serious productivity projects. More importantly, they know iOS inside and out as they spend much more of their day in this operating system then they do on any computer they have. I believe Apple understands this better than anyone and their most recent iPad Pro is a nod to this trend. More importantly, I see Apple using this to drive millennials towards making iOS their OS of choice as they move into their careers and new jobs. In fact, within 5-7 years, I suspect Windows will not even be of interest to this younger set, as iOS will be the device operating system that dominates their work and personal lifestyles.

First off, this is a terrific read, thoughtful and insightful.

In the millennials in my life, I see the phone as the center, always with them, always active, with the iPad, computer, DS, Xbox/PlayStation as a second device, depending on the activity. The phone rules as a communication device, but where there’s content to be created/consumed or a game to be played, the secondary device tends to come out.

I’ve never thought of the iPad Pro as a device for millennials, but now that Tim puts that thought out there, it is certainly an interesting strategy. I’m not sure I agree that millennials know iOS inside and out. I think they adapt to whatever is in their hands, moving fluidly between environments. And I also think iOS is easier to use “as is”.

That last point speaks to Tim’s supposition that millennials will move away from Windows towards iOS. I think that’s a terrific insight and feels right. But I don’t see the Mac and OS X going away any time soon.

Apple:

We always recommend developers use the free, secure tools we provide them — including Xcode — to ensure they’re creating the most secure apps for App Store customers. Some developers downloaded counterfeit versions of Xcode that have been infected with malware and created apps that were just as infected.

Apple incorporates technologies like Gatekeeper expressly to prevent non-App Store and/or unsigned versions of programs, including Xcode, from being installed. Those protections had to have been deliberately disabled by the developer for something like XcodeGhost to successfully install.

And:

We have removed the apps from the App Store that we know have been created with this counterfeit software and are blocking submissions of new apps that contain this malware from entering the App Store.

We’re working closely with developers to get impacted apps back on the App Store as quickly as possible for customers to enjoy.

A list of the top 25 most popular apps impacted are listed below. After the top 25 impacted apps, the number of impacted users drops significantly.

If you are an iOS developer, anywhere in the world, be sure to verify your copy of Xcode. Here’s how.

MarketWatch:

The number of people in the U.S. expressing an intent to buy an iPhone has grown to 53.2% from 43.7% a year ago despite concerns that iPhone adoption would decelerate, according to a recent survey by Baird Equity Research. Intent to buy Androids, meanwhile, has slid to 46.8% from 56.3% a year ago.

Pendulum swing? Or is this a sign of migration?

Variety:

Netflix crunched cold, hard viewing data for more than two dozen TV shows and says it has determined which specific episode grabbed most subscribers to the point where they watched the entire first season.

However, none of the shows Netflix looked at, which included originals and licensed series, hooked viewers with the pilot. In fact, two shows — “Arrow” and “How I Met Your Mother” — didn’t hit the tipping point until episode 8. In the traditional TV biz, conventional wisdom holds that a show’s pilot is the most critical linchpin to igniting viewer interest, given the nature of how new television programs debut.

I tend to judge a show based on the pilot. If I don’t like the pilot, the show is dead to me. That said, if there’s enough buzz about a show later on in its run, I do give a later episode a watch. Rare that my opinion changes, but it definitely does happen.

Perfect example is Big Bang Theory. Hated the pilot, thought it was obvious and had all the wrong stereotypes. But my wife loved it, pushed me to try again in season 2. For whatever reason, that clicked for me and I became a fan.

This season, two new shows survived the pilot episodes for me: Limitless and Blindspot. I read the Limitless book and saw the movie. Big fans of both. The pilot did not disappoint. Blindspot reminded me of a terrific show a while back, John Doe. Intriguing. Hoping it develops well.

September 23, 2015

On a bustling street in China’s southern boomtown of Shenzhen, more than 30 stores carrying Apple Inc’s iconic white logos peddle pre-orders for the new iPhone, a gadget that has become a status symbol among many better-off Chinese.

Many of the stores look just like Apple’s signature outlets, right down to the sales staff kitted out in blue T-shirts bearing the company’s white logo and the sample iPads and iWatches displayed on sleek wooden tables.

First, what the fuck is an iWatch? Second, I wonder if there’s anything Apple can, or would, do about this. According to the story, the stores are selling “genuine Apple products.” Interesting problem.

Jim and Dan talk about Dan’s newfound Apple love, the iPhone 6s, Watch OS 2, apps as the future of TV (and the fundamentally changing way we view TV as a medium), the iPad Pro, the Pencil, and ad blocking from the standpoint of an independent content creator.

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Samantha Bielefeld talking about The Verge:

What I would like to see is the author not afraid to bite the hand that feeds, to confront the real issue here…the problem isn’t with there being advertising on the web driven by page impressions. The issue is how awful they look, how invasive they can be (auto-play audio/video, yuck!), their attempts at deceiving your website’s audience, and tracking your every mouse click or tap around the web in order to serve their own needs while sacrificing the privacy of the customers they are seeking to gain.

Great read.

The Deck and ad tracking on The Loop

I’ve been asked about ad tracking on The Loop quite a bit since iOS 9 and its content blockers were released. I use The Deck to serve ads on the site, and have for the last few years. Jim Coudal, the owner of The Deck, and I share a philosophy that ads should be unobtrusive and respectful to the reader.

Here is The Deck’s official stance on ad tracking (spoiler: there is none):

Short version. We don’t track our readers in any way or allow any other behind-the-scenes shenanigans. We just serve useful, relevant ads in a simple, unobtrusive way to support independent publishers. Please white-list The Deck when using ad blocking software. Thanks.

We will never share your personal information obtained by tracking, either individually or in aggregate, with advertisers or any one else for one very good reason: we don’t have any.

I understand people are upset with being tracked and having ads all over the sites they want to visit, but that’s not what The Deck or The Loop is about. When you block the sites that do make you angry, remember to white-list the ones that treat you with respect.

Coudal also recently spoke with Fast Company about ad blocking.

Dan Moren, writing for Six Colors, with a nice tip you might want to bookmark.

Apple: iPhone pre-orders sold out, but reservations will reopen 8a Saturday

Apple (doomed) has officially closed pre-order reservations for the new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. If you try to preorder one, you’ll see this message:

apple

If you missed your chance to pre-order a phone for in-store pickup, you can head to the Apple Store Friday morning (I suspect there will be big lines, so get there early) or head online Saturday morning and book yourself an appointment.

The question is, how long will the wait be for an in-store appointment? We’ll find out Saturday morning.

Ben Bajarin, writing for Tech.pinions, on the wave of changes that came with the new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus:

We used to take pictures by snapping the photo at the desired moment. With Live Photos, since it captures 1.5 seconds before the shot and 1.5 seconds after the shot, it is a good practice to leave the camera on the target for the additional 1.5 seconds after you take the picture. This seems odd but, as I said, the results are worth it. Luckily, Apple included a small icon on the top of the screen that says “LIVE” to let you know the Live Photo is still capturing. Once it disappears, you can then move the phone. As I said, it is a slight change to how we typically take photos.

If all you care about is that one moment, the still picture you were aiming to take, nothing need change. But if you embrace and explore Live Photos, you will want to tweak your picture taking behavior just a bit, hold the phone still just a bit longer after you take the picture. Otherwise your Live Photos will all feature a drop at the end as you start to put your phone away.

On death of the lock screen:

When Apple said the second generation of Touch ID was fast I initially thought to myself, “It is super fast now. how can it get faster?” Then you try the second generation touch ID and realize it’s so fast you nearly don’t see your lock screen. From dark screen to home screen in milliseconds. There is no need to press and hold your finger on the sensor for a reading. Just press the home screen button and in the amount of time it takes to press, you are logged in and at your home screen. I had a nice picture of my family on the lock screen which I now only barely get a glimpse of. Here again is an example of shaving split seconds of time off an experience to let you do the things you want to do with your phone faster and more efficiently.

Touch ID on the iPhone 6 is already pretty fast. I frequently find myself racing to let go of the home button so I can see the clock on the lock screen. Looks like the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus will require a new strategy.

Great article, Ben.

Everything you might want to know about the new watchOS release.

This is a great tip. You can track your phone “by reference” using the phone number used to place the order.

Read on for details.

MacRumors:

Visual designer Adrienne Alpern from San Diego, California is one of the first customers to receive the brand new iPhone 6s, nearly five whole days before the latest smartphone launches in the U.S. and eleven other countries.

And:

Apple each year requests that couriers like UPS and FedEx hold new iPhone deliveries until the same day the smartphones become available in stores, but a few lucky customers often receive their devices ahead of time due to logistical error.

Good stuff. Jump to the article for pictures and a bit of 4K video shot with Adrienne’s new lucky phone.

A few days ago, we posted the story about the XcodeGhost malware that made its way onto the App Store via compromised copies of Xcode.

In response, Apple pulled affected apps from the store and, just as importantly, sent out letters to developers to test their copies of Xcode, to make sure it was indeed a valid copy from Apple.

In a nutshell, developers typed this line into the Terminal utility:

spctl --assess --verbose /Applications/Xcode.app

Here’s what I saw when I ran this on my Mac:

/Applications/Xcode.app: accepted
source=Mac App Store

You might also see:

source=Apple

or

source=Apple System

Anything else and you should redownload Xcode and recompile any current apps.

Joe Mullin, writing for Ars Technica, presents a story that has been flying around the internet:

More than two years after a documentary filmmaker challenged the copyright to the simple lyrics of the song “Happy Birthday,” a federal judge ruled Tuesday that the copyright is invalid.

The result could undo Warner/Chappell’s lucrative licensing business around the song, once estimated to be $2 million per year.

In a nutshell, a victory in the copyright challenge would mean movies, TV shows, and other public performances of the definitive birthday song could be done for free. As is, use of the song is expensive. So much so that restaurants were forced to come up with their own spin on the song to sing to guests.

But before the celebration is memorialized by embedding the song in film and other media, there’s still another step or two to go:

The company is likely to appeal the ruling to the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.

And if they lose that appeal, they still can petition the Supreme Court. So this is not quite a done deal. Almost, but not quite. It could be years until we know for sure.

Podcasting is a very interesting experience. It’s fun, though a little unnerving. You really have to think on your feet. Ian and Kirk were tremendously welcoming and kind. I hope I didn’t break anything.

Here’s the link. Please excuse my nervous newbiness.

September 22, 2015

Jeffrey Zeldman:

Advertisers don’t want to be ignored, and they are drunk on our data, which is what Google and other large networks are really selling. The ads are almost a by-product; what companies really want to know is what antiperspirant a woman of 25–34 is most likely to purchase after watching House of Cards. Which gets us into issues of privacy and spying and government intrusion and don’t ask.

And in this environment of sites so cluttered with misleading ads they are almost unnavigable, Apple looks heroic, riding to the consumer’s rescue by providing all the content from newspapers without the ads, and by blocking ugly advertising on websites. But if they succeed, will media companies and independent sites survive?

This issue is far from over. We have no idea how this is going to shake out, who will adapt and survive and who will fold. I do believe it is an issue ad publishers have largely brought on themselves. But it’s a shame there is and will continue to be a lot of collateral damage in this so-called Apple vs Google War.