April 23, 2015

Another Apple Watch app tracker. This one is from WatchAware.

I like the fact that they keep track of the number of shipping apps. Not sure where that number comes from or how accurate it is, but as of this post, there are 2,145 approved Apple Watch apps.

As I said in this post, I think that number will rise to over 100,000 by the end of the year. Might have to revise that number upwards if there are already 2,145. After all, the big wave of Apple Watches hasn’t even hit yet. Think we might hit a million Apple Watch apps by the end of the year?

There are a boatload of Twitter clients for OS X. Apple Watch? So far, according to the linked article, there are three: The official Twitter client, Twitterrific 5, and Tweetings 2.

One notable absentee from this list is Tweetbot. As of the writing of this post, there is no information available on whether or not Tapbot’s flagship will be coming to Apple Watch. When and if it (or any other app) does, we’ll update this list to reflect the new Twitter app order. But even then, the Twitter client you use on your Apple Watch will most likely be the same one you use on your iPhone, just in a much more personal fashion.

I asked Paul Haddad (lead developer for Tapbots) about his plans for Tweetbot for Apple Watch. His reply was twofold. First, he’s waiting to get his hands on an Apple Watch (looks to me like his order will arrive tomorrow).

But Paul also made this point. The most critical element of a Twitter app are the notifications you receive. As it turns out, Tweetbot has long been part of the Apple Watch demo experience, as evidenced by the video in this post. That’s a Tweetbot notification, about 30 seconds in.

Certainly a custom Twitter client will give you more control over your tweets, but it is worth knowing that as long as your existing Twitter client makes use of the Notification Manager, you’ll get those notifications on your wrist, too.

You can read the whole Twitter exchange here.

Allyson Kazmucha, writing for iMore, has put together a solid list of shipping Apple Watch apps. Click the View All link towards the top of the page to see all of the apps in a single list.

I suspect that this list will grow exponentially over the coming weeks. My money’s on a hundred thousand Apple Watch apps by the end of the year. Think that’s too ambitious?

This is getting exciting.

Security researchers at SkyCure stumbled onto an iOS vulnerability that, at its extreme, may cause all phones (and, presumably iPads) on an attacking network to go into an infinite restart mode. The solution is to either disable WiFi or leave the range of the offending network. As far as I can tell, the harm of this vulnerability is that it disables your phone. There does not appear to be any permanent damage or loss of data.

This is not quite “the sky is falling”, but it is an issue that needs to be addressed. I can only imagine that Apple is busy working on a fix as we speak.

If you are interested in details, the SkyCure researcher who discovered this issue wrote up a pretty interesting blog post that tells the story of his discovery and lays out some (but not all) of the details.

April 22, 2015

Apple senior director Natalie Kerris retires

Natalie Kerris, who spent the last 14 years at Apple in corporate communications, announced her retirement from the company on Wednesday in a Twitter post.

“After 14 amazing years at Apple, it’s time to move on and see what adventures life holds for me next!” Kerris said.

She accompanied the announcement with this photo of a Steve Jobs quote:

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Kerris was responsible for launching the iPhone, iPod, iPad, iTunes, the Mac, Apple Pay, and Apple Watch.

I contacted Kerris this afternoon to see what her plans were and if she had any other comment on her departure.

“I’m retiring to enjoy life,” Kerris confirmed. “Two weeks in Italy with my family gave me a new perspective on life.”

Congrats on your retirement Nat, you will be missed!

IMG_7898

“I just had it,” Lucas Hinch, 38, told The Smoking Gun (via Ars Technica). Apparently the PC had thrown up one too many blue screens of death in recent months, so Hinch took it into an alley, loaded up a 9mm Hi-Point pistol that he’d purchased on Craiglist, and let the bullets fly.

Priceless.

From checking flight status to being in the cockpit, Apple is changing the air travel industry. It’s amazing when you think about how many industries Apple has transformed over the years—music, movies, phone, tablet, etc. The list goes on and on.

April 21, 2015

John Gruber:

I just can’t see Apple ever allowing these sort of watch faces for Apple Watch — that’ll be left for the jailbreak crowd. A few weeks ago I thought third-party watch faces would be like third-party apps were for the iPhone — something that wasn’t there at the launch, but which came sooner rather than later.

That’s what I thought too. John has some interesting thoughts on custom watch faces and why we won’t see them.

If you haven’t used the Health app on iPhone, it’s something you just consider doing. Here’s a good article on how to easily show the information you’re looking for without overwhelming you.

Learn how Apple Watch measures your heart rate, and get tips for a more accurate reading.

Great information from Apple.

Petapixel:

Adobe today announced its latest version of Lightroom, called Lightroom CC. The update brings faster performance, some revamped tools, and a set of powerful new creation features.

Here’s a look at the major new things found in Lightroom CC, which will also be sold as a standalone program called Lightroom 6.

Now that Aperture has all but disappeared, Lightroom will be the only choice for most professional photographers. Luckily, it’s a very good app on its own and these new features add a lot to its abilities.

April 20, 2015

For some people, IT is a task and not a career. Bushel is a simple-to-use cloud-based tool that anyone can leverage to manage the Apple devices in their workplace. Bushel allows you to easily set-up and protect all of the Apple devices that you distribute to your team, or those that your team already has. Provide access to company email accounts, automatically install work apps to every device all at once, and separate and protect your team’s personal data from company data. And if a device is ever lost or stolen, you can even remotely lock it or wipe company data completely. Do all of this and much more, without any help from IT. All wrapped into one seamless interface so you can manage those Apple devices when you want, wherever you are. Bushel makes the complex simple, so you can focus on what matters most, all while taking back your nights and weekends. Your first three devices are free forever, and each additional device is just $2 per month with no contracts or commitments. Learn more at Bushel.com.

Re/code:

One of the proposed benefits of wearable technology is the notion of having a health-and-fitness tracker attached to your body 24/7 — or at least for a good portion of the day. This is the case with activity-tracking wristbands, like Fitbit and Jawbone Up, and also the appeal of some smartwatches, such as Apple Watch.

As I wrote in my earlier review, I’ve found Apple Watch to be a capable health-and-fitness tracker — especially for a smartwatch.

As I suspected and as was confirmed by several reviewers, the Apple Watch, while not a perfect fitness tracking device for the hard core exercise buff, will certainly provide benefit to those who use it to track their activities. And the really good news is, once it gets in the hands of developers and users, it will only get better.

CNET:

Twitter is upgrading its popular direct message feature to allow users to receive messages from other users regardless if they follow each other. The move is part of its ongoing effort to try to boost user growth as pressure from Wall Street investors continues.

I’m not sure how or why CNET describes this as a “upgrade”. It’s like the people who run Twitter don’t actually use Twitter. This will open up a whole new way for spammers to abuse the service and, while it might draw in advertisers who want to send “personalized” direct messages to people, it will drive away more users than it could ever to benefit.

UPDATE: The Next Web points out this is “an optional feature” and “The new setting is turned off by default.”

Jason Snell, writing for iMore:

While most members of the media are content to go to the keynote, write their stories about Apple’s big announcements, and then head home, when I was at Macworld I always bought a developer badge and attended sessions. Yes, they were confidential — I couldn’t write anything about what I learned there — but they also provided background material about how OS X (and later iOS) worked that proved invaluable when new versions of those products shipped.

Still, at many sessions, I would realize that after 20 minutes of solid introductory material, the slides were suddenly starting to fill with code. I am not a developer. Code makes my head hurt. Instead, I would retreat outside and hope that someone had re-filled the candy bowl.

But while the sessions at WWDC are absolutely not for everyone, in the past few years it’s become clear that WWDC has still become an event for everyone who works in the Apple-related universe. Quite simply, there’s no single event on the calendar that draws enough of us together in one location: WWDC has critical mass.

WWDC is a massively good time and the center of the Apple universe, at least for a week. Great writeup.

This article is an excerpt from an upcoming Elon Musk bio.

Earlier in 2013 the company was struggling to turn preorders of its vehicles into actual sales. As Musk put his staff on crisis footing to save Tesla, he also began negotiating a deal to sell the company to Google through his friend Larry Page, the search giant’s co-founder and chief executive officer, according to two people with direct knowledge of the deal.

Fascinating read. Especially if you keep in mind all the Apple Car talk of the last 6 months or so and the fact that Musk is said to have met with Apple around the same time.

Ryan Smith, writing for AnandTech, digs in to the new MacBook as only AnandTech can. Among the fascinating tidbits is this discussion of the Intel Core M processor:

Overall Apple is offering 3 different versions of the Core M within the MacBook lineup. The $1299 base configuration utilizes a 1.1GHz Core M-5Y31, while the $1599 utilizes what we believe to be a 1.2GHz 5Y51. Finally, both configurations offer an optional upgrade to a faster processor, a 1.3GHz version of what’s likely the 5Y71, which is the fastest of Intel’s current Core M lineup. However to put a twist on things Apple has gone and clocked these processors slightly differently than Intel’s original specifications; all 3 MacBooks have a base clock higher than Intel’s specs, and in the case of the faster two these don’t even match Intel’s faster “cTDP Up” configurations. As a result the Core M processors in the new MacBook are somewhat unorthodox compared to the regular processors – and perhaps slightly more power hungry – though there’s nothing here that other OEMs couldn’t do as well.

Ideally Core M will spend very little time at its base clockspeeds, and will instead be turboing up to 2.4GHz, 2.6GHz, or 2.9GHz respectively. This vast divide between the base and turbo clocks reflects the performance-bursty nature of the Core M design, but it is also why the base clockspeeds that Apple advertises can be deceptively low. In light workloads where Core M can quickly reach its top speeds to complete a task, a 2.4GHz+ Core architecture processor is nothing short of zippy. However in sustained workloads these base clockspeeds become much more relevant, as Core M has to pull back to lower clockspeeds to keep heat and power consumption under control.

As is typical with AnandTech’s in depth reviews (similar to what John Siracusa does…er…used to do for software), this is a sprawling epic, divided into 11 pages. Look for the jump link at the bottom of each page.

From the conclusion:

While I doubt Apple was looking quite this far into the future when they created the initial MacBook Air, I get the distinct impression that this is the kind of device they have been building towards. Apple has always been held back by technology to some degree – be it processor size, storage size, or display power requirements – and it’s only now in 2015 that the pieces have come together to allow them to make a laptop this small. I don’t believe this is a stopping point for Apple simply because one way or another they’re going to keep iterating, but compared to the MacBook Air there isn’t the same need nor ability to make a MacBook even smaller.

Which brings me to my final point, which is the future direction of the Apple’s Mac laptop families. The fact that the MacBook is the MacBook, and not the MacBook Nano or some other named MacBook is something I believe is telling. Although there’s clearly a risk in reading too much into Apple’s future plans based on a name alone, I have to seriously wonder where the MacBook and the MacBook Air go from here. Apple still needs an entry-level Mac laptop, but do they need the MacBook Air in particular? Just as the newer MacBook Air rendered the previous generation MacBook redundant in due time, I suspect Apple may intentionally following the same course with the new MacBook. But as to whether that comes to pass, only time will tell.

When Steve Jobs came back to Apple, one of the first things he did was crush the Mac product line down from many overlapping products to a very efficient few. With the iMac, MacBook Air, the 2015 MacBook, and MacBook Pro with two different sizes and all with multiple configurations, the product line is drifting towards those muddy waters again.

Norway will officially kill off FM radio in 2017. Will the dominos fall? Is Norway the first of many?

Kevin Fox is a bit of an Apple historian and a self-professed digital packrat.

Last week I happened across a blog post showing the history of Apple.com over the past 17 years, complete with screenshots culled from the very earliest days of the Internet Archive Wayback Machine. It’s a serious trip down memory lane, but it didn’t go back far enough.

I remember a very different, more playful Apple.com homepage. I remembered a page that was more Fractal Design Painter and less grids and columns. I remember taking a screenshot of that page because I liked the look of it. But where would it be today?

Follow along as Kevin’s archaeological skills kick in and he finds the earliest known image of Apple’s home page. Great read, great work.

[Via 512 Pixels]

Apple Insider:

Porsche owner Volkswagen Group is offering substantial CarPlay support across its marques, including Audi, SEAT, Skoda, Suzuki and Volkswagen.

You can see the fill list of CarPlay compatible manufacturers towards the bottom of this page. That’s 34 and counting. Impressive progress.

Jordan Kahn, writing for 9to5mac, pulled together a collection of ads for Apple Watch replacement straps ad other accessories. One item I found especially clever was an adapter that allows you to connect a traditional watch strap to your Apple Watch.

Given that replacement straps are strictly mechanical (no electronics involved, like an iPhone case), I’d expect the replacement strap market to quickly bloom and commoditize, meaning you’ll soon be able to buy a replacement strap at those little watch kiosks in the mall.

April 18, 2015

My thanks to Iconic for sponsoring The Loop this week. Looking for a special gift for that mega Apple enthusiast in your life? How about the newest edition of an absolutely stunning coffee table book that features lush, beautiful photographs of Apple devices? ICONIC: A Photographic Tribute to Apple Innovation is Iconic uses vivid color and detail to document Apple’s journey in design, form and function—and looks back at over 35 years of Apple innovation. Four years in the making, the author captured over 150,000 photos of nearly every product Apple has made, including rare prototypes and even packaging. With a foreword from Steve Wozniak and The Loop’s own Jim Dalrymple and hundreds of amazing quotes from other Apple pundits—ICONIC is the ultimate coffee table book for every Apple fan, and the perfect gift for any Apple owner who ever wanted to explore and discover the true roots of their favorite iMac, iPod, iPad, or iPhone. With free global shipping, see the different editions and use the coupon code THELOOP on checkout for 10% discount.

Jim’s Note: In addition to writing the foreword for this book, I also own two and love them!

So jarring to move from that page back to their current home page. Definitely a step back in time.

From the IconFactory blog:

Today we are pleased to announce that Twitterrific 5.11 with Apple Watch support is available in the App Store. Ever since we first saw Apple’s new wearable in action, we knew Twitterrific would be a great fit. There are a myriad of compelling features in this update so we wanted to take some time to share a few of them with you.

I find it fascinating to watch existing products evolve an Apple Watch app. Good read, especially if you are thinking about building your own WatchKit app.

[Via iOS Dev Weekly]

Tim Cook is a steal

From Bloomberg Business [AutoPlay]:

Apple Inc.’s Tim Cook has the best pay-for-performance rating of any chief executive officer on the Bloomberg Pay Index, the first daily ranking of the highest-paid U.S. executives.

Cook was awarded $65.2 million in compensation last year. During the three fiscal years he has run Apple, revenue climbed 69 percent to $183 billion and net income grew 53 percent to $39.5 billion. Sales of iPhones more than doubled to $102 billion.

“Apple is just unbelievably killing it,” said Dan Ernst, an analyst at Hudson Square Research in New York. “A good leader like Cook builds a team around him that can do the job.”

Perfectly said. Tim Cook is the consummate team player, incredibly well organized, and unselfish to boot.

On a side note, I did not embed the link in the headline because the embedded video, which really adds nothing to the story, is set to autoplay. AutoPlay has its place, but not on a news story. My 2 cents.

Follow the link to see a gallery of images. Interesting palette of colors. I wonder if they’ll make their way to the mainstream product line.

April 17, 2015

Don Henley will not take it easy when there’s a product being sold that references both his name and career with The Eagles, and now everyone knows: After filing a lawsuit against a Wisconsin clothing company that emailed an ad telling customers to “don a henley and take it easy” last October, the two sides have settled the case, with the company issuing an apology to both Henley and his fans for trying to be too clever.

I really like Duluth Trading Co. and their ads, but they did go too far this time.

Wall Street Journal:

Apple Inc. is planning to launch its mobile payments service in Canada this fall, marking the start of its international expansion of Apple Pay, according to people familiar with the matter.

The company is in negotiations with Canada’s six biggest banks about a potential November launch of the service which would enable mobile payments for both credit and debit cards using iPhones and the forthcoming Apple Watch, those people said.

From the download/knowledge base page:

The OS X Yosemite 10.10.3 Supplemental Update fixes a video driver issue that may prevent your Mac from starting up when running certain apps that capture video.

My hope is that this somehow fixes a problem I’ve been having with Safari ever since I installed the 10.10.3 update. Probably a stretch, but I can dream, can’t I?