March 9, 2020

Apple Support:

Using a 70 percent isopropyl alcohol wipe or Clorox Disinfecting Wipes, you may gently wipe the hard, nonporous surfaces of your Apple product, such as the display, keyboard, or other exterior surfaces. Don’t use bleach. Avoid getting moisture in any opening, and don’t submerge your Apple product in any cleaning agents. Don’t use on fabric or leather surfaces.

This is an updated support article from Apple but I’ve always used Clorox Wipes on my water-resistant iPhones.

Mashable:

Pirating content is making a comeback (again) thanks to the streaming wars.

Given the influx of streaming services created to compete with Netflix, such as Disney+, Apple TV Plus, and Peacock, people are now turning back to torrenting their favorite shows instead of paying multiple subscription fees.

All the Streams claims to be a “private radio for streaming,” and does work as such. You can “turn the dial” and go to channels of the main streaming services, from Hulu to Netflix to Amazon Prime. Like actual pirate radio, you cannot choose what’s playing — you just sit back and enjoy.

Pirating content may be popular again, but it’s still not legal.

This site will get shut down in 3….2….1….

CNET:

Passwords suck.

They’re hard to remember, hackers exploit their weaknesses and fixes often bring their own problems. Dashlane, LastPass, 1Password and other password managers generate strong and unique passwords for every account you have, but the software is complex. Services from Google, Facebook and Apple allow you to use your passwords for their services at other sites, but you have to give them even more power over your life online. Two-factor authentication, which requires a second passcode sent by text message or retrieved from a special app each time you log in, boosts security dramatically but can still be defeated.

A big change, however, could eliminate passwords altogether. The technology, called FIDO, overhauls the log-in process, combining your phone; face and fingerprint recognition; and new gadgets called hardware security keys. If it delivers on its promise, FIDO will make cringeworthy passwords like “123456” relics of a bygone age.

“A password is something you know. A device is something you have. Biometrics is something you are,” said Stephen Cox, chief security architect of SecureAuth. “We’re moving to something you have and something you are.”

It’s only a matter of time before FIDO happens but it won’t be a quick or easy fix.

Eater:

In the early days at Mei Mei, success was measured by having enough dumplings to get through the day and confirming that the bank account wasn’t empty. Today, every single staff member, from the dishwasher to the line cook, can interpret and speak to the restaurant’s entire profit-and-loss statement because, for two years now, Mei Mei has been opening its books to its staff.

This means all staff are able to see every line item associated with money coming in the door and all of the expenses the restaurant takes on — from paying its employees to keeping the lights on. Not only that, each employee actually plays a hand in working to move the bottom line, working on teams tasked with the goal of reducing costs and increasing profits for the business. If the team wants to research and vet new vendors, they have that power. If they want to change the menu prices for a fixed period of time, they’re able to do that too.

Now, it’s no longer enough for Li to share the nitty-gritty financial info with her team. She wants the public to understand it, too.

Really interesting article, whether enjoy Denver food or whether you want to run a restaurant or not.

MacStories:

NetNewsWire, which was relaunched on the Mac last August, is now available on iOS and iPadOS. Like its Mac counterpart, the iOS and iPadOS version is built on a foundation of fast syncing and sensible, bug-free design. As with any 1.0 app, there are additional features and refinements I hope to see in future releases. Unlike most 1.0 releases, though, you won’t find lots of rough edges and bugs. NetNewsWire is ready to be your primary RSS client today.

One of the strengths of NetNewsWire is that if you’ve used the Mac app, the iOS and iPadOS version is immediately familiar, while also feeling right at home on an iPhone or iPad. I wish I could say the same about most apps, but I can’t. Whether it’s an iOS or iPadOS app moving to the Mac or the other direction, too often the core experience of an app is replicated without accounting for the unique qualities of the platform to which it’s being added.

That isn’t the case with NetNewsWire. The app benefits from the same careful attention to detail that the Mac app does, but adapted for the iOS/iPadOS environment.

While reports of its death are greatly exaggerated, RSS isn’t a particularly popular piece of tech. But NetNewsWire is well done and well thought out. If you need a full-featured RSS reader on the Mac or your iOS device, you won’t find a better one than NetNewsWire.

Monday Note:

Today’s lighter fare will be another go at a now well-aged rumor — or prediction — that Apple’s home-grown ARM processors will replace x86 Intel chips as the main CPU of our Macs, a prophecy that was reinvigorated last week when notorious and prolific analyst Ming-Chi Kuo added a timeline to the prediction: Apple will make the move in the next 12 to 18 months.

This isn’t wild speculation. The iPhone and iPad have run on Apple-designed ARM chips since birth, and while early entries into the Axx line were underpowered, the latest chips created by Apple’s silicon design teams have yielded laptop- or even desktop-class performance. Couple that with Apple’s well-established drive towards vertical integration and control over its products’ key technologies, and the “rumor” seems inevitable.

Last year, I concluded that a move to the ARM processor created two serious challenges for the Macintosh line, two forks in the product line.

I’m not really much of a “where there’s smoke, there’s fire” kind of guy so I ignore most of the rumours but this switch seems inevitable.

Reuters:

Apple sold fewer than half a million iPhones in China in February, government data showed on Monday, as the coronavirus outbreak halved demand for smartphones.

China placed curbs on travel and asked residents to avoid public places in late January, just ahead of the Lunar New Year festival, a major gift-giving holiday. Those restrictions stayed largely in place through most of February.

In total, mobile phone brands sold a total of 6.34 million devices in February in China, down 54.7% from 14 million in the same month last year, data from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology showed (CAICT).

This will be the same story for other smartphone vendors as well as just about any sector that relies on China for sales.

Laptop Mag:

“Uh huh, sure!” we say sarcastically when a laptop brand boasts about its product’s “spectacular” battery life. Forgive us at Laptop Mag for being skeptics — if you’ve been testing a crapload of laptops that rarely lived up to their battery life hype, you’d be a cynic, too.

Let’s start with some good news! Not all laptop brands have been spewing tall tales about their products’ battery life. Apple and Microsoft are the top two companies that made battery life claims that were closest to our real-world test results.

Apple knocked it out the park with an impressive eight out of nine products that matched our battery life results; in other words, 88% fell within our permitted 2.5-hour window. In some cases, our battery life results surpassed Apple’s advertised battery life claims.

Good news for Mac laptop users.

Apple Support:

Apple has determined that, under certain circumstances, the screen on a limited number of iPad Air (3rd generation) devices may go blank permanently. A brief flicker or flash may appear before the screen goes blank.

Affected devices were manufactured between March 2019 and October 2019. Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider will service eligible devices, free of charge.

Note: No other iPad models are part of this program.

This program is very specific to these iPads only but if you’re affected, Apple has you covered.

Bloomberg:

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook offered employees at most of its global offices the ability to work from home and called the coronavirus outbreak an “unprecedented event” and a “challenging moment.” IF you want to learn more on how to make your employees happy during difficult times, there are new team building ideas that have been tested and proven to work great, for example you can Book an escape room game and make corporate team building fun and exciting again. Fun activities that help people see each other in a different light allow them to connect in a different setting.

Cook told employees at several global offices to “please feel free to work remotely if your job allows” for the week of March 9 to 13, according to a memo Cook sent that was obtained by Bloomberg News. That extends the company’s move last Friday to encourage employees in California and Seattle to work remotely. In addition, a new type of remote work is emerging that offers workers the flexibility they value while benefiting businesses too—asynchronous work. If you want to learn more about asynchronous work, you might want to visit sites like https://rock.so/blog/asynchronous-work/ to learn more.

Apple is implementing “new efforts to maximize interpersonal space and continuing, enhanced deep cleanings,” according to the memo. This includes reducing human density and occupancy at Apple classes and Genius Bar appointments at stores.

Things are going to get worse before they get better. This all but ensures Apple will cancel WWDC. It’s just a matter of time before they make the announcement.

March 8, 2020

Billboard:

Apple Music has tapped Lady Gaga to help celebrate International Women’s Day on Sunday (March 8).

As the music streaming service’s new Artist in Residence, Gaga has curated an exclusive playlist, titled Women of Choice, featuring her new single “Stupid Love,” along with music by St. Vincent, Rosalia, Grimes, Charli XCX and HAIM, among others.

Apple Music will also feature artist-curated playlists by Taylor Swift (Playlists by ME!), Meghan Trainor (Who Runs the World), Kehlani (#OnRepeat), Hailee Steinfeld (Heartbreak Pop) and others.

And check out Apple’s home page today.

March 7, 2020

Fast Company:

That’s Neil deGrasse Tyson’s exact MO. He appears, on Twitter at least, to live exclusively for yucking your yum. Each new day to him is a challenge to find the most innocuous thing that people frivolously enjoy, and “debunk” it with straight talk. He’s just obsessed with letting you know that everything that has ever been said about the moon in pop culture is factually inaccurate. I would say that the sight of anyone enjoying themselves whatsoever is like Neil deGrasse Tyson’s bat signal, but that would probably only lead to Tyson somehow appearing before me to explain why the bat signal is impossible, because of the moon.

IMO, Neil deGrasse Tyson is the very definition of the word “annoying.”

BuzzFeed News:

The 2020 South by Southwest conference and festivals have been canceled amid fears of the growing American outbreak of the coronavirus. Many large companies had already pulled out of the conference, including Netflix, Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Twitter.

Austin city officials said in a press conference, “this is a medical and data-driven decision.”

SXSW organizers said in a tweet they were “devastated.”

The SXSW organizers should have made this decision on their own and not been “forced” into it by city officials. Your move, Apple.

March 6, 2020

The Verge:

Looking for a hybrid vehicle to help cut down on your carbon footprint? Can I suggest the new 1,700-horsepower Koenigsegg Gemera?

Their latest creation, the Gemera, takes the absurdity to another level. And while, yes, it’s not going to make the same kind of dent in transportation emissions as, say, a Toyota Rav4 Hybrid, or a Chevy Volt, or any all-electric vehicle, it’s a fascinating piece of modern automotive technology.

The benefits of this wild hybrid powertrain are multifold. For one thing, Koenigsegg says the single gear direct drive setup allows the car to achieve its incredible performance with higher efficiency and less weight than “any other hybrid solution.” The result is a car that can go up to 1,000 kilometers (621 miles) before needing to recharge or refuel, and also go from 0 to 100 kilometers per hour (62mph) in a brain-liquefying 1.9 seconds.

There will come a day when automakers will stop making insane supercars but today is not that day.

The Dalrymple Report: WWDC, iPhone and Apple Music

Coronavirus is affecting people around the world, but what does it mean for WWDC? Dave and I also talk about the possible affects on iPhone production, as well as switching Apple Music to other countries.

Subscribe to this podcast

Apple TV+ “Home Before Dark” official trailer

Trailer looks good. The 10-part series has the potential to be “too kid-friendly” but it’s an interesting plotline.

Engadget:

Sonos has been under fire lately for the way it has handled a few decisions around its oldest products. Last fall, the company introduced a “trade up” program — if you owned one of Sonos’ oldest products, you could send it in to the company and get 30 percent off new gear. However, to get the discount, you had to put your old products in “recycle mode,” a setting that would permanently make them unable to connect to a network or work with other Sonos gear.

Today, the company is reversing course. A Sonos spokesperson confirmed that the Trade Up program will continue, but recycling mode is no more.

That said, it’s worth noting that Sonos hasn’t changed its plans to stop updating those legacy products come May. As a reminder, they’ll work as they do now but won’t receive new features or software updates going forward.

Another example of a PR disaster that shouldn’t have happened.

TechHive:

The TV industry is second to none when it comes to misleading, obscure, hyperbolic, and useless terminology and specifications. Manufacturers try to baffle you with bull… Err, bedazzle you with numbers and fancy names. Case in point: it’s an industry that can keep a straight face while telling you that 3840 horizontal pixels equals 4K horizontal pixels (4K equals 4096, but who’s counting?)

Don’t worry, we’re here to help with no-hype, no-frills, plain-language (or as close as we can get) definitions of the terms and specs you’ll encounter when you go shopping for your new TV. We’ll also present some basic advice that will have you schooling your local big-box store pro in no time.

There are few things in tech more frustrating than trying to compare tech specs of big-screen TVs. This article might help make sense of some of the terms used by manufacturers.

Macworld:

Tot (or Tot Pocket as it’s called on iOS)—a new, purposely limited notetaking app for iOS and macOS—warrants your attention. Not only does it introduce more than one fresh idea, but it also solves a specific and common digital notetaking problem.

Most notetaking apps let you create an unlimited amount of documents, but Tot only lets you choose between seven different sheets within the same interface. This is especially satisfying on the iPhone, as a little haptic tap accompanies each swipe. You have to click on the dots representing each document on the Mac, but the interface looks exactly the same and the automatic syncing takes a couple of seconds at most.

Tot impresses me because it lets you edit in both Markdown and rich text through a simple toggle at the bottom of the interface, and I like that it usually converts copied rich text snippets into Markdown when you copy and paste them from other documents and sites (aside from font and font size). For that matter, you don’t have to keep each of the seven files in either rich text or Markdown. Tot remembers the settings, and it’ll even maintain them when you switch from an iPhone to a Mac or vice versa.

Tot is an interesting app with an even more interesting pricing model – it’s free on macOS but $20 on iOS. I wish the nice folks at Iconfactory much success with this app.

CNBC:

Apple is cracking down on apps related to the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak that aren’t from recognized institutions like governments or hospitals, iPhone developers told CNBC.

Apple has been specifically evaluating coronavirus apps to prevent the spread of misinformation. It looks at both where the health data comes from and whether the developers represent organizations that users can trust to publish accurate data, like governments or health-focused organizations, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The restriction appears to be working, as search results show few apps about the outbreak and no obvious spam. But it could also reduce the availability of software that would enable iPhone users to track the outbreak, and raise fairness questions about who is allowed to develop apps for iPhones.

Some will say Apple (and Google) are being too heavyhanded on this issue but with so much false information and so many sleazy people trying to take advantage of it, it’s prudent for the companies to take this action.

BoingBoing:

When a plane is in trouble, the pilots dump all its fuel before making an emergency landing. This is controversial; though fuel usually dissipates before reaching ground, it’s a dangerous pollutant all the same and sometimes it gets dumped close enough to humans that it puts them at risk.

This 1984 film, of a test of jet fuel formulated to resist igniting, shows why pilots dump it. NASA and the FAA loaded a retired training jet with test dummies, then remote-piloted it to a crash landing in the Mojave desert. It comes down rough but stays in one piece as it plows through earthworks and obstacles. If it were out of gas, chances of everyone surviving would be good. But with a full tank?

Spoiler: the fuel ignites.

I’d seen the end of this video many times but this is the first time I’ve read about the whys of it or seen what came before the fireball.

March 5, 2020

The Verge:

Companies based in Santa Clara County, California — which includes Cupertino, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and San Jose — should avoid travel and postpone or cancel mass gatherings, the county recommended on Thursday. The recommendations come after six new cases of the novel coronavirus have been identified, bringing the total number of people confirmed to have the disease to 20.

Other guidance from the county includes minimizing the number of people “working within arm’s length of one another,” urging people to stay home if they’re sick, and spacing out start and end times of the workday for employees. People at higher risk for serious illness — those who are over 50 or have another underlying health condition — should stay home.

The county recommendations are an attempt to slow the spread of the new coronavirus by limiting in-person contact.

As I said on Wednesday night’s Your Mac Life show, Apple should just announce the cancellation/postponement of WWDC now. It’s obvious that they are going to do it eventually. Sooner rather than later is best – release all of those people from the stress of not just planning the trip but also of having to deal with this issue.

“Insert Coin” – Midway Games documentary trailer

IGN:

The oral history of a team of geeks and misfits in the back of a Chicago factory creating the biggest video games (Mortal Kombat, NBA JAM, and others) of all time.

You may have to be “of a certain age” to enjoy this trailer but, if you are, prepare to be hit by a tsunami of nostalgia for your misspent youth and remember how many literal thousands of dollars many of us pumped into these machines. I want to know – where the hell did I get all that money?

Kirk McElhearn:

Major events continue to be cancelled around the world, due to the Covid-19 coronavirus outbreak.

The first major event was the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, scheduled to be held in late February. Since then, Google and Facebook announced the cancellation of their developer conferences, and other smaller events have been cancelled as well. Yesterday, the London Book Fair was cancelled. And today, the news says that both Apple and Netflix have pulled out of SXSW, the annual everything festival in Austin, Texas, due to start in about a week.

And:

So what if Apple does delay the iPhone 12? I’ve long felt that the annual upgrade cycle for mobile phones is artificial and unnecessary. In the early days, there were big changes from model to model, but now we see tiny incremental changes, mostly affecting the devices’ cameras. What if Apple decided to move to a two-year cycle, starting with the next model?

Makes me wonder if coronavirus is going to change some basic behaviors. Simple things, like the normalcy of shaking hands. More complex things, like building a conference with the goal of putting thousands of people into the same room, and into the same room with key company personnel.

And, as Kirk points out, might coronavirus change events that depend on precise timing, as the yearly rollout of new iPhones depends on the stability and timing of the worldwide supply chain.

Kirsten Korosec, TechCrunch:

An arbitration panel ruled in December that Levandowski and Lior Ron had engaged in unfair competition and breached their contract with Google when they left the company to start a rival autonomous vehicle company focused on trucking, called Otto.

And:

Ron settled last month with Google for $9.7 million. However, Levandowski, had disputed the ruling.

Wow. In hindsight, that seems a mind-bogglingly poor decision. Levandowski has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Apple honors International Women’s Day with Behind the Mac video

The video, embedded below, features the women listed below, all backed by Beyoncé’s ***Flawless (feat. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie):

  • 00:01 — Malala Yousafzai: The youngest Nobel laureate for her work on girls’ education.
  • 00:02 — Ava Duvernay: Director known for “Selma” and “When They See Us.”
  • 00:04 — Marie Kondo: Tidying expert, bestselling author and Emmy-nominated television star.
  • 00:07 — Greta Gerwig: Director known for “Lady Bird” and “Little Women.”
  • 00:09 — Gloria Steinem: Women’s rights activist who helped start second-wave feminism.
  • 00:11 — Lady Gaga: GRAMMY®️ & Oscar winning artist and founder of the Born This Way foundation.
  • 00:13 — Megan Rapinoe and Shannon Boxx: World Cup champions fighting for equal pay.
  • 00:15 — Olivia Wilde: Actor and director known for her feature debut “Booksmart.”
  • 00:17 — Diane von Furstenberg: Fashion designer and founder of the DVF Awards.
  • 00:19 — Elizabeth Banks: Actor and director of “Pitch Perfect 2” and “Charlie’s Angels.”
  • 00:21 — Alicia Keys: GRAMMY®️ winning artist, touching hearts and inspiring the world through her art.
  • 00:23 — Lilly Singh: The first woman to host a network late-night talk show in 30 years.
  • 00:25 — Audrey Gelman: C.E.O and first visibly pregnant woman featured on a business magazine cover.
  • 00:27 — Black Mamba: South Africa’s women-run anti-poaching unit.
  • 00:30 — Victoria Monét: On-the-rise artist and GRAMMY®️ nominee, known for her hit songwriting.
  • 00:32 — Tarana Burke: Founder of The ‘me too.’ Movement.
  • 00:34 — DJ Switch: A 12-year-old DJ and founder of the DJ Switch Foundation for education.

Buried in the Flixed study of the major streaming services is a chart titled, “How much do critics and audiences like what’s on?” If you want to look at the chart, follow the headline link and scroll about 3/4 of the way down.

The chart shows average Rotten Tomatoes scores across each services’ original content (which is all of Apple TV+, obviously).

Amazingly, the highest average Rotten Tomatoes audience rating belongs to Apple TV+, at 87%. At the same time, Apple TV+ owns the lowest average critic score, at 69%.

Draw your own conclusions here, but if I was running Apple TV+, I’d be more concerned with what the audience thinks, not so much what the critics think. And I’d weave that top audience average score into my marketing.

Kayvon Beykpour, Product Lead at Twitter (and founder of Periscope):

The test is being run in Brazil and appears to be an experiment. Meaning, if Fleets do make their way to the mainstream, the form and process might be quite different.

As is, the value proposition doesn’t click for me. A big part of Twitter is the interaction, the follows, replies, retweets, likes and dislikes. The Twitter model tends to be a stream of consciousness, where your action is scroll, read, scroll, read.

With Fleets, it sounds like you have to tap out of that model and seek them out. In effect, you have to leave your feed to move to a non-interactive world.

And with the Snapchat-like vanishing tweet model, I worry that people will be emboldened to say some pretty terrible things, then vanish into the void, paying zero social cost for their misdeeds. And I worry that this system will be ripe for misadventure, with money poured into bots streaming lies, with the goal of disrupting elections and worse.

Granted, it’s not a new concept, so there’s the argument that this is just Twitter keeping up with Snapchat, Facebook et al. But I feel we should be moving towards solving the bot/misinformation problem, not expanding their reach.

March 4, 2020

TidBITS:

Black Ink is a Mac-based crossword puzzle app from Red Sweater Software. It gives you access to any crossword puzzle using the Across Lite format (which typically has a .puz extension). The default sources it offers include the Wall Street Journal crossword, Chronicle of Higher Education, New York Times Premium Crossword, and American Values Club.

Black Ink offers many useful features for the crossword aficionado. The first of these is the capability to check the puzzle clue answer either at the letter, word, or puzzle level (look in Solution > Check). The second notably helpful feature is Reveal (Solution > Reveal).

Overall, Black Ink is easy to use and a good fit for any puzzler from beginner to advanced, thanks in large part to its Reveal feature. If you already have a New York Times subscription, it’s a nice way to do the crossword puzzle digitally on your Mac.

My only knock on this is that it is Mac only. I’d love to be able to do these crosswords on my iPad.

CNET:

After March 31, a bunch of amateur alien hunters will regain some personal computing power. The Berkeley SETI Research Center announced Monday that SETI@home, the two-decades-old crowdsourcing effort to hunt for signs of E.T. in radio telescope data using internet-connected computers, is shutting down at the end of the month.

The home-based search for extraterrestrial intelligence project was launched from University of California, Berkeley, back in 1999 — when the internet was still a relatively new thing to many people and the term crowdsourcing had not yet been coined.

SETI@home works a little bit like bitcoin mining: Volunteers install a free computer program that downloads and crunches data in the background around the clock. The difference being that there is no currency produced as a reward, except for the satisfaction of helping your fellow humans navigate the vast cosmos, in a way.

Now the SETI@home team says it’s time to shut the whole thing down and focus on compiling the results from the project.

In the early days of the internet, I was more than happy to lend my “extra” computing power to this project.