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Tom Briant

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Saturday, December 29, 2018

Three End-Of Year Tips to make 2019 Easier

One, get a timer. 

 

Whether you use the timer on your phone, a Website (https://onlineclock.net) or pick up one at the store, a timer can make life easier in 2019. 

 

You need a timer to make sure you don’t play Fortnite while others fume in the laundry room over your taking the last good dryer.

 

You need a timer to time the food you’re cooking. Yes, stop going to fast-food joints and cook your own food this year. 

 

For starters, go here to the most profane and hilarious cookbook I have ever read. Warren’s sister wrote this for him. Read it here or download it in several formats. Cook and laugh. 

 

 

 

Two, how to make a simple template for your Mac’s documents you use over and over again.

 

This tip is not new. Apple has included this feature since way back in the Classic OS days. Yet people keep reinventing the wheel when they need a new document only varying slightly from many previous documents. 

 

Here’s the deal:

 

Select a document you want to recycle in the Finder. Click on it once.

 

1 Select and highlight the document

 

Right-click or control-click on the document to bring up the Information Panel.

 

2 Choose Get Info

 

Click to put a checkmark in the Stationary Pad checkbox. 

 

3 Stationary Pad

 

Click in the Stationary Pad checkbox. You’ve created a simple template for future documents.

 

4 Stationary Pad checked

 

Now when you click on this document, you’ll get a duplicate of it opening in the application using this document.

 

You can use it for letters you send out with your name and address and contact information already in place.

 

You can use it for computer coding documents you use over and over again with only a change to one or two variables. 

 

You can use this with pictures, too. Any document you want to edit on your Mac can use this technique.

 

Now many apps already come with their own template capability. You can include variables, such as using a mailing database to insert names and addresses from that list. 

 

The time and date are other variables your app’s templates could insert that this simple Stationary Pad technique won’t do.

 

 

Having said that, you now possess a simple technique from Apple for making templates for simple apps such as Text-Edit and Preview. 

 

Third, get a second display

 

Macs, at least since the start of the Intel era in 2006, have come with a second display port. 

 

Make use of it for your profit and amusement. 

 

You can use your big screen TV or an iPad as that second monitor. You can also buy a cheap used monitor.

 

For the big screen TV, you need an adaptor cable. You’ll need a cable that fits into the Mac’s second display port on one end and into your big TV’s second HDMI port on the other. 

 

For the iPad with the Duet Display, you’ll need your iPad’s USB to the iPad’s connector. Recent iPads use the Lightning connector, which are easy to find and purchase.

 

If you use an older iPad, it came with a 30-pin to USB cable. You will have trouble finding these on the market, so check your junk drawers. 

 

Now you can use a Wi-Fi connections between your iPad and your Mac. Avatron’s AirDisplay uses the Wi-Fi connection. 

 

If you want to display video on your iPad, you’ll want the hardwired connection used by 

Duet Display

 

I’ve used both. They take a little fiddling to make the connection between Mac and iPad. 

 

 

You want to make it simple? Just get a second monitor, put it where it’s convenient and plug in the correct cable and adaptors. 

 

Tip: If you want to buy a cheap monitor, go here to PCLiquidations. They have used LCD monitors. They may have some missing pixels or a scratch on the bezel, but you can save some dollars. 

 

Come here to Monoprice for the right cables

 

 

That’s my 3 tips for years end to make life better.

 

Happy New Year!

 

Tom Briant

Editor, MacValley Blog

Monday, December 10, 2018

How to Add a Windows-Style Start Menu to your Dock for FREE!

Many of us work on Windows computers elsewhere. I use one at work. 

We grow used to the convenience of the Start Menu in the lower left-hand corner. It lists all the apps we need in one place. 

What if you could put a Start Menu in your Dock? What if you could do it for free? Follow me then...

 

Step 1: Open up the Finder to the root (bottom) of your boot drive.

 

 

1 the five folders at the base of my

 

At the bottom or root level of my own hard drive, called High_Sierra, I have 5 folders.

 

  • Applications
  • Library
  • Opt
  • System
  • Users

 

Step #2: Click on the Applications folder and drag it down to the right side of the Dock.

 

2 Drag the Applications folder to the right side of the dock

 

 

You ‘ll notice several folders on the right-hand side. In the middle of those folders, you’ll see an icon looking like a lock. That’s the icon of the first app in my Applications folder, 1Password.

Note the settings revealed when you right-click on the icon:

 

  • Sort by Name
  • Display as Stack
  • View Content as Automatic

3 how the Start Menu looks at first

 

Now to change it to a list of apps with the branded Applications folder in the Dock, do the following:

 

  • Sort by Name
  • Display as Folder
  • View content as List

4 How to set up the Start Menu as I did

 

 

 

Here’s how my Start Menu looks when I click on it:

 

 5 What the Start Menu looks like

 

Summary:

 

With this procedure, you get a Start Menu in your Dock. Other apps, some free and some paid, offer more options for the Start Menu. 

For a free option, look into Devon Technologies’ XMenu, available here. You will need to scroll down the list of great freeware they provide to see X-Menu.

For a paid option, look into Brawer Software’s uBar 4. It’s about $30, but gives you a full-blown Start Menu on the left-hand side. It seemingly replaces the Dock.

Well, it shoves the Dock over to the right-side of the desktop and puts it on auto-hide. 

Don’t steal it! The developer has a neat way of combatting piracy. The app’s text morphs into Klingon if you use a bad password.

 

Tom Briant

Editor, MacValley Blog

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tom's observations on the current state of the Mac market 2018

The Mac lineup now comes with lots of power from the Mac mini to the iMac Pro. It will cost you to buy a Mac. 

 

Apple now focuses on professionals, what I call the “I can deduct this on my taxes!” market. If you want to buy a Mac or an iPhone, you’ll pay for it.

 

Some writers accuse Apple of “greed.” I won’t excuse them. They have touched the heights of a trillion dollars in stock market value. They won’t go back to a mere $100 million in valuation voluntarily. They value the cheers from Wall Street more than a good review in Macworld or MacFormat (UK). 

 

My strategy is to use my Mac mini until it won’t run the software I need. This especially applies to the operating system. If the software you need won’t run on your current Mac’s operating system, then it’s time to start pricing replacements. 

 

My first piece of advice for those seeking a new Mac is this: DON’T BUY OFF THE SHELF AT THE MAC STORE IN THE MALL! Go to Appleinsider.com and MacRumors.com, which list the latest deals. If you hold your enthusiasm in check, you can save substantial sums with mail order. 

 

Just today, Fry’s Electronics listed the base model Mac mini at $747 instead of the MSRP of $799. Exercise some patience. You can find a good deal if you look for it.

 

Of course, Apple has us over the barrel when it comes to adding additional storage and memory. My sympathies. Just remember, you want to purchase a Mac for several years. I bought my Mac mini in 2012 with OS X 10.7. Now it’s nearly 7 years later with macOS 10.13. I’ve recouped my payment.

 

I’ll keep writing tips and techniques for getting more from a Mac. Your Mac has a lot of secrets hidden in the operating system. It’s my job to bring them to you. 

 

Tip #1: Make backups with Time Machine if you run OS X 10.5 or above. Use Super-Duper if you run OS X 10.4 or below. That’s not original advice by any means. It will save you from the heartache of a dead hard drive/SSD and the loss of files you spent years creating or just saving. 

 

Tip #2: Go back to Tip #1. 

 

Haven’t got a back up drive? The following retail stores have them: Costco (near the big screen TVs), Best Buy, Frys, Staples, Office Depot, Office Max. 

 

Want an even better deal? Head for Amazon and eBay and Newegg and Tiger Direct. 

 

But Do It! 

 

Tom Briant

Editor, MacValley Blog

 

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Holiday Tips for us

Hi MacValley Blog readers:

With the arrival of Halloween and a return to normal standard time (whatever that is), I should start passing out tips for the holidays.

Write down your Wi-Fi password and put it into your cell phone’s notes application right now. That way, you won’t get caught in your pajamas, or whatever you wear to bed, on some holiday morning frantically looking for the Wi-Fi router password!

Set up a separate table for the holiday food and drink. Do Not put a laptop on the same table as a mimosa, eggnog, or any other liquid. I recently tripped over a cord, spilled a drink and shorted out the display in a laptop. So, learn from my mistake!

Get a supply of those moist towelettes to wipe up spills. Get a can of compressed air to blow off the dust. 

If you have the time, spend some time cleaning up your computer desk. I can tell you it’s probably gross looking. 

Don’t use Windex or any other glass cleaning product to clean an LCD screen. This applies to your big screen TV or a laptop or tablet. No, no, no! Get an LCD cleaning kit. They’re in the checkout lane at Frys, Best Buy and at Costco in the jumbo pack.

What can you get for someone who’s obsessed with any sort of computers?

A good set of headphones, because you probably don’t want to hear the noise from a video game or YouTube video on any given holiday morning. I recently ordered a set of Sony MDR-7506 headphones from Amazon and I love them. 

An extra monitor in case the laptop’s display goes out. You want one or more of the following connections: (1) VGA, which is compatible with computers going back to the early 1990s; (2) HDMI, which means you can plug a video game console into it; (3) Displayport, which works with many current computers. 

No, you don’t need to buy the 34” curved 4K gaming monitor. I’m assuming the display goes blank when they start writing their term papers at 3:00 AM the morning before they are due. A 23” 1920 x1080 display for $120 is fine. 

An extra wired Windows keyboard and mouse. At some point, your computer nerd will need an extra keyboard and mouse at an inconvenient time. They’ll remember you fondly if you gave them a box with a spare set of them. Don’t go super-fancy, Amazon Basic is fine for these emergencies.

If your video gamer tells you they’d really like a $800-dollar video card, tell them that Starbucks is always hiring. Nothing like some impetus to get them out of the house!

A Brother P-Touch labeler. Lots of stuff that looks the same and needs labelling. A God-send! (And don’t forget extra batteries!)

A pack of Post-it/Sticky notes. Get these at Costco or Staples or Office Depot for each member of the family.

A blister pack of Sharpie pens. You need these to label CDs and DVDs that they create in their computers.  If they don’t know what CDs and DVDs are, you can use these with the Sticky notes.

Cans of compressed air. Always handy for cleaning stuff out of those hard to reach corners.

If it’s Christmas morning and you can’t think of anything, just go get an Amazon gift card for them at the nearest store. They can buy digital music, computer mice, and a Star-Wars themed coffee pot. 

Stuff not to buy for the holidays:

No Tape cassettes. If they own a cassette tape recorder, as I do, they already have the cassettes.

No Floppy disks in any size. They are too destructible. Buy a 5-pack of USB flash drives instead.

No Holiday music in any form. Let them get this on their own! It’ll go on sale after the holidays.  Unless you’ve got the original manuscript of White Christmas autographed by Irving Berlin, holiday music has come out of every musical orifice imaginable. 

What are my holiday plans?

I plan to read David Sedaris’s Holidays on Ice while drinking Margaritas and listening to Chopin. As far as I know, Chopin never wrote any holiday music or drank any margaritas

As for margaritas at 8:00 am, well, it’s got to be raining somewhere!

If you don’t want to read David’s recollections of working as an elf at Macy’s, read A Christmas Carol or watch A Charlie Brown Christmas.  Or read the Christmas source code and open a New Testament.

 

As for that statement about “Christmas source code,” no, I don’t include any rants against gay people, women, people of other faiths, and people seeking shelter from oppression added waaay after the Gospels. I mean peace and good will toward ALL. Sit down and have a piece of the holiday goodies. Yes, the muffins are gluten-free! And we have eggnog made with rice milk over there in the crockpot. 

Now off to the sales!

 

Tom Briant

Editor, MacValley Blog

Sunday, October 21, 2018

5 Simple Password Tips to keep the evildoers at bay

When dealing with computer clients, I deal with people who don’t read the instructions or follow rules. They don’t like Apple’s storing their passwords up in iCloud.

 

They refuse to set up their iCloud accounts to back up their Apple Mail app passwords. They’re afraid of “hackers”. Hackers from Romania are no smarter than people from Nebraska. Just change your password every 30 days.

 

Follow the xkcd cartoon to set up tough passwords you can remember and the Romanians can’t crack in less than 100 years.

 

1 xkcd password tips

 

 

 

Make regular backups of your computer. Hey, just plug a USB hard drive of sufficient capacity into the computer, set up Time Machine, and let it function.

 

 

Joan, Doris, Do Not Unplug the Drive from the Computer! Let it continue to make backups.

 

As an additional backup, use Super-Duper or Carbon Copy Cloner to make a clone of your Mac on an external drive. Set it up to run when you leave in the morning for work or school. By the time you come home, the app will create or refresh the clone. In my case, I set Super-Duper to shut down the computer to alert me the clone is done.

 

 

If you read your mail from a Web Browser such as Firefox or Chrome, you can use the internal password manager or an external one. In addition, you can set up a cloud account in Firefox and Chrome to save your passwords. If you set up Firefox and Chrome on another computer, no matter the operating system, you can synchronize your passwords.

I repeat, if you fear hacking by Russians, Chinese or Romanians; then you can make it harder for them with these simple steps:

 

1. Change your password every 30 days. Set a reminder in your calendar app to remind you to change them.

2. Follow the rules in the xkcd cartoon on setting up passwords that are tough to crack but easy for your to remember. 

3. Your laziness in maintaining passwords is the hacker’s secret weapon. Change them regularly, like underwear

4. Don’t use passwords such as “password” or “123456”. That’s how the Russians easily broke into the Democratic National Committee’s databases. Make them sweat!

5. Don’t use passwords based on publicly known information about you. These include your birthday, your mother’s name, your high school and your graduation date. Anything that Facebook has, assume the KGB has, too.

 

I can’t guarantee you’ll never get hacked. But you’ll make it much more difficult to get hacked by following those steps.

 

Tom Briant

Editor, MacValley Blog

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, October 14, 2018

Senior Correspondent Arnold Woodworth's Weekly Web Roundup for Sunday, October 14, 2018

 

Apple Says iOS 12 is Now Installed on 53% of Active Devices From Last Four Years
 
Apple's iOS 12 operating system, released on September 17, is now installed on 53 percent of active devices introduced in the last four years.
 
 
 
 
The first wave of reviews of Apple's latest iPhone XS and XS Max are in, and they're widely favorable. 

Of note, it seems the major improvement can be found in the camera
 
It's clear from the initial reviews that the cameras on the iPhone XS and XS Max impressed the most.
 
 
 
 
Apple quietly killed off a bunch of older iPhone and Apple Watch models — here are the products that are gone forever
 
   Apple Watch Series 1
 
   Apple Watch Edition
 
   iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus
 
   iPhone SE

   iPhone X

 
 
 
There's a good working theory about why Apple discontinued the iPhone X, the best phone it's ever made, only a year after announcing it
 
Here's the theory: If Apple followed its protocol and offered the $999 iPhone XS as well as a phone that is almost exactly the same but $100 cheaper, it would most likely confuse customers and cannibalize sales.
 
 
 
 
I can’t even use my AirPods anymore without this $12 accessory
 
AirPods have a design that is absolutely brilliant… for the most part. The compact size and great charging case are awesome, but the smooth plastic tips are decidedly not awesome since they never stay snug in your ears. If you want to solve that problem in about 2 seconds, check out the EarBuddyz 2.0 Ear Hooks and Covers for Apple AirPods. They fit over the AirPods perfectly and the silicone material keeps them nice and snug in your ears. Definitely check them out if you want to experience the sound in your AirPods the way it’s meant to me heard.
 
 
 
 
7 of the best headphones for the iPhone 7

 
 
 
2018 iPad Pro details revealed
 
 
 
 
Video:
iPhone XS Max is durable as it is expensive
 
As much as Zach Nelson might hate to admit it, the iPhone XS Max is one durable and unbending smartphone.
 
 
 
 
Google’s new products look great, but they’re still no threat to Apple
The Pixel 3, Pixel Slate, and Home Hub seem like nice products, but they’re not going to put a dent in Apple’s sales.
 
 
 
 
Google Pixel Slate vs. Apple iPad Pro: Which Should You Buy?
 
We won't know for sure until we review the Pixel Slate, but for now, it seems the iPad Pro will retain its crown as the best tablet on the market. Of course, these two devices run on very different platforms, and your preference in operating system between Chrome OS and iOS should play a big role in determining which tablet is right for you.
 
 
 
 
Video:
Filmmaker compares iPhone XS camera to $10k cinema camera, says results ‘mindblowing’

Putting the iPhone XS camera up against a $10,000 cinema camera would seem to be hopeless endeavor. Not quite, says one filmmaker who decided to do it.
 
While ultimately (and unsurprisingly) Gregory concluded that they aren’t in the same league, he said that at times he couldn’t tell the footage apart, and that the iPhone XS camera gave ‘completely mind blowing results.’
 
 
 
 
Video:
iPhone XS Max Review: The Phone I Hate To Love
 
 
 
 
 
Video:
iPhone "Gates" Explained!
 
 
 
 
The easiest way to share iPhone photos and videos
Finally, a reason to use iCloud.
 
 
 
 
In what may be a world first, the FBI has forced a suspect to unlock his iPhone X using Apple's Face ID feature. Agents in Columbus, Ohio entered the home of 28-year-old Grant Michalski, who was suspected of child abuse, according to court documents spotted by Forbes. With a search warrant in hand, they forced him to put his face on front of the device to unlock it. They were then able to freely search for his photos, chats and any other potential evidence.
 
 
 
 
Forensics firm urges police not to look at screens of iPhones with Face ID
 
While U.S. police are now sometimes forcing suspects with Face ID-ready iPhones to unlock their devices, Apple's technology is simultaneously making that a risky proposition, one security firm is warning agencies.
 
"This is quite simple. Passcode is required after five unsuccessful attempts to match a face," Elcomsoft CEO Vladimir Katalov explained to Motherboard. "So by looking into [a] suspect's phone, [the] investigator immediately lose[s] one of [the] attempts."
 
 
 
 
'Siri, I'm getting pulled over': A new shortcut for iPhones can automatically record the police
 
• A big new feature for iPhones this year is Shortcuts, an app that lets you write scripts for the iPhone.
• One widely shared shortcut is called Police, which records police interactions and texts a predetermined contact that you've been pulled over.
• It also sends a video of the encounter to your contact.
 
You don't need to be a programmer to create your own shortcut
 
This article provides a link to the site where you can download the Police.  But make sure you have the Shortcuts app installed first.
 
 
 
 
If You Have an iPhone, Do This Right Now—Just in Case You Get Pulled Over by Police
 
Robert Peterson created a trick using the virtual assistant, Siri, that lowers the phone’s brightness, turns on Do Not Disturb, texts the iPhone owner’s location to an emergency contact and lets them know you have been pulled over by police. The shortcut will also automatically start recording video and, when finished, the phone will send the video to the contact or save it to a cloud service.
 
“I noticed in news articles and reports on TV that in many cases, police say one thing happened and the citizen pulled over says something else,” Peterson told Mic. “Sometimes police have body cameras, sometimes not. When they do, the video is not always released in a timely manner. I wanted a way for the person being pulled over to have a record for themselves.”
 
 
 
 
Apple Watch Series 4 fitness review: We tested Apple's fitness claims

 
 
 
 
I’m a Paramedic: Here’s How the Apple Watch Series 4 Will and Won’t Save Lives
 
Thanks to its health monitoring features, the new Apple Watch Series 4 will save lives, probably within weeks of launch. I’ve been on real calls that might have had happier endings had the person been wearing one.
 
That doesn’t mean it’s perfect. The Apple Watch Series 4 is far from a comprehensive life-saving device.
 
The Apple Watch Series 4 is a big deal. Fall detection will save lives nearly immediately. AFib detection will help reduce the rate of strokes. And the ECG feature will enable doctors to better monitor and communicate with their patients.
 
 
 
 
What to Know About the ECG Feature in the New Apple Watch
 
Turning the ECG feature on may be easy, but deciding whether or not to use it is more complicated.  This feature is not for everyone.
 
 
One reader commented:
"Very good article. There are serious drawbacks to the trend of increased screenings."
 
 
 
How (and Why) to Turn On Your Apple Watch 4's Fall Detection Feature
 
Your brand-new Apple Watch doesn’t have fall detection turned on by default.
 
Turning on fall detection isn’t difficult.  What’s annoying is that Apple doesn’t prompt you to do this during any part of setting up a new Apple Watch.
 
 
 
 
Apple Watch Series 4 Reviews are a Sad Reminder of How Lost Google's "Wear OS" Is
 
Wear OS is Google's competitor to Apple's Watch OS.
 
It’s frustrating to watch as Apple continues to improve upon its wearable side and define its focus while Google and partners can’t figure any of it out.
 
Apple has what Google thinks doesn’t exist. The Apple Watch is meant to be a one-size-fits-all device. It’s both a fashion accessory and a sports watch, for those who need it.
 
 
 
 
The latest Apple Watch has been on sale for a few days now and I've been testing it for over two weeks. Here's all you need to know.
 
The Apple Watch has evolved so much since the first one arrived in Spring 2015.
 
The new Series 4 offers a tremendous update to the design, the fastest speeds yet (it's a 64-bit watch, for goodness sake!) and features unheard of on other smartwatches.
 
Every previous Watch band fits the new model perfectly.
 
It's the best wearable for health and fitness. Period.
 
 
 
 
Apple Watch Series 4 Review: Small tweaks make a big impact
 
 
 
 
Apple Watch’s new auto-911 calls after falls may tumble into legal trouble
 
If police are alerted by an Apple Watch of a possible injury, they do not need a warrant to enter a home under the "community caretaking" exception to the Fourth Amendment.
 
"I think 'call auto-detected local emergency services' is a fine and sensible default, but users should have the ability to override that with their own setting," Fred Jennings wrote to Ars. "If I'm in rural Montana, my live-in partner or former-EMT neighbor may be a faster responder than the local police and doesn't come with the same privacy or over-response concerns."
 
 
 
 
Video:
11 Apple Watch tips and tricks
 
 
 
 
Nike+ Apple Watch Series 4 Review - Apple's Masterpiece
 
 
 
 
The Series 4 is the best smartwatch ever. That’s clear to me. Its main problem is that last year’s Series 3 is also still so damn good. (And now it’s relatively cheap, too.)
 
 
 
 
The HomePod’s growing pains
 
Overall, my experience of the HomePod, more than half a year after its debut, has reminded me largely of the early days of the Apple Watch where the company didn’t seem to have a clear idea of what the device actually was.
 
 
 
 
Free Mojave macOS update is now available to download
 
MacOS version 10.14 — codenamed Mojave — is now available to download.
 
 
 
 
5 reasons why you should upgrade to macOS Mojave right now
 
There are lots of new features in Mac OS Mojave.
 
 
 
 
Some 2018 MacBook Pro owners are running into errors installing macOS Mojave
 
Some Mac owners trying to upgrade to the latest edition of macOS are encountering errors preventing them from completing the process, according to complaints on Apple's support forums.
 
According to the providers we contacted, users looking to upgrade to Mojave should back up data in entirety using Time Machine, then attempt to install Mojave.  After that, if the Mac OS Mojave installation fails, this article has instructions on what to do next.
 
 
 
 
How to clean install macOS
 
Want to clean install macOS on your Mac? Here's how to download and install a fresh copy of Mojave - and if you need to, High Sierra, Sierra, El Capitan, Mojave, Yosemite or some earlier version of OS X.
 
 
 
 
Apple's made it impossible to download old versions of MacOS in Mojave
 
Beware installing macOS Mojave! Apple appears to have completely removed the ability to download the installers of older versions of macOS and Mac OS X from the new version of the Mac operating system.

Previously users could go to the Mac App Store, click on the Purchased tab and see a list of all the apps they had ever downloaded.
 
Now that Apple has updated the Mac App Store in macOS Mojave, there is no longer a Purchased tab. Users can see some of their previously purchased items if they click on Store in the Apple Store and choose: View My Account. However, this will no longer show any older versions of MacOS, though it did previously.
 
It is possible to download the installer for an older versions the Mac App Store but only if you are running macOS High Sierra or older. If you are running macOS Mojave this will not be possible.
 
 
 
 
It’s time to switch your Mac backups from Time Capsule to Time Machine volumes
 
The Apple Time Capsule seemed like a great idea when it was unveiledabout a decade ago. It was a Time Machine network backup target that also embedded a Wi-Fi gateway and ethernet sharing. Perfection, even if it was a little too expensive: It came with Apple technical support and warranty.

But it didn’t play out with the promise it had.
 
Then Apple stopped making new ones years ago and finally admitted it canceled the line earlier this year. If you’re using a Time Capsule, it might be time to consider an alternative.
 
 
 
 
macOS Mojave: What is desktop Stacks and how to use it
 
 
 
 
How to use Spaces, Apple's mostly ignored macOS Mojave productivity feature
 
If you use Spaces on your Mac then you probably love this feature so much that you can't imagine not having it. More likely, though, you've vaguely heard of it and not looked to see whether it could be of use to you.
 
But when you know what this feature is supposed to do and you know how to work around its oddities, Spaces can be a boon.
 
Then if you fill that one up, Spaces can give you another. And another. And another. You can have up to 16 different desktops on your Mac. Each with your choice of windows open and even each with their own desktop wallpaper.

The idea is not that you can then open a hundred apps and have a thousand document windows filling them all up. It's that you can get more organized.
 
Many people have only one desktop and too many things cluttering it up.  Spaces lets you divide all that clutter up among several desktops.  If each desktop is used for a particular purpose, then you can move each item that clutters your first (original) desktop to a new desktop.  The end result is that the one big pile of clutter on your first desktop is separated into several smaller piles, each on a separate desktop.  This improves the overall organization of your Mac.
 
Spaces works. It is an aid to concentration and productivity because it helps you compartmentalize. That's about more than just having one different app in each Space, it's about separating the types of work you do. You can group related apps together into a Space.
 
 
 
 
Astropad's Luna Display for Turning an iPad Into a Second Screen for Mac is Now Available
 
 
 
 
Today in Apple history:
September 25, 2018:  iPod nano gets colorful aluminum upgrade
 
Apple ships its second-generation iPod nano, offering a fancy redesign of the pocket-size original.
 
 
 
 
Today in Apple history:
October 2, 1991: IBM and Apple shake and make up
 
As the Cold War comes to an end, hell freezes over a second time as Apple and IBM agree to put aside their differences.
 
The Apple-IBM deal certainly shocked the hell out of Apple fans in 1991.
 
 
 
 
Today in Apple history:
October 5, 2011:  Steve Jobs dies at 56
 
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs dies at the age of 56 in his home in Palo Alto, California.

Jobs’ official cause of death is respiratory arrest arising from complications related to a rare type of pancreatic cancer. He was diagnosed with the cancer eight years earlier, and officially stepped down from his role as Apple CEO in August 2011.
 
 
 
 
Today in Apple history:
October 9, 1991: The Beatles beat Apple in court
 
A court orders Apple to pay $26.5 million to Apple Corps, The Beatles’ record label and holding company, for trademark infringement.

It is the second time Apple is forced to pay The Beatles. It comes a decade after Apple swore it would never get into the music business.
 
 
 
 
Today in Apple history:
October 10, 1993 :  The elusive Macintosh Color Classic II ships
 
Also known as the Performa 275, the Color Classic II will eventually become something of a collector’s item, since Apple released it only in Canada, Asia and Europe.
 
 
 
 
How to Take a Screenshot on Your Mac
 
In macOS Mojave, Apple has introduced a screen capture interface that unifies the screenshot and screen recording features on Mac, making accessing them easier from one place.
 
A new floating palette brings the traditional Mac screen capture functions together under a single menu. You can access it by hitting Command-Shift-5.
 
 
 
 
There's a pro trick for keeping all of your screenshots organized on your Mac — here's how to do it
 
AW comment:
This article describes a very geeky way to do this.
Hopefully, Apple will provide an easy way to accomplish this in the future.
 
 
 
 
Microsoft's new Surface PCs are the Macs I want Apple to make
 
I've said it before, and I'll say it again -- Microsoft is making the Mac look old and stale. While Apple has been neglecting its desktops and laptops to mercilessly push the iPhone, Microsoft has been busy reinventing the PC.
 
Ever since switching from PCs to Macs a few years ago as my daily workhorses, I've watched on in horror as Apple has shifted to a point where it doesn't seem to care about anything other than selling iPhones, and admiration as Microsoft simultaneously releases one cracking Surface device after another.
 
 
 
 
Surface Laptop 2 vs MacBook Pro
 
We compare Microsoft's new Surface Laptop 2 with the 2018 MacBook Pro models for design, features, specs and value for money.
 
The verdict:
 
We still prefer Apple's classic MacBook design and we find macOS a far more pleasurable experience than Windows. But the Surface isn't a bad alternative by any means.
 
The Surface Laptop 2 is a smart-looking machine that has a touch-screen display, and it's available for far less money than Apple's equivalent MacBook Pro.
 
 
 
 
Office 2019 is now available for Windows and Mac
 
For customers who aren’t ready for the cloud, Office 2019 provides new features and updates to the on-premises apps for both users and IT professionals.
 
Office 2019 is a one-time release and won’t receive future feature updates.
 
 
Office 2019 for Mac is supported on the three most recent versions of macOS.
 
 
 
 
Microsoft Office 2019 is now available on Windows 10 and macOS
 
Unlike an Office 365 subscription, Office 2019 is the version of Microsoft’s productivity suite you can get for a one-time fee and get it forever. However, like Office 365, Office 2019 includes the latest versions of Word, PowerPoint, Excel and Outlook.
 
Compared to Office 2016, the new 2019 suite includes a load of key features Microsoft has rolled out to its Office 365 users over the last few years.
 
 
 
 
Apple is using proprietary software to lock MacBook Pros and iMac Pros from third-party repairs affecting display and logic board repairs
 
Apple is reportedly using new proprietary software diagnostic tools to repair MacBook Pros and iMac Pros that, if not used on key part repairs, will result in an “inoperative system and an incomplete repair,” reads a document distributed to Apple’s Authorized Service Providers.
 
Tech critics and e-waste activists, however, claim that electronics makers are making devices hard to repair as a way to tightly control the repair market and encourage the purchase of new devices.
 
 
 
 
Apple Is Reportedly Looking To Block Third-Party Repairs For MacBooks And iMacs
 
Apple is butting heads with 'Right to Repair' activists.
 
It seems like Apple is preparing to roll out a system that would allow even fewer people to repair laptops and desktops without compromising their devices.
 
 
 
 
But ifixit.com says Apple’s secret repair kill switch hasn’t been activated — yet
 
Well, stop the presses. Turns out, ‘Apple makes your MacBook inoperative if you get it fixed at local repair shops’ isn’t quite true — at least not yet anyway.
 
Even though the Mac line has grown less repairable over time, fixers have still managed to develop techniques for performing essential screen and battery repairs—until now.
 
Ever the optimists, we headed down to our friendly local Apple Store and bought a brand new 2018 13” MacBook Pro Touch Bar unit. Then we disassembled it and traded displays with our teardown unit from this summer. To our surprise, the displays and MacBooks functioned normally in every combination we tried. We also updated to Mojave and swapped logic boards with the same results.


That’s a promising sign, and it means the sky isn’t quite falling—yet. But as we’ve learned, nothing is certain. Apple has a string of software-blocked repair scandals under its belt, including the device-disabling Error 53, a functionality-throttling Batterygate, and repeatedfeature-disabling incidents. It’s very possible that a future software update could render these “incomplete repairs” inoperative, and who knows when, or if, a fix will follow.

 
Basically, Apple owns your device, not you, and could conceivably disable it remotely if they detect unauthorized repairs going on. For years, Apple has actively fought right to repair legislation in the US, but hasn’t outright blocked independent repair—this would be a big step, even for them.
 
So why is Apple doing this?  Profit.
 
Non-Apple Mac repair may not be dead yet, but it’s certainly not safe—Apple has made that much painfully obvious.
 
 
 
 
Tim Cook Hides Chekhov's Gun Inside New MacBook Pro
 
In effect Tim Cook has built the digital equivalent of Chekhov’s Gun.
Chekhov wrote:
    "Remove everything that has no relevance to the story.
     If you say in the first chapter that there is a rifle hanging
     on the wall, in the second or third chapter it absolutely
     must go off. If it's not going to be fired,
     it shouldn't be hanging there."
 
The ability to repair your own MacBook without getting explicit sign off from Apple’s central server is in danger.
 
I have no issue with Apple saying that it won’t repair an out of warranty product that has been opened by a third-party. I do have an issue with Apple (or any other company) saying that it won’t let you replace the battery, clean out the fan, or repair your own computer, smartphone or tablet. So do many others.
 
The team at iFixit - famed for tearing down production hardware and offering DIY repair guides - decided to check out the details and found that Apple’s lock-out system is not in place… yet.
 
But this is not a time to celebrate, this is a time to question. Apple has form in locking out repairs (notably the TouchID sensor and home button in the iPhone), and you would not spend your limited engineering time and resources to build a lock-out system for the new MacBooks and not use it.
 
Should you trust your digital life to a company that quietly sets up a dead man’s switch without being clear to consumers about the impact on after-sale support?
 
 
 
 
Bait and fix: Apple is basically forcing you to get AppleCare for your new MacBook Pro
 
Some purchasers may be in for a surprise when they try to fix their MacBook after their limited one-year warranty runs out.
 
Repairs without AppleCare are much more expensive than repairs made with AppleCare.  AppleCare isn’t cheap, but it’s still better than paying for a new screen or motherboard.
 
 
 
 
How to Make Your Mac as Secure as Possible
 
Several good hints.
 
 
 
 
Malware Has a New Way to Hide on Your Mac
 
Malware on Apple's MacBook and iMac lines is more prevalent than some users realize; it can even hide in Apple's curated Mac App Store. But the relatively strong defenses of macOS make it challenging for malware authors to persist long-term on Apple computers, even if they can get an initial foothold. Additionally, the avenues available for lurking on macOS are so well known at this point that technicians and malware scanners can flag them quickly. That's why more subtle approaches are significant.
 
Mac security researcher Thomas Reed presented one such potentially dangerous opening. When you launch an app installer in macOS, a program called Gatekeeper checks to see whether the app originated from the Mac App Store, or is cryptographically signed by a developer who has registered with Apple. All legitimate programs have to be "code signed" to establish their validity and integrity. By checking a file's code signature, Gatekeeper can warn you if a program is malware or if someone has tampered with an otherwise benign installer.

These code signature checks are a vital security step. But Reed, who is the director of Mac and mobile platforms at the security firm Malwarebytes, has noticed that once a program passes a code signature check and gets installed, macOS never rechecks its signature.
 
Reed hasn't seen any malware that capitalizes on the opening so far, which he views as an opportunity to raise awareness now about the need for voluntary code checks.
 
 
 
 
Hackers loot digital wallets using stolen Apple IDs
 
Two Chinese companies are warning customers that hackers used stolen Apple IDs to get into their digital payment accounts and steal money.
 
Digital wallets are popular in China.
 
The companies did not offer details on how the hackers might have gotten the accounts but recommended that users of their digital wallets take steps to protect themselves including by changing passwords.
 
 
 
 
Apple users still getting phone calls from tech support scammers
 
If you get a call from someone claiming to be from Apple warning you about a security issue with your Mac, iPhone, or iCloud account, it’s almost certainly a scam. The company tells customers: “If you get an unsolicited call from someone claiming to be from Apple, hang up and contact us directly.”

But those warnings haven’t stopped scammers from attempting to hustle Apple users into providing their usernames, passwords, and payment information or installing dodgy software on their devices.
 
 
 
 
The best Mac Virtual Private Networks (VPN) in 2018
 
 
 
 
The Big Hack: How China Used a Tiny Chip to Infiltrate U.S. Companies
 
AW comment:  WOW!!  This is big!!
 
The attack by Chinese spies reached almost 30 U.S. companies, including Amazon and Apple.  The security of the global technology supply chain had been compromised, even if consumers and most companies didn’t know it yet.
 
Apple made its discovery of suspicious chips inside Supermicro servers around May 2015, after detecting odd network activity and firmware problems.
 
In 2015, Amazon.com Inc. began quietly evaluating a startup called Elemental Technologies, a potential acquisition to help with a major expansion of its streaming video service, known today as Amazon Prime Video.
 
Government investigators were still chasing clues on their own when Amazon made its discovery and gave them access to sabotaged hardware.  Nested on the servers’ motherboards, the testers found a tiny microchip, not much bigger than a grain of rice, that wasn’t part of the boards’ original design. Amazon reported the discovery to U.S. authorities, sending a shudder through the intelligence community.
 
Officials familiar with the investigation say the primary role of implants such as these is to open doors that other attackers can go through.
 
Investigators determined that the chips allowed the attackers to create a stealth doorway into any network that included the altered machines. Multiple people familiar with the matter say investigators found that the chips had been inserted at factories run by manufacturing subcontractors in China.
 
There are two ways for spies to alter the guts of computer equipment. One, known as interdiction, consists of manipulating devices as they’re in transit from manufacturer to customer. This approach is favored by U.S. spy agencies, according to documents leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. The other method involves seeding changes from the very beginning.

One country in particular has an advantage executing this kind of attack: China.
 
The chips had been inserted during the manufacturing process, two officials say, by operatives from a unit of China's People’s Liberation Army (PLA).
 
Today, Supermicro sells more server motherboards than almost anyone else.  Supermicro has assembly facilities in California, the Netherlands, and Taiwan, but its motherboards—its core product—are nearly all manufactured by contractors in China.
 
The majority of its workforce in San Jose is Taiwanese or Chinese, and Mandarin is the preferred language, with hanzi filling the whiteboards, according to six former employees.
 
With more than 900 customers in 100 countries by 2015, Supermicro offered inroads to a bountiful collection of sensitive targets.
 
Many years ago, a belief formed that China was unlikely to jeopardize its position as workshop to the world by letting its spies meddle in its factories. That left the decision about where to build commercial systems resting largely on where capacity was greatest and cheapest. “You end up with a classic Satan’s bargain,” one former U.S. official says. “You can have less supply than you want and guarantee it’s secure, or you can have the supply you need, but there will be risk. Every organization has accepted the second proposition.”
 
 
 
 
What Businessweek got wrong about Apple
 
 
 
 
Apple Insiders Say Nobody Internally Knows What’s Going On With Bloomberg’s China Hack Story
 
Multiple senior Apple executives, speaking with BuzzFeed News on the condition of anonymity so that they could speak freely, all denied and expressed confusion with a report earlier this week that the company’s servers had been compromised by a Chinese intelligence operation.
 
Both Amazon and Apple issued uncharacteristically strong and detailed denials of Bloomberg’s claims.
 
Apple’s broad, categorical denial is essentially unprecedented in its detail.
 
Bloomberg’s defense of its story is equally forceful.
 
The result is an unusual stalemate that’s left onlookers baffled.
 
 
 
 
Statement from DHS Press Secretary on Recent Media Reports of Potential Supply Chain Compromise
 
The Department of Homeland Security is aware of the media reports of a technology supply chain compromise. Like our partners in the UK, the National Cyber Security Centre, at this time we have no reason to doubt the statements from the companies named in the story.
 
 
 
 
Before China iCloud spy chip allegations, Bloomberg published these five incorrect stories about Apple
 
Media personalities have been bending over backward to find a way to square the claims made by Bloomberg in its "China Hack" story with a series of strongly worded denials from Amazon and Apple insisting that the report was "wrong and misinformed." However, there is solid evidence that Bloomberg has previously published a series of false claims before.
 
The tantalizing idea —as if ripped from the pages of a spy novel —that Chinese hackers had implanted chips into servers used by Apple and others to harvest data and spy on their users' activities was instantly lapped up by Apple's critics as rich dirt for seeding skepticism of Apple's competence in security.
 
A much simpler explanation is that Bloomberg rushed to publish information that was wrong, in part because its journalists didn't really understand what they were writing about, and in part because they didn't need to care whether their report was absolutely true or not.
 
 
 
 
Bloomberg doubles-down with this article
 
New Evidence of Hacked Supermicro Hardware Found in U.S. Telecom
The discovery shows that China continues to sabotage critical technology components bound for America.
 
Supermicro, based in San Jose, California, said after the earlier story that it “strongly refutes” reports that servers it sold to customers contained malicious microchips.
 
The more recent manipulation is different from the one described in the Bloomberg Businessweek report last week, but it shares key characteristics: They’re both designed to give attackers invisible access to data on a computer network in which the server is installed; and the alterations were found to have been made at the factory as the motherboard was being produced by a Supermicro subcontractor in China.
 
National security experts say a key problem is that, in a cybersecurity industry approaching $100 billion in revenue annually, very little of that has been spent on inspecting hardware for tampering. That's allowed intelligence agencies around the world to work relatively unimpeded, with China holding a key advantage.
 
 
 
 
Russia-based cybersecurity company Kaspersky Lab today said that while "hardware supply chain attacks are a reality," evidence suggests Bloomberg Businessweek's report about Chinese intelligence tampering with server motherboards manufactured by Apple's former supplier Supermicro is "untrue."
 
Kaspersky Lab itself has faced controversy, with several reports over the last year claiming its software was compromised by Russian intelligence. Nevertheless, Motherboard said the firm "continues to have a good reputation in the industry," particularly as it relates to its ability to discover malware.
 
 
 
 
NSA cybersecurity head can't find corroboration for iCloud spy chip report
 
The senior advisor for Cybersecurity Strategy to the director of the National Security Agency has advised there is a lack of evidence relating to both of Bloomberg's recent espionage-related stories, and has openly requested for people with knowledge of the situation to provide assistance.
 
 
 
 
Attorney General Becerra Announces Arrests, Charges Against 17 Individuals for $1 Million Robbery Scheme Targeting Apple Retail Stores
 
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced the arrest of and charges against 17 individuals for a robbery scheme targeting Apple retail stores across California that resulted in the loss of over $1 million. The defendants are charged with entering Apple retail stores in large groups wearing hoodies and snatching products on display in a matter of seconds. The alleged crimes took place across 19 counties.

Seven adults were arrested on September 25, 2018.
 
 
 
 
Myst at 25: How it changed gaming, created addicts, and made enemies
In 1993, the atmospheric CD-ROM game became a beloved megahit–but not everybody was happy with its influence on the game industry.
 
Even 25 years later, the emergence of Myst still represents a watershed moment in the development of computer video games. 
 
In Myst, you explore an ornately detailed island that leads to other vaguely Victorian sci-fi worlds (called ages) created by a character named Atrus. You’re presented with lushly detailed screens—punctuated by animations—depicting the scene around you, and can point and click your way through puzzles that feel woven perfectly into the tapestry of the game. Despite its largely static nature, its groundbreaking pre-rendered visuals (which many people called photorealistic at the time) made Myst feel like the first convincing virtual reality experience, at least in the sense of feeling physically present in a fictional world.
 
 
 
 
Animated Map: Visualizing 2,400 Years Of European History
 
The history of Europe is breathtakingly complex.
Jurisdiction over most of Europe's landmass has changed hands innumerable times —
except for the long time when the Roman Empire was dominant.
 
WW2 was important to our history, but Hitler's Third Reich was just a flash in the pan compared to the Roman Empire.
 
 
Here is the same history, except with names of rulers instead of names of empires.
 
 
 
 
The American Dream Depends On Your Zip Code
 
Very interesting map.
Zoom in to see individual counties.
Zoom in further to see still greater detail.
 
According to the map, the deep south is in the worst shape and the northern mid-west is in the best shape.
 
You can't see the wealthy parts of the cities in the deep south unless you zoom in on them.
Once you look closely, you see that the deep south – while in bad shape – is not quite as bad as it first appears.
 
 
 
 
Father Of World Wide Web Launches Platform Which Aims To Radically Decentralize The Internet
 
Tim Berners-Lee, "The Father of the World Wide Web" has launched a start-up that intends to end the dominance of Facebook, Google, and Amazon, while in the process letting individuals take back control of their own data.
 
The mission of Inrupt.com is to turbocharge a broader movement afoot, among developers around the world, to decentralize the web and take back power from the forces that have profited from centralizing it. In other words, it’s game on for Facebook, Google, Amazon.

Berners-Lee's new online platform and company Inrupt is being described as a "personal online data store," or pod, where everything from messages, music, contacts or other personal data will be stored in one place overseen by the user instead of an array of platforms and apps run by corporations seeking to profit off personal information.
 
As described on the Solid.mit.edu and Inrupt.com websites the new platform will allow users to have complete control over their information 'pods' (an acronym for "personal online data store") — it is only they who will decide whether outside apps and sites will be granted access to it, and to what extent.
 
 
 
 
Facebook Wants A Facial Recognition Smart Home Device For Its Users
 
Americans don't trust Facebook to protect their information, so why should they trust them with facial recognition?
 
It’s a known fact that Facebook has handed data to governments worldwide.
 
This reminds me of the time former CIA Director David Petraeus said: “we will spy on you through your dishwasher.”
 
 
 
 
You Gave Facebook Your Number For Security. They Used It For Ads.
 
A group of academic researchers from Northeastern University and Princeton University, along with Gizmodo reporters, have used real-world tests to demonstrate how Facebook’s latest deceptive practice works. They found that Facebook harvests user phone numbers for targeted advertising in two disturbing ways: two-factor authentication (2FA) phone numbers, and “shadow” contact information.
 
When a user gives Facebook their number for security purposes—to set up 2FA, or to receive alerts about new logins to their account—that phone number can become fair game for advertisers within weeks. (This is not the first time Facebook has misused 2FA phone numbers.)
 
But the important message for users is: this is not a reason to turn off or avoid 2FA. The problem is not with two-factor authentication. It’s not even a problem with the inherent weaknesses of SMS-based 2FA in particular. Instead, this is a problem with how Facebook has handled users’ information and violated their reasonable security and privacy expectations.
 
Second, Facebook is also grabbing your contact information from your friends.
 
Even if you never directly handed a particular phone number over to Facebook, advertisers may nevertheless be able to associate it with your account based on your friends’ phone books.
 
As Facebook attempts to salvage its reputation among users in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, it needs to put its money where its mouth is. Wiping 2FA numbers and “shadow” contact data from non-essential use would be a good start.
 
 
 
 
Facebook's latest data blunder is mind-blowingly bad, and users should be burning with rage

• Losing personal information of up to 50 million people is bad enough, but also risking people's accounts with sites like Tinder, Airbnb, or Spotify was an outrageous error.
• Like other tech giants, Facebook decided a while ago that having all your social-media information wasn't enough — it wanted to know what you were up to on other sites too.
• It showed last week it couldn't be trusted with that information, and users should leave in droves.
 
Around 2010, there was a battle for our collective online identity. Everyone knows that trying to remember account names and passwords for every site you use online is unfeasible. Besides a password manager, one solution involved using a trusted site like Google or Facebook to log into all your favorite web sites instead. 

The tactic worked. According to Quartz, citing statistics from the identity firm Janrain, Facebook became the most popular sign-in choice by far.
 
The deal for users was that they didn't have to remember countless logins. The deal for a service like Spotify was that users had a frictionless sign-up, meaning faster growth. And, as ever, the deal for Facebook was more data — specifically knowing what its users were up to on websites that weren't Facebook. 

Was it really worth giving Facebook all that data in exchange for an easier sign-up process? Especially since Facebook so clearly can't be trusted to manage that information? Friday's news suggests not.
 
 
 
 
The Social Media Purge and How It Affects Everyone
 
Just about every website owner I know is feeling personally victimized by the recent social media purge that has been going on.  But here’s an interesting fact: it isn’t, as is widely perceived, just conservative voices that are being silenced. It is dissenting voices.

You don’t have to be on a Twitter feed to see how this is an overwhelmingly anti-American problem. Like it or not, social media is a monumental source of information these days, and when it’s censored to only show one point of view, the future of our republic is in peril. We are well on our way to peak censorship and this has been carefully orchestrated.
 
I’m not personally a huge fan of Jones, but I do believe what happened to him was collusion between social media giants. Big Tech got together and now Alex Jones has to find new ways to reach his very large audience.
 
Jones has a lot of money so this may not be the end of him, but for most website owners, this would be the absolute end of our ability to do business. And to be able to bring the information we bring, we do have to run our websites as businesses. It’s far more expensive than most people realize to run a site.
 
By making free thought something that is frowned upon and erased, they silence us all.
 
 
 
 
Why The Coordinated Alternative Media Purge Should Terrify Everyone
 
The alternative media purge was boldly advanced in a coordinated effort to silence people who dissent from establishment views.
 
Hundreds of alternative media site administrators logged onto Facebook to discover that their accounts had been removed. Soon after, many of these sites and their writers found that their Twitter accounts had also been suspended.

Popular pages like The AntiMedia (2.1 million fans), The Free Thought Project (3.1 million fans), Press for Truth (350K fans),  Police the Police (1.9 million fans), Cop Block (1.7 million fans), and Punk Rock Libertarians (125K fans) are just a few of the ones which were unpublished.
 
John Vibes said:

"This signifies a re-consolidation of the media. Cable news media controlled the narrative for most of modern history, but the internet has lowered that barrier to entry and allowed the average person to become the media themselves. This obviously took market share and influence away from the traditional media, and it has allowed for a more diverse public conversation. Now it seems the platforms that have monopolized the industry are favoring mainstream sources and silencing alternative voices. So now, instead of allowing more people to have a voice, these platforms are creating an atmosphere where only powerful media organizations are welcome, just as we had on cable news."
 
Ron Paul reminds us that truth is treason.
 
“You get accused of treasonous activity and treasonous speech because in an empire of lies the truth is treason,” Paul told the Russia-based news outlet. “Challenging the status quo is what they can’t stand and it unnerves them, so they have to silence people.”
 
What can you do about the alternative media purge?
 
• Subscribe to the newsletters of websites you enjoy. Don’t count on seeing their work on social media. (You can subscribe to my newsletter here, incidentally.)
 
• Support them financially if you can. Many sites have Patreon accounts or donate buttons
 
• Bookmark them and visit regularly – if they have ads, your visits help them to make the money they need to stay afloat.
 
• Share their articles on your own social media accounts. If they can’t get their work out there, we can help.
 
• Join alternative social media outlets like Gab and MeWe.
 
The alternative media purge is just the beginning. And we should all be very concerned.
 
 
 
 
Have you heard about China’s dystopian new “social credit” program? If you haven’t, there’s a terrifying infographic from Bored Panda that I’ll be referencing throughout this article.

The good news is that this is happening in China, where we all know a Communist government has long been crushing freedom for the residents of the nation.
 
The bad news is that it is incredibly close to happening here. Heck, it is happening here.
 
It could easily turn into a situation in which you can no longer function, have money, or be employed unless you toe the digital line.  This is already happening in China.
 
I don’t like him much, but he’s lost everything because some companies got together to ban him. You don’t have to like or support Alex Jones to see the broad, sweeping arm that took him down. None of us with a public profile is immune.
 
Apple, by the way, is already giving people “trust scores” based on their phone calls and emails. Just in case you think I’m being far-fetched.
 
 
 
 
Communist China Moves To Control Billions Through ‘Social Media Credit’

In a chilling but unsurprising move, Communist China seeks ultimate control over the population by introducing a scorecard which will supposedly keep the public in check. The big brother system will monitor all citizens 24/7 and keep a “score” of their activities.
 
Participation in the “social credit” system was first announced in 2014 and is mandatory.
 
The Communist Party’s plan in China is for every one of its 1.4 billion citizens to be at the whim of a dystopian social credit system, and it’s on track to be fully operational by the year 2020. Those people will either reap the benefits of having a high score or suffer the consequences of a low social score.
 
“If people keep their promises they can go anywhere in the world,” said Tianjin general manager Jie Cong. For Jie, it’s black and white with no grey area. “If people break their promises they won’t be able to move an inch!”
 

 

 

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