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Tom Briant

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Thursday, July 6, 2017

Senior Correspondent Arnold Woodworth's Weekly Web Wrap-up for Wednesday 7-5-2017

Reminder:
 
August 21, 2017 — a total solar eclipse will traverse the U.S. from the Pacific to the Atlantic.
The path of totality will be within one day’s drive of most people living in the 48 states region
 
If you can possibly get some vacation time on that date, definitely go see it.
Every person who sees a total eclipse of the sun tells stories about it for the rest of his / her life.
 
Click the links below for more information.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Apple's Stunning New HQ Is as Polarizing as Its Visionary (Steve Jobs)
The debate is raging as to whether it's a masterpiece or a monstrosity.
 
 
 
 
How to adjust security settings for Apple’s “AirDrop” feature on your iPhone and make sure that not just anybody can access info on your iPhone.
 
 
 
 
Steve Jobs did not invent the iPhone
 
Steve Jobs made crucial decisions. His business maneuverings—especially absorbing info from the carriers and then winning near-total freedom to build his iPhone any way he liked, and winning favorable contract terms—and his aesthetic tastes in the space were unparalleled. He deserves a lot of credit. Just nowhere near all of it.
 
What Jobs did at Apple with the iPhone was take a smattering of percolating technologies, and drove his team to integrate them in a way never executed so elegantly before. The key word is “team”; the iPhone, in fact, grew out of a series of clandestine meetings, under even Jobs’ radar.
 
There’s a small city worth of people who contributed to the iPhone, who made it tick, who unfurled its innovations, who designed the most popular software interface of all time, who made it sing on a tiny handheld device.
 
We now know, for instance, that Edison most certainly did not invent the lightbulb—he simply perfected it as a consumer product.
 
Brian Merchant is the author of “The One Device: The Secret History of the iPhone”.

 
 
 
Steve Jobs is Not the Right Role Model for You
 
Founders should be wary of aiming to be the next Steve Jobs or Mark Zuckerberg. Being practical will save budding entrepreneurs not only time and money, but also disappointment and from feeling like a total failure. Learn from your missteps. And find mentors and idols in the everyday people (hint: people like Vitaly) whose success may be less famous, but who are no less extraordinary.
 
Here’s the main thing people need to understand about startups. In the early days, startups are closer to a science experiment than a business.
 
 
 
 
A surprising number of Windows users plan to switch to Mac
 
 
 
 
It may be time for Mac users to give Apple’s Safari browser another chance
 
1. You can stop auto-playing videos from ever starting.
2. You can make it harder for companies to track your activity across the web. But Safari doesn't completely block this kind of tracking.
 
AW Comment:
The author of this article likes Google Chrome better than Safari, even though it’s a safe bet that Google tracks everything you do with Chrome.
 
 
 
 
The iPad could soon be ready to replace the MacBook
 
Some users will still need the power of a more robust, flexible and capable OS, and this is where costly iMacs (like the just announced iMac Pro) or even MacBook Pros come in.
 
But for most people who just need a browser, email, YouTube, Netflix and the likes, an iPad might be a much better way to spend their money, and make it their primary machine.
 
 
 
 
Video:
iOS 11 will completely transform the iPad
 
I’ve been playing with a beta version of iOS 11 on a 10.5-inch iPad Pro for the past few weeks. While the final version of iOS 11 is not coming until later this fall, Apple just launched the public beta. Here’s a preview of what you can expect.
 
 
 
 
iOS 11 on an iPad Pro still won’t replace your laptop
 
Apple introduced some major changes to the iPad with its iOS 11 beta earlier this week. While you can use the iPad just as you’ve always been able to, there are some additional multitasking changes that really make the iPad Pro more of a laptop contender. Apple has created a dock that acts more like something you’d find on macOS, and refined its side-by-side apps interface so it’s even more similar to Windows 8. These changes make the iPad a lot more useful, but also a lot more confusing than it has ever been before.
 
 
 
 
We’ve been dragging-and-dropping the hell out of iOS 11
 
Here's a sentence I never expected to write: Drag and drop changes everything.
 
Drag and drop makes iOS feel like more than a collection of apps.
 
The author provides a long list of his favorite improvements in iOS 11.
 
 
 
 
How To Uninstall The iOS 11 Beta In Six Easy Steps
 
WARNING:
Use iTunes to make a backup of your iPhone, iPod   and / or   your iPad data BEFORE you install iOS 11 Beta.
Without that backup, the uninstall won’t help you.
 
 
 
 
The iPad has an identity crisis
Unlike the iPhone, the iPad hasn't launched whole new classes of services. And the more Apple does to make iPads competitive with laptops, the more it gets compared to them and comes up short.
 
The main reason for the demise of the tablet was the proliferation of larger-screened smartphones.
 
In some ways, the iPad's struggles were foretold at its introduction, with Steve Jobs categorizing it as a device that fit between the smartphone and laptop. But it has no hope of making progress against the former and faces a host of competitive challenges against the latter. It is stuck between a rock and a hard place.
 
 
 
 
8 tips for being productive on the iPad with iOS 10
 
One obvious thing to do is go ahead and install the iOS 11 public beta. It seems relatively stable on the iPad Pro. But my recommendation is still to wait a bit, especially if you depend on your iPad for day-to-day work.
 
So here are some of my favorite tips for iOS 10.
 
Learn how to use the “Text Replacement” feature.
Try Affinity for image editing.
Install Annotable — a great screenshot markup tool
Set up Widgets
Check out Duet to make your iPad a monitor
 
 
 
 
Former Chief of Engadget.com and Verge.com Trashes the New iPad Pro
 
AW Comment:
Interesting discussion.
 
 
 
 
The iPad’s biggest flaw: It’s too perfect
 
Some of the world’s biggest technology companies are facing an unusual and costly problem: their products are proving too good to replace.
 
“Tablet sales have slowed since their peak in 2013 as fewer Australians have seen the need to replace their existing devices,” Foad Fadaghi said.
“However, this is changing, with support for older models ending and functionality of newer tablets improving.”
 
 
 
 
12.9-Inch iPad Pro Review
 
Premium laptop-class performance; Long battery life; Amazingly bright, speedy display; Improved Pencil input; Stellar, booming sound; iOS 11 has a lot of promise.
 
The 12.9-inch iPad Pro boasts the best screen and performance we've ever seen in a tablet, but we'd suggest waiting for the final version of iOS 11 to arrive before you splurge.
 
Despite not changing the hardware of its $99 Pencil, Apple made it work a whole lot better with the new iPad Pros. Thanks to the iPad Pro's ProMotion display, writing feels more realistic than ever, as the company cut latency down from 40 milliseconds to 20 ms.
 
 
 
 
Apple iPad Pro 10.5 Review
 
Pros:
• Big, beautiful screen (but not TOO big)
• Bassy, rich sound
• Day-long battery life
• Laptop-competitive performance
• Great camera for when you need it
 
Cons:
• With accessories, starts getting expensive, fast
• Even with split-screen, iOS doesn't feel optimized for tablets
• Audio recording when shooting video doesn't sound great
 
 
 
 
Review: Apple 12.9-inch iPad Pro (Second Generation), 10.5-inch iPad Pro
 
Pros:
Significant camera improvements
Front and rear cameras
Battery life remains exceptional
 
Cons:
The 12.9” model is still a behemoth by iPad standards
3D Touch support remains absent on both models.
 
Apple has actually brought both models to the same level; the only real distinction between the two new iPad Pro models is the size.
 
While users who simply want a basic iPad to supplement their smartphone or laptop for surfing, reading and productivity tasks will be well served by the standard fifth-generation iPad, the iPad Pro models will definitely appeal to serious iPad users who are willing to spend the money for top performance. Both models earn our high recommendation.
 
 
 
 
Why Apple’s iPad Pro Doesn’t Feature 3D Touch
 
While 3D Touch on an iPad might sound super-cool and beneficial, physically implementing it on such a large display would be impossible.

If Apple ever wanted to bring a 3D Touch-like functionality to the iPad, they’d have to develop an entirely new technology.
 
 
 
 
10.5-inch iPad Pro review: Apple's 2-in-1 is starting to grow up
 
Since it came out, I've been using the 10.5-inch iPad Pro for just about everything, from consumption tasks like reading books and watching movies to productivity tasks like writing articles and editing videos. Click the link below for more.
 
 
 
 
The iPad Pro: Now a true photographer’s tool
 
The iPad Pro has finally reached a tipping point for photographers. The improved hardware in the just-released iPad Pro models, plus software improvements in iOS 10 and the upcoming iOS 11, make the iPad Pro (mostly) fullfill the potential of the iPad as a true photographer’s companion.
 
 
 
 
ProMotion display technology on the Apple iPad Pro explained: buttery smooth!
 
 
 
 
Video:
Review: 10.5-inch iPad Pro - ZERO compromises
 
 
 
 
Best 10.5-inch iPad Pro Accessories
 
 
 
 
Some techies in the ‘iPad as laptop’ debate are forgetting how atypical we are
 
Steve Jobs was right that some people will always need (or want) trucks. I’m one of them. I wouldn’t dream of attempting to use an iPad to replace my Mac. I prefer a large screen for things like photo editing and video editing, I like to carry a lot of data around with me (mostly photos) and I value the expansion options you get with a Mac.

But I also recognize that I’m far from typical of the mass market. While I wouldn’t personally make the switch, I have recommended to multiple friends that they do so, based on listening to what they want from a computer and what they want to do with it.
 
 
 
 
Video:
100 New Features in iOS (Beta version)
 
AW Comment:
“Beta” actually means “Beta Test” software.
Apple provides “Beta” software only to users who agree to be testing subjects who agree to find and report any defects they notice.
Apple plans to fix the bugs that the “Beta Testers” find before the release iOS 11 to the rest of us.
 
But this video is still worth watching because you can learn what’s coming in your future.
 
 
 
 
Linea sketching app for Apple Pencil updated for 10.5-inch iPad Pro
 
The Iconfactory has updated its excellent sketching app for Apple Pencil to work specifically on the new 10.5-inch iPad Pro.
 
 
 
 
Apple starts selling refurbished Apple Pencil, get one for $85 — for a limited time only
 
A refurbished Apple Pencil isn't brand new, but Apple says it undergoes a thorough cleaning process and inspection to ensure it meets Apple's quality standards.
 
A refurbished Apple Pencil comes with Apple's standard one-year limited hardware warranty covering manufacturing defects.
 
 
 
 
 
This Is Why the iPhone Upended the Tech Industry
 
In 2007 the cellphone industry was sundered. In hindsight, there is only before and after the iPhone.
 
The original iPhone, which went on sale 10 years ago on June 29, laid the foundation for the modern smartphone, forever changing the way we access the world's information. It introduced two very important concepts that would remain at the core of mobile computers for years to come: the touch screen and the App Store.
 
Today's smartphones are computational Swiss army knives, capable of everything from turn-by-turn driving directions to housing all our work-related documents.
 
 
 
 
Apple Is Quietly Scrubbing the App Store
 
Thousands of apps rely on templates. In most cases, the template-based apps are designed by developers who don't have formal coding knowledge or simply want to get a program to the App Store quickly to capitalize on a trend.
 
Revised guidelines will ostensibly help Apple manage spam apps that are designed with templates to quickly get programs into the App Store that serve ads or perform unnecessary functions for developer financial gain.
 
While app clones and other unsavory software are being scrubbed from the App Store, Apple is performing the cleanup in such a way as to not dissuade the use of third-party app production tools. By targeting only those apps that fall afoul of rule 4.2.6, the company can keep the App Store clone free while at the same time fostering a welcoming environment for amateur developers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The filmmaker behind ‘App: The Human Story’ talks about the struggles developers face
 
Jake Schumacher, Jedidiah Hurt, and Adam Lisagor spent three and a half years producing a documentary about apps — or more specifically, the people who make them.
 
The film was screened last month as part of a peripheral event at Apple’s WWDC, and is slated to be released late summer.
 
Very interesting interview.
 
 
 
 
How to fix the spinner after login in macOS
 
An interesting story of how the author fixed a difficult problem.
 
 
 
 
macOS: Installing Flash Updates (The Safe Way)
 
The author wrote instructions for updating Adobe Flash Player via Apple’s System Preferences application instead of going to the Adobe.com web site.
 
 
 
 
Apple Beta program lets anyone install early versions of Mac OS, iOS
 
 
 
 
5 Hidden macOS Features Make Your Life Easier
 
 
 
 
macOS: How to See Which Mac Apps are 32-Bit
 
 
 
 
My take on the 2017 MacBook: I'm returning it after two weeks
• I've been using Apple's new MacBook for almost two weeks.
• It's not powerful enough to justify the $1,299 price tag.
• I'll be returning the new MacBook soon.
 
 
 
Why I'm not buying the most powerful MacBook Pro anymore
 
In 2012, I bought the most powerful model of the 15-inch MacBook Pro because I knew its Core i7 processor would keep up for several more years than a MacBook Pro with a less powerful Core i5 processor.

The concept is called "future-proofing." Basically, I buy a device that's way more powerful than necessary for my current needs in anticipation for the future when operating systems and apps will require more horsepower.
 
Today, I think “future proofing” is NOT a good strategy.
 
By spending big in the past to extend the life of my old MacBook Pro, I've essentially locked myself in to its old technology until I upgrade.
 
If I do end up buying a new model, I'll probably go for one with lesser hardware specs and a lower price tag so that it doesn't last so long. That way, I can upgrade more quickly and keep up with new features and technology.

Future proofing can help you save money, but it can also keep you living in the past
 
 
 
 
Apple MacBook Pro with Touch Bar (15-inch, 2017)review
 
The Good The updated 15-inch MacBook Pro gets faster processing and graphics options. It's still the biggest and most-powerful laptop Apple makes. The giant touchpad is easy to use and battery life is excellent.

The Bad Having only USB-C ports can be a hassle. The super-flat keyboard is an acquired taste.

The Bottom Line Even if you're not sold on the idea of the Touch Bar, this slightly updated MacBook Pro is still the king of high-end laptops, especially for the creative class.
 
 
 
 
Apple's new MacBook Pro looks the same, but inside it's much improved
 
Users of the 13-inch MacBook Pro have an option of buying the laptop with or without the Touch Bar.  I think it's worth the money.

Pros:
Smaller, lighter, faster than the previous generation.

Cons:
Expensive, needs dongles for connecting almost anything.

Bottom Line:
Apple users may balk at the dongle situation, but that won't stop anyone from buying this machine to get the fastest Mac laptop.
 
 
 
 
Apple celebrates America’s national parks this July
 
From July 1 through 15, Apple is donating $1 to the National Park Foundation for every purchase made with Apple Pay at any Apple Store, on apple.com or through the Apple Store app in the US. Apple Pay is accepted at select locations in some of the most popular national parks, from Yellowstone and Yosemite to the Grand Canyon and Muir Woods National Monument.
 
 
 
 
 
 
• You can unlock your Mac using an Apple Watch.
• That means you won't need to type in a password.
• This article shows you how.
 
 
 
 
AI Detects Abnormal Heart Rhythm Using the Apple Watch’s Heart Rate Sensor
 
A recent study presented at the Heart Rhythm Society conference by Dr. Greg Marcus, the director of Clinical Research for Cardiology at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), endeavored to find if an Apple Watch was sensitive and accurate enough to detect atrial fibrillation, a common heart condition.
 
“The app was able to detect or discriminate a-fib from normal rhythm with 97% accuracy,” Marcus says.
 
However, the AFib detecting smart watch app isn’t ready for primetime yet
 
 
 
 
Type instead of talk to Siri with iOS 11
Now you can ask Siri questions in silence.
 
To enable the feature, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Siri and toggle on Type to Siri. Now, when you long-press the Home button, Siri will pop up with her familiar "What can I help you with?" question but with a search bar and keyboard .
 
 
 
 
The Best Siri Commands
 
Interesting list.
 
 
 
 
Lots of people dislike voice assistants. Blame Siri
Hard numbers say so, though these digital helpers continue to gain users.
 
 
 
 
How to Completely Turn Off Siri on Your iPhone
 
The instructions for disabling Siri altogether are slightly different in iOS 10 and iOS 11, so both ways are covered in this article.
 
 
 
 
The 25 most influential YouTubers. (And Why You Need To Know Them)
 
 
 
 
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is Killing Retailers and Giving Life to Mindless Shopping
 
When you see an ad pop up on your computer or smartphone, it’s the work of the AI robots and machine learning bots mining your every digital click.
 
AI’s here and now, and it’s the future of retailing. Without it, retailers are going to die off like dinosaurs.
 
 
 
 
How Battling Brands Online Has Gained Urgency, and Impact
 
Until last week, Travis Kalanick, a founder of Uber and its chief executive, ruled his company absolutely.
 
But we live in an era dominated by the unyielding influence of social feeds. Every new Uber revelation ignited a massive campaign against the company on Twitter and Facebook. A swirl of negative branding took on a life of its own — and ultimately could not be ignored.
 
The story is bigger than Uber. Online campaigns against brands have become one of the most powerful forces in business, giving customers a huge megaphone with which to shape corporate ethics and practices, and imperiling some of the most towering figures of media and industry.
 
The mechanics of social media suggest it will be the cultural and political left, more than the right, that might win the upper hand with this tactic.
 
 
 
 
The BuzzFeed wizard who changed media as we know it
 
An old story, but well worth reading.
 
It’s about a woman who did some really important stuff at buzzfeed.com.
 
 
 
 
We’re one step closer to getting cheaper, faster Internet from space
 
A former Googler and friend of Elon Musk became the first to receive permission to actually build a next-generation satellite Internet service that targets U.S. customers.
 
At the heart of Greg Wyler's new network are a fleet of 720 satellites, all orbiting the earth at an altitude of roughly 745 miles. The first satellites would launch next year, and service could start as early as 2019. Federal regulators voted to give Wyler and his company, OneWeb, approval to use the airwaves that will beam the Internet down to earth.
 
 
 
 
Why “How many jobs will be killed by AI?” is the wrong question
 
Over the past few years we've developed artificially intelligent machines that can do many things that used to require human minds.
 
So shouldn't we be preparing ourselves for massive AI-induced technological unemployment? A widely cited 2015 analysis by Carl Frey and Michael Osborne of Oxford University found that 47% of current jobs in the US were susceptible to computerization. And some jobs look especially ripe for automation. As self-driving technology advances it seems likely that many of America's approximately 3.5 million truck drivers could find themselves out of a job.
 
While 3.5 million jobs sound like a lot to lose, there are almost that many layoffs every two months in the United States, and another six million or so people voluntarily leaving their jobs. The American economy is both huge and dynamic; large numbers of jobs are lost all the time, and even more are created.
 
There are two large labor force challenges at present, and they're both due in part to tech progress. The first is that while the engine of job creation is still running it has shifted into a lower gear. This engine used to do a great job of generating lots of solid middle-class jobs that paid more over time. Now it's creating lower middle-class jobs with more stagnant incomes.

There are many reasons for this change, but our MIT colleague David Autor and his collaborators have identified the central one: that the US middle class was built on routine work (both physical, like staffing an assembly line in a factory, and cognitive, like handling payroll for the factory) and this work has been rapidly automated in recent decades.
 
The single best way to create more job opportunities for people is to support the creation of lots of new companies that need to hire in order to grow.
 
 
 
 
Why technology helps us do more while understanding less about what we're doing
 
Technology has made us able to do more while understanding less about what we are doing, and has increased our dependence on others.
 
We outsource more skills to technological tools, like a movie-making app on a smartphone, that relieve us of the challenge of learning large amounts of technical knowledge.
 
A major downside of increased dependence on technologies is the increased consequences if those technologies break or disappear.
 
Individually, we depend more on our technologies than ever before – but we can do more than ever before. Collectively, technology has made us smarter, more capable and more productive. What technology has not done is make us wiser.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Tech That New York Times Security Experts Use to Be Digitally Secure
 
The Times’s security experts suggest keeping all software up to date and using two-factor authentication and password managers to protect your privacy.
 
 
 
 
In the past month, malicious actors have twice used cyberweapons stolen from the National Security Agency (NSA) against countries around the world in a series of escalating cyber attacks that have targeted hospitals, banks, transportation systems, and even nuclear sites.
 
A growing concern is whether US intelligence agencies have rushed to create digital weapons that they cannot keep safe from adversaries or disable once they fall into the wrong hands, and there have been numerous calls for the NSA to help halt the attacks and to stop hoarding knowledge of the computer vulnerabilities upon which these weapons rely.
 
Unfortunately, as long as software manufacturers continue to develop poorly engineered products full of flaws in their computer code, opportunities will abound to create openings for digital weapons and spy tools, and the NSA is not likely to stop hoarding software vulnerabilities any time soon. And as long as people and companies fail to properly patch their systems and adopt cybersecurity best practices, more sophisticated and damaging attacks of this kind will be likely.
 

Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Happy Fourth of July! Have you made your computer backups yet?

You Need A Backup!

Yes, you. If you keep personally valuable files on your computer, such as wedding photos & videos or grandchild’s wedding photos and videos, files related to taxes, and files related to your occupation-then for Heaven’s Sakes GET A BACKUP DRIVE! They’re on sale! Tonight! Tomorrow! Here are the links!

1 Tb Western Digital USB External Backup Drive from Wal-Mart With In-Store Pick-up.

3 TB Western Digital USB External Backup Drive, 8 TB Seagate USB External Backup Drive. 500 GB FW800/USB 3.0 drive from LaCie, and 4 TB USB-C (Design by Porsche!) External Backup Drive from LaCie, all at Fry’s this week. And don’t forget to sign up for those promo codes, as they can save you money!

Costco will close tomorrow for the 4th ,so if you make your regular dogfood and beer run there on Wednesdays; stop by the electronics section for a good deal on a backup drive, too! The hardest part will be getting the drive out of the darn clamshell packaging!

And I’m just as bad as you may be. I’ve got a laptop I haven’t backed up in 333 days! So when I got home tonight, I plugged in my little 1TB backup drive to start the process. 

But I have a wonderful new MacBook Pro with all USB-C! How the Hell do I connect my HDTV to it, among other questions?

Roman Loyola of Macworld researched the dilemma of finding the right USB-C & Thunderbolt 3 adaptors for your MacBook Pro here.  Have at it.

You Need A Backup!

Yes, you. If you keep personally valuable files on your computer, such as wedding photos & videos or grandchild’s wedding photos and videos, files related to taxes, and files related to your occupation-then for Heaven’s Sakes GET A BACKUP DRIVE! They’re on sale! Tonight! Tomorrow! Here are the links!1 Tb Western Digital USB External Backup Drive from Wal-Mart With In-Store Pick-up.3 TB Western Digital USB External Backup Drive, 8 TB Seagate USB External Backup Drive. 500 GB FW800/USB 3.0 drive from LaCie, and 4 TB USB-C (Design by Porsche!) External Backup Drive from LaCie, all at Fry’s this week. And don’t forget to sign up for those promo codes, as they can save you money!Costco will close tomorrow for the 4th ,so if you make your regular dogfood and beer run there on Wednesdays; stop by the electronics section for a good deal on a backup drive, too! The hardest part will be getting the drive out of the darn clamshell packaging!How to start backing up your laptop! And I’m just as bad as you may be. I’ve got a laptop I haven’t backed up in 333 days! So when I got home tonight, I plugged in my little 1TB backup drive to start the process. But I have a wonderful new MacBook Pro with all USB-C! How the Hell do I connect my HDTV to it, among other questions?Roman Loyola of Macworld researched the dilemma of finding the right USB-C & Thunderbolt 3 adaptors for your MacBook Pro here.  Have at it.

 

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Senior Correspondent Arnold Woodworth's Weekly Web Wrap-up for June 23 2017

Video:
Watch Apple build its brand-new campus in 18 seconds
 
 
 
 
The 20 best smartphones in the world
 
According to this article:
 
1.  Google Pixel
2.  Google Pixel XL
3.  iPhone 7 Plus
4.  iPhone 7
 
 
 
 
New iPad Pro Inches Toward Replacing PC, but Falls Short
 
The professional tablet, which comes in two screen sizes — 10.5 or 12.9 diagonal inches — is incrementally improved from previous models.
 
But after about a week of testing the 10.5-inch iPad Pro, I concluded that Apple’s professional tablet still suffers from some of the same problems when compared with a laptop. Most important, keyboard typing is not comfortable, and some tasks are better done with a mouse than with a touch screen. In the end, I would still recommend a traditional laptop for most professionals.
 
I used the iPad Pro in research and outlining for this review. But when it came to writing it while reviewing notes simultaneously, I switched back to my MacBook Air, largely because the keyboard felt better to type on and it was easier to multitask with several apps.
 
 
 
 
iPad Pro vs. Surface Pro: Which Is Best for You?
 
 
 
 
10.5-inch iPad Pro (2017) Vs. Surface Pro Gen 5 (2017)
 
Verdict: The iPad Pros is the best tablet out there but not the best laptop replacement.
 
Verdict: Microsoft’s Surface Pro is a great hybrid that comes very close to a full-fledged laptop -- and beats the iPad Pro as a laptop replacement.
 
 
 
 
iPad Pro vs. Surface Pro: 5 ways to choose
 
 
 
 
Audio:
iPad Pro or Surface Pro?
 
Interview of Josh Goldman — CNET reviewer.
No video, only audio.
 
AW comment:  The audio bar is small — I almost didn’t notice it.
 
 
 
 
Apple’s new iPad Pro is the innovation missing in the Android ecosystem
 
Apple’s new iPad Pro and iOS 11? That single-handedly put every single Android manufacturer, and Google, to shame.
 
What makes the iPad Pro so innovative is the accompanying software.
 
 
 
 
MacBook Pro vs. MacBook vs. MacBook Air: Which should you buy?
 
 
 
 
MacBook 2017 review: The bang for your buck gets better
 
This is a review of the MacBook — notice the word “Pro” is missing.
 
The newest MacBook is a better buy than it has been, thanks to performance improvements by its processor and graphics upgrade.
 
 
 
 
Apple MacBook (2017) review
 
The Good:
The new 12-inch MacBook adds the improved keyboard mechanism from the MacBook Pro line. New processor and RAM options mean better performance.

The Bad:
Little else has changed, including the lack of ports beyond a single USB-C connection. You still can't get more-powerful mainstream Intel processors.

The Bottom Line:
With a subtle tweak to the keyboard and better component choices, this cult favorite mini MacBook suddenly feels like it can be your everyday laptop.
 
 
 
 
Video:
Believe it or not, the iPad Pro is faster than the 2017 and 2016 MacBook Pros in SOME performance tests
 
 
 
 
Apple's Powerful MacBook Pro Humbled By New iPad Pro
 
The idea that a laptop should be better than a tablet is widely expected.
 
Comparing the benchmarks of the latest iPad Pro and MacBook Pro machines leads to some interesting discoveries regarding the respective capabilities of the two devices launched at WWDC. Benchmarking the CPUs handed a narrow victory to the laptop, but the GPU victory went to the tablet family.
 
 
 
 
Video:
Here are all the major changes coming to your iPhone
 
 
 
 
I'm a disabled person, and Siri changed my life. Then I lost the ability to speak
 
The Google Assistant iPhone app, does not, that I know of, read text. Siri does. But with Google Assistant’s typing commands, I am able to complete tasks I was only able to do with Siri when I could speak.
 
Together they offer what one app should: a virtual assistant that allows me to type commands and prompt it to read text.
 
 
 
 
Think Siri is no match for Google Assistant? Watch this video showdown
 
The video shows just how far Siri in iOS 11 has come.
 
Note:
The “Beta Test” version of iOS 11 is being used by some people.
Apple’s web site says iOS 11 should be released for everyone else in the fall of 2017.
 
 
 
 
 
watchOS apps continue to disappear as Whole Foods says ‘nighty nighty’ to Apple Watch support
 
Whole Foods just removed its Apple Watch app from the App Store, making it the latest company to do so after Google, eBay, Amazon and others did the same earlier this year.
 
 
 
 
Apple working with startup Health Gorilla to add health diagnostic data to iPhone
 
Apple is looking to solve the “interoperability” problem of medical records by making the patient the “center of their own care.”
 
Apple has a secret team working to turn the iPhone into a one-stop shop for medical records information, partnering with select companies and looking to acquire smaller start-ups.
 
 
 
 
In its quest to turn the iPhone into a comprehensive health repository for every iPhone user, Apple has teamed up with Health Gorilla, a company specializing in aggregating diagnostic information.
 
Apple wants to create a centralized database for all of a person's health data, which would allow the medical community to overcome existing barriers that often prevent or complicate the transfer of patient data between providers, ultimately resulting in better care for patients.
 
 
 
 
The iPhone changed the world, and it changed Apple—except in one crucial way
 
Steve Jobs hired an experienced supply chain executive, Tim Cook. With Jobs’ support and inspiration, the future COO and CEO assembled the necessary team, set new rules, and forged new partnerships. As quantity begets nature, Apple became a different company.

…although not entirely.

One thing that didn’t change at Apple: The compulsion for total control through hardware/software integration.
 
 
 
 
AppleCare+ for Mac and iPhone Must Be Bought Within 60 Days of Purchase
 
All of Apple's AppleCare+ plans for Macs, iPads, and iPhones, must be bought alongside a new device or within 60 days of purchase, according to AppleCare+ support staff that MacRumors spoke to.
 
The original AppleCare plans for the Mac could be purchased while the Mac was still under its standard warranty, so customers had a year to buy it, but with the new AppleCare+ plan for Mac, a purchase must be made within 60 days.
 
AW comment:
Apple has begun to address this issue but needs to to better.
 
 
 
 
Remember to log out of iCloud before selling an iOS device
 
Before selling or giving away an Apple iOS device, users need to sign out of iCloud and erase all contents and settings. Otherwise, the new owner may not be able to activate and use the iPhone or iPad.
 
This is because of the Find My iPhone function, which helps locate a device and block it remotely in case of theft or loss. When you sign out of iCloud, this function is deactivated.

To log out of iCloud, go into Settings > iCloud on the device and sign out.

http://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech-news/2017/06/22/remember-to-log-out-of-icloud-before-selling-an-ios-device/
 
 
 
How to Make an Old, Slow Phone Feel Like New Again
 
 
 
 
Woman Loses Phone, But Gets It Right Back Thanks To Apple iCloud
 
 
 
 
Two-factor authentication required for beta versions of iOS 11, macOS High Sierra
 
“If you install the iOS 11 or macOS High Sierra public betas this summer and meet the basic requirements, your Apple ID will be automatically updated to use two-factor authentication,” Apple explains in its email to users.
 
It’s not totally clear whether two-factor authentication will be required for ALL users who update to iOS 11 and macOS High Sierra — or whether it’s only necessary for those who already use two-step authentication.
 
 
 
 
How to update to two-factor authentication (2FA) for an iTunes-only Apple ID
 
If you’re like me (and many of you are), you have two Apple IDs for historical reasons that you continue to use:
One for iCloud and one for the Apple Store.
 
After June 15, Apple requires 2FA… 
 
AW comment:  The instructions seem a bit complicated.  Setting it up seems easier if you use an iMac or MacBook than if you use an iOS device.
 
 
 
 
How to set up two-factor authentication on all your online accounts
 
 
 
 
Apple's Biggest Mistake After Steve Jobs Was Conceding The Power User Market
 
By not offering a suitable machine for power users, Apple has burned a pile of good will with its most influential (and wealthiest) customers.

Apple should make power user Macs for the same reason that auto companies participate is motor sports.
 
 
 
 
One man in a tiny Irish town could derail Apple’s plans for Europe
 
Allan Daly an American by birth and an environmental engineer by trade, and his main objections to the project were environmental. He was worried about the strain the proposed data center would put on Ireland’s electrical grid. He was also worried that Apple had no plans to mitigate the volume of greenhouse gas emissions he’d calculated the facility would produce. Plus, he just didn’t think the site in Derrydonnell Wood was suitable. There were better sites in County Galway already zoned for this type of thing. He thought Apple should choose one of those instead.
 
Apple is the world’s most valuable company, and it’s used to getting its way. Yet here in rural Ireland, one man has managed to block its ambitions.
 
 
 
 
Virus scanner or malware? Beware app store fakes
 
In the wake of the WannaCry ransomware attack, 27 different smart-phone apps materialized promising to protect your phone from the global cyber threat.

But wait: WannaCry, which ensnared more than 200,000 computers around the world, doesn't target phones. It used an exploit, discovered by the National Security Agency and leaked by hackers, that targeted outdated Windows systems.

Perhaps more alarming was that these apps were filled with malware — executing the very attacks these apps promised to protect against.
 
 
 
 
Apple's Laxity Is Leading to Scammers and Risky Apps in the App Store
 
Apple has failed to adequately screen a few apps that not only are dangerous, but are scams, resulting in huge monthly charges.
 
This is an embarrassment to Apple that needs to be addressed quickly.
 
 
 
 
All of the crypto-currency money in the world, in one chart
 
This article has a list of how many dollars worth of each crypto-currency exist right now.
 
Bitcoin currently tops the list at $46 Billion worth.
 
But there’s a whole crypto world out there beyond bitcoin: CoinDesk lists more than 800 cryptocurrencies, though most of them are thinly traded and have market capitalizations under $1 million. Only eight cryptocurrencies are worth more than $1 billion, as you can see in our chart.
 
 
 
 
College students would give up their friends’ privacy for free pizza
 
Americans may claim to value privacy, but their actions suggest otherwise.

Nearly three-quarters of people (74%) in the U.S. believe it’s “very important” to be in control of who can get information about them and 60% say they would never feel comfortable sharing their email contacts. However, the vast majority of college students (98%) gave away their friends’ emails when promised free pizza.
 
This isn’t the first time a disparity between the beliefs surrounding privacy protections and the actions upholding them has been proven.
 
 
 
 
Fearing Terrorism, Germany Wants To Fingerprint 6-Year-Old Children And Force Smartphone Surveillance
 
“We can’t allow there to be areas that are practically outside the law,” German interior minister Thomas de Maiziere told reporters today while announcing new Nazi-like surveillance measures to fight terrorism.

The new measures include fingerprinting 6-year-old children and forcing technology companies to give the German authorities front doors to smartphones and backdoors into messaging apps in order to spy on all communications.
 
It seems each new “terror” attack in Europe results in more laws that destroy individual liberty and benefit the police state. Others are noticing, too.

Reuters makes sure to add that the “proposal encountered strong opposition in Germany, where the memories of spying in the Communist and Nazi run deep.”
 
 
Reader Comment:
Although terrorism is real it serves the same purpose as Climate Change as far as the Global Government crowd is concerned. IT IS JUSTIFICATION FOR CONTROL.... Giving up freedom for more government controls.

 

 

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