November 5, 2014

Dan Frakes:

Here are some of my favorite iOS 8 features, in no particular order, with an emphasis on things that haven’t been exhaustively covered elsewhere. I hope you discover something new and useful.

Dan has some great tidbits here. My favourite is the SMS relay feature.

Macworld:

The latest release of AgileBits’ password manager is as good as ever—and a perfect companion for OS X Yosemite.

I can’t recommend 1Password enough. Indispensable to my computer use.

Quartz:

It didn’t take long for me to get used to Apple’s large new iPhone 6 Plus. After more than a month of everyday use, it has become even more of the pocket computer I’ve always wanted. A few thoughts.

The article hits a lot of the points I was curious about. Anyone else have similar or dissimilar stories about using their iPhone 6/6 Plus for the past month?

The Robservatory:

Dearly beloved…

On this, the occasion of its 14th birthday, we’re gathered here to mark the passing of Mac OS X Hints.

While it can be hard to tell exactly when a web site has died, the signs are fairly obvious. It’s been over 45 days since the last new hint appeared on the site. There is no way for new users to sign up for an account. There’s been one new comment posted in the last two days. A sidebar box proudly proclaims Latest Mountain Lion Hints. The site design, logo, and icons were last updated when I worked for Macworld, over four years ago. To paraphrase a Star Trek character, “it’s dead, Jim.”

While Rob, the originator of Mac OS X Hints, makes a clear case as to why the site is no longer as needed as it has been in the past, it’s dormancy is still a shame. It was a site many of us relied on in the early days of Mac OS X to try and figure out the ins and outs of the new operating system.

Outside:

As airlines pack more passengers than ever onto each plane, a single storm can reverberate through the system—leaving flyers stranded as agents scramble to find ever-rarer empty seats on later flights. But you aren’t entirely at the mercy of the airlines. Should your itinerary be delayed, cancelled, or overbooked, knowing your rights can be the difference between a $300 voucher and a long night at the airport, for more information o this subject find all air passenger rights here . As air travel gets more and more onerous, it’s important to know what you are supposed to receive when the airline makes a mistake. As always, be firm but polite with any airline agents you speak to. First, get in line to speak with an agent. You might also want to call the airline while you wait. Typically, if your flight is canceled, the majority of airlines will rebook you on the next flight available to your destination at no additional cost. However, depending on why your flight was canceled, finding seats on a new flight may prove difficult and may alter your travel plans considerably. But when you fly with sky aviation, you will never experience any hassle or delays.

“In the event of a flight delay or cancellation, travel advisors have a number of tools to assist,” says Peter Vlitas, senior vice president of airline relations at Travel Leaders Group, one of the largest travel agency companies. “If we anticipate flight delays due to weather, for example, travel advisors receive advance waivers so they can select alternative flights before they sell out.”

If you didn’t purchase flights through a travel adviser, you can pay for Cranky Concierge’s Urgent Assistance plan, which charges a fee per one-way flight to help travelers find a solution to flight changes (either delays, cancellations or missed connections) and proactively monitor future trips. You can also try booking flights at Jettly if you want to schedule your flight at the time of day that is most convenient for you.

Chappie trailer

Ever see District 9? If not, I’d urge you to go find it. Absolutely brilliant movie.

District 9 director Neill Blomkamp and lead actor Sharlto Copley are teaming up again in the upcoming Chappie. Watch the trailer below. Dev Patel (big fan), Hugh Jackman, Sigourney Weaver too. Can’t wait for this one.

Writing for ReCode, Walt Mossberg lays out his thoughts on MCX and their anti-Apple Pay tactics. You no doubt know all the details (if not, click here).

CVS had no comment for this article, but MCX did grant me an interview.

When I asked the CEO of the MCX consortium, Dekkers Davidson, what he and the consortium were afraid of, he said, “nothing.” In fact, he said that eventually there ought to be multiple “compelling” mobile payments systems.

However, Davidson explained, MCX insisted on exclusivity for now, to provide “breathing room” for the development of CurrentC. When I asked whether that meant the merchants didn’t want another system to catch on, he said no, and repeatedly explained what a massive undertaking CurrentC is. He added that the exclusivity rule would expire in “months, not years.”

And this nugget:

Davidson flatly denied that MCX had ordered CVS to turn off Apple Pay, and he speculated that CVS might have simply done so because it had signed the exclusivity policy. He noted that one MCX member, the family-owned Midwest supermarket chain Meijer, hasn’t shut off Apple Pay.

Is there a difference? If the agreement with CVS specifically calls for exclusivity, that’s equivalent to an order for exclusivity. And if they acknowledge exclusivity, why make the case that Meijer did not adhere to that policy? I can only imagine what’s going on in the MCX boardroom right now. Fear, confusion, and a lot of finger pointing.

CNET:

Samsung was replaced by the iPhone maker as No. 1 in China’s mobile sector this year, according to the China Brand Research Center’s 2014 China Brand Power Index ranking report released Tuesday.

The Suwon, Korea-based company had previously held the top spot since 2012.

The China Brand Research Center calculated this year’s rankings by polling 13,500 Chinese across 30 cities, aged 15 to 60, from August 2013 to January 2014, about brand awareness and loyalty.

The report said Samsung failed to secure its first-place mobile ranking due to a focus on market share leading to falling consumer loyalty.

A picture is worth a thousand words.

November 4, 2014

New York Times:

Japan may be one of the world’s perennial early adopters of new technologies, but its continuing attachment to the CD puts it sharply at odds with the rest of the global music industry. While CD sales are falling worldwide, including in Japan, they still account for about 85 percent of sales here, compared with as little as 20 percent in some countries, like Sweden, where online streaming is dominant.

“Japan is utterly, totally unique,” said Lucian Grainge, the chairman of the Universal Music Group, the world’s largest music conglomerate.

That uniqueness has the rest of the music business worried. Despite its robust CD market, sales in Japan — the world’s second-largest music market, after the United States — have been sliding for a decade, and last year they dropped 17 percent, dragging worldwide results down 3.9 percent.

Digital sales — rising in every other top market — are quickly eroding in Japan, going from almost $1 billion in 2009 to just $400 million last year, according to the Recording Industry Association of Japan.

Amazing that Tower Records closed all 89 of its American outlets, but they still have 85 outlets in Japan. A large part of it is the marketing approach, finely tuned to the Japanese collectible culture.

Peculiarities of Japan’s business climate have shaped its attachment to the CD, but cultural factors may also be at play, like Japanese consumers’ love for collectible goods. Greatest hits albums, for example, do particularly well in Japan, perhaps because of the elaborate, artist-focused packaging. The hugely popular girl group AKB48 pioneered the sale of CDs containing tickets that can be redeemed for access to live events — a strategy credited with propping up CD sales, because it can lead the biggest fans to buy multiple copies of an album.

Washington Post:

For a large chunk of consumers, buying a wearable before the Apple Watch just isn’t an option. As part of a six-month study of the wearable market, PriceWaterhouseCoopers asked 1,000 consumers to share how they feel about the wearable market, and found that 59 percent of them were most excited by Apple’s entry into the market. (Amazon, Google, Microsoft and Nike rounded out the top five.)

The report also notes how important the Apple Watch is to the wider market, calling it a “sleek device that rivals project will help mainstream the entire wearable category.”

In other words, until Apple joins the fray, everyone else is just holding their breath.

The role of a setter of trends, of a market-maker.

Back in February, Disney launched its Disney Movies Anywhere (DMA) service on iOS. In effect, Disney movies you buy via iTunes are available in your DMA locker for you to stream on your iOS devices. Now, Android has joined the fray, meaning you can watch all those iOS-purchased Disney movies on your Android device and, if you buy movies on an Android device, you can watch them on your iOS device.

All well and good, but the thing I find the most fascinating about this is the thread of cross-compatibility it brings. Movies are data and this allows you to share and consume the same data on either side of the iOS/Android divide, just as you might an email, PDF, or even a Word document.

This kind of cross platform sharing is a big win for consumers, and it is a small step in the direction of eroding the platform specific ecosystem barricade. Imagine if you could cross platform share all your media, your movies, TV shows, documents, and music. Now that would be a disruption.

Music that touches you at a deep level is a rare delight. Same with a book, a movie, a piece of art or anything that is the result of the creative process. Today I had the good fortune to stumble upon something that did this on several levels.

Sonic Highways is a documentary series on HBO, put together by Dave Grohl and Foo Fighters. The series is an incredible journey, taking you on a deep musical exploration of eight cities, building a song in each city based on the musical foundation found in that city.

For example, the series opens in Chicago and revolves around artists like Buddy Guy, Muddy Waters, and Rick Nielson (the baseball hat-wearing, scorching guitar player from Cheap Trick). You get the chance to meet Steve Albini, controversial producer of Nirvana’s In Utero album. All the while, you watch the elements that would ultimately form the first of the album’s 8 songs unfold. The song is a tribute to Buddy Guy and you get to meet Buddy and hear him talk about his deep friendship with Muddy Waters. The Buddy Guy interview snippets actually turn up in the song lyrics. Rick Nielson stops by the studio and lays down a track on the album.

The finished song, like the documentary itself, is deep, complex, and polished. Sonic Highways is a gift to anyone with an interest in music. The series is available on HBO, on HBO Go, and on demand.

Here’s the trailer, which gives a pretty good sense of the show format and tone.

November 3, 2014

NPR:

Tom Magliozzi, one of public radio’s most popular personalities, died on Monday of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. He was 77 years old.

Tom and his brother, Ray, became famous as “Click and Clack the Tappet Brothers” on the weekly NPR show Car Talk. They bantered, told jokes, laughed and sometimes even gave pretty good advice to listeners who called in with their car troubles.

I don’t know a thing about cars but listened to the show simply because Tom and Ray were so entertaining.

Honda “Dark Side” spot created in Final Cut Pro X

Over the weekend, I posted a link to this fantastic Honda commercial. You have to actually play it to understand the mechanic. Well worth it.

Turns out, the project was build using Final Cut Pro X. Here’s a link to the specifics. [Hat tip to Adam Schoales]

When you plug an iOS device into your Mac, you no doubt end up launching iPhoto, whether you intended to or not. Yosemite handles the setting that controls this in a way different than its predecessors.

Kirk McElhearn:

By default, when you sync an iPhone or iPad, OS X opens iPhoto, asking you if you want to import photos. I had this setting turned off in Mavericks, but it seems to have been turned on again in Yosemite. Yet when you look in iPhoto, there is no such setting. Tricky of Apple to have hidden it in another app…

Read the post for the details. Good stuff.

In a direct response to Tim Cook’s public essay laying out his sexual orientation and his reasons for speaking out, Russian media is reporting that a St. Petersburg monument to Steve Jobs has been taken down.

The monument, with an interactive screen displaying information about Jobs, was reportedly put up on the grounds of an IT university in January 2013 on the initiative of a Russian company called Western European Financial Union.

Russian Radio station Biznes-FM cited the company’s chief, Maksim Dolgopolov, as saying he had it removed in part to comply with a law banning the spread of “propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations” among minors.

And:

After Cook came out as gay in an essay published on October 30, prominent St. Petersburg antigay activist Vitaly Milonov was quoted as saying Cook should be banned from Russia because he could bring AIDS, Ebola, or gonorrhea into the country.

The mind boggles.

On the rational side of the spectrum, there’s this op-ed piece from the New York Times:

As Lloyd Blankfein, the chief executive of Goldman Sachs, put it, “He’s chief executive of the Fortune One. Something has consequences because of who does it, and this is Tim Cook and Apple. This will resonate powerfully.”

Trevor Burgess, the openly gay chief executive of C1 Financial in Florida, and one of the first publicly gay chief executives of a public company, said Tim Cook used “the metaphor of laying a brick on the ‘path towards justice.’ ” But, “This is more like 600 million bricks,” Mr. Burgess said. “He has the most influential voice in global business.”

Indeed he does.

According to NetMarketshare, Windows XP adoption currently sits at 17.18%, Windows 8 at 5.88%, and Windows 8.1 at 10.92%, giving Windows 8.x a total of 16.8%. Windows 7 remains the big dog, with a 53.05% adoption rate.

The Windows 8 adoption rate straggling may be old news, but the coming crossover in adoption rates is interesting nonetheless. Part of the issue is Windows fragmentation and Microsoft’s struggle to convince its customers to fork over the $100+ to buy into a newer OS. Will a free OS change that?

Another issue is all those left behind machines and the security risk they pose. How many unpatched Windows XP and Vista machines are out there, either waiting to be malwared into a zombie state or already serving in a malware army?

If you want to explore OS, browser, or search engine market share, head over to NetMarketshare, then make a selection from the drop down menus at the top of the main pane.

This article appeared back in January 2013, long before CVS and Rite Aid pulled the plug on Apple Pay, and long before Apple Pay was even announced. There’s a lot to process here.

On the pitch to become a member of the Merchant Customer Exchange:

One example of the pitch approach some have cited: MCX demanding $30,000 from retailers just to see the official PowerPoint. (That slide deck must have some amazing images.) Although charter members were asked to kick in $1 million to join, retailers are being asked to give $500,000 or $250,000.Chains are also being asked to commit to three-year mobile payment app exclusivity, meaning they won’t support any non-MCX mobile payment other than any mobile payment app they have already deployed. (There’s a one-year grace period from the start of membership—where retailers can get out of the deal—and that period is about to expire for most of the initial backers.)

And:

One CIO of a major chain, who sat through the MCX salespitch (he declined to pay for the PowerPoint but the consortium showed it to him anyway—or at least a version of the slides), said he declined to join because of what he perceived as the sketchiness of the plan.

And this, on the difference in liability between the MCX-backed ACH approach and the credit-card approach (used by Apple Pay):

The question of whether there will be a credit card option is crucial. Although debit card transactions—especially at Walmart—are soaring percentage-wise, the risks to the consumer are light years less with credit cards and the associated zero-liability programs. In theory, a zero-liability program could be created for debit cards, but it would mean banks agreeing to not bounce any transactions until they had established that no fraud is involved.That’s because even if banks ultimately reimburse a shopper all monies stolen by thieves, the damage perpetrated by inappropriately bounced checks can be permanent and extensive. A credit card zero-liability incident grants a temporary credit, and the shopper is not hurt.

Also interesting is the idea that many merchants are involved specifically because of Walmart’s huge gravity well:

One retail concern that has haunted the group since its launch is the perception—with more than a little justification—that Walmart is playing an ultra-dominant role. Granted, other retailers are certainly involved, but Walmart began the effort and one of its executives—Walmart VP and Assistant Treasurer Mike Cook—is seen as the group’s de facto CEO. Some have come to jokingly suggest that MCX stands for the Mike Cook Exchange. The suggestion that many of the chains involved are there to closely watch Walmart (“keep your friends close and your enemies closer”) is still alive and well.

A fantastic read. [hat tip to Jim Neal]

Feathers, bowling balls, dropping in the world’s biggest vacuum chamber

Aristotle taught that heavy objects fall faster than lighter ones, in direct proportion to weight. It wasn’t until Galileo’s time that the concept of air resistance entered the zeitgeist.

The video embedded below is shot in the world’s biggest vacuum chamber, NASA’s Space Power Facility in Ohio. The money shot starts at about 2:50, but the whole thing is worth watching.

November 2, 2014

Have you ever wanted to train your voice, learn to sing in pitch, develop a better ear? The SingTrue app uses a wide range of pitch recognition exercises to develop your sense of pitch.

The app is free, with in-app purchases for expanding the set of exercises. If developing your sense of pitch has ever been a goal, download the free app and take it for a spin.

Honda’s dark side

I wish I could embed this video, but since I can’t, follow the link to check out Honda’s incredibly clever new marketing campaign video. To me, it’s not at all about the product (the supercharged Honda Civic Type R) or the plot of the video, but about the delivery mechanism.

When the page loads, play the video. If you press and hold the R key at any time during the video, you’ll immediately switch to a perfectly matched alternate view which tells a completely different story. Press and release R as you like to instantly shift back and forth. Incredibly well done.

November 1, 2014

Pop Chart Lab:

Newly refreshed with a bevy of recent Apple products including the iPad Air 2, iMac with 5K Display, iPhone 6, and even next year’s Apple Watch, the world’s most comprehensive mapping of Apple products is back.

This classic gallery of proprietary gadgets displays every computer, handheld, peripheral, software, and operating system released by Apple from 1976 onward. Over 500 items in all, chronicling how Apple has invented—and reinvented—insanely great products.

We’ve mentioned this before but the update makes it even better. If you know “A True Apple Believer”, this would make a great Christmas gift!

October 31, 2014

Wired:

The Baltimore Wastewater Treatment Plant put out a call for “extreme spider” help in 2009, when a giant spiderweb covered almost 4 acres of their facility. Scientists eventually estimated over 107 million spiders were living in the structure, with densities of 35,176 spiders per m³ in spots.

In honour of Halloween, I’m going to leave this right here for you. Thanks to Brian Webster for the link.

Wall Street Journal:

Ive told an audience at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Thursday night that designing the smartwatch posed more challenges than the iPhone because of societal expectations around a wristwatch. The wrist, he said, is an ideal place for “lightweight interactions” and “casual glancing,” but not for heavy reading.

“Even though Apple Watch does so many things, there are cultural, historical implications and expectations,” Ive said. “That’s why it’s been such a difficult and humbling program.”

It’s obvious Apple has thought long and hard about that last sentence and maybe that’s why the Apple Watch will be more successful (although, that’s damning with faint praise) than other company’s offerings.

CurrentC and antitrust implications

There’s been a lot of discussion about the legal implications of the recent move by CVS and Rite Aid to drop support for Apple Pay. This quote from a Reuters article clarified the point:

Antitrust experts said CVS and Rite Aid have the right to drop a vendor if they believe they can save money by going around the credit card companies and Apple, both of which will take a piece of the action.

But they could run into antitrust trouble if they coordinated on dropping Apple Pay and Google Wallet or if someone else, perhaps a person working with CurrentC, organized their decision to drop Apple and Google’s payment services.

“If I was a regulator, I would want to take a look at that,” said Peter Carstensen, who teaches antitrust at the University of Wisconsin Law School.

As I read this, antitrust would be an issue if a requirement was placed on CVS, Rite Aid, and other members of the MCX consortium to drop support for Apple Pay. In other words, no problem if CVS and Rite Aid independently decided to drop Apple Pay support.

But is that what happened here? What caused them both to drop Apple Pay? Was it a contractual requirement? Was there an email that went out from MCX to the exchange merchants laying out some rule requiring them to block Apple Pay?

Want to ask Mark Zuckerberg a question? In a move taken from the Reddit Ask-Me-Anything playbook, Zuckerberg has launched a Facebook page designed to field and vote on questions.

On Thursday, November 6 at 2pm PT, Zuckerberg will respond, via live video stream, to the most up-voted questions. The event will last about an hour.

Earlier this week, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler proposed a far reaching rule change (detailed in this blog post) that would level the playing field and give non-traditional video suppliers access to programming that is currently only available to cable and satellite providers.

Back in 1992, the satellite TV industry was new and floundering because they didn’t have access to the same programming is the cable companies. In response, the FCC passed the Communications Act.

In Title VI of the Communications Act, Congress created rules to ensure that cable companies that own video content can’t raise artificial barriers to competition by refusing to let their video competitors have access to the programming they own. That worked for satellite providers, and also helped telephone companies entering the video business.

The new rule would allow companies that distribute TV/cable programming over the internet, so-called over-the-top suppliers (OTTs), access to that same programming. And that’s where Apple could come in. In this excellent piece for Seeking Alpha (free reg wall), Mark Hibben writes:

Wheeler’s proposal is a recognition of a simple fact: the Internet is the future of content delivery, any content, including video. Wheeler recognizes that most cable companies have become high-speed Internet Service Providers (ISPs), and many are converting to Internet Protocol delivery of their video content as well.

How is this over the top distribution different from Apple TV, Chromecast, Xbox, and other plug-in devices that put web-enabled programming on your TV? There’s this:

iTunes could become a central hub for all iOS content, able to stream purchased, rented, subscription and “free” network TV content. All it takes is infrastructure, and Apple has plenty of that, and the capability to build and acquire more. Under this scenario, you would be able to watch a live TV event, such as the Super Bowl, anywhere on your iPhone or iPad. For a nominal fee, of course.

And this:

I think Apple still needs a discriminator to set it apart from the pack of Internet-connected smart TVs. The most important discriminator that Apple can offer is some enhanced level of iOS capability. Of course, Apple TV and any future Apple television will be based on iOS, but future Apple television products need to offer greater access to iOS apps and games than the current Apple TV does.

There’s a lot to chew on in this FCC blog post. The new rule change needs to be fleshed out and the terms clarified. But no matter how it plays out, this seems a huge opportunity for Apple and a boon to consumers.

October 30, 2014

Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta 2014 – Timelapse Short Film from Knate Myers on Vimeo.

Vimeo:

Every year the city of Albuquerque host the largest hot air balloon event in the world, the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta.

This festival is on my “Great Places to Shoot Photos” bucket list.

Ars Technica:

Last week three men filed a class action lawsuit in Northern California District Court alleging that Apple’s 2011 MacBook Pro laptops were defective and that Apple did not take proper steps to compensate customers whose hardware broke.

The lawsuit specifically addresses 15” and 17” MacBook Pros from 2011, which the plaintiffs claim suffered from “random bouts of graphical distortion, system instability, and system failures.” The plaintiffs also assert that the problem is widespread, with an online survey conducted by the plaintiffs receiving over 3,000 responses from 2011 MacBook Pro owners in a single week.

As someone who has one of these affected machines and has already had one logic board failure attributed to it, I’m going to follow this closely.