It avoids the potential landmine of having to describe what an Apple Pen is.Apple Pencil.
Apple Pencil.
What is this I don't even.
--Patrick
It avoids the potential landmine of having to describe what an Apple Pen is.Apple Pencil.
Apple Pencil.
What is this I don't even.
It would be awesome if indie podcasts like Smarter Every Day, Vintage Space, and Brady Haran's plethora of shows (Objectivity, Periodic Video, etc.) could have their own actual app channels easily accessible in the AppleTV menu. Especially since Discovery/History Channels no longer seem to carry any science and history (Reality TV needs to die in a fire).App Store on the Apple TV is important because it means that video providers no longer need to be approached by Apple to get on the platform which will be much better for smaller operations.
And National Geographic was just sold* to Fox.Discovery/History Channels no longer seem to carry any science and history
It just got a lot easier for them. Expect a TWiT app on the Apple TV by the end of the year.It would be awesome if indie podcasts like Smarter Every Day, Vintage Space, and Brady Haran's plethora of shows (Objectivity, Periodic Video, etc.) could have their own actual app channels easily accessible in the AppleTV menu. Especially since Discovery/History Channels no longer seem to carry any science and history (Reality TV needs to die in a fire).
Netflix and Hulu combined with awesome indie video podcasts make me not miss having cable at all.
<DarthVader>NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! DO NOT WANT!</DarthVader>And National Geographic was just sold* to Fox.
--Patrick
*Well, not sold, but certainly "had controlling interest given."
And National Geographic was just sold* to Fox.
*Well, not sold, but certainly "had controlling interest given."
Rupert Murdoch marks first day of National Geographic ownership by firing 200 employeesI've been reading that magazine since I was six-years-old. It fueled my interest in science and history.
Dammit.
I imagine the proportion of "storytelling" will rise an unfortunate amount.“Looking ahead, I am confident National Geographic’s mission will be fulfilled in powerful, new and impactful ways, as we continue to change the world through science, exploration, education and storytelling.”
So if you have a respectable digital music collection, don't use Apple's music subscription service, or make sure you have a backup....When I signed up for Apple Music, iTunes evaluated my massive collection of Mp3s and WAV files, scanned Apple’s database for what it considered matches, then removed the original files from my internal hard drive. REMOVED them. Deleted. If Apple Music saw a file it didn’t recognize—which came up often, since I’m a freelance composer and have many music files that I created myself—it would then download it to Apple’s database, delete it from my hard drive, and serve it back to me when I wanted to listen, just like it would with my other music files it had deleted.
I know the idea is to make all your music available on every device without taking up gigs of room, but making regular backups of your stuff (especially self-authored content!) would be thunderously good advice in any case.make sure you have a backup.
No DRM. If it was push-button-get-MP3-be-done, that'd be great. But it's not, and it sucks.I still don't understand the hate the internet has for iTunes. It has a list of songs, a play button, a search box, and skip buttons. What else do you need? I guess if you liked organizing music a lot it might stink, but I have no desire to do that. Usually I'm looking for a specific song or artist and it does that just peachy. I mean, I'm not writing fan mail for it, but I never hated it either.
I've used iTunes to rip to MP3 for years. You just set it up so it uses MP3 and when you insert a disc it does it all for you including album art, tags, etc.No DRM. If it was push-button-get-MP3-be-done, that'd be great. But it's not, and it sucks.
I'm not talking ripping a disk you already have, I mean buying a track from online.I've used iTunes to rip to MP3 for years. You just set it up so it uses MP3 and when you insert a disc it does it all for you including album art, tags, etc.
For me, it's because iTunes (like most Apple products) is designed to try to lock you into a specific ecosystem. For people who already exist in an all apple ecosystem, that's fine, but I don't, and so I don't want to use iTunes.I still don't understand the hate the internet has for iTunes. It has a list of songs, a play button, a search box, and skip buttons. What else do you need? I guess if you liked organizing music a lot it might stink, but I have no desire to do that. Usually I'm looking for a specific song or artist and it does that just peachy. I mean, I'm not writing fan mail for it, but I never hated it either.
I've used iTunes Match for years, and never saw this behavior. I used iTunes Radio for years, and never saw this behavior. Once Apple decided I had to use the paid Apple Music service to continue using what once was iTunes Radio, I declined that offer and continued to use iTunes as before.And in other news, Apple's music subscription service will obliterate your music library on your hard drive, by design:
https://blog.vellumatlanta.com/2016/05/04/apple-stole-my-music-no-seriously/
So if you have a respectable digital music collection, don't use Apple's music subscription service, or make sure you have a backup.
Real-time 4k video processing.Kaby Lake's big aim seems to be 4K video processing. But overall a nice step forward.
Same. I'm really hoping Samsung gets the Exploding Note issue corrected and gets the supply chain ramped back up soon.I like my iPhone. It's the third one I've owned.
It is also the last one I will ever own.
Mine is less than a year old, so I'll still be using it for a while. I'm just so pissed that they actually removed the headphone jack. They've done a lot of money grabs before, but this is beyond shameless. I know its unlikely, but I really hope this comes back to bite them.
While I agree that the default android UI response time feels sluggish, you can enable developer options and manually speed up the process. I have transition animations set to 3x speed and it feels very snappy now.I envy the UI response time of iphones, but I much prefer android's.... well, everything else.