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    Last Episode — August 24: Gene presents a regular, tech podcaster and commentator Kirk McElhearn , who comes aboard to talk about the impact of the outbreak of data hacks and ways to protect your stuff with strong passwords. He’ll also provide a common sense if unsuspected tip in setting one up. Also on the agenda, rumors about the next Mac mini from Apple. Will it, as rumored, be a visual clone of the Apple TV, and what are he limitations of such a form factor? As a sci-fi and fantasy fan, Kirk will also talk about some of his favorite stories and more. In is regular life, Kirk is a lapsed New Yorker living in Shakespeare’s home town, Stratford-upon-Avon, in the United Kingdom. He writes about things, records podcasts, makes photos, practices zen, and cohabits with cats. He’s an amateur photographer, and shoots with Leica cameras and iPhones. His writings include regular contributions to The Mac Security Blog , The Literature & Latte Blog, and TidBITS, and he has written for Popular Photography, MusicWeb International, as well as several other web sites and magazines. Kirk has also written more than two dozen books and documentation for dozens of popular Mac apps, as well as press releases, web content, reports, white papers, and more.

    For more episodes, click here to visit the show’s home page.

    Newsletter Issue #889: So is the Touch Bar Only the Beginning?

    December 12th, 2016

    Shortly before I began to write this column, I saw a TV ad for the new MacBook Pro. The only memorable part was the flashy deomonstration of the joys of the Touch Bar, and it is the tentpole feature of the new notebooks. The rest isn’t quite so important. It doesn’t matter that it’s thinner and lighter, but promises the same battery life as the last version. Well, except for those who claim it doesn’t. It’s also a tad faster and the SSD is much quicker.

    Forget about the argument about whether the Touch Bar is really a feature that can appeal to professionals. I’ll just accept that it can be, based on the demonstrations at the Apple media event that focused on Adobe Photoshop and Final Cut Pro X. The fact that developers are busy adding support to their own apps indicates they have confidence that Apple is pointing the way to a useful addition in personal computing.

    Sure, Apple sells far more notebooks than desktops these days. I am sure only the iMac yields decent sales in the latter category. When it comes to portables, a decent proportion of sales will go to the MacBook Pro, but lots of people have purchased MacBook Airs in recent years. My son acquired one earlier this year, and no doubt for the same reasons others buy the cheaper models — price.

    Continue Reading…


    About Apple Hardware and Buggy Systems

    December 9th, 2016

    You can say the launch of an all-new Apple gadget may at times be troublesome. While some of you may feel that Apple’s quality control has taken a nosedive in recent years — and you want to blame Tim Cook for it — that’s not quite true. Every so often a new Apple device arrives that has defects that require a software update, or perhaps a hardware fix or replacement.

    I remember that PowerBook 5300ce I bought back in 1996. It was actually introduced the previous year, but production was halted, or never started, because Apple had to change out the battery configuration. They wanted to introduce lithium-ion batteries, but some early production units began to smoke. In other words, display symptoms similar to those that dogged Samsung’s Galaxy Note 7 earlier this year.

    So Apple had to switch back to a nickel-hydride battery which offered a shorter lifecycle, but at least it worked reliably. I received it months late, and I paid something in the mid-$5,000 range for it; there were evidently configurations that cost as much a $6,300. So when you complain about a fully-outfitted Late 2016 MacBook Pro costing upwards of $3,000 when all the options are selected on a custom order, don’t forget how far we’ve come. Still, the average Windows notebook these days has a mid-three-figure price tag.

    What made matters was is that my 5300ce had to go back to Apple several times to fix different bugs. One fi required a new logic board, another involved some adhesive that kept leaking into view from the bottom of the display bezel. In fact, I kept returning the unit to Apple, for the leaking adhesive phenomenon was never fully repaired. It seemed almost ghost-like when it reappeared a few weeks after the unit was returned to me.

    I finally sold that PowerBook to a friend at a discount, warning him of the potential problems. He ended up sending it back to Apple one more time before selling it to someone else, he said, for the same price he paid me. So you could call us even!

    Yet another Mac notebook I owned, a 17-inch MacBook Pro from 2006 or thereabouts, had some sort of battery swelling problem, but it was easily replaced. You could actually change batteries in those days in a matter of minutes. The last MacBook Pro I acquired was a similar 2010 model. I still have it, and I’ve boosted performance with more RAM (8GB) and a 500GB SSD. It works pretty well, though I can see the joys of a Retina display.

    Since it continues to run reliably, I haven’t thought about replacing it.

    I recall when a client’s iMac G5, first introduced in 2004, developed a power supply failure, not once but twice. The first time he paid an independent repair shop for the fix. When I pointed him to Apple’s extended repair announcement, he called up support and arranged to have the repair done at an Apple Store. In turn, Apple arranged to refund the money he paid on that first repair.

    As I read about battery problems with an iPhone 6s, and view an assortment of other issues on Apple’s support site, it’s clear to me that there have always been defective products out there from Apple. Other tech companies have also encountered various and sundry issues.

    Most often problems of this sort aren’t caught during the early test stages, and don’t show up until millions of units are in use. They may involve premature failures of one component or another, and it may take time for Apple to confirm that something more significant than an isolated issue is involved. But they’ll usually do the right thing and make the repairs free of charge.

    When I bought my son, Grayson, a loaded black MacBook in 2008, I made the decision — a smart one I realized later — to buy AppleCare. During that three-year support period, Grayson replaced nearly every part on that notebook. A couple of hard drives failed, a keyboard or two, the logic board, and there were also LCD failures. After three years, nearly every component had been replaced one or more times.

    After he received that computer, he took up residence in Madrid, where he began his career as a teacher. He teaches Spanish students English. For the most part, I learned of his frequent visits to an Apple dealer via email. But I didn’t press him on whether he was being unduly abusive to his Mac. He’s always impressed me as being reasonably careful about handling breakable machinery.

    But after three years of fixing everything, AppleCare expired. Yet another failure occurred, and so I followed up with Apple to convince them that this computer was a lemon, and probably should have been replaced long ago. They did agree to repair it yet again, and one more time a few months later, before informing me that enough was enough. If the MacBook developed any more problems, it was on Grayson’s dime.

    He hung out until earlier this year, when something stopped working, most likely the logic board. I don’t know what he did with it. He probably handed it off to a friend, and bought a new MacBook Air.

    Although it sometimes took a few telephone calls to executive support people to convince Apple to continue to provide free support, in the end they acted above and beyond the call of duty.

    As I write this, there are reports of graphics glitches and poor battery life on some of the new MacBook Pros. Apple is evidently in the final stages of readying a macOS Sierra 10.12.2 release to fix the graphics issues, which apparently impact both 13-inch and 15-inch models. I don’t know about the battery life, but none of this comes as a surprise to me. Not at all.

    It reminds me of what some day about buying a car. Don’t purchase a vehicle in its first model year. Give it a year or so for the kinks to be worked out. Consider the second year and beyond to get the most reliable performance. Perhaps that’s also true about Macs.


    Gaming on the Fourth-Generation Apple TV

    December 9th, 2016

    Special Feature

    Gaming on the fourth-generation Apple TV is going to be an exciting experience for almost everyone involved. A lot of enthusiastic game players are specifically going to buy the Apple TV in order to enjoy all of the associated benefits this device might have for game players. Many people who are interested in playing games are specifically going to be interested in making the graphics for the games better, and that is what they will be able to accomplish through the use of the Apple TV. Going to the www.pokiespedia.com website will truly never be the same.

    There are lots of new gaming devices available today. More and more players are getting interested in the possibilities inherent to these new gaming devices. Most people are interested in the graphics of their games in one way or another. They are going to be excited about the possibilities inherent in getting greatly improved graphics while still technically playing the same games, and people will be able to take advantage of all of that through the use of Apple TV devices and similar devices.

    In some cases, people are really excited about being able to play new games. In other cases, they are just going to be really excited about being able to play the old games in a new way. Lots of people are under the impression that it is an all or nothing situation. Gaming companies tend to release more and more games all the time in order to keep their brands fresh and in order to make sure that they are going to be able to attract new customers. This is certainly a sound business strategy that is going to work well for them and they are encouraged to do this. However, in some cases, all players need is a gaming device that is going to modify their experience somehow. Gaming on the latest Apple TV will manage to make that work for a lot of people.

    Gaming on the Apple TV is going to be the sort of thing that a lot of people are excited about, and many people are going to try to get their hands on one during the holiday season. These are the sorts of gifts that are very popular in the modern world, and a lot of people are enthusiastic about being able to provide a great new gaming experience for their friends and family members. It’s difficult for a lot of people to shop for the ones that they love in an era where gift giving has changed so much in so many ways. This is a world where people have a tendency to give gift cards and similar presents that have a tendency to lack the heart of other gifts. However, for a lot of people, anything that is going to make the gaming experience better will constitute the perfect gift for any occasion. Gaming on an Apple TV is certainly going to work for them.


    The Late 2016 MacBook Pro and Endless Controversies

    December 8th, 2016

    The carping about the perceived lapses in the Late 2016 MacBook Pro won’t end. I would have thought that complaining about the lack of a 32GB option, the high price, and hopes for more performance and battery life, would die down after a while. But they haven’t, and there are other issues that are getting attention.

    Complaints about the Touch Bar include the width of the virtual keys, the propensity for hitting the wrong key, and whether the available options can really improve your productivity. But it’s early in the game and apps are just starting to issue updates that support the new hardware. It’s up to developers to figure out what works with their products, although the demonstrations with Adobe Photoshop and Final Cut Pro X, at Apple’s media event, were impressive.

    The argument about the lack of support for 32GB RAM is based on the fact that some PC notebooks do. But no Apple notebook has ever supported more than 16GB RAM. Apple executives, particularly VP Philip Schiller, assert that battery life would suffer severely if a different hardware memory scheme were used. The critics suggest Apple should just produce two different models, one that emphasizes power savings, the other that emphasizes performance. assuming that doubling RAM would make a huge difference. But in many cases it doesn’t, and the speedier SSDs help when virtual memory is required.

    This is a question of asking Apple to do something they haven’t done before, which is to provide essentially two different logic board configurations for the same product, one as a low-production option. You might see that on the PC side, where few manufacturers make much in the way of profits from personal computers, and they overwhelm the public with different model configurations. But Apple is never going to provide as many options as some want.

    Even then, there are some complaints about battery life, with users saying they are only getting as little as half what Apple claims, in the five-hour range. At the same time there appears to be a bug in the handling of the switchover from integrated graphics to discrete graphics on the 15-inch MacBook Pro. The obvious symptom would be graphics artifacts, but this problem appears to occur on units that only feature integrated graphics. But if a dual-graphics unit doesn’t switch from discrete graphics when it should, that would shorten battery life.

    According to published reports, Apple executive Craig Federighi is quoted as saying, in an email to a Mac user, that the forthcoming Sierra 10.12.2 update will fix the graphics issues. I assume that would include the inability to properly switch between the dual-processors, which ought to improve battery life. Nothing is being said about other power efficiencies that would be managed by the OS or some misbehaving apps.

    What makes the battery issues most confusing is the fact that not everyone is impacted. Reviewers almost universally report battery life consistent with Apple’s claims of up to 10 hours. Well, one exception I know about offhand is columnist Joe Wilcox, who also says he’s not getting much more than five hours. But again this may all be about the OS or individual apps doing things they aren’t supposed to do.

    Regardless, when Sierra 10.12.2 lands — and it should be shortly — well see what it fixes. Meantime, it is available to both developers and public beta testers, and according to published reports, it does seem to fix all or most of the graphics glitches. I haven’t heard about the battery life shortcomings, though I suppose we’ll know soon enough. My feeling is that the pending updates will all arrive before Christmas, possibly within days.

    What bothers me is that some critics pretend Apple hasn’t had such problems before. Don’t forget that the first dual-graphics MacBook Pros from Apple also had switchover glitches. Some of the problems required replacing the unit, and we all know it’s happened in PC land. Don’t forget that the latest MacBook Pro is a very new design in many respects, so bugs are to be expected. But I also expect Apple to figure out what’s wrong and take care of the problem.

    Consider that Boot Camp audio glitch that fried MacBook Pro speakers. Apple will certainly replace the affected machines, and the Boot Camp audio drivers have been fixed. Consider the battery problem that impacts the iPhone 6s. Apple has announced a repair program to replace the batteries without charge. Over the years, there have been a number of extended repair programs from Apple to fix hardware defects that can cause a product to misbehave or fail.

    When a new product arrives, however. it may take a while for the shakedown cruise, for the glitches to be identified and more time for them to be fixed. It becomes really difficult when a problem isn’t consistent, where some users have the problem and others don’t. It reminds me of the car that misfires — until you bring it to the repair shop and it works perfectly. I can tell you a few stories.