In the news

In a normal year, we would now be starting the second weekend of Jazz Fest in New Orleans, one of my favorite times of year in this city.  The live music is varied and excellent, there is fantastic food, and there is an interesting art market.  Of course, none of that can happen right now (although they are trying to do it this October instead).  But in the meantime, the New Orleans radio station associated with Jazz Fest, WWOZ, is doing its second year of Jazz Festing in Place, in which they are playing recordings of some of the best live performances at Jazz Fest from 1970 to 2019.  Artists include Dr. John, Henry Butler, Miles Davis, The Meters, Carole King, James, Taylor, Trombone Shorty, Richie Havens, Joe Cocker, Irma Thomas, Al Hirt, Kermit Ruggins, Willie Nelson, Allen Toussaint, and so many more.  Click here for a PDF grid showing who is playing and when.  Jazz Festing in Place started a week ago, but that doesn’t matter because WWOZ always offers a two-week archive, so you still have time to listen to any of it that you may have missed.  Or if you want to listen to the main stream as it is happening, you can do so from the WWOZ website or the WWOZ iPhone app.  If you are looking for something good to listen to this weekend, WWOZ has you covered.  And now, the news of note from the past week.

  • It is hard to believe it, but we are getting close to the end of the school year for many students.  It’s been a school year in which mobile technology has been more important than ever — much like the last year of many law practices.  Jade Cunningham of WWL reports on a viral video showing how students at Loyola Law School in New Orleans thanked their environmental law professor, Rob Verchick, for making it through this difficult year.
  • Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories reviews the latest version of 1Blocker, which adds a firewall feature to block even more obnoxious ads.
  • Today, Apple has started to sell the 2021 version of the iPad Pro.  After I wrote about this latest iPad, I heard from several of you who were upset that the Magic Keyboard for iPad wasn’t going to work with this newest iPad.  Not to worry; Jason Snell of Six Colors reports that the previous version of the Magic Keyboard for iPad will work with the new iPad Pro, but it will be a snug fit — especially if you use a screen cover.  The new version of the Magic Keyboard for iPad has slightly more space to accommodate for the slightly more thick new iPad Pro, but if you bought the prior version, it looks like your keyboard will still work with the new iPad Pro.
  • If you ordered an AirTag when that product first went on sale last week, you should be getting Apple’s latest product at some point today.  And starting today, you can also buy them on Amazon, either a single AirTag for $29, or a four-pack for $99.  I ordered a four-pack.
  • Harry McCracken of Fast Company reviewed the AirTag.
  • Although the AirTag is not very expensive, if you feel the need to spend more on the product, Parker Ortolani of 9to5Mac discusses the $699 AirTag travel tag from Hermès.  When you are using a travel tag that is more expensive than the suitcase to which it is attached, you won’t want to lose it.  Good thing it works with AirTag.
  • What might you want to track with an AirTag?  Kirk McElhearn of Intego came up with a pretty good list of 23 items.
  • In an article for Macworld, Snell discusses how it was that Apple made so much money in its most recent financial quarter.  (Yesterday, I provided my report on that incredibly impressive quarter.)
  • One of the new additions in iOS 14.5 that I did not mention earlier this week is that users can now report hazards, speed checks, accidents in Apple Maps, just like you can with other maps apps such as Waze.  Michael Potuck of 9to5Mac describes the new features in Maps.  I presume that when enough people report something, an alert will show up in the Maps app for other folks, but I haven’t seen this yet myself.
  • Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac reviews the SanDisk 2-in-1 flash drive, which lets you transfer large files between an iPhone, computer, and iPad because it features both Lighting and USB-C.
  • Juli Clover of MacRumors reports on a new HomeKit-compatible device called the Eve Energy Smart Plug, which can not only control a device (like a lamp) that it plugged in to it, but which also can act as a Thread router.  A HomeKit mini can also act like a Thread router.  My hope is that, in a few years, the cross-platform Thread standard will really take off, improving the capabilities of lots of different smart home products that you might use.
  • Just in case you are curious, yes, there are Apple Watches in space right now.
  • In an article for Macworld, Dan Moren speculates on some of the upcoming products that Apple may be working on.
  • And finally, one of the features of iOS 14.5 that has been getting a lot of press is the App Tracking Transparency.  Here is a video from Apple that explains how it works and why you may want to take advantage of it to protect your privacy.

Apple 2021 fiscal second quarter — the iPhone and iPad angle

Yesterday, Apple released the results for its 2021 fiscal second quarter (which ran from December 27, 2020, to March 27, 2021) and held a call with analysts to discuss the results.  Unlike Apple’s Q1 which contains all of the holidays sales, Apple’s Q2 is usually not a particularly interesting quarter.  Apple’s best Q2 ever had been in 2018, when Apple posted revenue of $61.1 billion.  But I think it is fair to say that Apple beat that record this time, posting jaw-dripping revenue of $89.6 billion during the quarter.  That’s a number that you would only expect to see in a Q1 with holiday sales, such as Apple’s 2020 Q1 with revenue of $91.8 billion thanks to the holiday sales at the end of calendar year 2019.  Apple had a very, very good financial quarter.  If you want to get all of the nitty gritty details, you can download the audio from the announcement conference call from iTunes, or you can read a transcript of the call prepared by Jason Snell of Six Colors.  Apple’s official press release is here.  Here are the items that stood out to me.

iPhone

  • iPhone revenue for the quarter was $47.9 billion, a record for a fiscal second quarter.  iPhone revenue was up 66% compared to this time last year. 
  • Apple CEO Tim Cook said that the iPhone 12 model is the most popular, but the iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max are also very popular.  He did not specifically mention the iPhone 12 mini, and my sense is that it is the least popular product in the iPhone 12 line.
  • People seem to like their new iPhones.  Apple CFO Luca Maestri stated:  “In the U.S., the latest survey of consumers from 451 Research indicates customer satisfaction of over 99% for the iPhone 12 family.”
  • To give you a sense of how impressive the increase in iPhone revenue was this past quarter, here is a chart showing the year-over-year percentage change since Fiscal 2013 Q1, which is when Apple started reporting this type of revenue in this form.  There were some great quarters in 2015, but last quarter was even better.

iPad

  • iPad revenue was $7.8 billion, which is 79% higher than a year ago.
  • Maestri said that there are shortages in the semiconductor industry that have affected many companies, and these shortages are having an impact on how many iPads that Apple can make.
  • Here is a chart to show the year-over-year percentage change in iPad revenue since Fiscal 2013 Q1, which is when Apple started reporting this type of revenue in this form.  As you can see, the increase in iPad revenue was even more impressive than the increase in iPhone revenue when you compare this most recent quarter to all of the prior quarters.

Other

  • Apple Watch sales continue to expand, with 75% of Apple Watch customers during the quarter purchasing their first Apple Watch.  And Cook believes that there are many more Apple Watch sales to come, remarking that he thinks “we’re in the early innings on the Watch” and “this is a long way from being a mature market.”
  • Apple TV+ shows have received 352 award nominations and had 98 wins.

iOS 14.5 adds many new features

Yesterday, Apple released iOS 14.5 for the iPhone along with similar updates for the iPad, Apple Watch, and Apple TV.  This was a major update with lots of new features.  If you want to go deep on every single thing that is new, I recommend this extensive article by Federico Viticci of MacStories.  But here are my four favorite new features.

Unlock your iPhone while wearing a mask

For the past year+ of the pandemic, I’ve envied my wife’s iPhone with Touch ID every time that I tried to unlock my Face ID iPhone while wearing a mask.  It is annoying to want to look at my iPhone in a grocery store, elevator, and many other places and needed to type in my (long) passcode to unlock my device.  Ugh.  But that is now over for folks with an Apple Watch (Series 3 or later, running watchOS 7.4 or later).

With iOS 14.5, you can turn on the option to unlock your iPhone automatically when you are wearing a mask and an Apple Watch.  But first, you need to turn this feature on.  Here is how you do that.

In the iPhone’s Settings app, tap Face ID & Passcode.  Next, enter your passcode.

 
That’s it.  Now that you have this feature turned on, here is how it works.

When you try to unlock your iPhone and the iPhone senses that you have a mask on — specifically, when it senses that your mouth is covered — your iPhone checks to see if you are wearing your Apple Watch.  If so, it checks to see if the reason that your Apple Watch is unlocked is that you did so by entering the passcode on the Apple Watch.  If yes, then your Apple Watch tells your iPhone that you are already authenticated, and the iPhone unlocks.  The whole process takes a second or less.  At the same time, your Apple Watch taps your wrist to give you an alert that the watch has just unlocked your iPhone:

There are lots of safeguards built-in to this process.  For example, if your Apple Watch taps you to tell you that it just unlocked your iPhone and that is not what you intended, you can quickly tap the button on your Apple Watch screen.  That will immediately lock your iPhone, and at that point, it can ONLY be unlocked by entering your passcode, not with Face ID — either with or without a mask.

Also, this whole process only works if your Apple Watch is on your wrist and your iPhone is fairly close.  My son tested this feature with me last night.  When he tried to unlock my iPhone by holding it on the other side of the room from me, it was too far from my Apple Watch to work.  But when he got within 6-7 feet of my watch, it worked.  So if you have this feature enabled, you do need to pay attention if someone is close to you and picks up your iPhone.  But if they steal your iPhone and run away, the Apple Watch won’t unlock it.

Another security feature is that if the reason that your Apple Watch is unlocked is that you used your iPhone to automatically unlock your watch, then your watch cannot also automatically unlock your iPhone.  It is only when you unlocked your watch with your passcode that this works.  I enter the passcode every morning when I put on my Apple Watch, so if you do it the same way, you are ready to go.

I’m very excited to have this feature, and in my tests yesterday, it worked great.  Of course, I look forward to a day when I don’t have to wear a mask at all, but this new feature will make it much easier in the interim.  I just wish that Apple had added this feature last year.

App Tracking Transparency

In iOS 14.5, if an app wants to track your activity and then share it with other apps, the app now needs to ask for your permission before doing so.  Facebook and some other companies have opposed this feature strenuously, taking the position that they ought to be able to track you without telling you about it, and they complain that if they have to ask for permission, people will say no.  But the fact that many people will say no when given the choice seems more like an argument for the Apple approach over the Facebook approach.

For an excellent overview of this feature, watch the video at the top of this article by Joanna Stern of the Wall Street Journal in which she discusses the feature with Apple executives Craig Federighi.

I haven’t actually seen one of these requests from an app yet, but I presume I will soon.  I like the fact that Apple is trying to do what it can to enhance privacy and put the control back in the hands of the user.

New emoji

There are a few updated and changed emoji in iOS 14.5.  For example, there are three new faces:  Exhaling Face, Face with Spiral Eyes, and Face in Clouds:

Also, the Syringe emoji no longer has blood in it, making it more appropriate to use to indicate vaccination:

On the iPad, it is now easier to search for emoji because you can do so by name on the iPad, just like you have been able to do on an iPhone.

Share lyrics

There are a number of new features in the Music app, but here is my favorite.  Apple Music already had the ability to show you the lyrics to most songs, but now you can share lyrics — the specific lines that you select.  When you are looking at the lyrics in a song, just press down on one line of lyrics.  You will then have the option to select additional lines of lyrics, and then you can share a card showing just those lyrics with someone else, such as via the Messages app.  The recipient will see the lyrics that you selected.  And if they tap the image, they will start playing the song at the point where those lyrics are being sung.

I presume that both parties need to subscribe to Apple Music for this to work on both sides.  Nevertheless, this is a very fun way to quote lyrics to someone else.

Support for items in the Find My app

I discussed the expansion of Find My to include items earlier this month.  And after I wrote that post, Apple introduced its own AirTag product, so there are now both third-party and first-party products that can work with Find My.  But you need iOS 14.5 to make it work.

I ordered an AirTag 4-pack this past Friday, and they are supposed to be delivered to me this Friday.  If you also have plans to use an AirTag or similar products from third-parties, make sure you are running iOS 14.5.

Conclusion

Apple’s WWDC conference is coming in June, and I’m sure that Apple will use that opportunity to preview iOS 15 before it is released later this year.  But even with iOS 15 now perhaps just four to five months away, I’m glad that Apple is still adding new features to iOS 14 so that we can start using these new features today.

In the news

It was a big week for Apple announcements.  I discussed the new iPad Pro pretty extensively two days ago, but there was so much more.  One of the best overviews I saw of all of Apple’s announcements on Tuesday was this article and accompanying video by Joanna Stern of the Wall Street Journal.  And now, the rest of the news of note from the past week:

  • Brett Burney of Apps in Law reviews LawStack, an app that lets you access legal reviews and statutes on your iPhone or iPad.  At the top of his review, Brett provides an excellent video that shows you step-by-step how to use the app.  You can access some sets of laws (like federal rules) for free; others (like state laws) require a subscription.  LawStack has been around for a long time; I reviewed a recent version of the app in 2019, but I also reviewed an earlier version of the app all the way back in 2010.
  • Apple updated the Apple TV 4K this week.  Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories describes what is new.
  • One of Apple’s big announcements this week was a new product:  the AirTag.  It went on sale this morning.  It is a small coin-sized device that you can place in, or attach to, an object so that you can find the object if you lose it — keys, a purse, a briefcase, a pet, etc.  If anyone else with a relatively modern iPhone passes by your object, your own iPhone can tell you where that object was last seen.  And when you bring your own iPhone (as long as it is a relatively new one) close to the AirTag, your iPhone can show arrows to help you find the precise location of the AirTag.  Apple gave selected members of the press a few AirTags to try them out, so there are now a number of AirTag reviews.  If you want more information on this new product, I’ll list the ones that I thought were worth reading. First, Matthew Panzarino of TechCrunch does a good job explaining the features.
  • Dieter Bohn of The Verge also wrote an interesting review (and a good video to go along with it) in which he had someone else hide an AirTag someplace in a city and he was able to find it after a car passed by the AirTag — a car that presumably had an iPhone in it.
  • Michael Grothaus of Fast Company interviewed two folks from Apple for his AirTag review.
  • Marques Brownlee prepared a good video review of the AirTag.
  • I also liked the video review of the AirTag by Justine “iJustine” Ezarik.
  • In an interview with Andrew Griffin of The Independent, John Ternus and Greg Joswiak of Apple discuss the new iPad Pro.
  • Apple also introduced a new color for the iPhone 12 this week:  purple.  Matthew Panzarino of TechCrunch describes it.  Spoiler alert:  it’s an iPhone that’s purple.
  • Harry McCracken of Fast Company says that the hardware in the new iPad Pro is amazing, but it needs an updated iPad OS to go along with it.  I agree, and I hope that later this year, Apple adds new features to iPad OS to reflect how powerful the iPad Pro has become.
  • In an article for Six Colors, Jason Snell describes similar feelings in an article titled The iPad Pro is a killer machine but its software is killing me.
  • Over on Six Colors, Jason Snell describes the new version of the Brydge Keyboard, which all but turns an iPad Pro into a laptop computer.
  • If you are looking for a new band for your Apple Watch, Parker Ortolani of 9to5Mac describes the new bands that Apple released this week.
  • Alexandre Vallières-Lagacé of Hipster Pixel reviews the Material MagSafe Dock by Studio Neat.
  • Luke Dormehl of Cult of Mac reports that a puppy swallowed some AirPods when they were in a charging case.  A vet had to perform surgery to remove them, but the AirPods still worked.
  • And finally, here is Apple’s new ad for the 2021 version of the iPad Pro, which highlights the key features:

Why lawyers will love the new iPad Pro

Yesterday, during a one-hour jam-packed (and beautifully produced) video presentation (that you can view here), Apple announced a number of new products:  AirTag, a new iMac, a new Apple TV, and more that I will be talking about over the coming weeks.  But today, I want to focus on the announcement that will interest many attorneys:  the new iPad Pro.  After many years of attorneys using an iPad Pro as a substitute for a computer, this is the first iPad Pro that is unquestionably fit for that comparison because it uses the exact same chip that Apple uses in its computers:  the M1 chip.  This looks to be an incredibly powerful device, and I cannot wait to get my hands on one.  Here is why I think that lawyers will love the new iPad Pro.

Size

Let me start with what has not changed:  the sizes.  The two 2021 models of the iPad Pro are the iPad Pro 11″ (3rd generation) and the iPad Pro 12.9″ (5th generation).  The 11″ size is essentially the same familiar iPad size that folks have been using since 2010.  The larger 12.9″ size was introduced in 2015

There is an important difference in the screen technology between the two models, which I address below, but other than that, size is all a question of personal taste.  The 11″ size is one that people have known and loved for years, and it is small and light.  The 12.9″ usually takes a week or two to get used to, but the larger screen makes it so much easier to look at exhibits, read caselaw, edit documents, etc.  I could get work done on an 11″ iPad if I had to do so, but for me, the 12.9″ size is so much better for getting work done.  And then when you want to use the iPad for entertainment, such as watching a movie or TV show, the larger size is glorious.

Power

Almost every time that Apple releases a new iPad, it is more powerful.  Sometimes the change from the prior generation is small, which was true just over a year ago when Apple released the 2020 versions of the iPad Pro.  But sometimes, Apple gives the iPad Pro a significant boost.  This is one of those years.

After many years of using Intel processors in Apple computers, on November 10, 2020, Apple introduced the M1 chip.  Apple took everything that it knew about making its own chips for the iPhone and iPad and then used that knowledge to create a powerful chip for a computer.  And I do mean powerful.  When Apple introduced its first three computers using the M1 chip — the MacBook Air, 13-inch MacBook Pro, and Mac mini — Apple made a huge splash.  Even though these are entry-level computers, the M1 chip is so fast that these computers finished many tasks faster than all but the highest-end and most expensive Windows and Mac computers using Intel and AMD processors.  As Chris Schodt of Engadget noted:  “Apple’s new M1 processors have shaken up the entire CPU landscape” because they are “some of the fastest laptop processors we’ve ever seen, and they deliver this performance with incredibly low power consumption.”

The new iPad Pro brings this same performance to a tablet computer.  Not just something similar, but the exact same M1 chip.  I didn’t expect Apple to do this — I always thought that the “M” in “M1” was a reference to Macintosh computers — but I’m thrilled to see this power in a thin device that you hold in your hand.

Whenever I talk about processor power in a device that lawyers will use, I always feel the need to pause and discuss why this matters.  The M1 will be especially useful for folks pushing their iPad Pro to the limit by editing videos and large photographs, doing augmented reality, performing AI functions, etc.  But lawyers do not do those tasks very often.  We are mostly working with documents.  Even so, a faster iPad Pro is a more responsive iPad Pro, so it is more enjoyable to use.  Indeed, you can make the argument that a faster processor is more noticeable in an iPad than on a computer because you touch an iPad screen and directly manipulate on-screen objects using your fingers.  Any lag in that process destroys the illusion that you are actually “moving” items on the screen with your fingers.  Additionally, modern web pages have so much going on that they can tax the limits of any processor, on a computer or a tablet.  I’ve heard people rave about how much better the Safari web browser performs on a Mac with an M1 chip, and I hope that we will see the same on the new iPad Pro.

I’ve been enjoying the 2018 version of the iPad Pro for many years now, and it has been fast enough that I wasn’t tempted by the 2020 iPad Pro, which offered only a minor speed bump on certain tasks.  But Apple says that the M1 provides up to 50% faster performance than the chip that was in the 2020 iPad Pro, and I look forward to finding out how that feels in real-world usage.  The new iPad Pro should have the power to tackle even the most complicated workflows involving the largest documents with ease.   I cannot wait to put it through its paces.

5G

I have 5G on my iPhone 12 Pro, and it honestly doesn’t make much of a difference for me as compared to LTE.  To be fair, part of that is because we have been living in a pandemic, so I spend virtually all of my time either at home or at my office, where I have fast Wi-Fi.  But even when I run speed tests to compare 5G and LTE, I rarely see much of a difference.

Nevertheless, I recognize that 5G is a better technology and that. at some point in the future, when you are in the right location, 5G will provide amazing speeds without WiFi.  For example, Joanna Stern of the Wall Street Journal ran some speed tests last year, and in one part of downtown Denver she saw download speeds of 1,800 Mbps.  That almost twice as fast as expensive Gigabit cable modem speeds that some folks pay for at their home, and it is probably 50 times faster than typical 4G speeds.  In the future, this speed will be available in more areas. 

I typically purchase the version of the iPad Pro that only supports Wi-Fi because I virtually always have access to Wi-Fi, and when I don’t, it isn’t a big deal for me to tether to my iPhone.  But if you are the sort of person who takes full advantage of cellular service on an iPad, I’m glad that the new iPad Pro supports 5G because it helps to future-proof the product.

Thunderbolt / USB 4

When the iPad Pro had its last major update in 2018, one of the big changes was to switch from a Lightning port to USB-C.  This gave the iPad Pro the ability to access many more types of accessories.

The new iPad Pro uses a Thunderbolt / USB 4 connector.  It is the same size as a USB-C connector and is backward-compatible with all USB-C devices.  But it is also four times faster and can support more powerful hubs and other accessories.

One of the big advantages of Thunderbolt is the ability to drive large external monitors.  But right now, external monitors have limited utility for an iPad Pro because even a large external display can only show either the same thing that is on the iPad Pro screen or a single window being controlled by the active app on the iPad Pro.  The iPad Pro would be more “Pro” if it could connect to an external monitor while also running multiple apps on the same monitor, much like you can have lots of programs with lots of windows open at the same time on a computer.  But this would require a substantial update to iPad OS.  I wonder if Apple is adding Thunderbolt to the iPad Pro now so that it can support this feature in an upcoming version of iPad OS, perhaps iPad OS 15, which I expect Apple to preview in WWDC on June 7?  We’ll see.

Display

The 11″ version of the new iPad Pro uses the same display that has been used in all other versions of the iPad Pro, which Apple calls the Liquid Retina Display.  it is an excellent display.

The 12.9″ version of the new iPad Pro uses something new for the display.  Apple calls it the Liquid Retina XDR Display because Apple says that it looks just as good as the high-end monitor that Apple sells for computers for $4999 called the Pro Display XDR.  In the industry, the display on this new iPad Pro is called mini-LED.  Other iPad Pro models use 72 LEDs in the screen.  This new display uses 10,000 mini-LEDs.  So, you know, more.

Luke Dormehl of Cult of Mac wrote a long article explaining why mini-LED is so good.  Click that link if you want full details, but suffice it to say that it is a significantly better display with brighter bright areas and darker dark areas.  It is almost as good as the OLED displays used on the newest iPhones, but it avoids screen burn-in, which can be a problem for OLED.

Thus, if you get the 11″ version of the new iPad Pro, you will get a great screen.  If you get the 12.9″ version, you will get an even better screen.

Camera

The cameras are better in this new iPad Pro, and the big change is that Apple added Ultra Wide cameras to the front and back.  The one on the back is pretty useless to me — if I want to take a picture, I use my iPhone, not an iPad.

For the one on the front, I had hoped that Apple was going to move the camera to the long-edge instead of the short-edge.  I virtually always keep my iPad in landscape orientation, especially on videoconferences, and it is awkward to have to look to the side to give the perception to the other person that I am looking right at them.  But Apple did not move the camera, and that bums me out.

What they did do is add an Ultra Wide camera to the front and pair it with a new software feature called Center Stage.  With this feature, the iPad take a wide picture and then crops in to where you are located, and then if you move the iPad creates the illusion of a camera tracking your motion by moving the cropped area within the wide picture.  On this page of the Apple website, Apple uses a video to show the feature in action, which you can click here to view.

It’s a neat idea, and I can see it being useful during casual videoconferences with loved ones.  For my work-related videoconferences, I’m always sitting still in one location, so I don’t think I will use this.

So in short, I don’t see the new Ultra Wide cameras being useful in many law practices, but they could be nice when using the iPad Pro at home.

Accessories

There were rumors that Apple might update the Apple Pencil and/or the Magic Keyboard for iPad yesterday, but that did not happen.  Well, there was one minor change to the Magic Keyboard for iPad — in addition to the prior black model, you can now purchase a white version.

Cost

The new 11″ iPad Pro starts at $799 for the 128 GB model.  I think that the 256 GB model for $100 more is the better size for most attorneys so that you have plenty of space to store exhibits, which seem to get larger with each new case that I work on.  You can also get 512 GB ($1099), 1 TB ($1499) or 2 TB ($1899). 

The new 12.9″ iPad Pro starts at $1099 for the 128 GB model, so you pay an extra $300 for the larger size with the better screen.  You have the same size choices:  256 GB ($1199), 512 GB ($1399), 1 TB ($1799), and 2 TB ($2199).

If you want to add 5G Cellular to any of these models, that adds another $200.

Note that when you buy from Apple, you can trade in your current iPad, which helps to reduce the overall price.  For example, it looks like Apple will pay me $535 for the iPad Pro 12.9″ (3rd generation) with 256 GB that I purchased in 2018, and that goes a long way towards paying for a new model for me.  It also demonstrates how much iPad Pros retain their value over the years.

You can pre-order a new iPad Pro from Apple starting on April 30, and the models will start to ship about two weeks later in the second half of May.

Conclusion

As excited as I am to use the new iPad Pro, don’t forget about the iPad Air if you are looking at the 11″ version.  On September 15, 2020, Apple introduced the excellent iPad Air (4th generation).  That latest version of the iPad Air added many of the traditional advantages of the iPad Pro, such as the edge-to-edge screen and support for the second generation Apple Pencil.  You can get a 256 GB version of the iPad Air for $749 or a 256 GB version of the iPad Pro 11″ for $899.  The extra $150 gets you the much faster M1 chip, a slightly better screen, and a few other minor advantage that I mentioned in my post on the iPad Air.  For many attorneys, I suspect that the only difference that you would really notice is the M1 chip, which Apple says is up to 50% faster.  But the iPad Air is also quite fast, so you need to decide if the extra $150 is worth it to get a faster, more responsive, iPad Pro.  And remember, the Apple Pencil is $129, so you could put the extra $150 towards that instead of the M1 chip.  On the other hand, if you want the latest and greatest, go for the new iPad Pro.

If you are like me and you want the larger screen to make it easier to work with documents, to give you more space to take handwritten notes, and to have a better view of pictures and videos, then the new iPad Pro 12.9″ is the one to get.  Again, I recommend 256 GB.  For myself, I may decide to spend the extra $200 to get the 512 GB version just to have room to grow.

Whichever model you choose, the iPad Pro is so incredibly powerful that I suspect that it will remain the high-end iPad for several years.  The last major iPad Pro revision was in 2018, so this new iPad Pro may be at the top of the heap until 2024.  If you have been in the market for a new iPad Pro, this is a good time to get one.

Apple to announce new products today

Today at 10:00 a.m. Pacific / 1:00 p.m. Eastern, Apple will hold its online “Spring Loaded” event to announce new products.  (That’s 6:00 p.m. BST in London and 3:00 a.m. AEST in Sydney, Australia.)  Last week, I discussed the rumors on what Apple may announce today.  The product that seems most certain is a new version of the iPad Pro, perhaps with an updated version of the Apple Pencil to go along with it. 

This will be the first Apple event over five months, and it has been even longer than that since Apple held an event to say anything about the iPad — September 15, 2020, when Apple announced the iPad Air (4th generation).  The current version of the iPad Air is actually very similar to the iPad Pro, so much so that I have been very curious what Apple would add to the iPad Pro in the future to make that device more “Pro” and to increase the gap between the iPad Pro and the iPad Air.  We should find out today.

If you want to watch the online event live, you can do so by going to this page of the Apple website.  You can also watch the event live on YouTube, on an Apple TV device in the Apple TV app.

In the news

I believe that we are on the cusp of some big changes in the world of iPhone and iPad.  We know for sure that Apple will announce new products in a few days on April 20.  I don’t know what Apple will announce, but I suspect that we will see a big step forward on the iPad Pro.  We are also about to see iOS 14.5.  I look forward to being able to unlock my iPhone while wearing a mask by virtue of the fact that I will be wearing an Apple Watch.  Also, the new App Tracking Transparency feature will certainly be interesting, for the reasons noted at the end of today’s post.  I look forward to learning more about all of this next week, but for now, let’s take a look back at the news of note from the past week:

  • I’ve been using the TranscriptPad app from Lit Software extensively over the past few weeks to work with deposition transcripts, and that is an essential app in my law practice.  Thus, it has worked out well for me that the app received new bookmark features this week, as Lit Software explains on its blog.  You can use bookmarks within the app to make it easier to jump to a part of the transcript.  But what I find even more useful is the inclusion of bookmarks in the PDF file when I create a report; the app automatically places a bookmark every time a new issue begins.  Thus, I can work with a single report in an app like PDF Expert and use the Outline tab in PDF Expert to jump directly to a specific part of the report.  This is one of those features that I didn’t know that I wanted, but now that I’m using it, I can’t imagine living without it in the past.
  • If you want to track the food that you eat, California attorney David Sparks of MacSparky recommends the FoodNoms app.
  • I’m a fan of Apple’s Fitness+ service, and even my wife is now using it.  Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories describes some of the new features coming to Fitness+ next week, including workouts for pregnancy and workouts for older adults.
  • There is a fascinating story in the Washington Post by Ellen Nakashima and Reed Albergotti about the security firm that hacked the iPhone for the FBI that was used by the San Bernardino shooter back in 2016.
  • I’ve often heard a Tesla car referred to as an iPhone with wheels.  Jason Snell of Six Colors used a Tesla for a week and wrote an interesting story about his experiences.
  • Developer David Smith describes a new free Apple Watch app that he released called Ian’s Awesome Counter that could be useful for anyone who needs assistance maintaining focus.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac has advice for making an Apple Watch less intrusive.  I don’t go as far as Zac does, but I also like to limit how much my Apple Watch interrupts me.  I have all sounds turned off and very few apps can alert me — which means that when I do get alerts, I know that they matter to me.
  • If you want a HomeKit-compatible device that is weather-proof and can be used outside, there are not many options on the market.  I use the iHome iSP100 Outdoor Smart Plug, which I reviewed in 2018, and it works very well for me.  Christopher Close of iMore discusses a new device called the meross Outdoor Smart Plug, which has three independently-controlled outlets and only costs $35, and thus looks like a better deal than the iHome device that I use.
  • I love the Memories feature on my iPhone and iPad because it does a great job of surfacing fun pictures from my past.  I’ve had times when it surfaced a picture of a loved one who is now deceased, which can be a bittersweet memory, but one that I still find valuable.  But what if the Memories feature triggers a memory that you don’t want, such as an ex or a troubling part of your life?  This issue is discussed in two well-written articles.  First, Lauren Goode of Wired wrote this article, and then after that, Stephen Hackett of 512 Pixels shared this very personal story.  I recommend them both.
  • Allison Aubrey of NPR discusses using an iPhone app as a COVID-19 vaccine passport.
  • Congratulations to the folks behind the GoodNotes app, which is celebrating its 10th anniversary this week.  I use the app throughout the day in my law practice to take notes, I use it at night to help my kids with homework (e.g. I scan and then annotate a math assignment so I can work through problems on my iPad to help them work through the assignment on the handout), and I sometimes even use it on the weekend to do crossword puzzles that I find on the Internet or scan from a newspaper.  It’s such a great app.
  • The penultimate episode of Season 2 of For All Mankind was released on Apple TV+ today and … O M G.
  • When iOS 14.5 comes out (presumably next week), it will alert you when an app wants to track you and give you the option to opt-in or opt-out.  This has Facebook upset because they make their money by tracking users.  Joanna Stern of the Wall Street Journal always does a great job with her videos, but this week she outdid herself.  She does an amazing job explaining the controversy and what it could mean for the future with the aid of some little helpers in this video:

Apple will announce new products on April 20

Apple is well-known for being secretive about its future plans.  Thus, nobody is surprised when we learn that Apple has sued a former employee who disclosed confidential information.  For example, just last month, Joel Rosenblatt of Bloomberg reported on a lawsuit Apple filed against long-time employee Simon Lancaster after he allegedly disclosed secrets to a reporter.  But it appears that the latest leaker at Apple is none other than Siri. 

Sami Fathi of MacRumors reported early yesterday, just after midnight Pacific time, that on some devices, and in certain instances, if you asked Siri “When is the next Apple Event,” ‌Siri‌ responded with:  “The special event is on Tuesday, April 20, at Apple Park in Cupertino, CA. You can get all the details on Apple.com.”  John Gruber of Daring Fireball tweeted a video to show that he got the same response when he asked the question of Siri on a HomePod mini.  About nine hours after Siri let the cat out of the bag, Apple itself announced that it was holding a special event on April 20th at 10 Pacific / 1 Eastern.

In an email Apple sent out yesterday, Apple used the tagline “Spring loaded” to tease the event:

Apple is having some fun with the logo for this event.  If you want to see a fun AR version of the invitation logo, go to this page of the Apple website on your iPhone or iPad and then tap on the picture.  Or if you want to see something similar, look at what Apple’s Greg Joswiak tweeted in this video.  Also, if you send a tweet and use the hashtag #AppleEvent, you will now see that logo as a custom hashtag graphic. AppleEvent

So what will Apple be announcing next week?  Only Apple knows for sure.  (Well, maybe Siri does too, but she isn’t spilling the beans … yet.)  Nevertheless, there are lots of rumors about what might be coming.  Listed in the order that I consider most likely to least likely, here are the rumors that seem to be getting the most attention right now:

New iPad Pro

This one seems very likely to me because the last major revision to the iPad Pro was in 2018.  Apple provided a very minor update a year ago, and the 2018 version of the iPad Pro is a fantastic device so it has been fine to keep it around for so long, but it seems like the time is right for something new.

Of course, I expect the next iPad Pro to be faster.  There is also a rumor that the larger version of the iPad Pro will use a new display technology called mini-LED, resulting in a brighter screen that uses less battery power.  And the new iPad Pro could feature a Thunderbolt connector, which would let you connect an iPad Pro to even more devices with greater speeds.

I love the second-generation Apple Pencil and I’m not sure what Apple might do to improve it further, but there are also rumors that Apple will release an updated version of the Apple Pencil to go with the new iPad Pro.

AirTags

As I noted a few days ago, Apple recently announced that its Find My feature would work with third-party devices, and there have been strong rumors that Apple has been working on a first-party device called AirTags.  The idea is that you attach a small AirTags device to something like a briefcase or purse or your keys, and then if you cannot locate that item, the Find My app can help you to find it again.

I actually thought that Apple would have released this product a year ago, but with all of us forced to stay at home for large amounts of time during the pandemic, the risk of losing items went down substantially.  Now that we seem close to the end of that, it seems like the right time for a new product like this.

Apple TV

Apple has been doing great things to improve its Apple TV+ streaming video service.  But for folks who want to watch that service on an Apple device connected to a television, it is getting increasingly difficult to recommend the purchase of an Apple TV considering that the product has not been updated since 2017.  It seems like it is definitely time for Apple to release a new version of the Apple TV.  And if so, I hope that it comes with a better remote control.

iPad mini

Apple last updated the iPad mini in 2019, so it might be a candidate for a refresh.

New AirPods

There is a rumor that Apple is developing a new version of AirPods that look similar to AirPods Pro, although they won’t offer noise reduction.  If true, this seems like more of a Fall announcement to me, shortly before the holiday season.

New Macs

I suspect that Apple will soon release a new version of the iMac that works with Apple’s new M1 processor, but I’m not sure that we will see that next week.  I think it is more likely to see this announced at Apple’s upcoming WWDC conference scheduled for June 7.

Apple Watch bands

Apple loves to come out with new band designs for a new season.  However, I don’t think that new bands for the Apple Watch are important enough to receive any attention during an Apple event — not unless they somehow add a new feature to the Apple Watch.  If we do see new bands this month, I think it is more likely that they will be announced in a press release, or perhaps they will just show up in the Apple Store without any fanfare.

In the news

Kara Swisher of the New York Times released an episode of her Sway podcast this week that featured an excellent interview with Apple CEO Tim Cook.  It is a good listen, or if you prefer to read, the New York Times also posted a transcript.  Cook discussed the App Store guidelines and why certain apps have been rejected, privacy, social media, augmented reality (which he agreed is “a critically important part of Apple’s future”), Apple TV+, self-driving cars, voting rights, the LGBTQ community, and how much longer he sees himself at Apple.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • Ivan Mehta of TNW reports that an iPhone app can predict COVID-19 with 80% accuracy just by using your voice.
  • Once you get the COVID-19 vaccine, you want everyone around you to have the vaccine as well in order to start the return to “normal” life.  Geoffrey Fowler of the Washington Post reports that some states are looking at creating a digital vaccine passport app that you can use to show that you are vaccinated before you enter a location, such as a sporting arena.  Fowler takes a look at the State of New York’s app, called Excelsior Pass.
  • It’s often fun to look at prototypes of future technology, even if you are Steve Jobs.  As Luke Dormehl of Cult of Mac reports, a new book by Naz Beheshti — who was an executive assistant to Steve Jobs in 1999 — reveals that when Steve Jobs wanted to unwind, he would hang out in Jony Ive’s office and play with the mockups and models of possible future projects.
  • Tweetbot, an excellent Twitter client, was updated to version 6 this week.  Juli Clover of MacRumors describes what is new in Tweetbot 6.
  • British GQ came up with a list of the “48 best iPhone and iPad apps for everything,” and there are lots of great picks on that list.
  • José Adorno of 9to5Mac explains how Apple substantially increased the number of games available in its Apple Arcade service by expanding the types of games included.  For example, Apple has brought back some great classic apps.
  • Julie Strietelmeier of The Gadgeteer discusses SkyFloat, a telescoping pole that attaches via magnets to your ceiling and holds an iPhone or iPad so that your device can float in the air.
  • Jason Cross of Macworld describes some of the new shows and new seasons coming soon to Apple TV+.  I’m looking forward to the second season of Mythic Quest, and a bonus episode called “Everlight” is being released on April 16.  I’m also looking forward to Season 2 of Trying, which starts May 14.  And this Fall, Apple TV+ will debut a new current-affairs show featuring Jon Stewart called The Problem with Jon Stewart.  (Great title.)
  • And finally, the Wall Street Journal created a video to explore the features that could be included in an upcoming Apple Car, and they came up with a fun way to do it, hiring someone to create a “car” out of iPhone parts.

Apple expands its Find My feature

Yesterday, Apple announced that its Find My app will work with third-party accessories, and Apple introduced the first three Find My-enabled partners:  VanMoof, Belkin, and Chipolo.  And even more Find My improvements are coming when Apple releases iOS 14.5 this month.  Here is the scoop on how these products work and what could be coming in the future for Find My.  But first, a little history.

Find My:  the first decade

Back in 2008, Apple launched a $99/year service called MobileMe.  It replaced a previous service called .Mac (which replaced a previous service called iTools).  MobileMe, bundled lots of different features such as an online picture gallery, backup software, online storage, and more.  On June 17, 2009, Apple released iPhone Software 3.0.  One of the new features was Find My iPhone, which allowed MobileMe customers to discover the location of their iPhone using the GPS on the iPhone — useful if you lost your iPhone or if it was stolen.

The next year, on November 22, 2010, Apple released iOS 4.2.  It expanded the Find My iPhone service so that everyone could use it if they were using the latest Apple hardware (such as the iPhone 4) without the need to subscribe to MobileMe.

The next year, Apple added the ability to find someone else’s iPhone in a feature that Apple called Find My Friends.  It was released in October 2011, along with iOS 5.  If a friend or family member agreed to share their location with you (using the GPS on the iPhone), you could find their location.  For a few years, Find My Friends was a separate app that you had to download, but then it became part of the operating system in 2015 with iOS 9.  

From the addition of Find My iPhone to MobileMe in 2009 until September 19, 2019, The Find My iPhone and Find My Friends service relied upon GPS in the device that you were trying to locate — or Wi-Fi, if the device didn’t have GPS enabled but was connected to a Wi-Fi network.  Thus, if you owned an iPad that didn’t have cellular service and you lost it in a location that didn’t have Wi-Fi, you would never be able to find the device again using the Find My iPhone service.  Or if you lost an iPhone while it was in airplane mode (because, for example, you left it on an airplane), the Find My iPhone would not work for you.

Find My:  offline access for Apple devices

On June 3, 2019, at Apple’s WWDC developer conference, Apple previewed some of the new features of iOS 13 (which would be released on September 19, 2019).  Apple announced that it was combining Find My iPhone and Find My Friends into a single service called Find My.  More importantly, Apple announced that the Find My service would, for the first time, work with devices that were offline. 

This service still works today, and here is how it works.  Let’s say that you lose your iPad.  You can use the Find My app on your iPhone to mark your iPad as missing.  Whenever your missing iPad gets close to someone else using an Apple device with Bluetooth such as an iPhone or an iPad, that device senses your iPad and reads a unique number transmitted by your missing iPad.  The next time that the iPhone is communicating with Apple, it adds something to the end of the communication that essentially says “oh and by the way, I recently passed by a device that was transmitting this specific number.”  Apple checks that number against its database and notices that this is an item that you marked as missing, so it alerts the Find My app on your iPhone that your iPad was spotted as such-and-such location. 

The entire process is completely anonymous, so you won’t know who else had an iPhone close to your missing iPad.  Similarly, that person they won’t even know that they played a role in helping you to locate your missing iPad.  To add to the security, that unique number transmitted by your missing iPad changes every 15 minutes.  That way, if you stroll through a shopping center holding your iPad over the course of a few hours, the shopping center cannot create a map of all of the places that you visited along the way by using a series of Bluetooth devices to continuously track the location of the device emitting that unique number.

Find My works with most devices sold by Apple, including the ‌iPhone‌, ‌iPad‌, Macs, Apple Watch, and AirPods.  For the AirPods, however, this service is less useful.  Even though AirPods have Bluetooth, the Find My service doesn’t seem to work when the AirPods are in the charging case.  Thus, all that the Find My service can do is tell you the last time that your AirPods were connected to your iPhone (or another device) using Bluetooth.  For example, as I am typing this paragraph on my home computer on Wednesday night, I can see my AirPods right next to me on my desk.  However, if I use the Find My feature, my iPhone tells me that my AirPods are in my office — or, to be more precise, that my AirPods were last seen at my office at 12:47 pm because that is the last time that they were connected to my iPhone (as I was listening to a podcast while having lunch at my desk).

From the standpoint of Find My, it would be better if my AirPods had GPS, or at least had Bluetooth that would connect to any other Apple device, because that way I could get more accurate information on the current location.  Nevertheless, even this more limited information is still sometimes helpful.

Find My:  offline access for the masses

That brings us to today.  Or more accurately, to June 22, 2020.  That is when Apple first announced that it was going to open its Find My service to third-party devices.

Yesterday, Apple announced three of those third-party partners.  One of them is VanMoof, a company that makes electric bikes.  The company’s latest S3 and X3 e-bikes will soon work with the Apple Find My system. 

This means that if you lose your e-bike (or someone else takes it), you can use the Find My app to find it.  When the e-bike gets range of anyone using an Apple device that knows where it is located — such as an iPhone, iPad, or Mac — you will be notified.  Chance Miller of 9to5Mac has a report with some screenshots showing how this works.

Another partner that Apple announced is Belkin.  Belkin’s SOUNDFORM Freedom True Wireless Earbuds will work with Apple’s Find My.  It’s unclear to me if the support will work the same as it currently works with AirPods — in other words, you can only track location while the Belkin earbuds are connected to your iPhone — or if they will provide location information when anyone’s Apple device is nearby.

The final partner that Apple announced is Chipolo.  The upcoming Chipolo ONE Spot (available in June) will be a small disk with a hole so that it can be attached to a keychain or similar fastener.  I presume that it will be similar to the currently-shipping Chipolo ONE, which costs $25 and is 1.49 x 1.49 x 0.25 inches.  You can attach one of these devices to your keychain, a knapsack, or even a pet.   If you lose something with a Chipolo disk attached to it, the Find My app may be able to tell you where it is, and you should be able to make the Chipolo play a sound to further assist in the recovery.

Apple also announced that third-party device makers will soon be able to take advantage of Ultra Wideband technology in Apple devices that contain a U1 chip.  This includes the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, and iPhone 11 Pro Max that Apple released in 2019 as well as many more recent iPhones.  Without the U1, you can get a general sense of an item’s location.  With U1, location detection is more precise and is directionally aware.  For example, your iPhone could show you not just that a missing item is in your house, but could show you that it is over there, in the couch, between the second and third seat cushion.

What about stalkers?

In 2018, an ABC News affiliate in Houston ran a story about a woman who noticed that her ex would often show up at the same place that the woman was located — a house, a restaurant, even once an out-of-town location when the woman was on a trip.  This seemed like a strange coincidence until the woman discovered that her ex had placed a Tile tracker in the woman’s car.  Using the Tile device (which works somewhat the same way as Find My), the ex was able to keep tabs on where the woman’s car was located – and thus where the woman was located.  She reported the stalking to the local police, and the ex was charged with a misdemeanor.

To try to prevent a stalker from doing something similar with a Find My tracking device, such as the upcoming Chipolo ONE Spot, Apple will reportedly include a new feature in iOS 14.5 (which should be out this month) called Item Safety Alerts.  This feature, which is enabled by default, will notify you if an unknown item has been found moving with you.  That way, if someone slipped a Chipolo ONE Spot into your briefcase or purse in an attempt to track your movements, your iPhone will eventually alert you.  Apple has not yet provided details on how this will work.  How long before you get the notification?  What if the tracking device belongs to a friend or family member with whom you are traveling?  But whatever the details, hopefully, Apple has found a way to eliminate or at least greatly reduce the opportunity for inappropriate use of Find My by stalkers.

What about Apple first-party devices?

We now know a little information about upcoming third-party devices, but what about upcoming first-party devices — tracker products made by Apple? 

It has long been rumored that Apple was working on a tracker device called AirTags.  In fact, almost exactly one year ago, Pururaj Dutta of Applesophy reported that he was watching a support video on the Apple website when he noticed a picture of the Settings app on an iPhone that actually referred to AirTags by name.  Based on the rumors, AirTags will` be similar to the Chipolo ONE Spot device, but will apparently include the U1 chip to provide more accurate tracking.  Juli Clover of MacRumors recently wrote an article rounding up all of the rumors on what AirTags may offer.

Conclusion

What started a dozen years ago as a way for you to find a lost iPhone is about to be released as a technology that can be used to locate just about anything — with amazing precision, thanks to the U1 chip.  I look forward to the release of iOS 14.5 in a few weeks to learn more about how all of this works. 

Of course, other companies, like Tile, have offered similar technology for years.  But to work well, you need to have lots of people running the right software on their devices to increase the chance that your missing item is near a compatible device.  I’m not sure how many people are running the Tile software on their devices, but I do know that there are a ridiculously large number of iPhones being used in the world.  Thus, I suspect that we are very close to a time in which the Find My app on your iPhone will be the best possible way to locate an item.