Podcast episode 139: AI, DOJ, 18K, and Riding Around the Apple Ring

Brett Burney and I start this week’s episode of the In the News podcast by discussing what Apple may be planning to announce later this year about how it is using AI to improve its products. There are lots of possibilities, and all of them are exciting. We also talk about the new antitrust lawsuit filed by the DOJ against Apple. We then talk about how to pay even more money to buy an Apple Vision Pro, whether Apple should bring back its AirPort products, the minor Apple software updates from this past week, and much more.

Brett’s tip of the week addresses what your iPhone can do even when it is turned off. I share a tip for making the Apple TV remote even more useful by giving it the ability to turn on and off subtitles.

Click here to listen to the audio podcast, or just listen using your podcast player of choice.  You can also watch the episode on YouTube:

In the News

If you were to ask Old McDonald what was in the Apple news this past week, his answer would be A-I-A-I-Oh! Of course, AI is nothing new for Apple. It has been a part of the Memories feature of Photos for a long time, it is used extensively in the current iOS 17 to power features such as creating a Personal Voice that (sort of) sounds like your real voice and the greatly improved AutoCorrect feature, it is responsible for the excellent transcripts created with the Podcasts app, and much more. But Apple CEO Tim Cook announced last month that AI was going to be an even bigger topic for Apple later this year. And we started to get a hint at what might be behind that when Mark Gurman of Bloomberg reported this week that Apple may license Google’s generative large-language models to power some AI features in iOS 18. For a number of reasons, including privacy and security, Apple likes to run things “on device” and I’m sure that some of iOS 18 will utilize AI that runs right on the iPhone. But just like your iPhone currently uses the online Google search service to search the web, perhaps iOS 18 will utilize some server-based AI to enhance what you can do on an iPhone. What will this AI do? It could be transformative, as Dan Moren discusses in an article this week for Six Colors and Macworld. All of this is making me very excited for what we will learn when Apple previews iOS 18 at its WWDC conference this Summer and when Apple released the 2024 models of the iPhone this Fall. And now, the other news of note from the past week:

  • Yesterday, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a large antitrust lawsuit against Apple in federal court in New Jersey. I’m not an antitrust lawyer, so I’m not providing any legal analysis, but I did very much appreciate reading the non-legal analysis from Jason Snell of Six Colors. He does a good job of explaining what the lawsuit alleges and where the DOJ seems to be taking some liberties.
  • John Gruber of Daring Fireball also offers some interesting reactions to Jason’s reactions to the DOJ lawsuit.
  • Apple released iOS 17.4.1 yesterday. It fixes some bugs and provides security updates, with no new features. Apple also released iPadOS 17.4.1 and visionOS 1.1.1, presumably for the same fixes.
  • John Voorhees of MacStories reports that the part of the App Store that shows what you have previously purchased has been updated to provide additional details and more organization.
  • Nvidia had a big conference this week, and one of its announcements was that companies will be able to use Nvidia’s products to bring immersive 3D experiences to the Apple Vision Pro. Harry McCracken of Fast Company got a demo of what this might look like when he was able to wear a Vision Pro to check out an “uncannily realistic virtual” model of the upcoming 2024 Nissan Z sports coupe. Stories like this remind me that we are at only the beginning stages of Apple’s Vision platform and I am so excited to see how the technology develops over time. (And on a side note, Apple and Nvidia have seemed to have a chilly relationship over the last few years, so it is great to see them working together.)
  • Speaking of the Apple Vision Pro, Bennedict Evans has been using one for about a month and offers some incredibly insightful thoughts on what works, what doesn’t, and what this all may mean for the future.
  • If your complaint about the Apple Vision Pro is that it isn’t expensive enough, Samantha Wiley of iLounge reports that Caviar will sell 24 versions of the Apple Vision Pro in 2025 that will cost $40,000 and up and will be covered with 18-karat gold.
  • One of my biggest regrets in the history of Apple is that the company stopped making its AirPort line of wireless routers. If only Apple had purchased Eero instead of Amazon, it could have done some incredible things with home networking while keeping complicated technology easy to use. Joe Rosensteel agrees with me and believes that it is not too late for Apple to do something in this arena as he explains in an article for Six Colors entitled It’s time for a new AirPort.
  • If you have HomeKit devices that have batteries that need to be occasionally recharged or replaced, HomeBatteries is a new app that focuses on tracking the battery life and notifying you when you need more battery power. Brent Dirks reviews the app for AppAdvice, and it looks like a great idea for an app.
  • If you are a fan of the Apple AirTag, like I am, you might be interested to know that, as reported by Eric Slivka of MacRumors, Apple is once again updating the firmware, this time to version 2.0.73. It’s the first update since last October, but Apple hasn’t yet explained what is new—so my guess is that it is just some bug fixes or something like that. There is nothing you can do to force an update; AirTags just update on their own eventually.
  • Jason Snell of Six Colors explains a new feature in the MLB app that slows down the app and explains why that is actually a good thing.
  • I’ve written in the past about how it is useful to occasionally connect a HomePod mini to a portable battery to turn it into a portable speaker. Niléane of MacStories discusses using the PlusAcc for HomePod Mini Battery Base ($40 on Amazon) to make it easier to switch a HomePod mini from being plugged-in to the wall to being portable. This does look like a more elegant solution than what I have been doing, and if I did it more than once every few months, I would consider getting one of these.
  • This week, Brian Tong released an amazing video that gets my highest recommendation for numerous reasons. First, he talks to lots of Apple employees about the iPhone, photography, AI, and other Apple technology. Second, he does so on Apple’s campus. And third, he does so while riding around Apple’s campus in a golf cart, so at the same time that you are listening to the interesting video, you see the beautiful Apple Park campus in a way that you have never seen before. The video is 40 minutes long, and when I started it I figured I would just watch the first few minutes … and then 40 minutes later, I was upset that there wasn’t more. Check it out.
  • And finally, Apple wants you to believe that there is so much space available on your iPhone that you don’t need to worry about deleting old photos just to save some space. And thus, the company released this humorous video titled Don’t Let Me Go:

Podcast episode 138: Eclipsing Technology, Maximizing Soccer, and Swimming with a Vision

Here comes the sun … except for when it disappears for a few minutes. Brett and I start this week’s episode of the In the News podcast by discussing the upcoming solar eclipse. Brett’s house in Ohio is in the zone of totality, and I’ll be traveling to the Dallas area to see the eclipse on April 8. And while that is a few weeks away, now is the time to make plans and get filters, such as a solar filter for the iPhone. In yesterday’s post, I mentioned a Wirecutter recommendation for an iPhone filter that I will be trying out, and in the podcast, Brett and I also discuss Jamie Carter’s good article on Space.com with tips for photographing a solar eclipse with a smartphone. Next, we discuss the Apple Vision Pro, what Apple has learned about who in the United States is exercising with an Apple Watch, the best options for premium streaming services on an Apple TV, and more.

In this week’s Where Y’at? segment, we discuss the story of a man in England who left his keys on the dashboard of his SUV (d’oh!) but fortunately, he also had an AirTag in his vehicle.

Brett’s tip of the week revolves around the Astronomy watch face for the Apple Watch. I share a tip for dealing with unexpected and unwanted widgets that start showing up on your iPhone or iPad.

Click here to listen to the audio podcast, or just listen using your podcast player of choice.  You can also watch the episode on YouTube:

In the News

When I was in Sixth Grade, my English teacher had our class memorize an Emily Dickinson poem, and somehow the whole thing is still in my brain all these years later. It begins: “There is no Frigate like a Book / To take us Lands away …” Perhaps I remember the words because I love to read books for pleasure; a good book really can transport you to a different place. And yet, I never seem to have time to do it, so thank goodness for audiobooks which allow me to fit in the time to read a book while I am doing something else. I mention this because I just finished an audiobook that I loved: All Souls Lost by Dan Moren. I link to Dan Moren’s tech stories frequently in these Friday posts—Dan is part of the Six Colors website (along with Jason Snell)—so it won’t surprise you that this book has a technology angle. But primarily, the book is a noir private eye tale set in our modern world except that the supernatural is real. Yes, that is a bizarre mashup, but it works well in this book, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. There is even quite a bit of humor in this book. As you think about your next book to read or listen to, I recommend that you give this one a try. And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • The big solar eclipse is coming up in a few weeks on April 8, 2024. My son and I are planning to travel to Dallas to see the total eclipse. Phil Ryan of Wirecutter offers advice for taking a photograph of the eclipse, and he recommends getting an inexpensive camera filter for the iPhone called the Solar Snap Eclipse App Kit (Amazon link). I ordered one, and hopefully, it will be fun to use.
  • Do not, I repeat, do not copy what iJustine is doing and wear an Apple Vision Pro in the pool.
  • As I am thinking of ways to enhance my legal practice with an Apple Vision Pro, doctors are doing the same thing. Hiyah Zaidi of Metro reports that the device was used during a recent surgery in London. A scrub nurse wore a Vision Pro so that she could assist the surgeons and ensure that they were using the right tools. She told the reporter that the device was a “gamechanger” because it “eliminates human error. It eliminates the guesswork.” The app used by the nurse compared the surgery to similar procedures performed in the past by other surgeons, and as a result, it was like the nurse had tons of experience with the surgical procedure.
  • Hugo Barra, former head of Oculus at Meta, knows what he is talking about when it comes to AR/VR headsets, so it is not surprising that he offers an interesting and in-depth analysis of the Apple Vision Pro. I disagree with some of what he says, but he definitely has a well-informed perspective.
  • Speaking of Apple and health, Apple and others have been running a heart and movement study using the Apple Watch and, as reported by Laura Rosenberg of 9to5Mac, recently revealed which states in the U.S. exercise the most and the least. The best states for staying active are Massachusetts, New York, and Connecticut. The worst states are Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Mississippi. OK, I get the message Apple, and I’ll get back on my treadmill.
  • If you are looking for a good show to watch on Apple TV+, this week I started watching Constellation and it is really good. The story starts on the International Space Station and then tells the story of an astronaut for whom some bizarre things start happening.
  • I used to subscribe to HBO (now Max) through my TV service provider (DirecTV) because of a promotion that made the service free. But then Max removed the ability to watch shows in 4K, which defeated some of the purpose of my Apple TV 4K and my 4K television, so I started subscribing to the $20/month package directly through Max. Amy Skorheim reports that Max is currently running a big discount if you subscribe for a year instead of a month, and both new and some current customers can take advantage of it. I just did. With the discount, I’ll pay $140 for a year, which works out to less than $12 a month, a 40% discount off of the $20 per month that I had been paying. If you are also interested in HBO/Max, consider taking advantage of this deal while you can.
  • If you want to watch some soccer games this weekend, Benjamin Mayo of 9to5Mac reports that all matches this weekend will be free—no MLS Season Pass required. There are fourteen games this weekend. Saturday’s match between D.C. United and Inter Miami should have been a good opportunity to see Lionel Messi in action, but I see that Michelle Kaufman of the Miami Herald is reporting that Messi may miss the game on Saturday due to a hamstring injury. Well, good news if you are a fan of D.C. United.
  • William Gallagher of AppleInsider shares the tale of a man whose SUV in England was stolen after he left his keys on the dash (yikes!) but because there was an AirTag in it, the police were able to help him recover his car.
  • And finally, Apple released a funny video last month called New Driver. I had intended to link to it here, but apparently, I forgot, and I didn’t realize the omission until Brett Burney mentioned it during last week’s episode of the In the News podcast. As someone with a daughter who will soon be getting her driver’s license, this one hits pretty close to home for me.

Review: Weather Up — the weather app that is all about the widget

I’ve been a very happy user of the CARROT Weather app for as long as I can remember, so much so that I had been paying for the top-of-the-line $30/year “Premium Ultra” subscription, and then I changed that to the $50/year “Premium Family” level to share it with others in my household. I also like, and sometimes use, the built-in Apple Weather app. So when I heard about a recent update to yet another weather app, an app called Weather Up, I figured that I would look at it briefly out of curiosity but then go back to my favorites. To my surprise, I’ve been really impressed by Weather Up because it does one thing better than any other app. It has a fantastic widget on the iPad and iPhone, and a corresponding fantastic complication on the Apple Watch.

When I put a widget on my iPhone or iPad, my goal is to get the information that I want as fast as possible. CARROT Weather has always done a very nice job with its weather widgets. The widget that I have been using on my iPad shows both the next few hours and the next few days, using numbers to give me the temperature and placing those numbers at different heights so it is easy to see changes without even reading the exact numbers. And icons on the CARROT Weather widget provide further information about the type of weather:

It’s a nice widget.

The Weather Up widget takes a different approach, both in the way that the graphics are displayed and also in the way that you can interact with the widget. First, the Weather Up widget uses a line that shows you the change from high to low, every day, over a couple of days. I find that I prefer using graphics that make it easier to see both the high and low every day. When rain is in the forecast, the widget indicates that by using blue lines to tell you the point in the day when rain will occur. For example, in the following picture, I can see some rain is coming in the middle of the day on Friday when it will get up to 78º:

Better yet, this is an interactive widget. If I tap on the part of the widget that shows me Friday, the widget changes to concentrate on Friday’s weather. With this view, I can see more clearly that the rain starts a little before Noon and then continues for a few hours. Looks like a bad day to make plans to walk somewhere for lunch:

In addition to tapping on a specific day, you can tap on the arrow at the right to advance to the next few days. Doing so, I can see that the current forecast calls for even more rain all day on Sunday:

I love having an interactive weather widget on the iPad. It means that I never have to even launch the app itself to get the weather information that I need, which saves time. (With the CARROT Weather widget, tapping the widget launches the app.) And I also like the graphics used in the icons in the app for sunny, partly sunny, rainy, etc. I find that the graphics really pop.

I’m not currently using Weather Up on my iPhone, but I have tested it and it works well. The weather icons are a little larger than they are on an iPad. And if you own a Mac, you can also put the Weather Up widget on your Mac’s desktop, which I have done.

The iPhone screen is more cramped, but Weather Up has a nice complication that shows almost as much information as the iPhone/iPad widget:

An Apple Watch complication cannot be interactive, so tapping the Weather Up widget merely launches the app, where you can see more specific information for each hour of the day and upcoming days. But just looking at the complication typically tells me everything that I need. Indeed, this is one of my all-time favorite Apple Watch complications in terms of how good it looks on the Apple Watch.

When you launch the Weather Up app on the iPhone or iPad, it shows you a weather map with radar showing you where it is raining (or showing).

Weather maps are very useful when it is raining, especially when the map is in motion, because you can get a good sense of what rain is coming your way. But the built-in Weather app made by Apple already does a fine job showing a weather map, and it is free. My CARROT Weather app also has a great weather map. The Weather Up weather map is certainly pretty, but I don’t find it to be better in any meaningful way.

Weather Up costs $4/month or $40/year. As noted above, when I first installed the app, I had zero intention of keeping it on my devices for longer than 24 hours. But once I started using the widget on my iPad and the complication on my Apple Watch, I got sort of hooked. Both do an amazing job of communicating, in the most succinct way possible, the weather forecast, and they do so using fantastic graphics. And for now, at least, that is worth $4 a month to me. After a few months, if I find that I’m still enjoying the app as much as I do now, I’ll probably switch to the annual plan.

Conclusion

It seems counterintuitive, but Weather Up is a fantastic app precisely because you never need to open up the app. I encourage you to check it out.

Click here to get Weather Up.

Podcast episode 137: Point 4 Updates, Double Better Persona, #2 Pencils, and 50 Added Movies (some in 3D)

Updates, updates, and more updates! Brett and I begin this week’s action-packed episode of the In the News podcast by discussing Apple’s numerous latest updates to the operating systems for just about all of its products. Even if you don’t live in the EU, there are lots of changes on the iPhone, including Apple’s impressive and helpful feature in the Apple Podcasts app that lets you work with (and search) a transcript of a podcast. Plus, there are new Emoji including the 🍋‍🟩 lime Emjoi (which will look like a lemon + green square if you haven’t updated yet).

The Vision Pro operating system was updated to version 1.1, and one of the new features is improvements to Persona. If you are wearing your Vision Pro during a videoconference, the avatar version of you looks a little more like the real you than it did before. This is tough to describe in an audio podcast, but if you watch the video of this week’s podcast on YouTube (which is embedded below) and jump to the chapter called “Jeff’s Improved Vision Pro Persona,” you can see a comparison of the prior version and this new update thanks to Brett doing such a good job in creating this week’s video.

But that’s not all. We also discuss a fun new version of the Apple Pencil, tips for taking panoramic photos, new movies on Apple TV+, new videos created by Apple, and more.

Brett’s tip of the week involves the always helpful ESC key. My tip of the week is to check out a weather app called Weather Up, not because of the app itself, but instead because of the amazing widget and Apple Watch complication.

Click here to listen to the audio podcast, or just listen using your podcast player of choice.  You can also watch the episode on YouTube:

In the News

Apple issued updates for lots of its software platforms this week. Perhaps the biggest changes are reserved for those who live in Europe, where the EU’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) has forced Apple to allow for third-party app stores and third-party browser engines on the iPhone. But for those of us here in the U.S., the new software provides lots of other small updates. And in light of Apple updating its MacBook Air computers earlier this week, will next week be the time when Apple finally announces updates to its iPad line, after no new iPads at all in 2023? We’ll find it soon enough. In the meantime, here is the news of note from the past week.

  • Niléane of MacStories runs down what is new in iOS 17.4 and iPad OS 17.4. In addition to changes for the EU, one new feature is the addition of transcripts to Apple’s podcasts app. This is a really cool feature. If you listened to a podcast a while ago and then you want to jump back to the specific part of a podcast where something specific was mentioned, you can now do so. Open up the podcast episode, start playing the episode, tap the transcript button at the bottom left (very similar to the lyrics button in Apple Music), and then tap the word Search. Type a word and you can jump directly to the part of the podcast where that word was used and listen to it again. Cool! Or if you don’t want to listen and just want to review or search the transcript, you can do that too. The quality of these generated transcripts is not 100% accurate, but it is amazingly close to that. There are also 118 new Emojis such as the lime Emoji, a new clock widget, a new Live Activity for the stopwatch, and more.
  • Juli Clover of MacRumors also does a good job of explaining what is new in iOS 17.4. For example: “Call identification in iOS 17.4 displays Apple-verified business names, logos, and department names when the information is available.” I haven’t seen that yet, but that sounds like a nice feature.
  • Another reason to update your iPhone when new updates are available is that Apple’s updates virtually always improve security. Michael Potuck of 9to5Mac notes that iOS 17.4 fixes four important security issues, two of which were actively being exploited in the real world. Yikes, and I’m glad that I updated already.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac explains that Apple also released updates to the Apple Watch, Apple TV, and more.
  • Because Apple may be just days away from announcing a new iPad and perhaps also a new Apple Pencil, now is not the time to buy a new Apple Pencil. But if I were going to do so anyway, I would be very tempted to purchase the “Apple Number 2 Pencil” from Colorware because, as noted by Michael Potuck of 9to5Mac … actually, you don’t have to pay much attention to the words in that post. Just look at the picture. Very fun, and very cool. It reminds me of the great No. 2 Pencil Stylus for Touchscreens by Griffin that I reviewed back in 2013, but alas, Griffin is now part of a different company and that product is no longer available. But mine is still on my desk and I still occasionally use it.
  • Apple also released the first big update for the Vision Pro: software version 1.1. I was very excited about this update because the Vision Pro now supports Mobile Device Management, which is a requirement for many folks who work for a company. As of the time that I’m writing this, the MDM software that we use as my law firm is not yet updated to support the Vision Pro, but my fingers are crossed that support will come soon. I see that another MDM product, Jamf, was ready for Day 1 of version 1.1.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac reports that the Persona feature is much better in version 1.1. I created one, and I have to admit that it does look better than what had before.
  • Should lawyers (and other professionals) use an Apple Vision Pro? In an article for Above the Law, New York attorney Nicole Black concludes probably not. As she writes: “For most lawyers, there’s no reason to rush out and invest in this device. Unless you’re an early adopter of Apple products, I would wait a year or even more until newer versions are released and more apps are created specifically for the Apple Vision Pro, especially in the productivity category.” I agree 100% with her very practical advice. Having said that, it seems clear that she, like me, is very happy that she owns a Vision Pro to have the opportunity to get a sneak peek at what this technology of the future looks like. If you also enjoy living on the cutting edge of technology, and if you have around $3500 to spend, it is a really fun product.
  • Before I started using the Apple Vision Pro I would take panoramic photos only occasionally. But considering how incredibly cool they look, I wish I had taken them more often. If you do take a panoramic photo with your iPhone, you are likely to use the built-in feature in the Photos app. But Jason Snell of Six Colors points out that you can actually get higher-quality panoramic photos by just taking a series of still photos and then using Photoshop to stitch the photos together. That’s how I used to create panoramic photos when I took pictures with my DSLR camera (and I’m glad that I did so because now I have panoramic photos that date back to 2005) but it is interesting to learn that this technique remains useful today.
  • John Gruber of Daring Fireball criticizes the battery indicator on the Vision Pro’s external battery. Perhaps there won’t even be an external battery in the next version of the Vision Pro, but if there is, Apple should implement the changes suggested by Gruber.
  • Samuel Axon of Ars Technica explains what it was like to use the Apple Vision Pro exclusively for a week to get his work done.
  • In the 1990s, Apple created and released a personal digital assistant called the Newton. The device had its fans, but it had some problems as well. Steve Jobs killed the product when he returned to Apple, but the spirit of the Newton lives on today, better than ever, in the iPhone and iPad. So let’s think about the Apple Car, which Apple worked on for 10 years but reported abandoned. Stephen Hackett of 512 Pixels thinks about the good aspects of what Apple was trying to do with the car. And who knows, maybe in a decade or so, Apple will return to the automotive market.
  • Dan Moren of Six Colors explains why the technology behind the Apple Car may well live on in other projects at Apple.
  • David Sparks of MacSparky shares his thoughts on the end of the car project.
  • Justin Pot of the Wall Street Journal recommends turning on the iPhone feature that lets you tap on the back of your device to launch an app or a specific feature such as the flashlight.
  • The Apple TV is now a fantastic device for doing a video conference, thanks to tvOS 17. But you need a way to prop up your iPhone. I’ve been using a Belkin iPhone Mount with MagSafe for Mac Desktops and Displays (my review), but Belkin recently revised that product and came up with the Belkin iPhone Mount with MagSafe for Apple TV 4K, which looks like it would work even better. It will cost $49.99 when it is released, and Roman Loyola of Macworld has a sneak peek.
  • Apple spends a lot of money creating movies that often lose money at the box office, but Tatiana Siegel of Variety explains, Apple still comes out ahead financially—and not just because of the prestige of releasing these movies on Apple TV+ after the theatrical run.
  • Harley Charlton of MacRumors reports that Apple TV+ recently added over 50 movies to its catalog for a limited time. Some of them are in 3D, so this past weekend I picked one of these movies, Edge of Tomorrow starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt, and watched it using my Apple Vision Pro. The 3D did not really add that much to the movie, but the movie itself was a fun sci-fi thriller, especially because I didn’t read anything about the movie so I wasn’t spoiled about a big twist in the movie. If you decide to watch it too, try to avoid reading any descriptions of the movie.
  • And finally, here is a video from Apple called One More that shows off the long battery life of the iPhone 15 Plus.

Podcast episode 136: Fiscal Factuals, Quantum Messaging, and Visiting the Muppet Theater

Brett and I begin this week’s episode of the In the News podcast by saying goodbye to the Apple Car that we never knew. We also discuss Apple’s upcoming AI announcement, the Apple Sports app, upcoming features in iOS 17.4, watching movies on an Apple Vision Pro, and more.

In our Where Y’at? segment, we discuss three tales of people who credit the Apple Watch with saving their lives, two from a land called Down Under, and one from a state that sits down under New York.

In our In the Know segment, Brett shares a tip for checking to see if your AirPods are running the latest firmware. I explain how to improve the new Apple Sports app by removing the display of betting odds.

Click here to listen to the audio podcast, or just listen using your podcast player of choice.  You can also watch the episode on YouTube:

In the News

The biggest Apple news of the week concerned something that Apple never released and Apple never even talked about. But given the thousands of people hired by Apple over the last decades, many of them former employees of other car manufacturers, and the disclosures that Apple has to make to authorities that it was testing autonomous vehicles on roads, it was an open secret that Apple has been developing a car. As first reported by Mark Gurman of Bloomberg and then widely reported by numerous other news outlets, Apple finally decided to pull the plug on its electric car project this week. Brian X. Chen and Tripp Mickle of the New York Times wrote an extensive article about the situation based on lots of off-the-record interviews. (That’s a gift link so you can read it even if you don’t subscribe.) Why did Apple give up the project? This one sentence says it all: “If it ever came to market, an Apple car was likely to cost at least $100,000 and still generate razor-thin profit compared with smartphones and earbuds.” In 1997 at Apple’s WWDC conference for developers, Steve Jobs famously said: “People think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I’m actually as proud of the things we haven’t done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.” I think it made sense for Apple to explore this area, but after a decade of not getting to a shipping product that makes sense, it looks like Apple made the right decision. Some of the reported 2,000 employees working on the Apple Car will probably lose their jobs, but many are being offered positions working on AI issues for Apple, which I’m sure was a big part of making an autonomous car. If the end result is that Apple devotes more focus to products that make more sense for the company and those products are even better with more people working on integrating AI, then that will definitely be a good thing. Indeed, John Gruber of Daring Fireball floated a theory that Apple executive Kevin Lynch has spent the last few years figuring out who to use the Apple Car technologies in other Apple products. And now, the rest of the news of note from the past week:

  • iOS 17.4 is not out yet, but Zac Hall of 9to5Mac reports that Apple has already published the full release notes. It will include new Emojis, transcripts in the Apple Podcasts app, caller identification for Apple-verified businesses, and more. And if you live in the EU, Apple is adding support for third-party app stores.
  • Another change in iOS 17.4 is that the Messages app will remain secure even if attacked by a quantum computer. No, quantum computers don’t exist yet, but defenses against them are already possible. John Gruber of Daring Fireball wrote a post that quotes Apple’s (good) explanation of this technology and then further explains what is going on.
  • Here is a brief Public Service Announcement on the Apple AirPods Pro and Windows 11. I recently upgraded my work computer to Windows 11, and when I tried to pair AirPods Pro, I put the AirPods into pairing mode (by holding down the button on the back) but they would never appear in the Settings app in Windows for me to select them. After trying the same thing at least two dozen times, on the next try, it worked. If you have difficulty pairing AirPods Pro to Windows 11, my advice is to keep doing the same thing over and over again until it finally works.
  • In a series of two videos, a person who posts YouTube videos under the name Practical Matters shows in the first video how he accidentally dropped his Apple Vision Pro onto a hardwood floor, shattering the front of it, and shows in the second video how he attached the replacement part that he received through Apple Care.
  • Mike Wuerthele of AppleInsider suggests five famous places that would be perfect environments for Apple to add to the Apple Vision Pro. I agree with all five suggestions.
  • In an article for Six Colors and Macworld, Jason Snell explains that Apple Stores should be doing a better job helping people choose the right Light Shield sizes for an Apple Vision Pro. I agree. When I first pre-ordered mine using the app, the app scanned my face and announced my size to be 25W. When I visited an Apple Store on the day that the product was released, I expected someone to let me try different shields to find the right fit, but that never happened. And then, after reading Jason’s article, I used the app to scan my face again multiple different times, and now the app says I should get a 21W. My current Vision Pro seems to fit fine so I guess the 25W is okay, but would a 21W be better? I don’t know. If any of you have changed Light Shield sizes over the last few weeks, I’d love to hear about your experience. (For Jason Snell, who started with a 24W and was then told that a 21W would be better, he tried out the 21W and decided that the original 24W was better.)
  • The Patently Apple website discusses Apple patents that could allow you to visit a virtual Apple Store using the Apple Vision Pro.
  • Apple released two videos to tell the story of two people in Australia whose lives were saved thanks to an Apple Watch: Lexie’s Heart and Bruce and the Roo.
  • And finally, New Orleans is not a city that one traditionally associates with amazing museums, but the National World War II Museum is an amazing, multi-building facility with incredible exhibits and artifacts. It is as impressive as any Smithsonian museum. And it definitely makes a trip to New Orleans worth it, even if one sets aside everything else that the city has to offer for tourists. I’ve been visiting the museum since it opened on June 6, 2000, in part because, until she passed away a few years ago, my grandmother (who met my grandfather during the war) worked at the museum as a volunteer every Monday. Perhaps in part because of my frequent trips to the museum, I’ve been really enjoying the Apple TV+ show Masters of the Air. (My son loves watching it too.) David Show of Cult of Mac reports that Apple TV+ will soon release a documentary about the real pilots who inspired the series, along with interviews with Steven Spielberg and Tom Hanks. I have no doubt that it will be a first-class production, and I look forward to watching it when it premieres on March 15. Here is the trailer for the documentary, called The Bloody Hundredth:

Dial M for 3D — relive 1954 in 2024 on the Apple Vision Pro

The Apple Vision Pro provides the very best way to watch a 3D movie. The screen can be as big as the largest movie theater. You get to sit in the perfect seat in the center. And you don’t have to wear polarized glasses that reduce the brightness of the film; instead, the image is crisp and bright in both of your eyes. When I recently watched the latest Avatar movie in 3D, widely considered to contain some of the best uses of 3D in a movie, I was astonished at how impressive a 3D movie can look. I never knew that 3D could look so good.

According to one post on Reddit, there are over 200 movies that are available to watch in 3D on the Apple Vision Pro. But perhaps the oldest one is the Alfred Hitchcock’s classic movie Dial M for Murder, released 70 years ago in 1954. At the time that the movie was conceived, studios thought that 3D movies might be the next big thing as studios started to use polarized glasses instead of the prior red-and-blue glasses. Making this 3D movie was not easy. As reported by Liam Gaughan of Collider, Warner Brothers only had a single 3D camera rig that it could use for this production, and the camera rig took up nearly the entire room. This made the movie particularly difficult for Hitchcock to shoot. For example, he could not have two cameras filming two sides of a conversation, and instead he would have to move around the bulky single camera for every different shot in the film.

Despite all of this effort, as the Wikipedia article on the movie notes, by the time the movie was finally released, public interest in 3D movies had diminished. As a result, there were very few 3D showings of this movie back in 1954. Starting in the 1980s, there have been rare times when select theaters would show the 3D version, and a 3D Blu-ray version was released in 2012 ($21.05 on Amazon). But most of the people who have seen the movie over the last 70 years have seen it in 2D.

Nevertheless, a lot of people have seen this movie, and for good reason. It is a suspenseful tale of murder from Hitchcock, a master of the genre. Almost all of the movie takes place in a single room of an apartment with only a few main characters, so the movie turns on the actors being good, and they are. Grace Kelly, in particular, is amazing. The whole thing feels more like a play than a movie, which makes sense because the movie was based on a play. The American Film Institute ranks this movie #9 on its all-time list of best mystery movies, and even 70 years later, the movie holds up very well. It certainly had me on the edge of my seat. There are a few lines of dialogue that reflect the sexism of that time period (such as references to what was appropriate for a wife versus a husband in a marriage), but other than that, almost the same script could be used today for a modern adaptation. And the film has been restored rather well considering its age, with no visible scratches and good color. When Hitchcock puts Grace Kelly in a red dress early in the movie, a not-so-subtle decision that adds to the plot, the dress pops on screen and she looks great.

But again, the reason that I watched this movie this past weekend is that I was curious to see how a movie that used cutting-edge 3D technology of the 1950s would hold up today in a Vision Pro. Initially, I had hoped to rent the movie. In the Apple TV app on the Apple Vision Pro, Apple has the movie listed, says that it is in 3D, and notes that it can be rented for $3.99. However, when I went to rent the movie, things did not go well. First, I was told that there were two versions to rent, but I could never get the button to click on one of the versions. Second, the single version that I was allowed to rent gave me the 2D version of the movie. I subsequently saw others say online that the only way to get the 3D version is to buy the movie, so I decided to bite the bullet and pay $9.99 to buy the movie and then dispute the charge on the $3.99 rental using Apple’s webpage for disputing a charge. (Less than 24 hours later, Apple refunded me the $3.99, either because they were feeling nice, or perhaps because their system noticed that I also bought the movie.)

Once the movie is purchased, when you select it in the Apple TV app, you see a pop-up window asking if you want to watch the movie in 3D or 2D. Finally, what I was looking for!

I am happy to report that this movie was a complete delight to watch in 3D and the 3D makes a real difference. The 2D version of the movie looks like a restored but still somewhat grainy movie from the 1950s—exactly what I had expected for a movie from this era. In the 3D version, the film still looks somewhat grainy, but I didn’t notice it nearly as much because the 3D effect made the movie seem more immersive and modern.

Additionally, and perhaps more importantly, the way that Hitchcock filmed this movie in 3D adds greatly to the suspense of the film. Hitchcock resisted the urge to overuse the 3D, so there are virtually no gimmicky 3D shots–except for one at the height of the drama that is totally worth it. For the rest of the movie, the 3D is used to make the room in which the actors are located seem more claustrophobic, which adds to the suspense. You see a lamp in the foreground as actors are plotting in the background. Or you see one actor closer to the camera and another a little further back. The end result is that you often get the sense that you are right there in the intimate room with the characters. Imagine watching a play that takes place in a single room where you get to be sitting in that room watching the play unfold in front of you. That is the feeling that you get thanks to the effective use of 3D camera placement. This movie is already good, but it is even better when you watch it in 3D.

So we have one of the greatest mystery movies of all time, made even better by the impressive use of 3D, and yet very few people have ever had a chance to experience it the way that it was intended to be seen. But now, thanks to the Apple Vision Pro, you can watch the movie in a way that is better than anyone has ever seen it before because the Vision Pro is so amazing at showing 3D content.

When my kids were younger, I would often purchase Disney (and similar) movies on DVD because they loved to watch them over and over again. But outside of those films, the number of movies that I have purchased over the decades is rather small because it is rare for me to want to rewatch a movie. I don’t plan to purchase a lot of movies from Apple just to have the opportunity to watch the movie in 3D. Instead, I’m glad that there are some great 3D movies available as a part of my Disney+ subscription and I hope to soon see even more good 3D movie options as a part of my Apple TV+ subscription. I wish that I could have just rented the 3D version of Dial M for Murder, but I enjoyed the movie enough that I probably received $10 of value in having the opportunity to see a classic movie like Dial M for Murder in such an amazing format.

If you own an Apple Vision Pro, and if the idea of a classic mystery appeals to you, I recommend purchasing Dial M for Murder in the Apple TV app. Bringing Alfred Hitchcock 70 years into the future is rather fun.