Podcast episode 212: Don’t Tease Me Bro 🍎 An “Instant” iPad App, and Quarters for the Arcade

In the News

Like many of you, Brett Burney and I are wondering what Apple will announce on Tuesday. As we look for hidden meaning in Apple’s invitation to that event, we look at prior invitations and the hidden messages that were sometimes contained in them. After that vigorous Kremlinology, we discuss ways that the upcoming iOS 26 can protect your privacy, the new iPad app from Instagram that was 15 years in the making, the new app from I’m-not-practicing-law-anymore-and-the-rest-of-us-are-a-little-jealous David Sparks, AirPods and Find My, spreadsheets, internet outages, taking a break from the iPhone, Apple Arcade, and more. We also discuss the Apple Vision Pro, CarPlay Ultra, and the upcoming new season of Slow Horses.

In our In the Know segment, Brett talks about installing and uninstalling iOS betas. I provide tips for coming up with good names for the objects in your home–at least, the ones that are connected to smart home devices. If you want to give cute names to any other objects, you are on your own.

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

In the News

Sometimes, good things come to those who wait. Other times, well… As John Gruber of Daring Fireball notes, the Instagram app first shipped in 2010, the same year that the iPad debuted. It has taken 15 years, but Instagram finally noticed that iPads exist and updated its app to support the iPad. But the Instagram app is different on the iPad. The default view, what you see when you start the app, is Reels, not the pictures from the people you follow. And the default view is not even videos from the people who follow, but instead just the random videos that the algorithm thinks that you might want to see. It’s like the company thought that it was releasing an iPad app for TikTok instead of Instagram. I’ve already heard people say that it would have been better if they had kept it the same as before, where you could use the app on an iPad in iPhone mode. But have no fear, I’m sure that they will fix this in, umm, maybe in 2040? And now, the news of note from the past week.

  • “Awe Dropping” is the tagline for Apple’s September 9 iPhone announcement event. Is there any hidden meaning in there? To try to figure that out, Alex Blake of Macworld takes a look back at the teasers for every prior iPhone announcement, starting in 2007.
  • If you are watching the show Dexter: Resurrection, currently streaming on Paramount+, then you saw an episode this season in which someone is able to track the location of a car by intentionally leaving their AirPods in the car. That would definitely work. AirPods are a little expensive as a tracking device, but for someone who is up to good, they may be easier for a victim to overlook than a dedicated tracking device like an AirTag. In an interesting article for Six Colors, Glenn Fleishman discusses how to remove tracking from AirPods, an issue that arose when someone bought a used AirPods Max from Amazon but learned that they could still be tracked by the prior owner, who didn’t disable Find My before selling the device.
  • I’m a big fan of the relatively new Anker charging devices that feature screens on them so you can get all sorts of useful information, such as how much power is going in and out. The Anker Laptop Power Bank (my review) has become an essential item for me, and it is currently only $94.99 on Amazon. Juli Clover of MacRumors reports that Anker has announced new products in its Anker Prime lineup that provide lots of different charging options, all of which feature a useful display.
  • Although I’ve never owned any Philips Hue smart home devices, I know that there are lots of fans. Juli Clover of MacRumors reports that a number of new Philips Hue devices are coming out this Fall.
  • Microsoft Excel is the #1 spreadsheet program, and it is more powerful than Apple’s Numbers app. Nevertheless, there are some features that work better in Numbers. William Gallagher of AppleInsider compares these two spreadsheet apps.
  • Apple recently announced that it has now shipped over 3 billion iPhones. Based on that number and other historical data, Horace Dediu of Asymco was able to estimate the sales numbers over time and create some interesting charts.
  • David Sparks of MacSparky released his first app. It is called The No List, and it helps you to track the occasions when you turned down a project as a way to help you distinguish opportunities that are worthwhile from those that are not. It is an interesting idea. In this post, he explains the thinking behind the app and how he created it.
  • Arin Waichulis of 9to5Mac reports on some of the new privacy features that are coming soon in iOS 26.
  • I use Eero devices (my review) to provide mesh WiFi throughout my house. I virtually never have any issues with the Eero units, but it is frustrating that my internet connection sometimes stops because of issues with my Internet provider (Cox). Chance Miller of 9to5Mac reports that a new product called Eero Signal gives you a cellular backup for whenever your wired internet is down. It appears that the product costs either $99.99 for 4G LTE or $199.99 for 5G, and then you also need to pay for a data subscription that costs either $99.99/year for 10GB of data each year or $199.99/year for 100GB of data each month. You will be able to buy it on Amazon, and I’m thinking about it.
  • Do you feel like you use your iPhone too much? If so, Christina Caron of the New York Times shares a number of tips from different people on how to curb your smartphone use.
  • Dan Moren of Six Colors notes that it was almost six years ago (September 19, 2019) when Apple launched its Apple Arcade service: pay one subscription price to get lots of games. Although Moren is right to question how deeply committed Apple is to games, I’ve actually been impressed by Apple Arcade over the years. Now to be fair, I play very few games on my iPhone and iPad, but I like that there is always something new to try in Apple Arcade. For example, just this week, Apple released a new title called Jeopardy! Daily, a daily puzzle game with clues written by the folks who make the Jeopardy! TV show, and I think that the game is fun. And some older titles that I still enjoy playing are Flipflop+ and Good Sudoku+. Apple Arcade is part of the Apple One service, and it is certainly a part of the reason that I consider Apple One to be worth paying for.
  • Steven Rosenbush of the Wall Street Journal reports that while the Apple Vision Pro is currently too expensive for many consumers at $3,500, there are certain businesses where the device is gaining traction. I don’t think that law is one of those right now, but I see tons of potential for lawyers in the future using a next-generation version of the Vision Pro.
  • There will soon be twice as many options to get Apple’s new CarPlay Ultra, in the sense that two is twice as many as one. When Apple announced CarPlay Ultra earlier this year, the only car to support it was an expensive model from Aston Martin. But Paul Horrell of Top Gear reports that Hyundai will launch a new small EV car, the Ioniq 3, on September 9 at the IAA Mobility car show in Munich, Germany, and it will include CarPlay Ultra.
  • It could be even more than that. Zac Hall of 9to5Mac reports that it is possible that other car manufacturers may make the same announcement in Munich. It is interesting that the Munich car show begins on September 9, the same day as Apple’s new iPhone announcement.
  • And finally, this week, Apple released the trailer for Season 5 of the fantastic Apple TV+ show Slow Horses. The first four seasons were incredible, and this trailer makes me think that the next season will be just as much fun. The new season starts on September 24.

Help kids beat cancer

As St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital says: “Childhood cancer remains the leading cause of death by disease for children under the age of 14. When St. Jude opened in 1962, childhood cancer was largely considered incurable. Since then, St. Jude has helped push the overall survival rate from 20% to more than 80%, and we won’t stop until no child dies from cancer.” And as the late entertainer Danny Thomas (founder of St. Jude) famously said: “No child should die in the dawn of life.”

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month. For the fourth consecutive year, iPhone J.D. is proud to join the community that is working with the Relay podcast network to raise money for St. Jude. You know this community. You are part of it, too. This is the community of people who have enough of an interest in technology to read tech-related websites and listen to tech-related podcasts. And this is a community that, over the last few years, has come together to raise over $4 million to help cure and treat cancer.

Donating is simple. I just did it. Simply go to the page, click the big green DONATE button, decide if you want to select a Reward (that part is optional), then checkout and pay.

Some rewards are directly related to St. Jude. For example, a donation of $50 or more can help provide art supplies for St. Jude patients, allowing them to explore their creativity and have fun. Two rewards are specific to the Relay network, and you can get things like stickers and a digital screensaver. Additionally, I am offering a special, limited-edition reward for iPhone J.D. readers: high-quality microfiber cloths featuring the iPhone J.D. logo, which I have previously given away on rare occasions in the past. If you donate at least $100, you may select this as your reward. These cloths are excellent for cleaning iPhone or iPad screens, and I personally use one daily to clean my eyeglasses. This is a limited-time offer, as I do not have many left, and the manufacturer is no longer in business.

Whether you donate $5 or $500, your donation will make a meaningful difference. A special thanks to those of you who contributed in the past and will contribute again this year!

Podcast episode 211: Apple Awe Drop 😲 AppleNoCare 👎 and Apple Invites a Widget to Dinner 🥳

In the News

This week’s episode of the In the News podcast was recorded on the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, so I share a few thoughts and stories about that to start us off, including some that are quite positive. Next, we look to the future. Specifically, September 9, when Apple will announce the 2025 version of the iPhone along with other new devices. We also discuss the history of Apple’s successful relationship with the advertising folks at TBWA, a reason that AppleCare One may not be for you, using the Invites app to count down the days to an event, a new camera app from Adobe, what to do about the increase in iPhones being inspected by customs agents when anyone enters the United States notwithstanding any confidential information that might be on that device, and how the shutdown of the TypePad service serves as a warning to all of us.

In our In the Show segment, we discuss Apple sharing the excellent show Trying with the BBC and the upcoming Apple TV+ limited series Savant.

In our In the Know segment, Brett shares a fun tip for changing the avatar when you are using the Google Maps app to navigate a route. And I explain what it means when you see a status icon at the top of your iPad that Apple doesn’t identify on its support page devoted to status icons.

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

In the News

It is now official. Apple announced this week what some of us have suspected for a long time: on September 9, 2025, at 10am Pacific / 1pm Eastern, Apple will have a big event. And we all know what an Apple event in September means: the introduction of this year’s version of the iPhone. The graphic that Apple is using for the event is interesting, and you can see it right now at the top of the Apple website. It is a glowing, fluid, Apple logo. If you move your cursor over the logo (or, on a touch device like an iPhone or iPad, if you touch the logo), you can move the heat map effect around on the Apple logo. I suppose this animation is a sort of a nod to the new Liquid Glass interface that is coming in iOS 26. There are lots of rumors on what Apple might announce—an iPhone with a camera bump that stretches across the entire top of the back of the iPhone, a version of the iPhone that is very thin and that might be called the iPhone Air, a case from Apple made from a new fabric, lanyards that work with that new case, and more—and we will all know for sure in 11 days. And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • In an article for Six Colors, Joe Rosensteel discusses a new iPhone app from Adobe called Project Indigo. Adobe calls it an experimental camera app, and as Rosensteel shows, it sometimes can produce a picture with color that is more true-to-life.
  • The free Invites app for the iPhone from Apple gained a new feature this week. As noted by Zac Hall of 9to5Mac, create an event in the app, and then you can put a countdown widget on your home screen so that you can count down the number of days until an important event. It’s a great way to know how many shopping days you have before Christmas or how many days you have before your current iPhone starts to seem like yesterday’s news, starting on September 9.
  • As Tim Cook begins his 15th year as Apple’s CEO, Jason Snell of Six Colors reflects on his impressive run so far.
  • Andrew O’Hara of AppleInsider reviews the latest generation of the Level Lock Pro, a smart lock for a door that works with Apple Home and the Home Key feature. This product looks to be feature-rich while not looking at all like a smart lock.
  • Jonathan Reed of MacStories reviews the Aqara G410 Video Doorbell. He concludes that it is a solid product at a reasonable price. (It is $129.99 on Amazon.)
  • Brittaney Kiefer of Adweek reports on the very long relationship between Apple and TBWA\Media Arts Lab, the agency that produces much of Apple’s marketing.
  • I’m a fan of the new AppleCare One program, which allows you to protect three or more of your devices under one plan. It is cheaper than what I used before and offers more protection. But John Siracusa notes in a post on Mastodon that the service doesn’t work on a Mac if you have multiple user accounts enabled. For now, only use the service with products on which there is only a single Apple account enabled. Jason Snell notes that this seems to be “another reminder that Apple launches all sorts of products without anything but a surface consideration of the Mac.”
  • Matt Burgess of Wired reports that smartphone searches by U.S. Customs and Border Protection when people enter the United States are now at a record high. These searches do not require a warrant, and anyone can be subject to smartphone search, regardless of whether they are a U.S. citizen. This practice is particularly problematic for attorneys who have confidential and privileged information on an iPhone, as I have discussed in the past.
  • At the end of 2024, I decided to move this website from TypePad to the WordPress platform. After 16 years and 2,608 posts, it was a long and difficult transition, and I needed to hire an expert to help me with a lot of the technical details. After a few months, the transition was finally complete. This week, TypePad announced on its blog that the service is shutting down completely on September 30, 2025, as reported by Andrew Cunningham of Ars Technica. As a result, all existing TypePad websites have to move or they will be gone forever. I feel bad for all of the people who now have to accomplish in just a few weeks what took me a few months.
  • Apple is trying something new with one of its Apple TV+ shows. As reported by Max Goldbart of Deadline, Apple has sold rights to the first three seasons of the show Trying to the BBC. This is the longest-running comedy on Apple TV+ (with four seasons already and a fifth season in the works), and it is a fantastic show that my wife and I have enjoyed. I suppose that Apple hopes that if people watch the first few seasons for free on BBC, they will subscribe to Apple TV+ to see the rest of the series.
  • Nancy Tartaglione of Deadline reports that Apple’s F1 movie (my review) is not just Apple’s most successful movie ever, it is also the top-grossing movie for Brad Pitt, with over $600 million in revenue.
  • And finally, Apple released the trailer this week for a new eight-part limited series called The Savant. It features Jessica Chastain as an undercover agent who tries to stop domestic terrorism attacks, and it looks like it could be good. The first episode comes out on September 26, 2025. Here is the trailer:

Podcast episode 210: The Wizard of Woz, Floating Candles 🕯️ and One Subscription to Rule Them All 📺

In the News

Brett and I begin this week’s episode of the In the News podcast with a quick PSA on a recent security update, and then we discuss Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, who recently declared to CBS News that he is the happiest person alive. He certainly does a lot to try to make other people happy. Next we discuss a device that has made a lot of people happy—AirPods—including ways to make them more comfortable in your ears and the amazing details on how they work. Next, we discuss using passkeys instead of passwords, the cost of Apple TV+, the benefits of being an Apple One subscriber, how an Apple Watch might help you detect a brain tumor, and the latest immersive environments for the Apple Vision Pro including a really cool one with a Harry Potter theme. We also discuss the Action Mode in the iPhone’s camera app.

In our In the Know segment, Brett shares some a tip for using the wonderful Live Photo feature in the Camera app, and I explain why you should consider using Apple’s Final Cut Pro app for the iPad—even if only for a month.

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

In the News

Steve Jobs gets all of the attention when people talk about the history of Apple, but there were two men in the garage who started the company, and the other founder was Steve Wozniak, who everyone calls Woz. John Gruber of Daring Fireball reports that Wox turned 75 years old this week. He also explains how Woz has tried to devote his entire life to the simple concept of making people happy. We can use more of that in this world, so Happy Birthday to Woz. And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • It was just last week that Apple released iOS 18.6.1. Nevertheless, as reported by Juli Clover of MacRumors, this week Apple released iOS 18.6.2 and iPadOS 18.6.2. Apple says that these updates provide important security fixes and are recommended for all users.
  • William Gallagher of AppleInsider shares the tale of a woman in the UK whose Apple Watch kept reporting a low heart rate. That led her to seek medical attention and discover that her heart was having ectopic beats, perhaps as a result of stress. And then subsequent tests discovered a brain tumor. No sensor on the Apple Watch discovered the tumor, but the fact that it encouraged her to seek medical attention turned out to be important for multiple reasons.
  • Do you use AirPods but find that they sometimes fall out of your ears? (I’m talking about AirPods, not AirPods Pro.) If so, Amber Neely of AppleInsider recommends trying silicone covers ($8.99 on Amazon) to see if that keeps them from falling out.
  • Do you wonder how AirPods work? A new video from Real Engineering does a great job of explaining the technology.
  • In an article for Six Colors, Glenn Fleishman does a great job of explaining why passkeys are better than passwords. He also recommends using Apple’s own Passwords app to store passkeys if you primarily use Apple devices and to use 1Password if you want to use passkeys on multiple platforms. (I’ll add: if you already use 1Password, it makes sense to also use that app for your passkeys.)
  • When the Apple Vision Pro was released last year, the HBO Max app included an immersive environment that made you feel like you were in the Iron Throne room from Game of Thrones. This week, HBO Max added another immersive environment: Hogwarts Great Hall from Harry Potter. As Chance Miller of 9to5Mac notes, there is both a day and a night mode, and it features floating candles and ambient sound effects. This makes sense because HBO Max recently started filming a new TV series based on the books, but since that new series does not debut until 2027, I’m a little surprised that this immersive environment was released now.
  • Malcolm Owen of AppleInsider notes that Disney+ has a new immersive environment for the Vision Pro based on content from the new show Alien: Earth.
  • If you like the Apple TV+ show Severance, there is a video episode of the Severance Podcast out this week. It features most of the cast members playing a silly game and trading jokes, and I enjoyed seeing the actors have fun.
  • Apple TV+ is getting more expensive if you get it as a stand-alone service and pay monthly. As Joe Rossignol of MacRumors notes, when the service launched in 2019 (with very few shows), the monthly cost was $4.99. In 2022, Apple increased the price to $6.99. In 2023, the price increased to $9.99. This week, Apple announced that the monthly price is going up to $12.99. (The annual price remains the same at $99.99.) Virtually every other streaming service has also had price hikes, and I still think that Apple TV+ is a great value. Indeed, if you get Apple TV+ through the Apple One bundle, the price is staying the same—even though Apple did increase the price of Apple One back in 2023 at the same time that it last raised the price of the Apple TV+ service.
  • John Gruber of Daring Fireball believes that the change in the monthly, but not the annual, price for Apple TV+ and other streaming services reflects the rise in short-term customers.
  • Ryan Christoffel notes that the Apple One service is becoming more worthwhile for two reasons. First, the price increase of Apple TV+ means that the price difference between that service and Apple One (which starts at $19.99) is even less. Second, another part of Apple One—the Apple Music service—is about to get much better in iOS 26 with cool new features like AutoMix, full-screen animated artwork on the lock screen, and much more.
  • Speaking of Apple One, I’ll note that if you get the Premier package ($37.95 a month), you can share with five other people, plus you get Fitness+ and News+, two services that I use frequently and really enjoy. Plus, you get 2TB of iCloud storage for your family, which is really useful. (I see that my iCloud Photos library alone is over 800 GB right now.)
  • And finally, in 2022, Apple released Action Mode, a way to reduce shakiness in handheld videos, which is especially handy if you are moving around a lot while you take a video. This week, Apple released an uplifting and tear-jerking video called No Frame Missed to show how the Action mode on an iPhone is also a great feature for people who have hands that shake because of Parkinson’s. Very cool.

[Sponsor] SaneBox — a safer, better inbox

Thank you to Sanebox for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month. In previous posts, I’ve discussed how SaneBox vastly improves an inbox by letting you see just the good stuff. This month, however, I want to focus on security.

Cybercriminals are becoming more sophisticated every day, sending you emails that seem legitimate in the hopes that you will click a link and be tricked into providing personal information and/or a login password. Every email service includes a spam filter that analyzes message content and attempts to block malicious emails. While you should take advantage of these filters, unfortunately, they are never enough. The bad actors can take advantage of AI to draft emails that, at first blush, may seem entirely legitimate.

That’s where SaneBox can help. For privacy reasons, SaneBox never looks at the content of any of your emails. (Which, by the way, I consider a great feature.) Instead, SaneBox examines the sender and subject lines of your messages. It intelligently keeps the emails you are most likely to want in your inbox, while moving less important messages to folders such as @SaneLater. This makes a huge difference. It means that when I’m working with my inbox throughout the day, there are relatively few emails in there. About once a day, I review the messages SaneBox has placed in the @SaneLater folder. When I do, I naturally adopt a more critical mindset, evaluating whether each email is important to me. Some of these messages are legitimate, but others are either spam that slipped past the spam filter or emails that simply do not deserve my attention. Or, they are emails that are improperly trying to attract my attention, something sent by a malicious actor. That is because typical phishing emails are sent by someone unknown to me, so there is a high chance that they are automatically sorted by SaneBox into my @SaneLater folder, not my regular inbox.

Another risk is known as spearphishing: an email that comes specifically to me, perhaps from the email of someone I do know, because that person’s email was compromised. But here again, SaneBox helps. Those rare emails may end up in my Inbox, but because SaneBox vastly limits the number of emails in my Inbox, each of them gets more of my attention, making it easier for me to spot something that isn’t quite right.

When I see an unwanted email from a sender that I don’t want to deal with again, I don’t bother using something like an “unsubscribe” link in an email. I rarely trust those to work—especially if the email came from a less reputable source. In fact, some companies may use your click to confirm your email address is valid, allowing them to sell your email address to others for misuse. Ugh. Instead, I just move the email into my @SaneBlackHole folder. With that one move, SaneBox will forever move all emails from that sender into that folder. They can send me as many annoying emails as they want in the future; I don’t care, because I never see them. It is awesome.

The primary reason I have subscribed to SaneBox for so long is that it provides a superior inbox experience. But I also very much appreciate that it enhances my email security—an increasingly important benefit.

If you would like to experience the difference SaneBox can make, click here to get a 14-day free trial with no credit card required. If you don’t like having a clean and tidy Inbox that is even more secure and decide to return to how you had it before, no sweat. But if you appreciate having a better way of working with email, using this link in this post will give you a generous $25 credit for when you pick a plan—and there are lots of different plans offered so that you can choose the one that gives you just what you want.

Thanks again to SaneBox for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month and for giving all of us a better and safer way to work with email.

Podcast episode 209: Anticipation Fascination, “Buddy Not A Coach” and a Bloody Workaround 🩸

In the News

Apple’s traditional September presentation is just around the corner, so Brett and I begin this week’s episode of the In the News podcast discussing the latest speculation on what Apple may announce. After discussing upcoming hardware, we then discuss upcoming software, including the great new features coming to watchOS 26 and the changes coming to the Messages app in CarPlay. We also discuss the return of the blood oxygen sensor feature to the Apple Watch, the latest shows on Apple TV+, and the end of using a dial-up modem to access AOL or a BBS.

In our In the Know segment, Brett discusses the low power mode on the Apple Watch and iPhone, and I discuss some additional reasons to check out the new app called Cassette that I reviewed a few days ago.

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

In the News

For the reasons I mentioned last week, my guess is that we are about three weeks away from Apple announcing new iPhones and more, such as perhaps a new Apple Watch. Jason Snell of Six Colors looks back at Apple’s history of taking a product that starts one way and then splitting the line into multiple products (such as regular size versus larger iPhones) and speculates on how Apple might do something similar this year to come out with a new version of a product. And what might be included in the Pro models of the iPhone, one of Apple’s highest-end products? Joe Rossignol of MacRumors has some ideas, and they include (1) an increase of RAM from 8GB to 12GB, which I suspect would help with AI, (2) up to 8x optical zoom, up from 5x on the current high-end iPhones, (3) an anti-reflective display, and (4) improvements to video recording. There were other predictions and revelations this week about what is coming soon because of some code discovered in beta software from Apple. For example, Benjamin Mayo of 9to5Mac says that the next version of the Apple TV 4K will include an A17 Pro chip—the same chip used in the iPhone 15 Pro—which may be included so that it can support Apple Intelligence. And now, the news of note from the past week.

  • Even if you don’t buy a new Apple device this Fall, you can still get a new feature for the Apple Watch. Or an old feature? I’m not sure. Chance Miller of 9to5Mac reports that after 18 months of Apple being unable to sell an Apple Watch in the United States with a blood oxygen feature, Apple has released iOS 18.6.1 and watchOS 11.6.1 to provide a “redesigned” version of this feature, while Apple continues to appeal the court ruling barring the original version of this feature.
  • John Gruber of Daring Fireball explains that the redesigned version of the blood oxygen feature works by taking blood oxygen measurements on your watch but then processing the data and displaying the results on your iPhone. Perhaps that is why Apple’s release notes call it a “Blood Oxygen experience” instead of a blood oxygen feature.
  • I installed the updates last night and took my first blood oxygen measurement since August 3, 2024—the date that my Apple Watch Series 7 broke, and I replaced it with a newer model that could not, per court order, have this feature enabled. The measurement part on the watch seems to work the same as before, but after the measurement is taken, my watch told me to look at the Health app on my iPhone. And my iPhone lock screen had a notification saying that I had a new blood oxygen recording. When I tapped the notification, I was brought directly to the Blood Oxygen part of the Health app, where I saw that my reading was 99%.
  • There is a new Messages app for CarPlay in the upcoming iOS 26, and Stephen Hackett is not a fan, for the reasons that he explains in his post on 512 Pixels. For example, unless a name is very short, it is truncated. I guess Apple hopes that you pay attention to the picture more than the letters in the name.
  • Amy Skorheim of Engadget discusses the new features coming to the Apple Watch in wachOS 26. She especially likes the new wrist flick feature.
  • Tim Hardwick of MacRumors reports that Netflix is rolling out a new interface for the Apple TV. The most noticeable change is that the left-hand sidebar navigation is gone, replaced with a menu bar at the top.
  • Ryan Christoffel of 9to5Mac reports that two of the shows currently streaming on Apple TV+—Chief of War and Platonic—are some of the best-reviewed shows of the service. I’m enjoying Chief of War, and while I haven’t started Platonic yet, I did like the first season.
  • And finally, if you are of a certain age, you can close your eyes and imagine the sound of a modem making a connection to a service such as America Online. Surprisingly, dial-up access to AOL has continued to work even in recent years, but as repoted by Yan Zhaung of the New York Times, this week we learned that the AOL dial-up access service will end on September 30, 2025. Roman Loyola of Macworld explains that Apple actually played a role in the creation AOL because of its cooperation in 1988 with a company called Quantum Computing Services. Quantum Computer Services had previously created a service called Quantum Link (Q-Link), which was an online service for the Commodore 64 that I used when I was in high school in the mid-1980s. I suspect that it won’t surprise you that I also ran a BBS in the 1980s, which meant that I couldn’t use my Commodore 64 to access Q-Link if someone was using my BBS because they were tying up my computer and my phone line. I didn’t see any interesting new videos to share at the end of this post this week, so here is an old one, a movie called BBS The Documentary from 20 years ago that is now available on YouTube. It addresses the rise and fall of the BBS community in the 1980s and 1990s. If you lived through that like I did, this is a bit of a walk down memory lane. Here is Part 1 of 8 of the documentary: