[UPDATE: For my latest post on Anker cables dated August 19, 2020, click here.]
I’ve reviewed many of high-end Anker cables, including PowerLine+ and PowerLine+ II cables, but I was recently in the market for a longer cable that was durable but inexpensive. The cable was for my daughter. She likes to keep her iPad plugged-in while she uses so that she doesn’t have to worry about battery power, but that means that she has to sit pretty close to a power source. I wanted to get her a long USB-to-Lightning cord so that she can be farther away from the outlet. The longest Lightning cable that Apple makes is two meters long and costs $24.36 on Amazon, a small discount from Apple’s $29.00 MSRP. Anker makes a cable that is 10 feet long, which is just over three meters long. You can buy that cable in the PowerLine+ II line, which will cost you $19.99 to $21.99 depending upon the color. But a simple, inexpensive cable was more than enough for my daughter’s needs, so I opted for Anker’s entry-level PowerLine 10ft Lightning cable, which costs $11.99 to $12.99 depending upon the color.
The white one that I purchased from Amazon is $11.99. It is also available in blue, red, or black. It comes with a small Velcro-type strap that you can use to keep it together.
PowerLine versus PowerLine+ versus PowerLine+ II
Anker currently sells three types of Lightning cables. The basic model is the PowerLine, and it features a cable made of PVC. Anker says that the PowerLine series is “reinforced with bulletproof aramid fiber” to make it “much stronger than conventional cables.” I cannot comment on that, but suffice to say that this appears to be a quality cable.
The PowerLine+ series has nylon around the cable, which protects the cord even more and makes it virtually impossible to knot the cord. The PowerLine+ II series also features nylon surrounding the cord, but it is just a hair thicker and Anker says that it is even more durable. I’ve had good experience with both of these types of cables. I have some that I’ve been using for a long time and they still look like new. I’ve had one or two that my kids have managed to wear out over time, but the Anker ones seem to hold up better than the Apple ones when confronted with the abuse of a standard pre-teen and teen.
PowerLine versus Apple
This white PVC PowerLine cable looks similar to the Apple cable that comes included with just about every Apple device. The Anker cord it just a little bit thicker, and the plugs on both ends are a little bit thicker. If you are connecting to a case that has only a tiny place for the end of the Lightning cable — such as the Lifeproof iPhone 6 / 6 Plus cases — the Anker cable is too big. But for most other uses, the Anker cable works just fine.
In the following picture, a standard Apple USB-to-Lightning cable is on the left, and the Anker PowerLine calbe is on the right:
If the very minor size difference is not an issue for you, then the Anker cable it a great alternative to Apple’s cable. First, if you want a long cable, the 10-foot cord is about 50% longer than Apple’s longest 2m cord. Second, the Anker cord is less expensive, about $12 versus about $25 for Apple’s cable on Amazon. Third, you get that small Velcro-type strap to hold it together, which is minor but nice to have for a longer cable.
My daughter hasn’t used the cable long enough for me to make any definitive statements about long-term durability, but based upon my prior experience with Anker cables, my guess is that this cord will be just as durable as an Apple cable, and perhaps even better. And because of the price difference, you could actually use an Anker cord for a few years and then purchase a new one and use it for a few years and still pay less than you would for a single Apple cable that isn’t even as long. Indeed, just last night, I ordered a second one of these cables for my son.
Conclusion
If you are looking for a long, simple, and inexpensive Lightning cable from a company with a reputation for making good products, the Anker PowerLine 10ft Lightning cable is a great choice.
I’ve been using Apple Maps in New Orleans since the service debuted in 2012. While I’ve never had the problems with Apple Maps that led some others to insist upon only using Google Maps, I’ve certainly noticed some quirks along the way. For example, there is a road I take to work every day which I know is the most direct way to go, but for years Apple Maps has suggested that I take an alternate route. I happened to be using Apple Maps guidance to go that same route a few days ago when I noticed, for the first time ever, that CarPlay wasn’t trying to reroute me. I thought to myself that Apple Maps has finally learned the way, but didn’t think much more of it than that. But then I saw reports this past weekend, on sites like MacRumors, that the upgraded data for Apple Maps (which Apple executives discussed a year ago with Matthew Panzarino of TechCrnch) is now available in Texas, Louisiana, and Southern Mississippi.
Joe Rossignol of MacRumors reports that the improved maps came first to Northern California (including the San Francisco area where Apple is headquartered) in July 2018. They then came to Hawaii and Southern California in November 2018. Arizona, New Mexico, and Las Vegas were added in April 2019. Using the most basic of Photoshop skills one could possibly use — no, you should not hire me to create the demonstrative graphic exhibits for your next trial — I created this map of the continental United States showing roughly where the new maps have been rolled out.
You can tell that only the lower half of Mississippi is included in this update both by looking at the above map (click to enlarge) or just by looking at the state on your own iPhone or iPad because the lower half of the state is light green but the upper half is not. That reflects one of the changes in the new data for Apple Maps: there is much more detail on each map, including a more precise indication of which areas are undeveloped (in green) and which areas are developed (in light yellow). As Panzarino explained in his article: “Water, swimming pools (new to Maps entirely), sporting areas and vegetation are now more prominent and fleshed out thanks to new computer vision and satellite imagery applications.” Building shapes and sizes are also more accurate in the new maps.
Based upon my very simplistic arrows indicating the passage of time, and my (perhaps incorrect) assumption that Apple will continue to go in the same direction, my guess is that if you live in areas like Mobile, Alabama and Atlanta, Georgia, you may be in the area that will next see improved Apple Maps. Apple executive Eddy Cute told Panzarino in that TechCrunch article from 2018: “Over the next year, we’ll be rolling it out, section by section in the U.S.”
If I had known that this update was coming, I would have taken some screenshots of the Maps app last Thursday so that I could do some before-and-after pictures. I didn’t do that, but I can still give you one example. When I reviewed the Apple Watch Series 4 last year, I included a picture of an outdoor walk around a playground that I took while my daughter was attending a soccer practice. The first picture below comes from the Apple Watch app, but it uses the same underlying map data that was in the Apple Maps app last year. The second picture below was taken last night, with the new maps data. As you can see, there is more detail in the new map, and you can even clearly see the baseball diamond at the top of the map in the newer picture. You can also see more precise details in the shapes of the building surrounding the playground.
I don’t have a “before” picture for this next one, but here is a picture of Audubon Park in New Orleans using the newer maps. You can now clearly identify each hole in the golf course, including the sand traps:
The visual changes are interesting, but as Panzarino explained in his article last year, the new update to Apple Maps is not just about the map image. The big change is that Apple started compiling its own map data last year. It gets some information using vehicles driven around areas. It gets other information from all of our iPhones, although as explained in that TechCrunch article, all of the information uploaded to Apple is handled in a way to maintain user privacy. By adding its own data to data obtained from others, the map engine itself is more precise. This explains why my iPhone is now agreeing with me on the most direct route to my office.
Better data is only part of what is new in Apple Maps. As I noted in my preview of iOS 13, which is coming to all iPhones and iPads this Fall, maps in iOS 13 will have additional details, plus Apple added its version of Google Street View so that you can see what it would be like to stand in a location and look around 360º with smooth transitions from one spot to another.
The new map data combined with the new features in iOS 13 will make Apple Maps even more useful. I’m glad to now have it in my neck of the woods, and it will be great when it is available in even more areas.
There are countless features that I like on the iPhone, but there is one fantastic feature that has almost nothing to do with the iPhone’s screen: CarPlay. I’ve been using CarPlay for over two years, and it vastly improves the experience of driving a car. Apple hasn’t done much to improve CarPlay during those two years, but this Fall there will be a major refresh. Illinois attorney John Voorhees, a writer for MacStories, wrote an excellent and comprehensive review of the new features coming to CarPlay in iOS 13. I can’t wait. And now, the news of note from the past week:
California attorney David Sparks discusses some of the new features of Shortcuts in the upcoming iOS 13.
Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories notes that PDF Expert — my app of choice for working with PDF files — was updated to version 7. You can now use the app for free, but you can access some interesting features of you pay $50/year for the pro version. After I try it out for a while, I’ll post a review.
Trevor Daughterty of 9to5Mac reviews Philips Hue Outdoor Lighting, concluding that it is expensive but the best HomeKit-compatible outdoor lighting.
Geoffrey Fowler of the Washington Post does a great job of showing off and describing the new finger gestures coming to iPadOS this Fall, including the numerous three-finger gestures. It’s going to take folks a while to get used to these new gestures to do things like cut, copy, and paste, but once you master them you can be much more productive with your iPad.\
Matthew Panzarino of TechCrunch reports that Apple has responded to concerns about how it uses humans to review recordings of Siri queries by suspending this practice and promising that, in the future, users will be able to choose whether the participate in the grading or not. I personally wouldn’t have a problem with a human listening to a recording of something that I said after I said “Hey Siri,” but the problem is that sometimes an iPhone or other device thinks that you said “Hey Siri” when you actually said something else — and thus the person might be listening to a part of something that I said in private. Of course, this problem isn’t unique to Apple; Amazon (with its Echo devices) and others have the same issue.
And continuing further … Chance Miller of 9to5Mac reports that Apple updated its USB-C to HDMI adapter. The new version supports 4K and 60Hz (HDMI 2.0), HDR video in HDR10, and Dolby Vision.
And finally, autonomous sensor meridian response (ASMR) is a sensation that many people can experience by watching a video or listening to audio, and ASMR videos typically feature sounds which are normally quiet such as whispering or water drops isolated and louder. It helps to wear headphones to get the full ASMR experience. Many people find that ASMR helps them to relax and even experience euphoria. This week, Apple released four ASMR videos created with an iPhone: Tapping (featuring the sound of raindrops), Crunching (featuring the sounds of someone walking on a trail), Whispering (featuring a whispering voice which moves from the left to right ear describing and showing the Ghost Forest beach in Oregon), and Scraping (woodshop sounds). Here is Tapping, which I think is my favorite:
Thank you to Bellefield Systems, the creator of iTimekeep, for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month. iTimekeep is one of the most useful apps on my iPhone, and along with Microsoft Word, it is one of those rare apps that I use almost every day on multiple computing platforms: PC, Mac, iPad, and iPhone. iTimekeep greatly improves time entry and time management for attorneys. Everyone who bills their time would agree that this is one of the most annoying aspects of a law practice, so the ability to transform this task from a daily drudgery to something that can be done much more easily is a huge win. I posted a full review of iTimekeep two years ago, and here is an update on why I find iTimekeep to be so valuable, plus a discussion of some of the new features recently added.
iPhone
I don’t use iTimekeep on my iPhone every day, but whenever I do, it is incredibly valuable. How many times have you had one of those “oh yeah” moments when you suddenly remembered that you forgot to record time for some activity? This often occurs to me before I go to bed at night. In the old days, I would hope to remember it the next time that I was in front of my PC in my office, but as you can imagine that didn’t work that well. Now, in just a few seconds, I can open the iTimekeep app on my iPhone, record my time, and then be done. The iTimekeep app talks to the server that you use for time entry at your firm (we use Elite at my law firm) and instantly adds your time.
This is valuable to me for two reasons. First, I don’t lose credit for the work that I did. Those little tasks may often be only a fraction of an hour, but they do add up over time when you do a better job of tracking all of them. Second, my time entry is always more accurate and descriptive when I enter it contemporaneously, or as close to that as possible, which means that the invoice that I provide to my client is a better invoice. Indeed, I will often enter time on my iPhone immediately after an event ends. I can step into an elevator after a meeting with my client, and I can finish my time entry before it is even time to get off of the elevator.
The iPhone interface is fantastic because you can enter your time so quickly. Tap “Matter” at the top and you can just start to type a few letters associated with a client or matter. As soon as you see the one that you want, just tap it.
In the Settings for iTimekeep you can also have the app default to your last matter when you enter time. This makes it even faster to enter multiple entries for the same client/matter, something that I do every day.
Tap the 0.00 to enter a specific time period.
If you want to instead have the iPhone keep track of your time, press the green Start button to start a timer. What if you started the timer too early or too late? No worries, just tap the nudge button to adjust the timer as necessary. What if you take a break? Just tap the pause button.
To make it even faster to enter time on my iPhone, I use the iPhone’s built-in text replacement feature (Settings -> General -> Keyboard -> Text Replacement. For example, if I type “rcf” on my iPhone, the iPhone automatically changes that to “Review correspondence from ” and then I just type the person’s name and what the correspondence is about.
iTimekeep validates your time against client billing requirements, so you don’t have to worry about forgetting to add a needed issue or task code for a file, or for entering time in 0.1 increments when the client requires 0.25 entries.
PC and Mac
You can also use iTimekeep on a secure website, using your browser of choice, from a PC or a Mac. That’s how I enter most of my time. In my office, I enter it using my PC. When I enter my time from the day at home at night, I use my Mac.
There are large buttons to click to add time or start a timer. From there, the process is similar to an iPhone, and time entry is even faster because you can use your computer’s keyboard. The My Time page gives you a clear view of each entry, with the client name, followed by the matter name, and then your descriptive text and the time.
A recent update adds buttons across the top to make it even faster to switch to different views. The Dashboard gives you an overview of your month (or week or year), including the number of billable and non-billable hours, average daily load, and other useful statistics. The Calendar makes it easy to see an overview of how much you billed each day, and you can jump to any specific day to add more time for that day. Those two views also make it easy to review your timecards and fill in any missing time gaps, which is especially useful if someone else enters your time and you just want to fix the entries. And if you like the timer feature, the Timers view gives you a single view for managing concurrent timers, so you can quickly switch between timers in different matters.
Presumably, your billing system also has its own webpage or desktop software that can be used to enter time. But iTimekeep is so fast and easy to use that it allows you to be much more efficient with your time entry, freeing you up to either do more work or finish your work day even earlier.
Conclusion
Everything about the time entry process is better with iTimekeep. You spend less time entering your own time, and you do so more accurately and efficiently. And because your iPhone is probably always with you, it is incredibly easy to enter time contemporaneously or record an entry from earlier in the day whenever and wherever you think about it. Additionally, reviewing prior time entries is simple, and iTimekeep will even alert you when you appear to be missing time from a day. Thus, even if you don’t enter your own time, iTimekeep makes it incredibly easy to see what time was recorded for you so that you can fix any mistakes earlier in the process. Thanks to iTimekeep for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month and for improving my own law practice.
I love using Apple’s HomeKit technology to turn my home into a smarter home. While I have quite a few HomeKit products installed, the most useful ones are part of the Lutron Caséta Wireless family. As I explained when I first reviewed these products in 2015, you can replace your current wall switch or dimmer with a Lutron Caséta Wireless Dimmer, and then you can use any of your Apple devices to turn the light on or off or dim the light. Or you can program the light to come on or off at specific times of the day or when triggered by some other HomeKit device, such as a motion sensor. I started with just a single wireless dimmer and I added more devices over time. You can have up to 75 Lutron Caséta devices in a single home.
Lutron Caséta uses a proprietary wireless technology it calls Clear Connect that works incredibly well. I’ve never experienced radio interference, nor have I seen reports online of others seeing that. I particularly like Lutron Caséta wall dimmers because while you can use devices like an iPhone to control them and you can automate them, the dimmer on the wall works just like any dumb dimmer. Other members of your household or guests just press the buttons on the wall the way that they would normally control a light switch or dimmer. (Some other HomeKit systems require that the light switch on the wall always be set to the “on” position to work; if someone turns the switch off, you can no longer control the lights using your iPhone.). And if a family member wants to use their Apple devices to control HomeKit products such as Lutron Caséta light switches, just use the Home app on your iPhone to send an invitation and then that person will be able to do everything that you can do.
The Lutron Smart Bridge (which you can buy with your first dimmer as a part of a set) connects to your router and is what allows the Lutron devices to work with Apple’s HomeKit technology. For example, the Smart Bridge gives you the power to tell Siri on your iPhone or your Apple Watch to dim the dining room light to 30%. Lutron says that the Smart Bridge is powerful enough to extend about 30 feet in each direction. If you lived in a big square home with no walls and put the Smart Bridge in the center, that would allow for about a 60 x 60 foot house of about 3,600 square feet. Of course, most folks won’t be able to place the Smart Bridge right in the middle of a house, and walls create some interference, but I’ve seen numerous reports online of folks saying that for a house size of around 2,500 square feet, even with two or even three floors, the Smart Bridge covers the entire house.
My house is two stories and almost 3,500 square feet, which means that the Lutron Smart Bridge could be enough to cover all of my house if I could put it in a central location, but I don’t have a router in the center of my house. My main router is next to my cable modem and computer, located in the study at the front upstairs of my house, and I have a second router located in my TV room at the back of the downstairs of my house. Placing the Smart Bridge at either extreme of my house, where the routers are located, made it difficult for the Smart Bridge to work with devices located at the other extreme at my house on a different floor.
Fortunately, Lutron gives you the option to extend the range, although you can only do so once. If you purchase a Lutron Caseta Wireless Smart Lighting Lamp Dimmer, which you can use to control a lamp or other device which plugs in to an outlet on a wall (you can actually control two lamps, one plugged in to each side), that device as a bonus will extend the range another 30 feet in each direction. Thus, place the lamp dimmer in a location that is in range of your Smart Bridge, and it will extend the wireless range in the other directions.
The way that I currently have this configured it that my Smart Bridge is in my upstairs study, and then in my upstairs bedroom I have the lamp dimmer plugged in next to my bed, controlling my bedside lamp. (If my wife is asleep in the room, it is nice to be able to use my Apple Watch to turn on my lamp to just 5% so that I can make my way around a dark room without waking her up.) The lamp dimmer is actually more than 30 feet from my Smart Bridge (it’s more like 50 feet away) but it still works fine. That lamp dimmer then works as a range extender, allowing the wireless signal to go to my TV room, located in that downstairs room in the back of my house, and to my backyard so that I can control outdoor lights connected to an iHome iSP100 Outdoor Smart Plug.
I’ve been using this configuration with success for a while, but recently I noticed that I was having trouble with the lights on a wall dimmer farthest away from my Smart Bridge. I thought that perhaps the wall dimmer itself was malfunctioning and would need to be replaced, but after some troubleshooting, I learned that I was having trouble with range because my lamp dimmer was no longer extending my range. I don’t know exactly how it happened, but I noticed that when I went to the settings in the Lutron app and looked at the range extender settings, I was told that I should add a range extender to increase my range. In other words, the lamp dimmer was working great to control my lamp, but it was not extending my range.
To solve this problem, I deleted the lamp dimmer from my HomeKit configuration using the Lutron app, added it back again, and then the Lutron app automatically made that dimmer a range extender. And then the lights that I was having trouble with started working perfectly again.
Unfortunately, if you have multiple Lutron lamp dimmers, there is currently no way to designate one of them as the range extender. The first one that you add to your HomeKit system is the range extender, and any subsequent ones are just normal lamp dimmers. So if you plan to use multiple lamp dimmers in your house, make sure that the first one that you configure is in the most strategic location to extend your wireless range, and then put the other lamp dimmer(s) wherever you want just for use as a dimmer. If you want to designate a different lamp dimmer as a range extender, you should first remove all of the lamp dimmers from your HomeKit account, then add the one that you want to extend the range, and then add the other lamp dimmers.
All of this sounds very obvious as I am writing this post, but it took me a long time to figure out what was going on when I had trouble with my lights. It took a long time to realize that there could be a problem with the range extender. If you decide to install Lutron Caséta devices in your home — and I can highly recommend them — make sure that you take advantage of a lamp dimmer if you want to extend your range. And if you ever have trouble with lights that are far from your Smart Bridge, learn from my experience and take a look at the settings in the Lutron app and confirm that your lamp dimmer is working as a range extender.
If you are looking to start using a Lutron Caséta system, there are lots of ways to purchase it on Amazon, and I’ve included a few links below, but you can set it up lots of different ways. Surely, you will want a wall dimmer and a Smart Bridge. You can also get a remote control (which Lutron calls the Pico remote) which is included with some sets, and you can use that remote control either on its own, or you can mount it on a wall with a wall bracket. For example, if you want to control the lights in a room from two different light switches, you can put a dimmer on one wall to actually control the lights, and then you can mount the Pico on another wall with the wall bracket, and it will look almost exactly like a dimmer switch, but it will actually be sending a signal from the Pico to the dimmer on the other wall to control the lights. And you can purchase Lutron Caséta in multiple colors to match your decor. In most of the rooms in my house, I use Light Almond, but in my TV room I use white, and you can also purchase black or ivory.
I’ve spent some time this week preparing for an upcoming appellate oral argument, and I’ve used GoodNotes extensively to prepare what I am going to say and to prepare the best responses to likely questions from the panel. I love that I can write things in different colors and ink sizes, paste an image of a part of a case so that I can quote it verbatim during my presentation, and easily move things around when I change my mind on the order. Handwritten notes in GoodNotes allow me to do so much more than just typing an outline in Microsoft Word on my computer. (I wrote about using GoodNotes to prepare for an oral argument in this post.) When I’m finished, I’ll export my notes to a PDF file and print them out in color as a backup, but I prefer using the bright screen on the iPad Pro at the podium. And now, the news of note from the past week:
Speaking of the GoodNotes app, California attorney David Sparks has shared some templates that you can use with GoodNotes, things like daily diary forms. If that interests you, you can download them from this page.
And here’s one more article regarding GoodNotes: This week, Josh Ginter of The Sweet Setup picked the best apps for taking notes with an iPad. For handwritten notes, he picked GoodNotes, but he picks lots of other apps for different types of notes.
Do any of you have a suggestion for a good projector to use with an iPad Pro for trial, presentations, etc., with portability being an important factor? I was asked that question this week by a Mississippi attorney, and while I have used lots of different projectors with my iPad Pro that were provided by the venue where I was giving a presentation, I’ve never shopped for one for myself so I don’t have any specific suggestion. If any of you happen to have a suggestion and don’t mind sharing your wisdom, please post a comment to this post or send me an email. Thanks!
Yesterday, I reviewed the HyperDrive 6-in-1 USB-C Hub for iPad Pro. Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac reviewed a similar product called the Kanex USB-C Hub. It looks far more awkward than the HyperDrive because it used a cord and connects to the corner of the iPad, which means that your iPad cannot lay flat while using it, and it costs $10 more than the HyperDrive, so the Kanex product doesn’t appeal to me, but Hardy gave it a positive review so perhaps it makes sense for some folks.
CarPlay Life discusses NewsFlash for CarPlay, a CarPlay app that can read aloud the text from a website so that you can hear a website while you are driving. It looks like you have to choose one of the 29 websites in the app (such as CNN, the New York Times, 9to5Mac, and Lifehacker); it would be more useful if you could add other websites. Still, it’s an interesting idea.
And finally, at some point this month, Apple will let you sign up for its new credit card, the Apple Card. It offers some advantages over standard credit cards, as Apple explains on this page of its website. Also, the physical card itself is really cool; it is made of Titanium, is laser-etched, and doesn’t display your credit card number (for privacy, although you can always get the number in the iPhone app if you need it). I saw one of these in person not too long ago and it is a very distinctive looking card. Here is a video from Apple showing the design of the Apple Card:
Last year, Apple introduced a new version of the iPad Pro that has a USB-C port instead of Lightning port. Because USB-C is versatile and is an industry standard with growing support, this change opened the door to new third-party accessory possibilities. One accessory that I envisioned when I first started using this iPad Pro was a jack-of-all-trades accessory with lots of options. That’s exactly what Hyper has created with the HyperDrive 6-in-1 USB-C Hub for the iPad Pro. I backed this device in a Kickstarter campaign in December 2018 and my unit finally shipped in March 2019. I’ve been using this device for the past four months and I really like it. And now I see that anyone can purchase the device on Amazon for $89.99.
6-in-1
As the name tells you, this single device turns your iPad Pro’s USB-C port into six different ports. Here is what you get:
3.5mm Audio Jack. This allows you to plug in a pair of headphones with a traditional connector. I normally use AirPods to listen to audio from my iPad, but there are two circumstances in which I’ve found it useful to use traditional headphones. First, on an airplane, I don’t find AirPods loud enough to hear over the background noise of a plane. Traditional headphones are just a little bit louder. Second, although my AirPods are almost always in my pocket, sometimes I forget them and it is handy to be able to use any random pair of headphones I find at my home or office.
USB-A. This is the traditional USB size, and the HyperDrive uses high-speed USB 3.1 Gen 1 capable of 5Gb/s transfer speed. When iPadOS comes out later this year, you will be able to use this port to access the files on a thumb drive or an external USB drive. You can also use this to connect an external keyboard, and when iPadOS comes out, you will be able to use this to connect a mouse. You could also attach MIDI audio devices, a microphone, cameras that support USB, a USB-to-Ethernet adapter, etc.
SD Memory Card. Use this port to plug in a memory card. I use it to transfer pictures that I take using my DSLR camera to my iPad Pro. Thanks to the beautiful screen on the iPad Pro, this is a great way to look at pictures soon after I take them, delete the bad ones, and make edits to the ones that I need edits. It is fast and works well.
Micro SD Memory Card. I don’t currently have any devices that use Micro SD, but I like knowing that if I encounter such a card, I’m ready for it.
USB-C. This is useful for two reasons. First, you can use the same cord that you normally use to charge the iPad even while the hub is attached. This means that you can use this hub and also charge your iPad at the same time. Second, you can use this USB-C port for data transfers, although I haven’t had a reason to do this yet.
HDMI. The HDMI port is located on the top of the HyperDrive, unlike the other ports, which are on the side. This HDMI port supports 1080p@60Hz, 2K@60Hz, or 4K@30Hz. The iPad Pro can actually support a better resolution than that: 4K@60Hz. However, due to technical limitations, the iPad Pro only supports this mode with a dedicated single-purpose adapter, not a multiple-port hub. This limitation has been irrelevant for me; I don’t even have a TV that can handle both 4K and 60Hz. If this limitation matters to you, you’ll need to buy a single-purpose adapter.
I use this HDMI port for giving presentations using Keynote and an external projector, which works great, and also sometimes for connecting my iPad Pro to a TV to show video on a TV outside of my home that doesn’t have an Apple TV, such as a TV in a hotel room. I also own the adapter made by Apple which allows you to connect HDMI to an iPad Pro — the Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter — and the HyperDrive seems to work just as well.
When I say “just as well” I don’t mean perfect every time. While I’ve never had a problem using the HyperDrive or the Apple HDMI connector to connect my iPad to an HDMI port on a projector (such as when I am giving a presentation), I’ve had mixed success with HDMI connectors for the iPad in hotel rooms. For example, this past June, I tried to connect my iPad Pro to a TV in a hotel room using the HyperDrive and I couldn’t get it to work. Then I switched to the Apple HDMI connector, and that one worked fine. Then I switched back to the HyperDrive, and the HyperDrive suddenly worked. And then just last week, I was on a family vacation to the beach and I tried to connect my iPad Pro to a TV in a condominium so that my son and I could watch the new season of Stranger Things on Netflix. With the Apple HDMI connector, I could only get audio on the TV, no video. But with the HyperDrive, everything worked perfectly.
And this is nothing new. In the past, I’ve used an Apple Lightning-to-HDMI connector with previous iPads, and while usually everything worked fine when connecting to a TV in a hotel room, every once in a while I would encounter an issue.
I wish I understood why I’ve occasionally (but not always) had these problems connecting to the HDMI port on a TV in a hotel room. My sense is that it has to do with the software or hardware on the iPad itself, not the accessory that I’m using. My tests over the last few months lead me to conclude that the HyperDrive is just as reliable as the Apple HDMI-to-USB-C connector, but that doesn’t mean that either one of them work all of the time. If anyone knows the correct sequence of Voodoo chants necessary to get HDMI to work 100% of the time with an iPad, please let me know.
Putting it all together. Having all of these different connections is really useful. For example, I can imagine being at a conference when someone gives me a presentation on a thumb drive. Once iPadOS is out later this year, I will be able to use the HyperDrive to load the presentation on my iPad Pro even without a Wi-Fi connection, then I could import some additional pictures that I took with my DSLR camera using the SD card slot, and then I could give the presentation using the HDMI port to connect to a projector. Pretty much the only thing that this HyperDrive doesn’t have that you might need when giving a presentation is a VGA connector, just in case you encounter an older projector that doesn’t support HDMI.
Design
Having all of those ports is very useful, but what I really like about this product is the great design. It is tiny, taking up almost no space when you need to carry around. And when connected to the iPad Pro, the size and color match so well that is almost seems like it is something made by Apple. I purchased the space gray version, but there is also a silver version so you can match either model of the iPad Pro.
A small blue light on the side indicates that the device is attached correctly and that it is getting power.
When it is connected to the iPad Pro, the connection is sturdy and it won’t fall off. You can certainly carry your iPad Pro in your hand around an office with the HyperDrive attached.
Because this device is made of metal, you wouldn’t want it to bump against the side of the iPad Pro too much because it might scratch the iPad Pro. But this isn’t a problem because Hyper includes a removable and replaceable plastic grip that secures the device onto the iPad Pro without any risk of scratching the iPad. If you want to use this device with something other than the iPad Pro, or if you have a very large case on your iPad Pro preventing that plastic grip from working, you can remove the grip and replace it with an included extension cable. That takes away a lot of the design appeal — I love that this product is snug to the side of the iPad Pro — but it gives you an additional way to use the HyperDrive.
We don’t know when Apple will release a new version of the iPad Pro and, whenever it comes out, we don’t know if Apple will change the design. But even if Apple does do so, hopefully Hyper could just create a new grip (or you could always use the extension cable), so this seems like a product that will remain useful for a long time. [UPDATE 8/1/2021: This device does work with the 2021 version of the iPad Pro containing an M1 chip. Even though the 2021 iPad Pro is thicker, this device comes with two plastic brackets for stability, one designed for the (former) iPad Pro and the other designed for the (former) iPad Pro with a screen protector. If you use the new 2021 iPad Pro and don’t have a screen protector, then the large clip makes this device compatible with the 2021 iPad Pro.]
Cost
$90 seems like a very fair price for this adapter. As noted above, I also own Apple’s HDMI adapter, and it costs $79 (or $60 on Amazon) and all you get is HDMI, USB-A, and USB-C. And Apple’s SD card reader costs $39 on Amazon. And the Apple USB-C to 3.5 mm Headphone Jack Adapter costs $5.99 on Amazon. The HyperDrive gives you a single product that does everything that those three adapters do, plus more because you also get Micro SD, all for less money. And because the Apple adapters stick out of the side with a short cable, they are more cumbersome to use and to carry around than the HyperDrive.
If you don’t need all six of the connectors on the HyperDrive, you can find cheaper options. Although I haven’t tried it, I see that Satechi sells a similar hub for $60 that attaches to the side of the iPad Pro and provides four ports: headphone jack, HDMI, USB-A, and USB-C. If you won’t ever have a need for the SD and Micro SD memory card slots, you can save $30 by getting that Satechi model. I do want those ports, and I love that I can only carry a single hub to give me all of the ports that I am likely to use … unless I encounter an older projector that only has VGA.
Conclusion
If you own the 2018 version of the iPad Pro and you want to use the USB-C port to its fullest, this is a very useful accessory. It is easy to keep attached to the iPad Pro, and even when you remove it, it is so small that it is easy to store in your briefcase or purse so that it is always there when you need it.
Yesterday, Apple released the results for its 2019 fiscal third quarter (which ran from March 31, 2019 to June 29, 2019) and held a call with analysts to discuss the results. This is typically not a big fiscal quarter for Apple; the important quarter for Apple every year is the first fiscal quarter (containing the holiday sales season). During the fiscal third quarter, most potential Apple customers — which for the most part means iPhone customers — are waiting to see what new products Apple will introduce in the Fall. Even so, Apple had their best fiscal third quarter ever, with quarterly revenue of $53.8 billion, just slightly more than one year ago when Apple reported a record $53.3 billion. 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 Seeking Alpha, or a transcript prepared by Jason Snell of Six Colors. Apple’s official press release is here. As always, I’m not as interested in the financial details as I am the statements of Apple executives during the call that are of interest to iPhone and iPad users. Here are the items that stood out to me.
iPhone
Apple is no longer reporting each quarter the number of iPhones sold. Apple is reporting iPhone revenue, and while iPhone revenue this past quarter was $26 billion, which is down 12% from this time last year, that is better than three months ago when that revenue was down 17% from the previous year. And Cook said that in the last month of this past quarter (June) iPhone sales were increasing year-over-year in Apple’s retail and online stores.
Cook noted that just last week, Apple purchased the majority of Intel’s smartphone modem business. This was Apple’s largest ever acquisition in terms of staff, and second largest in terms of dollars. The modem is obviously a central part of every iPhone, and Cook said that this acquisition is consistent with Apple’s “long-term strategy of owning and controlling the primary technologies behind the products that we make.”
When asked about a 5G iPhone, Cook responded that he wouldn’t comment on future products, but he would say that “I think most people would tell you we’re in sort of the extremely early innings of it.”
iPad
iPad revenue for the past quarter was just over $5 billion, up from $4.9 billion last quarter and up from $4.6 billion in the 2018 fiscal third quarter. This was the third consecutive quarter of iPad revenue growth.
Cook pointed out that Apple has a strong iPad lineup, with the iPad, iPad Mini, iPad Air, and iPad Pro. I agree; Apple has a great range of iPad devices right now.
Other
Cook said that Apple had “an absolutely blowout quarter for Wearables, where we had accelerating growth of well over 50%.” So folks are buying Apple Watches and AirPods.
Apple Watch sales were at a record level this past fiscal quarter, and over 75% of customers buying an Apple Watch were buying their first Apple Watch.
Apple Pay is now completing nearly 1 billion transactions every month. I myself am using it more and more, but given that number, I’m not the only one. Apple Pay now works in 47 countries/markets.
Apple will start rolling out its new credit card, Apple Card, in August.
Finally, if you want to see some interesting charts that provide a graphical overview of this past fiscal quarter, check out this post by Jason Snell of Six Colors.
Twenty years ago, Apple released its first product with Wi-Fi, the iBook. Ben Lovejoy of 9to5Mac takes a look back at the iBook product announcement. Around the same time, two associates at Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C., named Ed Walters and Phil Rosenthal quit their jobs to start the legal research platform Fastcase. In Episode 45 of the LawNext podcast, Massachusetts attorney Bob Abrogi interviews the two of them to discuss the growth of Fastcase over the past 20 years. They discuss the origins of the company, significant milestones, and what is coming in the future. They also discuss the launch of the Fastcase app for the iPhone and iPad, which I raved about when it launched in 2010. I really enjoyed listening to this podcast. And now, the news of note from the past week:
Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories reviews Flighty, a flight tracking app for frequent travelers.
Earlier this week, I mentioned that iOS was updated to version 12.4. One of the new features is a new iPhone migration tool, which lets you upgrade directly from an old iPhone to a new iPhone. Ryan Christoffel of MacStories provides some details on the new iPhone migration tool.
I don’t recommend rolling the dice when making legal decisions, but if you want to do so for some other reason, Josh Centers reviews a new app called Dice by PCalc, an app with beautiful graphics that lets you roll D&D-style dice. I used to play Dungeons & Dragons when I was in middle school in the 1980s, so I have to admit that seeing this app in action made me feel somewhat nostalgic for my old set of dice. I understand that D&D is still going strong, and my son recently played for the first time when he was at sleep-away camp.
Shep McAllister of The Inventory reviews the RAVPower 60W 6-Port USB Charger, a device that can both fast-charge your iPhone or iPad using USB-C but can lets you transfer files from an iPhone/iPad to a USB storage device such as a flash drive.
I never thought that the solid gold Apple Watch made sense considering it was obvious that you would want to upgrade the device over time, and it cost at least $10,000. But Nick Heer of Pixel Envy points out that Apple brought in over $100 million selling the gold first-generation Apple Watch Edition.
And finally, Apple produced an interesting and psychedelic video, created on an iPhone, called Elements III Cascade. The video itself is neat, but the behind-the-scenes film showing how they created the video is even more interesting, and you can view it here:
Although iOS 13 is just around the corner, Apple continues to update iOS 12, and yesterday released iOS 12.4.
I suspect that a primary reason for the update was to restore a feature to the Apple Watch. When watchOS 5 was released in 2018, Apple added a Walkie-Talkie feature so that two people could easily talk to each other using their watches. But Apple disabled the feature earlier this month because Apple discovered a flaw that could be exploited to listen to another person’s watch without their permission. At the time, Apple told Matthew Panzarino of TechCrunch that it was not aware of the flaw ever being exploited, but obviously any such risk is unacceptable. Yesterday, Apple released watchOS 5.3 to restore the Walkie-Talkie feature, and Apple says that the feature only works if both watches are paired to an iPhone running iOS 12.4 and configured to use FaceTime.
iOS 12.4 also adds a few other features. It adds the ability to wirelessly transfer data and migrate directly from an old iPhone to a new iPhone during setup, something that I suspect many folks will do after Apple releases new iPhones later this year. It also adds some improvements to Apple News.
Even if those new features do not matter to you, it is always a good idea to update your iPhone and iPad to the latest version of the operating system to ensure that you are taking advantage of all of the latest security updates.