In the news

I’ve noted in the past that you can charge an iPad Pro twice as fast by using a USB-C charger instead of the 10W or 12W charger that comes with an iPad Pro.  The new iPhone 8 also supports fast charging, but the results are not the same as the iPad Pro.  According to a test conducted by Dan Loewenherz reported by John Gruber of Daring Fireball, a USB-C charger is much faster than the 5W charger that comes with the iPhone 8, but you can get almost the same results using a standard 10W or 12W iPad charger with an iPhone 8 as you can using a USB-C charger.  Of course, if you have both an iPhone 8 and an iPad Pro, using a USB-C charger with both makes sense because then you get the fastest possible charging with both devices.  I’ll be curious to find out in a few weeks if the iPhone X results with USB-C are similar to the iPhone 8.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • I often link to articles relating to the iPhone or iPad written by California attorney David Sparks, who publishes the MacSparky website.  This week, that website had its 10th anniversary.  In addition to the iOS-related articles that I often mention here, David also writes about the Mac, technology in general, and occasionally even his favorite topic, Jazz music.  (And yet amazingly, I don’t think that David has ever made it to Jazz Fest down here in New Orleans, which just makes no sense to me.)  Congratulations, David, on reaching this milestone, and thanks for all of the informative posts over the past decade.  I hope that you can celebrate by taking some time to relax and listen to Kind of Blue.
  • Chicago attorney John Voorhees of MacStories discusses the new drag-and-drop feature in GoodNotes, the app that I use to take handwritten notes on my iPad Pro.
  • Earlier this week, I wrote about Apple’s impressive new general counsel, Kate Adams.  Supreme Court practitioner Neal Katyal noted on Twitter that now both Apple and Facebook have a general counsel who previously clerked for Justice Breyer.
  • If you feel like taking three seconds to vote for iPhone J.D. in a legal blog contest being run by The Expert Institute, feel free to click the VOTE box on this website.  (No registration required.)
  • Apple is developing a video service, and news broke this week that Apple reached a deal with Steven Spielberg to bring back his Amazing Stories TV series from the 1980s.  I have lots of questions about what Apple has planned, and Jason Snell of Six Colors saved me the time of asking them out loud by exploring them all in this post.
  • With iOS 11, many iPhones and iPads can now run apps that take advantage of Apple’s new ARKit to create virtual reality experiences.  These are early days so we don’t yet have a lot of these apps, but Andrew Hayward of Macworld describes 10 of the best ARkit apps that you can try out now.
  • Apple CEO Tim Cook explains why ARKit is such a big deal in an interview with Andrew Griffin of The Independent.
  • The iPhone X is the major new design for the iPhone, but Apple VP Jony Ive says that it is just the beginning of a new chapter in iPhone development, as reported by Ben Lovejoy of 9to5Mac.
  • Michael Simon of Macworld reviews the Apple Watch Series 3.
  • Neil Hughes of AppleInsider explains why he likes the Apple Watch Series 3.
  • Craig Lloyd of How-To Geek explains that in iOS 11, if someone wants to use your WiFi network, you can have your iPhone send the password, saving your friend the trouble of typing it in.
  • Thanks to Apple’s AirPods, which I absolutely LOVE, I haven’t needed or wanted to use a wired headphone in a long time.  But if you prefer to use wired headphones which plug into a headphone jack, and you want to be able to charge your iPhone at the same time that you use headphones, the Belkin 3.5mm Audio + Charge RockStar ($35 on Amazon) is what you need.  Jesse Hollington of iLounge posted this review.
  • And finally, here is a short but great video in which photographer Albert Watson talks about some of his most iconic photographs over the years, including the great shot of Steve Jobs which appears on the cover of Water Isaacson’s Steve Jobs biography.  I’m sure that you will recognize many of the photos in this video.  As for the Steve Jobs photograph, Watson explains:  “When you think of a Mac or an iPad, it’s pretty simple.  And the shot is pretty simple and direct.  I said, ‘I’d like you to think about your next project, and think about that some people might not let you do it.’  And that’s where that look came from.”  Here is the video:

New emoji coming in iOS 11.1

When iOS 11.1 is released at some point in the future — my guess is in the next few weeks [UPDATE: released on Oct. 31] — one of the new features will be the addition of new emoji.  Apple recently previewed high-quality versions of some of the upcoming new emoji.  In case you are curious what is coming soon, take a look.

New faces include face with symbols over mouth, face with monocle, crazy face, and shushing face:

New food includes pie, broccoli, takeout box, and dumpling:

New animals include giraffe, hedgehog, cricket, and sauropod (a dinosaur with a long neck, tail, and four thick legs, such as a Brontosaurus):

New accessories include coat, gloves, billed cap, and scarf:

New lifestyle emoji include man climbing, curling stone, sled, and woman in steamy room:

New mystical emoji include mermaid, mage (wizard), woman fairy, and man vampire:

Apple will also add gender-neutral emoji, including a child, adult, and older adult, as well as an orange heart:

Another one coming is the American Sign Language gesture for “I love you”:

The 28 emoji images shown above are just a small sample of the new additions.  According to Emojipedia, there should be 239 new emoji in iOS 11.1.  A larger number of those are variations on a central theme; for example, many emoji come in two genders and five different skin tones.  We saw an example of that last year in iOS 10.2 when Apple gave us 12 different versions of the judge emoji:

Other emoji coming in iOS 11 include face with hand over mouth, bearded person, breast-feeding, zombie, flying saucer, and coconut.  And also, there is a new face emoji with one eyebrow raised, which many folks call the Stephen Colbert emoji.  Colbert discussed it back in March of 2016, as you can see in this video:

Apple hires Kate Adams as new General Counsel

This past Friday, Apple announced that Katherine “Kate” Adams will be the next general counsel of Apple.  Specifically, she is the general counsel and senior vice president of Legal and Global Security, reporting to Apple CEO Tim Cook.  Here is some background on the general counsel position at Apple and Ms. Adams.

The general counsel position at Apple over the last 20 years

After almost dying as a company, Apple purchased NeXT in March of 1996 and brought Steve Jobs back to the company.  Eighteen months later, Apple hired Nancy Heinen to serve as General Counsel and Secretary, a job Heinen had also held at NeXT.  Heinen held the position until May of 2006, when she resigned shortly before Apple admitted to some irregularities in the backdating of stock options.  Heinen eventually settled claims brought by the SEC for about $2.2 million, without admitting to any of the SEC’s charges.

It took Apple six months to replace Heinen, and the next two replacements did not last as long as Heinen.  First, Apple hired Donald Rosenberg in November of 2007.  Rosenberg had previously been general counsel at IBM, where he had worked for over 30 years.  But Rosenberg did not stay at Apple very long, leaving after only 10 months to become general counsel at Qualcomm, a position that he still holds today.  Today, Apple and Qualcomm have more than Rosenberg in common; they are also suing each other in huge litigation over Qualcomm’s cellphone patents.  A few days ago, Max Chafkin and Ian King of Bloomberg Businessweek wrote an article about this litigation called Apple and Qualcomm’s Billion-Dollar War Over an $18 Part.

In September of 2007, Apple replaced Rosenberg with Daniel Cooperman.  Cooperman had previously served as General Counsel for Oracle for 11 years and before that was a partner in the San Francisco office of the firm that eventually became Bingham McCutchen.  Cooperman stayed at Apple for only two years, and then he returned to Bingham McCutchen.  When that firm collapsed in 2014, he moved on to DLA Piper, and now teaches at Stanford Law School and advises an angel investor.

In September of 2009, Apple hired D. Bruce Sewell, the fourth and final general counsel hired during the second tenure of Steve Jobs at Apple.  Before coming to Apple, Sewell had served as Intel’s general counsel for 15 years.  During the eight years that Sewell has lead the legal department at Apple, Apple become the largest company in the world thanks to the iPhone.  Sewell oversaw numerous complex legal issues including litigation with Samsung for copying the iPhone, efforts to return a prototype iPhone 4 that an Apple employee left in a bar, and numerous consumer privacy issues including negotiations with the FBI and other law enforcement agencies around the world eager to access confidential information on iPhones.

Sewell announced last week that he will be retiring from the Apple at the end of 2017.  “To have worked with this amazing executive team and all the incredibly smart people at Apple, especially my colleagues in legal and global security, has been the honor of a lifetime,” said Bruce Sewell in Apple’s press release.  “The years I have spent in this job have been the most gratifying of my career.  I’m delighted Kate is joining and I know she will be a huge asset.”

Kate Adams

Adams grew up in New York, and thanks to her father John Adams, had lots of early exposure to the law.  John Adams worked as a Wall Street attorney and then a federal prosecutor, but is best known for co-founding the Natural Resources Defense Council in 1970, the nation’s first litigation-focused environmental advocacy group.  Under the leadership of John Adams, the NRDC was involved in some of most important environmental litigation in the 1970s and beyond. 

Kate Adams went to college at Brown University, where she graduated in 1986 when a B.A. in Comparative Literature with French and German concentrations.  She thought about becoming a professor of literature, but got a job after college working in the criminal justice system, and this made her decide to be a lawyer.  She explained in one interview:  “I got a job right out of college [at Brown University] in the Bronx criminal court system working with repeat offenders.  I was exposed to lawyers and working in the justice system and got really interested in that whole arena of the intersection between law and society.  I thought, ‘Maybe I should do this.  It’s not a professor of literature, but I will do a lot of writing.'”

Adams then went to law school at the University of Chicago Law School, where she graduated in 1990.  After law school, she clerked for Stephen Breyer, who was then the Chief Judge of the First Circuit, but would be appointed to the Supreme Court by President Clinton in 1994.  From 1991 to 1993, she worked as a trial attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, working on environmental law.  From 1993 to 1994, she worked as a law clerk for Justice Sandra Day O’Connor at the U.S. Supreme Court.

In 1994, Adams joined the New York office of the Sidley Austin law firm, where she had an environmental law and litigation practice for almost ten years.  She made partner at Sidley in the late 1990s, and also taught environmental law as an adjunct professor at Columbia and NYU.

In 2003, Adams left private practice to work as Deputy General Counsel at Honeywell.  In 2009, she was named general counsel at Honeywell.  She worked to improve Honeywell’s safety and environmental record, and reduced Honeywell’s new case filing rate through litigation prevention measures.

After working at Honeywell for 14 years, eight of those years as general counsel, Kate Adams is now the first general counsel hired in the post-Steve Jobs era of Apple.  Apple CEO Tim Cook said in a press release:  “We are thrilled to welcome Kate to our team.  She’s a seasoned leader with outstanding judgment and that has worked on a wide variety of legal cases globally.  Throughout her career she’s also been an advocate on many of the values we at Apple hold dear.”  Adams is quoted as saying:  “Apple has had a tremendous impact on the world and it’s an honor to join their team.  I’m excited to help Apple continue to grow and evolve around the world, protecting their ideas and IP, and defending our shared values.”

Kate Adams seems to have the perfect background for this position.  She is incredibly smart, has experience as a general counsel, has a lot of experience with patents and other technology issues thanks to her time at Honeywell, and she grew up with a deep appreciation for protecting the environment and other values that are critical to Tim Cook’s Apple.  Good luck to the entire legal department at Apple during this transition, and I hope that Adams has a long and successful tenure.

UPDATE 12/8/2017:  Today, Apple updated its Apple Leadership page to replace Sewell with Adams.  Here is what Apple says about Adams:

Kate Adams is Apple’s general counsel and senior vice president of Legal and Global Security, reporting to CEO Tim Cook. Kate serves on the company’s executive team and oversees all legal matters, including corporate governance, intellectual property, litigation and securities compliance, global security and privacy. Kate joined Apple from Honeywell in 2017, where she worked for 14 years, most recently as senior vice president and general counsel. At Honeywell, Kate was in charge of the organization’s global legal strategy across more than 100 countries.

Prior to joining Honeywell, Kate was a partner at Sidley Austin LLP in New York. Earlier in her career, she served as a law clerk for Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor; as trial attorney for the United States Department of Justice, Appellate Section, Environment and Natural Resources division; and as law clerk for Stephen Breyer, then chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

Kate earned a bachelor’s degree in Comparative Literature from Brown University and a law degree from the University of Chicago Law School.

 

In the news

As I type this, New Orleans is a potential target of Hurricane Nate,  Enough with the 2017 hurricanes, already!  But if you are tracking a hurricane or just wondering when it will rain next, here are two weather apps that I have been using a lot lately and that I can recommend.  First, I like Hurricane HD, a great app that focuses just on tracking hurricanes.  Second, for a long time I put off trying CARROT Weather because it has a reputation for being snarky, which seemed like just a gimmick to me.  But I’ve been using the app for a few weeks now, and it has quickly become my favorite weather app.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

[Sponsor] Westlaw — extend the power of Westlaw to your iPhone and iPad

Thank you to Westlaw for sponsoring iPhone J.D. this month.  Westlaw is incredibly useful on a computer, but it also works really well on an iPhone or iPad with the fantastic Westlaw app.  With the Westlaw app, you can extend the power and collaboration capabilities of Westlaw so that research begun in one place can be continued on your mobile device and vice versa.  The Westlaw app has long been useful on the iPad, and as I discussed last year, the update to support the iPhone made the app even more useful.

There have been countless times when I was in court and I suddenly needed to pull up a case or statute.  With the Westlaw app on my iPhone or iPad, I was able to do so quickly and easily.  And using KeyCite, I could quickly see if there were cases distinguishing the jurisprudence cited by opposing counsel..

Even when I have been in my office with my computer on my desk, and thus I don’t technically need to use Westlaw on a mobile device, I often find that it is nice to be able to access Westlaw on my iPad so that my computer screen can be devoted to a brief that I am writing.  I can lean back in my chair and review cases on my iPad, and then pull back up to my desk when I’m ready to type again on my computer. The Westlaw app lets you run searches and filter the results, review prior research in folders, and add notes and highlighting.

If you haven’t yet checked out the Westlaw app for iOS, or if it has been a while since you did so, use it the next time that you perform legal research.  It’s a great tool for any attorney with an iPhone or iPad.

Click here to get Westlaw (free):  Disney Mobile Magic - Disney

Memories in iOS

It wasn’t that long ago that photographs were rare and special.  You only had a limited number of photos on a film roll, so you wanted to save your film for just the good shots.  And then you had to bring the film to a store and wait for the film to be developed.  Sharing photos meant going through the trouble of ordering additional prints.  Suffice it to say that there was a lot of hassle, and it meant that people took and shared far fewer pictures than they do today thanks to digital photography.  There were digital cameras as far back as the 1990s — I have some pictures taken with an Apple QuickTake 100 back in 1995 — but picture quality and storage on those older models was limited.  It wasn’t until I bought my first digital camera in 2005 (a Nikon D50 DSLR) that I was able to start to enjoy the freedom of taking unlimited, high-quality photographs that I could see (almost) instantly on my computer without having to find the nearest Fotomat.  I suspect that most of you can similarly remember when you transitioned from film to digital photography.

It has been a year since Apple introduced the Memories feature of the Photos in iOS 10 and on the Mac.  I’ve always considered Memories interesting, but thanks to updates in iOS 11 (and macOS High Sierra), the feature is becoming much more useful.  If you haven’t paid much attention to the Memories feature in the past, I hope that this post encourages you to check it out more often. 

Curate collections of photos (and videos)

The goal of Memories is to automatically create curated collections of your most meaningful photos and videos.  When the feature was first announced, I thought that it would be mostly useful for folks who don’t take the time to organize their photos.  I figured that for people like me — who take the time to delete bad photos and then put the good remaining ones into an event with a title such as “Mom’s Birthday” or “Christmas 2016" — the feature would be largely irrelevant.  Surely my ability to organize my own photographs would be better than a computer. 

Now that I have used Memories for the past year, I see that my first impression was wrong.  Sure, for folks who don’t take the time to organize their photos, Memories can handle much of that function.  For example, it is smart enough to notice that you have a bunch of photos taken when you were on vacation at the beach, and it can automatically put those photos together into a single memory. 

But Memories will also collect photos based on categories other than date, and that makes Memories useful for everyone, even people who take the time to curate their photo libraries.  For example, I can see that Memories put together a collection of some of the best photos and videos in my collection that were taken in Chicago from 2012 to 2016 (much of which is photos from ABA TECHSHOW).

I also see that Memories recently put together a collection of what Memories thinks are some of the best pictures of my wife from 2006.  Suffice it to say that Memories often comes up with collections that I wouldn’t have taken the time to create, and it does it all without me having to lift a finger.

Below the pictures and videos, you will see thumbnails indicating the people whose faces appear in the Memory, the locations where pictures were taken in the Memory, and other Related Memories.

In iOS 11, Memories does an even better job of creating collections based on something other than a specific date range and/or place.  Apple says that iOS 11 adds “[m]ore than a dozen new memory types including pets, babies, weddings, and sporting events.”  I’ve seen reports that other new ones include sporting events, performances, outdoor activities and nights out with friends.  Sure enough, just yesterday Memories was able to figure out my wedding date and put together some great pictures for me from that special day.  When I first saw this happen, I have to admit that I was a little surprised.  How did Memories know the date I got married over 20 years ago?  I suppose it was smart enough to figure out that if I was wearing a tuxedo (certainly not an everyday occurrence) and my wife was wearing a white dress, well then that must be a wedding.  And a few days ago, Memories put together a memory called “Go Team! New Orleans 2015" which included some great pictures of my kids playing soccer that year.

I hope that Memories continues to add new themes which connect photos taken in different years and/or in different locations.  These are the collections that I often find most interesting because they are the ones that I rarely take the time to create myself.

Surface great photos (and videos)

Another reason that I’ve grown to love Memories is that you get new collections frequently.  Thus, whenever I tap the Memories tab in the Photos app, there is a good chance that I will see something new.  Some are better than others; a “best of the last week” collection isn’t that impressive if I didn’t take particularly noteworthy pictures at that time.  But more often than not, Memories will suggest that I look at a nice collection of pictures that I would not have otherwise thought to look at

Sometimes I will see an “on this day” collection that will remind me what I was doing on this same day many years ago.  Or maybe it will surface pictures from a family vacation or a holiday many years ago.  Sure, I could have searched for and found those pictures on my own if I had thought to do so, but I love the serendipity of Photos just nudging me as if to say:  “Hey Jeff, remember these great pictures from that such-and-such event?”

Sometimes I disagree that a Memory is worth being a Memory.  Memories recently offered to show me pictures from September 9, 2005, a day when I was taking pictures of what must have been the last apartment in Baton Rouge, LA that was still for rent after Hurricane Katrina, when a large part of the Greater New Orleans population tried to squeeze into the state capital.  I really didn’t need to see those pictures again.

But far more often than not, Memories surfaces a memory that I do want to think about again, and jumping into those photographs and videos makes me smile.

Compared to the old days of film photography, I far prefer the world of digital photography, in which it is easy and virtually free to take lots and lots of photographs.  But the downside is that there are so many pictures that it is easy to forget about them.  I see that I have over 45,000 photos in my collection right now, so there are tons of pictures that I wouldn’t even think about looking at again if Photos didn’t bring back that memory.  Thus, the ability to surface great photos from the past is one of my favorite parts of Memories.

Presenting a Memory

All of this would be useless if Photos just dumped hundreds of pictures on me every day.  Perhaps the best part of Memories is that it automatically creates a nice little slideshow of some of the best photos and videos.  Just tap on the play button at the bottom right of the banner image for each Memory.  If the high quality versions of the photos and videos are not already downloaded to your device, you need to wait a little while (often just a few seconds) for your device to download those images from iCloud, and then the movie will start. 

Apple calls this a “Memory movie” and the word “movie” is appropriate because it truly is more than just a slideshow; it features nice transitions, zooms in on the people in the pictures, and uses great background music.  Each photo doesn’t stay on the screen for very long — just enough to time for you to say “oh yeah, I remember that!”  And it does a fantastic job with videos — including videos associated with Live Photos — because it creates very quick video segments, which can be far more interesting than, say, sitting down and watching the entire dance recital again. 

The final effect can be really dramatic, making it sometimes look like Ken Burns himself had created a documentary based upon your collections of photos.  In fact, the movies are so nice that sometimes they are out of proportion to the subject matter.  Allison Johnson of Digital Photograph Review recently said:  “The misses are all much funnier because of the slightly dramatic treatment: panning, gentle transitions and music give the impression of something that’s been carefully curated to invoke nostalgia.  It’s all very serious, and works very well for a post-hike selfie with a majestic backdrop.  It’s downright laughable when it’s a photo of some acne-treating serum I took a picture of to send to my sister.”

Strangely, the Memory movie feature is currently missing from Photos on the Mac (although I suggest a workaround below).  But it works on the iPhone, iPad and Apple TV, and I’m sure that it will come to the Mac soon.  If you own an Apple TV, this feature is really nice because it is such a great way to share with family and friends who are sitting around your televtion.  There have been many times when my family has sat down to watch a movie but first we take a quick look at a new Memories slideshow.  And then we watch a related Memory, and then another, and the next thing you know we have laughed for an hour as we walk down memory lane.

If you are just looking at Memories by yourself on your iPhone, even that experience is better in iOS 11 because Memories now optimizes its slideshows for both portrait and landscape view.  Thus, no matter how you hold your iPhone in your hand, the slideshow will look great.

You can also send a Memory movie to someone else.  Start to play the Memory movie, then tap the screen to show the edit options. In the bottom left you will see the share button (a square with an arrow pointing up).  Then choose how you want to share the movie — Messages, Mail, save it to Dropbox and then give someone else a Dropbox link, iCloud Photo Sharing, etc.

And if you really like a Memory, you can scroll to the bottom and select “Add to Favorite Memories.”  Over on the Albums tab, you will see a folder near the top called “Favorite Memories” with every Memory you designated as a favorite.  This makes it much easier to find that Memory in the future, and saves you the trouble of scrolling through newer Memories in the Memories tab to find that older one that you really liked.

Editing a Memory movie or creating your own

If you want to make some quick fixes to a slideshow, Memories makes it easy to do so.  Just tap on the screen and pause the slideshow.  There, you can easily change the length of the movie to short, medium or (if there are enough photos in the collection) long.  You can change the mood of the movie, which changes the font of the title screen, the transitions and the background music. 

While I don’t consider myself much of a “Club” person, I like the diagonal transitions that the “Club” setting uses.  Check it out.

For more advanced edits, tap the Edit button at the top left, which brings you to a screen where you can change the words and style of the title and the picture displayed behind the title.  You can also add or delete specific photos or videos from the Memory movie.  And you can choose an exact duration.

For the background music, you can add any song from your own music collection, but I find that the movies work great if you select one of the dozens of Memory Soundtracks (some of which are also in the Clips app).  Soundtracks are grouped by mood:  Dreamy, Sentimental, Gentle, Chill, Happy, Epic, etc.  At the very bottom there are Special soundtracks, which Memories only selects automatically under very special circumstances, such as a Happy Birthday soundtrack only used for birthdays, a song called Girls of Waikiki which is only used automatically for photos taken in Hawaii, etc.  Most Soundtracks are just instrumental, but a few feature vocals, such as the nice song “A Thousand Years” by Christina Perri (Apple Music link) located in the Sentimental section.  By the way, that song is one that that Memories will sometimes automatically select for wedding movies.  Memories does a great job of adjusting these Soundtracks so that they last the right amount of time for your movie and so that pictures change with the beat of the song.

As sophisticated as all of this is, of course it doesn’t come close to what you can do in an expensive program like Final Cut Pro.  Nevertheless, I love that I can just spend a few minutes to get in and get out and then have an even better slideshow to show off to others.

In addition to editing a Memory movie that was created automatically, you can also instruct Photos to create a Memory movie from a collection of photos.  First, you can tap the Photos tab at the bottom of the Photos app, which is where you see your pictures organized into Years, and then Collections (pictures taken around the same general date and place), and then Moments (pictures on a specific day and usually in a specific place).  For each set, just above the set of pictures, you will see bold words with the place where the pictures were taken and then the date just underneath (or sometimes, if there is no place, just the date in bold). 

If you tap on those words, Photos will start to create a Memory for that collection of photos and videos.

If you like what you see, you can scroll all the way to the bottom (just below the related Memories section), and on the bottom left tap on the word “Add to Memories” to add this collection to the Memories tab in Photos. 

You can also instruct Photos to create a Memory movie from an album that you created yourself.  In other words, you can collect any photos you want, taken at any time or place, and make that a Memory.  In Photos, tap the Albums tab at the bottom right.  Then select any album that you created.  Then at the very top left (just above the first picture in the album) you will see bold words with the title that you gave the album and the date(s) underneath.  Tap those words to create the Memory.  Once again, if you like what you see, scroll all the way to the bottom and you can choose to “Add to Memories” so that this one appears in  your Memories tab.

The ability to share Memories also provides a sort of workaround for the current limitation of not being able to create a Memory movie on the Mac.  You can create your own Memory collection using Photos on a Mac, then choose Add to Memories on your Mac, then go to your iPhone or iPad and you will see that same Memory, and from there you can create the Memory movie and then use the share function to send the finished movie back to your Mac.  It’s a clumsy workaround, and will hopefully soon become unnecessary as Apple expands the Photos app on the Mac.

Conclusion

Memories is an example of Apple at its best:  simple to use but professional results.  If you don’t want to do any work, you can just tap the Memories tab and scroll through to see what the Photos app has already created for you.  You are sure to find something interesting, and then you can enjoy the Memory movie.  Although you can stop there, with just a few seconds of effort you can often dramatically improve the movie by adjusting the mood and the length.  And then if you want to fiddle around for a few minutes, you can take out the photos you don’t like, add in some really good ones, pick some great background music, and end up with something really special that would have taken you hours to create without the Memories feature.  And whether you send the Memory movie to others, share with family and friends on an Apple TV, or just enjoy the movie yourself on your iPhone or iPad, there is a darn good chance that you will smile as you walk down memory lane.

So Apple:  thanks for the Memories.

In the news

Apple released iOS 11.0.1 this week.  As noted by Samuel Axon of Ars Technica, the update fixes a bug that could have stopped your iPhone from sending emails if you (or your company) uses Microsoft Exchange 2016 or some other Microsoft products for email.  I never had a problem with the email at my law firm, and hopefully not of you did either.  In the meantime, Apple is already giving developers access to the beta version of iOS 11.1.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • Florida attorney Katie Floyd discusses some useful and inexpensive gadgets for your home.
  • Horace Dediu of Asymco does the math and explains how Face ID on the upcoming iPhone X could save the equivalent of over 12,000 lifetimes.
  • Dedui also estimates that 33 million Apple Watches have been sold.
  • It often seems like a waste to pay for Gogo in-flight WiFi when you just want to send or receive a simple text message.  Fortunately, Delta announced this week that starting October 1, passengers will be able to use iMessage, WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger for free.  It will only work for text; no photos or videos.
  • Killian Bell of Cult of Mac reports that Netflix now provides HDR video when available if you have a premium subscription (the $11.99/month “Ultra HD” plan), resulting in a better image on the iPad Pro, iPhone 8 and iPhone X.
  • Jason Snell explains, in an article for Macworld, Apple’s decision to unveil both an iPhone 8 and an iPhone X this year.
  • After the passing of Hugh Hefner, Luke Dormehl of Cult of Mac discusses the Playboy interview of Steve Jobs back in 1985.
  • Unlike the iPhone, there is not a built-in calculator on the iPad.  Fortunately, Calcbot for iOS — a very good calculator app — has been updated for iOS 11, so you can use it in the split screen modes.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac has some great tips for customizing the new Siri face on Apple Watch in watchOS 4.  I’m very impressed with the Siri face and I use it frequently.
  • And finally, if you are a fan of the HBO show Silicon Valley (like I am), you’ll appreciate this Funny or Die video imagining how the characters in that show would react to the new iPhone X:

In the news

If you were among the first to place a pre-order for an iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, or Apple Watch Series 3, then you should be receiving it today.  If you are waiting for an iPhone X like I am, then we have five more weeks before we can place a pre-order, but you can still start living in the future by downloading iOS 11 for your iPhone and iPad and watchOS 4 for your Apple Watch.  These new products dominated the news of note from this past week:

  • On Monday, September 25, 2017 at 10:30 Central, I’m giving a CLE presentation through the Louisiana State Bar Association on tips for getting the most out of your iPad and iPhone in a law practice, with a special emphasis on tips for using the new iOS 11.  You can attend in person if you are in New Orleans, but you can also attend outside of New Orleans because the LSBA is providing a live webinar.  The LSBA is only charging $10 for the CLE, and you can get CLE credit in Louisiana; I don’t know about other states.  Click here for more information and to sign up.
  • On the latest episode of the Apps in Law podcast, Brett Burney interviews Texas attorney Rick Robertson to discuss the incredibly useful GoodReader app.
  • California attorney David Sparks is excited for Bluetooth 5.0 support on the new iPhones, and I’ve had the same thought.  When I am wearing my AirPods, my iPhone usually has to be in the same room.  I would love to have Bluetooth 5.0 AirPods so that I can roam around my entire house without carrying my iPhone with me.
  • The Apple Watch Series 3 is faster and (optionally) features cellular.  John Gruber of Daring Fireball wrote a good review of the Apple Watch Series 3.
  • Serenity Caldwell of iMore did a great job with this review of the Apple Watch Series 3.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac wrote this review of the Apple Watch Series 3.
  • Benjamin Clymer of watch website Hodinkee reviews the Apple Watch Series 3 Edition (the high-end version made of ceramic).  The written review is well-done, and so is the video that accompanies the article.
  • iOS 11 also came out this week.  Jason Snell wrote a good overview of iOS 11 in Macworld, and that article includes links to related articles, such as this useful one explaining the changes to the Maps app in iOS 11, along with other changes to make it safer to have your iPhone in your car while driving.
  • If you want all of the details of iOS 11, Federico Vitticci’s review of iOS 11 for MacStories is, as always, epic.  It is essentially an online book packed with tons of detail.
  • A number of third party apps have already been updated to take advantage of drag-and-drop and other new features in iOS 11.  GoodNotes, my favorite app for taking handwritten notes on my iPad, explains all of the improvements in this post.
  • Readdle explains how PDF Expert and other apps were updated for iOS 11 in this post.
  • 1Password was updated for iOS 11 so that you can now drag-and-drop a password into an app.
  • With iOS 11, TripIt now has an iMessages app, allowing you to share your travel plans with someone else, with the plans automatically updating if your travels plans change, as explained in this post.
  • You can now share an iPhone or iPad screen to someone else, which is great for tech support.  Ryan Christoffel reviews TeamViewer Quick Support, an app that lets you do just this.  If you have a family member or friend who relies on you for tech support, this looks very useful.
  • If you are interested in the new iPhone 8 or iPhone 8 Plus, John Gruber of Daring Fireball wrote this review.
  • Matthew Panzariono of TechCrunch wrote this review of the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, in which he focuses on the camera improvements.
  • And finally, it wasn’t that long ago that you needed to spend a lot of money on Photoshop for a computer to remove a person or unwanted object from a photograph.  But now you can use an inexpensive iPad app, such as the $5 Pixelmator app, to do so.  Here is a quick video from Apple showing you how to do it:

iOS 11, watchOS 4 to be released today

Today is the day that Apple will release the new iOS 11 and watchOS 4.  Apple typically releases iOS updates between 9am and 10am Pacific, so I typically check for the update around lunchtime here in New Orleans (Central Time Zone).  This year, I won’t be trying to update within the first hour — not only because that caused problems last year, but also because I happen to be in trial today.  But I do look forward to updating both my iPad and my iPhone tonight. 

iOS 11 is a major update for the iPad.  With the Files app, the new Dock, multitasking and drag-and-drop, you will be able to get much more work done, much more efficiently.  On the iPhone, I’m looking forward to the improvements to Live Photos, the new Siri, and the new Control Center design seems much more useful. 

On the Apple Watch, there are some nice improvements to the Activity and Workout apps, and the Siri watch face could make the Apple Watch an even better assistant.

Why lawyers will love the Apple Watch Series 3

Last week, Apple announced the 2017 version of the Apple Watch, called the Apple Watch Series 3.  Apple started taking pre-orders this past Friday, and it goes on sale this Friday, September 22, 2017.  The latest version of the Apple Watch, like the prior versions, looks like a great device for lawyers.  Lawyers deal with a ton of communications every day from courts, opposing counsel, clients, etc. via emails, text messages, and phone calls.  An Apple Watch can help you to manage (and triage) these communications.  Additionally, an Apple Watch is great for helping you to exercise and stay active — important for those of us who do most of our work sitting at a desk. 

If (like me) you already own an Apple Watch Series 2, then it may not be worth it to upgrade, for the reasons that I discuss below.  But if you have an original Apple Watch or don’t have an Apple Watch at all, the Apple Watch Series 3 looks to be a great device for lawyers.

What is new

Let’s start with the features that are new as compared to the Apple Watch Series 2 which was introduced one year ago

Cellular.  The main difference between the Apple Watch Series 2 and the new Apple Watch Series 3 is that you can get a cellular version of the Series 3, which supports LTE and 3G UMTS.  You can easily see if an Apple Watch has built-in cellular because there is a red dot on the digital crown.

Previous versions of the Apple Watch need to communicate with the outside world via your iPhone.  If your iPhone and Apple Watch are relatively close to each other, they will use Bluetooth to connect to each other.  If they are not nearby but are on the same WiFi network (for example, your iPhone is upstairs in your house but you are downstairs), the Apple Watch can connect to your iPhone via WiFi.  But if you leave your iPhone at home and go for a run around the neighborhood, your Apple Watch will not give you any notifications until you get back in range of the iPhone.

With the Series 3, even if your iPhone is far away, you can use the Apple Watch to make and receive phone calls (using the same phone number that you use with your iPhone).  You can use the built-in microphone and speaker on the Apple Watch, speaking into your watch as if you were Dick Tracy.  Better yet, you can use Bluetooth headphones such as the Apple AirPods. 

You can also send and receive emails and text messages.  Chat apps like WeChat and Shapchat will also work even when an iPhone is not around. 

The Apple Watch has always been able to control music playback on a nearby iPhone.  You could also play songs that are stored locally on the Apple Watch, but the process of transferring songs to the watch is slow and cumbersome.  If you have a single playlist that you listen to all the time, then perhaps it is not a big deal, but if you want a large, diverse and changing collection of music, this isn’t easily possible with older versions of the Apple Watch.  This all changes with the new Series 3 because the watch can directly connect to Apple Music and stream songs.  Apple says that this means that you essentially have 40 million songs right on your wrist — a big step up from the original iPod in 2001 which Apple advertised as giving you 1,000 songs in your pocket.

The built-in cellular radio also means that many other types of apps will work even when you are not near your iPhone. For example, you can see the weather using a weather app, or you can request a vehicle from Uber or Lyft.

This all sounds very cool, and is clearly the way that it was always meant to be for the Apple Watch.  I think that the #1 use case is taking an outdoor run.  It is nice to have access to your music, a phone if there is an emergency, and all of your notifications without having to find a place for your iPhone on your body while running, or deal with the iPhone bouncing around in a pocket.  I can also imagine that it would be nice to be able to go outside and walk your dog without having to find your iPhone first so that you can bring it with you.  On the other hand, if you are like me, and your iPhone is virtually always near you (for example, you work out at home using a treadmill or at a gym with your iPhone nearby), then you may consider cellular to be just an occasional nice perk and mostly unnecessary.

You can also purchase a Series 3 Apple Watch that doesn’t have cellular, which saves some money.  But note that the non-cellular Series 3 is only available in the aluminum version.  If you prefer the nicer look of the stainless steel Apple Watch or the ceramic Apple Watch, you need to purchase the cellular version of the Series 3.

Faster.  The original Apple Watch was quite slow.  The Series 1 and Series 2 got faster thanks to updated processors.  The Series 3 uses the new W2 dual-core processor and is 70% faster than last year’s model.

Talking Siri.  On older versions of the Apple Watch, you can talk to Siri and see Siri’s responses on the screen.  With the Series 3, Siri will respond to your requests more quickly, and you can also hear Siri speak.  Since I have my Apple Watch configured to make no noise at all (it gets my attention for select notifications by tapping my wrist), I don’t consider the speaking Siri feature very useful, but I’m sure that having Siri work faster is a nice improvement.

Find my friends.  You can use the Find my Friends feature on an iPhone so that you know where select friends or family are located and they know where you are.  With the Series 3, the Apple Watch will take precedence over your iPhone for telling others where you are located.

Elevation.  The Series 3 includes a barometric altimeter to track your elevation, which can be useful for monitoring certain activities such as skiing. riding your bike up a hill, etc.  With earlier versions of the Apple Watch, if your iPhone was nearby, the iPhone could sense elevation.  With the Series 3, elevation is tracked even if you don’t have your iPhone with you.

Size.  The Series 3 is just a tiny bit thicker and heavier, but you probably won’t notice it.  Apple says that the Series 3 is two sheets of paper thicker than the Series 2.  And importantly, the Series 3 works with all of the same bands as every other version of the Apple Watch.

Models

Just like before, there are two sizes:  the 42mm size and the 38mm size.  I typically see men using the 42mm version and women using the 38mm version, but you can pick whichever one is best for you best on your personal preferences and wrist size.

Just like before, there are three basic types of body finishes:  the cheaper (and a little lighter) aluminum model, the more expensive stainless steel model (which I think is nicer and more professional, especially when you are wearing nicer clothes such as court attire), and the high-end ceramic model.  When the first Apple Watch was introduced in 2015, Apple also sold a super-expensive gold “Edition” model starting at $10,000, but in 2016 Apple changed the Edition model to ceramic — still more expensive than stainless steel, but much cheaper than gold.

Just like before, you can also buy two special versions of the Apple Watch:  the Nike+ version, and the Hermès version.  The primary difference is that those versions come with special bands, but they also come with special watch faces.

Price

Apple is still selling the Series 1 version of the Apple Watch that it introduced last year, and it now costs only $249 for the 38mm version or $279 for the 42mm version.  But it is so much slower than the Series 3, and lacks so many other features, that I do not recommend it to any attorneys.  

There are many different configurations of the Apple Watch Series 3, which means that there are many different prices.  But in general, the aluminum version of the Apple Watch costs $330 to $430, depending on the size (the 42mm version is $30 more) and whether it has cellular (which is $70 more).  Thus, the Series 3 aluminum 38mm costs $329 without cellular and $399 with cellular.  The larger 42m model costs $359 without cellular and $429 with cellular.

In you want the nicer stainless steel case, it only comes in a cellular version, and the stainless steel cellular costs $200-$220 more than the aluminum cellular.  Specifically, the cost is $599 for 38mm and $649 for 42mm.

If you want the high-end ceramic case, it costs $900-920 more than the aluminum cellular.  Specifically, the cost is $1,299 for 38mm and $1,349 for 42mm.

All of these prices assume that you purchase a model with an entry-level band, such as a sport band, which Apple sells separately for $50.  There are other models with nicer bands which cost more.  For example, I love wearing the Milanese Loop with the stainless steel Apple Watch (that’s what I wear to work every day and whenever I am dressed more nicely on the weekend), and that model costs $100 more:  $699 for the 38mm version and $749 for the 42mm version.  And while the versions with the Nike+ bands costs the same as the Apple aluminum models, the versions with the Hermès leather bands range from $1,199 to $1,399. 

Additional bands are also available to purchase separately, including the new Sport Loop band which Apple says features a “soft, breathable nylon weave with an easily adjustable hook-and-loop fastener.”

Finally, the cellular costs I noted above are only for the Apple Watch itself.  You also have to purchase a data plan for the Apple Watch.  It looks like the U.S. carriers are adding an additional $10 to your monthly fee if you want to add an Apple Watch, although some carriers have discounts for the first few months.

Should you get one?

I noted at the outset the reasons that the Apple Watch is so incredibly useful for lawyers.  Communication is a major part of our profession, and it is so nice to get a subtle tap on your wrist when you need to be notified of something, and it is so nice to just glance at your watch screen to see what is going on instead of having to pull out your iPhone or iPad.  It is sort of like having a personal assistant.  And the Apple Watch works especially well for tracking activity and motivating you to be more active. 

Last year, I wrote about my first year with the Apple Watch, and most everything that I wrote in the “what I love” section in 2016 remains true today.  I also noted in that post the things that I didn’t like, and fortunately many of those things have improved thanks to speed increases in updated hardware and interface improvements in updates to watchOS.

If you don’t have an Apple Watch yet, this is a great time to get one.  If you are still using the first generation Apple Watch, this is a great time to upgrade to the Series 3.  The most notable improvement (besides cellular) will be a huge speed increase, but you will also get a much brighter screen, GPS, and you can swim with the watch because it is waterproof. 

If you are like me and you have a Series 2 Apple Watch, I think that the upgrade is really only worth it if you plan to go outside frequently without your iPhone, for the reasons I noted above.  As I think back over the 2+ years that I have been using an Apple Watch, it is hard for me to recall more than one time every month when cellular would have been really useful.  So I’m not going to upgrade this year.  Having said that, I am going to be jealous of the speed increase in the Series 3, and I suspect that I will now start to think of even more situation in which it would have been nice to have cellular on my Apple Watch.  So if you find yourself talking to me and I look a little green with envy, don’t take it personally; it’s just because I see that red circle on the digital crown of your Apple Watch.

On the other hand, if you are ready to buy your first Apple Watch or upgrade from an older model, I actually do recommend that you get the Series 3 cellular version.  First, if you want the nicer stainless steel (or even nicer ceramic) case, then you have to get a cellular version.  Second, even if you want the aluminum case, the $70 price difference is not that much, and then you will have cellular if you ever decide that you want to start using it.  Indeed, as more Apple Watch apps are designed to take advantage of cellular, cellular may be come an even more essential feature.  There is no requirement that you activate the cellular features when you first buy the watch; you can wait to activate the cellular feature until a later date and then start paying the $10/month.

With the upcoming iPhone X, I cannot help but think of how incredibly far the iPhone has come in ten years.  We are now only about 2.5 years into the Apple Watch, and Apple has been doing a great job with the hardware and software improvements.  The Apple Watch is already an incredibly useful device for me today, both in my law practice and in my personal life.  I hope that Apple continues the pace of improvements, and if so, the Apple Watch is going to amazing when it celebrates its tenth birthday.