In the news

There are so many serious things going in the world today that sometimes you just need a break, such as a good game.  Unlike my kids, who are experts in sophisticated games like Fortnite, I prefer to play casual games.  A Sunday and a crossword puzzle is a great combination for me.  I’ve long been a fan of Sodoku, but I haven’t found an iPhone or iPad app that I really liked.  And I’ve tried a bunch.  Yesterday, a new app was released called Good Sodoku, and I can already tell that it is excellent.  It lets you play traditional Sodoku with a great interface, but it is even better than that because it also can teach you how to be a better Sodoku player, giving you details on all of the techniques.  It also offers a mode that does some of the tedious parts automatically (such as indicating what number might go in each square), a mode that speeds up the game to make it more fun and let you focus on strategy.  If you want more information, Illinois attorney John Voorhees reviewed Good Sodoku on the MacStories website.  If you like casual games, I encourage you to click here to download Good Sodoku (for free) to see what you think.  If you like it, you can unlock all of the features for only $3.99.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • Neil Squillante of TechnoLawyer describes iMazing, software for Mac or Windows that can collect text messages from Apple’s Messages app or WhatsApp for a discovery production.
  • I had high hopes for the contact tracing software that Apple and Google worked together to develop.  Unfortunately, it is not being used very much in the United States.  In an article for Lawfare, Chas Kissick, Elliot Setzer, and Jacob Schulz note that only four U.S. states have said that that they will use the Apple-Google approach (Oklahoma, Alabama, South Carolina, and Virginia), and none of them are doing it yet.
  • Brenda Stolyar of Mashable shows off some of the winners of the 2020 iPhone Photography awards, and these pictures are really impressive.
  • In an article for Macworld, Jason Snell discusses each of the important eras in Apple history.
  • Apple Vice President Lisa Jackson — former Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency — says that by 2030, Apple will be 100% carbon neutral, and says that Apple will share details on how it is doing it so that other companies can do it too.
  • Trevor Daughterty of 9to5Toys reviews a Satechi wireless AirPods charger that has an ultra-portable design for a laptop computer.
  • Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac makes a compelling argument that Apple’s version of the medical mask emoji should be changed so that it is happy about wearing a mask.
  • Juli Clover of MacRumors explains the new features coming to AirPods with iOS 14.
  • Christine Persaud and Joe Maring of Android Central explain how you can use the Google Search app to see 3D animated animals in augmented reality.  They focus on doing this on an Android device, but it also works on the iPhone.  It is really cool to see a Giant Panda and many other animals sitting on my floor or my desk as I walk around them.
  • And finally, the Wall Street Journal put together a video showing that Apple has done the best job of closing its stores in different locations just before COVID-19 outbreaks have increased in that area.  So if you see that your local Apple Store is closing because of the pandemic, that may be a sign that you should increase your social distancing:

Apple previews new emoji coming in iOS 14

Every year, the Unicode Consortium selects new emoji to be added to the Unicode Standard.  Unicode describes what the emoji should look like, but Apple and other vendors get to decide how each character will look on their devices.  The same emoji can sometimes look very different on different devices.  For example, the pistol emoji currently looks like a water gun on the iPhone but looks like a real gun on some other devices, and the pizza emoji always has pepperoni on it but the other toppings vary depending upon the device.

Emoji version 13.0 was announced by the Unicode Consortium on January 29, 2020, and it adds 117 new emojis.  Last week for World Emoji Day, Apple provided the Emojipedia website with a preview of a few of the images that Apple will use when it implements Emoji version 13.0 later this year.  As always, the designers at Apple have done a really nice job with these.

Visit this page of Eomjipedia if you want to learn more about Apple’s new designs.  Here is a preview of some of the new emoji that we will see on the iPhone and other Apple devices later this year:  Dodo, Nesting Dolls, Piñata, Tamale, Pinched Fingers, Boomerang, Ninja, Coin, Anatomical Heart, Beaver, Transgender Symbol, Bubble Tea, and Lungs.

Images from Apple / Emojipedia composite

Apple typically releases the new emoji in a release that comes after the main operating system release.  So I don’t expect to see these new emoji in iOS 14.0, but perhaps they will be in iOS 14.1.  In prior years, Apple released new emoji at the very end of October — iOS 11.1 (October 31, 2017), iOS 12.1 (October 30, 2018), and iOS 13.2 (October 28, 2019) — so that makes me think that we are about three months away from being able to use these new emoji.

Review: Logitech MX Keys — full-size Bluetooth keyboard for computer, iPad, and iPhone

My work computer (a Dell laptop) sits on a small stand next to my desk and is connected to an external monitor and keyboard that both sit on my desk.  I also always have my iPad and iPhone on my desk.  When I work, I will typically look at documents and other information displayed on my iPad while I am also typing on the keyboard and looking at the monitor to work on my computer.  Sometimes, I need to enter text on my iPad or iPhone, and I’ve always thought that it was a shame that I could not just type on the keyboard right in front of me.  Now, I can do so thanks to the Logitech MX Keys, an excellent keyboard that can almost instantly switch between three devices at the touch of a key.  I love everything about this keyboard, and I highly recommend it.

Easy-Switch keys

The MX Keys features three Easy-Switch keys that you can assign to three different devices:  a Windows PC, an iPad, an iPhone, a Mac, or a Linux PC.  I suspect that many people will use it the same way that I am using it, with one key for a computer, one key for an iPad, and one key for an iPhone.

There are two ways to pair one of these keys to a device.  First, the MX Keys supports Bluetooth Low Energy, a version of Bluetooth supported by the iPad and iPhone that has the same range as Bluetooth (about 33 feet) but uses less power.  Second, the MX Keys comes with a USB receiver that plugs into a USB port on your computer.  Just like Bluetooth, it uses 2.4 GHz wireless technology provides a connection up to 33 feet away, and a single receiver can work with multiple Logitech devices.  I tried both methods of connecting to my Dell laptop and I couldn’t tell the difference.  For an iPad or iPhone, you use Bluetooth to connect.

Switching between devices is incredibly fast and easy.  When you press a key for a device, a light on the key illuminates for about five seconds to give you confirmation that you pressed the key. But you don’t need to wait during those five seconds.  When I press the key I assigned to my computer, the keyboard starts to work with the PC instantly.  When I press the key assigned to my iPad or my iPhone, it takes about one second for the keyboard to start working.  This is a huge improvement over a traditional Bluetooth keyboard that works with only one device at a time —  to switch that keyboard, you need to unpair one device then pair with a different device.  On the iMac that I use at home, I sometimes do this when I am using my Apple Magic Keyboard (with keypad) with my computer and I want to switch to my iPad, but because of the time it takes and the hassle to do so, I usually decide that it is not worth the effort.  Ever since I started using the MX Keys in my office, I find myself doing this all the time.  It is just so easy to tap one key and then type on the iPad using the MX Keys.

I would have loved the MX Keys if it just worked with two devices, but because there is a third button, I assigned that one to my iPhone.  I traditionally would never type anything that is very long on my iPhone when I had other devices near me.  But now, I’m doing that much more often.  If I want to respond to a text on my iPhone, I can quickly tap the Easy-Switch key and then type out a sentence on the keyboard to get those words on my iPhone much more quickly than I could using my thumbs on the on-screen keyboard.  I’ve even started to use the MX Keys to work with emails on my iPhone.  I may be typing a document in Word on my computer while I look at PDF documents on my iPad and I have Mail open on my iPhone to watch out for new emails.  When one comes in that I want to respond to, I don’t have to switch applications on my computer or iPad; I just type the response right into my iPhone using the MX Keys.

There have been times in the past when I expected to be typing on my iPad, so I would have one Bluetooth keyboard connected to my iPad (typically the Apple Magic Keyboard in a Studio Neat Canopy) while I used another computer to type on my computer.  But then I have to make space for two keyboards on my desk, which is a waste of desk real estate and sometimes results in me accidentally hitting keys on one keyboard while I am using the other one.  It is far superior to have a single keyboard that quickly switches between my computer and my iPad.

Keyboard feel and function

As much as I love the Easy-Switch feature, I wouldn’t use this keyboard if I didn’t like the way that it feels to type on it.  Fortunately, this is perhaps my all-time favorite keyboard on which to type.  The MX Keys uses full-size traditional scissor keys with a low-profile design (similar to the Apple Magic Keyboard).  The feel is somewhat similar to a nice laptop computer.  The keys are quiet as you type.  Unlike many other keyboards, such as the Apple keyboard that I use at home, these keys have a deeper dip on each key and have rounded edges.  This makes the keys more comfortable underneath my fingers, and also makes it easier to confirm that a finger is on the key.

The keyboard has a slight tilt to it.  Although the outside of the keyboard is made of plastic, it has a very high-quality feel to it, in part because the entire body of the keyboard is held together by a single metal plate.  This gives the keyboard a solid, somewhat heavy, and very sturdy feel.  It is easy enough to move the keyboard around, and sometimes I move it from in front of my computer monitor to directly in front of my iPad, but this is not really intended to be a portable keyboard that you carry around frequently (although I suppose that you could fit it in a briefcase).

This is a full-size keyboard with 108 keys.  It includes the standard Qwerty keys, full-size arrow keys in an inverse-T format, and a full numeric keypad. 

You can certainly buy more compact keyboards, even if you want a keypad.  For example, the Logitech K780 is more compact, also supports Easy-Switch for three devices, and costs only $60, whereas the MX Keys costs $100.  But I prefer having full-size arrow keys, and I like using the dedicated keys above the arrow keys like delete, home, end, page up, and page down.  (On the K780, the number pad keys are used for home, end, etc. with a function key.)  And I like the more traditional key shape and arrangement of the MX Keys.

The modifier keys work with multiple platforms.  The left side of each modifier key tells you what will happen on an iPad/iPhone/Mac, such as Option or Command.  The right side tells you what will happen on a Windows PC, such as Start or Alt.

Press the Fn and the Esc key to switch between the two modes for the function keys.  In one mode, they work as standard function keys.  I never use that mode.  In the other mode, the function keys work as media keys.

The escape key at the top left is large and easy to hit.  The F1 and F2 keys control brightness on the iPad, iPhone, or computer.  The F4 key is especially useful on the iPad or iPhone as it brings you to the Home Screen.  On a PC, F4 brings up the Action Center.  On the computer, F5 shows the desktop, hiding any other windows. 

F8 through F10 are media control buttons, and the next three buttons control volume.

The last function key button is a lock key.  It instantly locks your iPad, iPhone, or computer.  Most of the time, my MX Keys is connected to my PC, and I love how quick it is to press the button to lock my computer screen when I step away from my desk instead of having to do the awkward Control-Alt-Delete keystroke.

Above the number pad and next to the lock key are three special keys.  On the PC, the first key launches the Windows built-in calculator.  On the PC, the second key is the Print Screen key, which by default takes a picture of your entire screen, but I instead have the assigned to launch the screen snipping tool.  (In Windows 10, this is Settings -> Keyboard -> Print Screen shortcut.)  On the PC, the third key is the App Menu key.  On the iPad and iPhone, the first and third keys do not do anything, as far as I can tell, but the middle button takes a screen shot.

Note that the device I am using is the MX Keys, which was introduced in late 2019.  In July 2020, Logitech introduced a similar keyboard called MX Keys for Mac, which you might want to use if you never intend to use the keyboard with a Windows PC.  This MX Keys for Mac only has one command printed on each modifier key.  Also, it doesn’t include a button for showing your Home Screen / Desktop, and instead, it has a traditional Mac eject key at the end of the function keys. 

Modern Macs don’t use removable media like a CD or floppy disk (unless you add this feature with external hardware), and thus the eject key is less useful on a Mac now than it once was.  On the iPad and iPhone, the eject key is a useful way to hide or display the on-screen keyboard, but it isn’t the only way.  You can also make the on-screen keyboard appear by holding down on the symbol at the far right of the bar at the bottom of the iPad screen for about a second.  So in other words, when you are using the MX Keys with an iPad, you can still make the on-screen keyboard appear and disappear using on-screen controls, even though there is no eject button on the keyboard.  For these reasons, you probably won’t miss the eject key on the MX Keys, but if this is important for you, and/or you plan to use this keyboard primarily with a Mac instead of a PC, consider getting the MX Keys for Mac.

(By the way, if you are using an external keyboard like MX Keys with an iPad and you wan to see the emoji picker, just hold down CTRL and hit the space bar.  And use the same keystroke to make the emoji picker go away.)

Key illumination and battery power

Proximity sensors in the MX Keys detect when your hands come close, illuminating the keyboard.  To save power, the backlit keys fade off after you stop using the keyboard.  By default, the intensity of the light adjusts automatically to your lighting conditions, but you can use the F6 and F7 keys to manually adjust the amount of light.

Or you can turn the key illumination off, which is what I did.  I have overhead fluorescent lights in my office, and they do a fine job of illuminating my keyboard, so I don’t find the key illumination helpful in my office (except that it looks sort of cool).  But in other environments, I’m sure that key illumination is a nice feature.

When you use key illumination, the keyboard lasts about 10 days on a full charge.  When you don’t use keyboard illumination, the keyboard lasts up to five months.  On a PC, I don’t see a precise way to see the battery percentage, but when connected to an iPad or iPhone, the precise battery percentage shows up in the Batteries widget, along with other Bluetooth devices.

The keyboard has a USB-C port on the back of it for charging.  I already have a USB-C cord on my desk to charge my iPad Pro, and it is incredibly convenient for me to use the cord that is already there with the MX Keys.  But the MX Keys also comes with a USB to USB-C cord if you need it.

There is a small on-off switch on the back, next to the USB-C port.  I keep the keyboard turned on all the time, but it is nice that you can turn it off if you are traveling with the keyboard.

Logitech Options

If you install the optional Logitech Options software, you gain additional options to customize how the keyboard works on a computer (but not on the iPad or iPhone).

For example, Logitech Options lets you change what happens when you press every single one of the keys on the very top row of the keyboard except for the escape key and the three Easy-Switch keys.  You can either change what happens in all applications or you can create custom shortcuts that behave a certain way when you are running a specific application.  You can reassign a key to launch an application, type a keystroke, or perform numerous other commands.

Logitech Options also includes other advanced options, such as the ability to disable backlighting.  You can also control whether or not certain notifications appear on screen (such as when the lock key is pressed or when the battery is running low), and you can disable certain keys.

And finally, Logitech Options gives you a graphical interface to reassign the Easy-Switch keys.

Conclusion

In mid-2019, I needed a new keyboard for the iMac I use at home, and so I purchased an Apple Magic Keyboard (with keypad), which costs $119.  The Logitech MX Keys costs less ($99.99 on Amazon) and I like it more.  The keys feel better, the keys have backlighting (which I don’t use at my office but I would have appreciated at home), and the MX Keys makes it fast and easy to switch between a computer and an iPad and an iPhone.  The Logitech MX Keys wasn’t even announced until a few months after I purchased that Apple keyboard, but if I could do it all over again, this would have been a better option.

If you are thinking about a new keyboard, or if you like the idea of upgrading your current keyboard so that you can use it with multiple devices, I can enthusiastically recommend the Logitech MX Keys.

Click here go get Logitech MX Keys on Amazon ($99.99)

Click here to get Logitech MX Keys for Mac on Amazon ($99.99)

In the news

ABA TECHSHOW, which is traditionally held in Chicago every Spring, is always a great conference to learn about legal technology — everything from the latest-and-greatest tech to the best ways to take advantage of what you already have.  In light of the pandemic, it was announced this week that the 2021 event is going virtual so that folks can participate safely without having to travel.  Specific details have not been released yet, except that it will be held the week of March 8, 2021.  An online conference for attorneys produced by people who are tech-savvy sounds like a great idea to me because it could result in some great video presentations.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • For an example of how someone tech-savvy can do a great video presentation, check out this new post by legal technology consultant Brett Burney in which he reviews the Microsoft To Do app on his Apps in Law website.  Watch the video at the top of the post, in which you can see both Brett and the screen of his iPhone at the same time, which is a fantastic presentation technique.  How is he doing that?  My guess is that he is using brand new software called mmhmm.  It is still in beta, it is invitation-only, and it currently only works on a Mac, but it allows you to do some cool picture-in-picture and video-in-picture techniques, much like what you see on a news broadcast.  I’ve just started playing around with mmhmm on my Mac, and it is incredibly powerful.  Not only can you record a polished video like Brett did, you can also use mmhmm as a virtual camera for videoconference software such as Microsoft Teams or Zoom to give you presentation capabilities that go far, far beyond what you can do within Teams or Zoom.  I suspect that we are going to be seeing much more of this in the future.
  • In an article for Law Practice Today, Pittsburgh attorney and security expert David Ries discusses numerous legal and ethical duties relating to cybersecurity that attorneys should consider.
  • Illinois attorney John Voorhees of MacStories reviews Eve Cam, an indoor security camera that is compatible with Apple’s HomeKit Secure Video.
  • Apple released iOS 13.6 this week, and Ryan Christoffel of MacStories explains what is new.
  • Along with iOS 13.6, Apple introduced its first podcast.  It is called Apple News Today, and it a short daily podcast that provides an overview of the news of the day — stories that are available in the Apple News app.  The podcast sounds incredibly professional.  Although you can listen to it in the news app, you can also listen in any podcast app.  Benjamin Mayo of 9to5Mac explains how to do so.
  • Filipe Espósito of 9to5Mac explains the software changes that will improve the camera function of the iPhone in iOS 14.
  • Ed Hardy of Cult of Mac notes that Logitech has introduced the Folio Touch, which lets you add a keyboard and trackpad to an 11" iPad Pro.
  • Killian Bell of Cult of Mac explains how you can quit an app on an iPad using Command-Q on an external keyboard.
  • Dan Moren of Six Colors explains how to use AirDrop to share one of your passwords with someone else who you trust.  If you want to share your passwords with people who you don’t trust, simply write them on a Post-it note and put that on a monitor.
  • And finally, last year, I linked to a video produced by Apple called The Underdogs, in which office workers use Apple products to work together to sell an idea.  It was a funny video.  This week, Apple released a sequel with the same characters, and this time they are all using Apple technology to work from home during the pandemic.  The sequel isn’t quite as good as the original, but it still has some amusing moments.  Here is the new video, which is called The whole working-from-home-thing:

Reivew: The Bluebook Online — access the new 21st edition from your iPad, iPhone, or computer

The Bluebook is the most well-known resource for the citation of authorities in legal documents.  It has been available since 1926 and is now published by the editors of The Columbia Law Review, The Harvard Law Review, The University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and The Yale Law Journal.  Since the sixth edition in 1939, it has had a blue cover.  Fred R. Shapiro & Julie Graves Krishnaswami, The Secret History of the Bluebook, 100 Minn. L. Rev. 1563, 1582 n.67 (2016).  As a result, even though for many years the official title was A Uniform System of Citation, people ignored the title and just called it the Bluebook.  Starting with the 15th edition in 1991, the official title changed to The Bluebook:  A Uniform System of Citation.  Since the 1970s, new editions have come out about every five years.  In part, this is because new resources to cite become available making new rules necessary, and over the years the size of this book has increased from 28 pages to over 500 pages.  I suspect that another reason for the new editions over the years is so that the version I purchased in law school appears to be increasingly outdated, prompting me to spend money on new versions.

Electronic Access

For many years now, I’ve found it more useful to use an electronic version of The Bluebook so that I can always access it on my iPhone or iPad without having to hunt for a paper copy.  Back in 2012, I reviewed an app called Rulebook that allowed you to purchase the 19th edition of The Bluebook.  You can now get the 20th edition of The Bluebook in the Rulebook app.  (Rulebook is now owned by Casemaker.  Casemaker showed me a beta version of a new version of Rulebook in early 2019, and I was told recently that the update will finally be available soon.)

The 21st edition of The Bluebook was just released, and you can now purchase the traditional wire-bound paper copy for $45.  I don’t know if an electronic version of the latest edition will eventually be available in an app like Rulebook, but the 21st edition is now available online on a mobile-friendly website.  You can try it for free for three days, and after that, you need to pay an annual subscription of $39.  That’s right, they’ve come up with a way for me to have to pay essentially the full cost of the book every single year.  Lovely.  But you can save a little money by purchasing two years for $59 or three years for $79.  There will also be a pricing plan for law firms, but it has not been announced yet.

I joke about the price, but the reality is that throughout the 26 years that I have been practicing law, I’ve frequently found The Bluebook to be a useful resource.  I was interested to see how the new online version of the 21st edition works on my iPad, so I signed up for the three-day free trial.  And I have to admit that I’m impressed.

You access The Bluebook Online by going to a website and signing in.  Given that The Bluebook is something that I need when I am drafting appellate or trial court briefs, I suspect that I will always use The Bluebook when I have access to the Internet, so online access should always work for me.  I suspect it will work for others too.

Dashboard

There are five main tabs along the left side of the iPad screen.  The first tab is the Dashboard.  It serves as a cover and gives you access to rules that you have recently viewed and rules that you have pinned.

Quick Style Guide

The next tab is the Quick Style Guide.  It gives you the basic information that you need for the most common types of citations. 

I believe that anyone can access the Quick Style Guide, even without a subscription, by using this page.

Bluepages

The next tab is called Bluepages, and these are the pages that are tinted blue in the paper book.  They provide rules for practitioners to use when citing authority in non-academic legal documents.  These are the pages that I find the most useful because I always use The Bluebook when drafting a brief.  Now that I think about it, it has been a long time since I wrote citations for an academic publication — I see that the law review article that I wrote in law school hasn’t been cited since Clark v. State, 781 A.2d 913 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2001), so maybe it’s time for me to write another one.

Speaking of the Bluepages, I see that there is a somewhat significant change in the new 21st edition that could be interesting to attorneys who practice in federal court — or anyone who practices in a court that uses a word count instead of a page count.  The new version of Rule B6 now gives practitioners the option of closing up abbreviations in reporter names to reduce the word count.  Here is how the relevant part of B6 now reads:

Close up adjacent single capitals (U.S.), but do not close up single capitals with longer abbreviations (S. Ct.).  Every abbreviation should be followed by a period (Univ.), except those in which the last letter is set off by an apostrophe (Soc’y).

Because many court systems impose word limits on briefs and other documents submitted to the court, abbreviations in reporter names may optionally be closed to conserve space, even if they would normally be separated under this rule.  For example, “S. Ct.” would become “S.Ct.” and “F. Supp. 2d” would become “F.Supp.2d.”

If you find yourself in a tight situation with the word count for a brief, I suppose this is an option.

Whitepages

The next tab is called Whitepages.  This is the main part of The Bluebook.  While designed for academic documents, it is often useful for lawyers writing briefs.

Pins

The final tab of The Bluebook is reserved for sections that you have pinned.  For example, at the end of the Whitepages there are sixteen sections of tables with all sorts of useful information.  In fact, one of the tables — T2 for Foreign Jurisdictions — is no longer even a part of the paper version of The Bluebook; you have to access it online.  The table that I often find useful when citing cases is T6, which provides appropriate abbreviations for words that commonly appear in case names.  So I pinned it.

Search

I find the online version of The Bluebook easier to access than the paper book.  Just save it as a bookmark and it is always there when you need it.  An online resources is also easier to work with than a paper book because there is a big search bar at the top of every page.  Just type any word and you will instantly see a list of all of the sections in which the word (or even something similar to the word) appears.

The organization of the Bluebook makes it fairly easy to find items just by browsing.  But for those more difficult circumstances, the search bar lets you easily find a needle in the haystack.

iPhone

The Bluebook Online works very well on an iPad.  You can also access it on an iPhone, although I don’t like it quite as much.  With the much more limited screen real estate, you need tap through more menus to move around, and you cannot see as much text on the screen.  But it certainly works.

I have one pet peeve about the iPhone version.  A big blue tab called “Feedback” is always present on the right side of the screen.  I found myself tapping it by accident very frequently, which was frustrating.  I eventually used the Feedback button to send some feedback — namely, that they get rid of the darn Feedback tab.  I thought that after sending some feedback the tab would go away, but no such luck.  Hopefully, they will listen to my complaint and remove this.

Conclusion

I suspect that you already know whether The Bluebook is useful to your own law practice.  If it is, The Bluebook Online is a very handy way to access the latest edition.  It works really well on the iPad, it can be used on an iPhone, and of course, you can also access it on your computer from any web browser.  I think that the price is a little high considering that you can pay $45 just once for the paper version and it will remain current for the next five years.  Nevertheless, I’m sure that I will be paying $79 for the three-year subscription.

Click here for The Bluebook Online.

In the news

I’m excited to use iOS 14 and iPad OS 14, which Apple should release in a few months.  Both have lots of new features that will improve the experience of using an iPhone and an iPad.  If you want to try out those features without having to wait, yesterday, Apple released public beta of both operating systems.  I don’t recommend installing a beta version of an operating system on the same iPhone or iPad that you use to get work done, but I will sometimes install the beta version on an extra iPhone or iPad.  If you want to try out the beta, Jason Snell of Six Colors wrote a good overview of the iOS 14 beta for the iPhone, as did Jim Dalrymple of The Loop.  And Dan Moren of Six Colors wrote a good overview of the iPadOS 14 beta for the iPad, as did Federico Viticci of MacStories.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • In the latest episode of the TechSavvyLawyer.Page Podcast (Overcast link), D.C. attorney Michael D.J. Eisenberg interviews legal technology expert Brett Burney to discuss the best apps for attorneys, tips for production of evidence from an iPhone during discovery, and apps that are underutilized by attorneys.
  • In an article for MacStories, Illinois attorney John Voorhees discusses the new Widgets and App Library features of the upcoming iOS 14 home screen.
  • Adam Engst of TidBITS compares the AirPods to the AirPods Pro, and he recommends that most people get the AirPods.  He makes some good points; I love and prefer to use my AirPods Pro, but there are some specific features of the regular AirPods that I do miss.
  • Joseph Keller of iMore discusses the improvements to the Shortcuts app in iOS 14.
  • Patrick Lucas Austin of Time gives tips for looking better on a videoconference.  His first tip is better lighting.  A few weeks ago I recommended getting this $30 Lampat LED Desk Lamp that you can purchase on Amazon for your home and/or office, wherever you might be doing a videoconference.  It’s made a big difference for me when I’ve used Zoom or Microsoft Teams, plus it is a great lamp, plus it gives me a place to plug in and charge my iPhone. 
  • Another helpful tip for appearing in court on a videoconference:  wear a shirt.
  • Abner Li of 9to5Google reports that the Gmail app for the iPad finally supports split view multitasking.
  • As John Gruber of Daring Fireball points out, multitasking is a feature that was introduced with iOS 9 back in 2015.  It is remarkable that a company with the resources of Google took half a decade to add an important feature to one of the most popular apps in the App Store — an app that a huge number of people use every single day.
  • And finally, last weekend, the movie to watch at home was Hamilton on Disney+, and my family loved it.  I’ve been hearing great Hamilton songs in my head all week.  Today, the new Tom Hanks movie Greyhound debuts on Apple TV+.  The movie was destined for a theatrical release, but in light of COVID-19, Hanks made a deal with Apple to premiere the movie that he wrote and stars in, along with a star-studded cast.  Here is a short inside look narrated by Hanks that doesn’t appear to contain any spoilers:

Review: eero Pro 3-pack — blanket your home with fast Wi-Fi

The recent stay-at-home portion of the pandemic that began in the United States in March taught all of us many lessons about sharing a home, 24/7, with family members.  One of them is the value of having good Wi-Fi at home.  With my wife and I both using the Internet to get work done at the same time that my kids were streaming video to attend virtual classes, bandwidth became a valuable commodity in my home.  And with all of us spending so much time together, it became even more important, from time to time, to search for that semi-private corner of the home to hole up for a period of time.  Of course, the corners of a home are the very places that Wi-Fi sometimes doesn’t reach.  [UPDATE 9/24/2020:  See below for information on the new eero Pro 6.]

I did a major upgrade to the Wi-Fi in my home five years ago when I hired someone to run Cat 6 cable from the front room on the second floor of my house (a study) to the back room on the first floor of my house (a TV room) and I purchased two Apple Airport Extreme routers for each location.  I described that upgrade in this post, and for a long time it worked very well.  Nevertheless, there were still parts of my house where the Wi-Fi speed was low.  And since my devices use much more bandwidth now than they did five years ago, those spots became much more annoying.  For example, I have a dining room table that should be a perfect place to work, but when I was getting less than 1-3 Mbps of download speed while I was trying to connect to my work network, the Wi-Fi problems interfered with my productivity.  It was time for an upgrade.

eero Pro routers

After researching the options, it became clear that unless you have a small house for which the signal from a single Wi-Fi router can reach everywhere, the best option is a mesh router system with multiple units.  And one of the consistent favorites of numerous sites, including Wirecutter, is the eero Pro system.  The specific configuration that Wirecuter recommends is a system with 1 eero Pro and 2 eero Beacons for $399.  But for me, it made more sense to instead get only eero Pro units, which Amazon sells in a set of three eero Pro units for $499.  (Amazon bought the company that makes eero devices in 2019.) 

Here is why it was worth it for me to spend an additional $100 to get a system with three eero Pro units.

First, eero Beacons are simple to use because you just plug them into a wall outlet, and as an added bonus they contain night lights, but they don’t contain any Ethernet ports.  An eero Pro has two Ethernet ports.  Since I have a (fast) Cat 6 wire connecting two of the rooms in my home, I wanted to have an eero Pro in both locations so that I could plug into Ethernet in each location.  As fast as Wi-Fi can be, it is not as fast and consistent as a wired connection over Ethernet. 

Second, the eero Pro allows for faster Wi-Fi, especially if you have a fast Internet connection.  (I have Gigabit Internet at my home.)  An eero Beacon has a limit of 350 Mbps.  An eero Pro is designed to support Gigabit Internet.  Also, an eero Pro is a tri-band router, which means that it can work with devices that support the older 2.4 GHz band, it can work with devices that support the faster 5 GHz band, and it adds a second 5 GHz band and can manage connections on all three bands to maximize the speed.  For example, if you have multiple devices at your home using Wi-Fi, a tri-band system helps to prevent any one device from hogging all of the bandwidth and slowing down other devices — assuming that you have enough overall Internet speed for all of your devices.

Although those were the two primary reasons I opted for eero Pro, there are other advantages with the more advanced Pro system.  For example, two months ago, eero Pro gained support for Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) in the U.S. and Canada, which improves the speed and reliability of Wi-Fi.  Click here for an explanation of how this works on the eero Pro.

Note that the Wirecutter article by Joel Santo Domingo that I referenced above agrees that an eero Pro 3-pack is the “fastest and best Eero kit” and reports that “it performed better in our tests than one Eero Pro with a pair of Beacons,” but nevertheless concludes that an eero Pro with two eero Beacons is better because the eero Pro 3-pack costs “nearly twice as much.”  Perhaps that was true when the Wirecutter article was written, but it certainly isn’t true today.  The eero Pro 3-pack is currently $499, which is only $100 more than spending $399 on the Eero Pro with two eero Beacons.

UPDATE:  eero Pro 6

On September 24, 2020, Amazon debuted the new eero Pro 6.  It will be available on November 2, 2020, and you can pre-order it now.  There are four differences between the eero Pro 6 and the eero Pro that I discuss in the rest of this review.

First, the eero Pro 6 is bigger.  It is slightly wider (134.49mm versus 120.6mm) and it is noticeably taller (52.6mm versus 31.5mm).

Second, the eero Pro 6 supports Wi-Fi 6, which is also called 802.11ax.  The eero Pro supports Wi-Fi 5.  To take advantage of Wi-Fi 6 in an eero Pro 6, you must be using a computer or smartphone or tablet or other device that supports Wi-Fi 6.  Currently, the iPhone 11, 11 Pro, and 11 Pro Max support Wi-Fi 6, as do the 2020 versions of the iPad Pro.  The main advantage of Wi-Fi 6 is that it offers more speed in dense environments, meaning that you have tons of devices connected to your Wi-Fi.  In an office environment, Wi-Fi 6 could be a big improvement.  At your home, maybe not as much, although it could help if you have lots of different devices connected.  Wi-Fi 6 also offers higher theoretical speeds:  9.6 Gbps versus 3.5 Gbps for Wi-Fi 5.  Having said that, even the fastest Internet for most homes is Gigabit and most homes have far less than that, so as a practical matter you are going to notice the speed of your Internet connection, not the speed of your router.   But if you do have Gigabit speed internet, you may see higher speeds with Wi-Fi 6.

Third, the eero Pro acts as a smarthome hub for the Zigbee standard, if you have any devices that use that.  If you use that devices that work with Apple’s HomeKit protocol, this won’t help you.

Fourth, each eero Pro 6 is $30 more expensive than an eero Pro, so multiply that by two or three depending upon the number of units you plan to use in your home.  And you may be able to save even more money by getting a bundle deal, such as the $499 eero Pro 3-pack, which does not yet appear to be available for the eero Pro 6.  Thus, for now at least, to get three eero Pro 6 units, you would have to spend $690 — almost $200 more.

If you are going to use a three-router setup like I have, and if you don’t use Zigbee devices, and if you do have an iPhone, iPad, or other device that supports Wi-Fi 6, is it worth spending $90-$200 more for Wi-Fi 6?  In a typical home, even with Gigabit internet, you may not notice the speed difference.  But in an office or other environment where you have many more people using the same Wi-Fi, maybe you would.  Having said that, a router is not something that you want to buy very often.  By getting Wi-Fi 6 now, perhaps you future-proof the device a little bit more for the time many years from now when ever faster internet speeds are available.  If I was buying a new router today, I’m not sure that it is worth an extra $200 for the eero Pro 6, but I would be tempted to get it anyway, just in case it helps down the road.

Now, back to my review of the eero Pro:

Setup

As much as I love technology in general, computer networking is never something that I have enjoyed fiddling with.  I just want a system that works without me needing to tend to it, and that’s why I used to love Apple’s Airport devices back when Apple was still making them.  The different eero devices have long had a reputation of being the easiest Wi-Fi devices to set up, and based on my experience, that is absolutely true.  The eero app on the iPhone walks you through every step of the process. 

First, I connected one eero Pro in my study, where my cable modem is located, and connected the Internet to one of the ports on the eero Pro.  In a few minutes, the iPhone eero app had downloaded the latest firmware and confirmed that everything was working.  Then I used the second Ethernet port on the eero Pro to connect to a small and inexpensive NETGEAR 5-Port Gigabit Ethernet Switch that I’ve used for a few years.  It connects to devices like my iMac, a Drobo, an HDHomeRun (which gives me TV on my iMac), and it connects to the cord that runs downstairs to the TV room at the back of the house.

In my TV Room, I connected the second eero Pro to the Cat 6 cable, followed the directions on the eero iPhone app, and before long, that unit was up-and-running.  I used the extra port on the back of the second eero Pro to connect to my Apple TV.  I didn’t need to do that — the Apple TV works fine with Wi-Fi when the Wi-Fi router is just a few feet away — but after doing some tests, I found the speed to be a little higher and more consistent with a wired connection between the eero Pro and the Apple TV.

At that point, with just two eero Pro units, the Internet throughout my house was already better than it had ever been with the Apple AirPort Extreme setup that I had been using.  But then I added the third eero Pro in the middle of my house.  I plugged this one into a wall, and it communicates wirelessly with the other eero Pro units, switching between them whenever necessary to get the fastest possible connection.  That third eero Pro had two unused Ethernet ports, so in one of the ports I plugged in my Lutron Caséta Smart Bridge (which controls the lights in my home).  That way, the bridge is now in a central location in my house.

Speed and coverage

My goal was to blanket my entire house in fast Wi-Fi, and this system with three eero Pro units truly delivers.  That table near the middle of my house where I had been seeing 1-3 Mbps now frequently gets over 100 Mbps.  Perhaps more importantly, the fast speed is consistent.  In a corner of my house where there is a big cushy chair, the Wi-Fi speed used to be so slow that I would just turn off Wi-Fi whenever I sat there so that I could use a faster LTE connection on my iPhone — which was an OK solution on my iPhone, but my iPad doesn’t have cellular.  Now, I get great speeds in that spot on any of my devices without having to change any settings.

The speed is so good and the range is so wide that I even get reasonable Wi-Fi speeds in the very back corner of my backyard.  (Eero says that a system with three eero Pros can cover up to 6,000 square feet.)

Frankly, I wish I had purchased the eero Pro back in March so that I could have taken advantage of this system during those months when I was working from home every day.  I’m currently working back in my office again, but given the state of the pandemic, I realize that could change at any point.  For now, I appreciate the better Wi-Fi on the weekends and weeknights, and if I have to start working from home again during the week, the eero Pro will make that much better.

Note that the eero system is expandable.  You can start with one or two units and then add additional units over time if you want to extend the Wi-Fi to additional parts of your house.  These three eero Pro units are perfect for my house and at this point, I don’t see any need to add more in the future.  However, I could have started with just a single eero Pro device for $199 and then added more later.  (By buying a three-pack, you save $100 versus buying three individual units.)

iPhone app

I mentioned above how the iPhone app makes it incredibly easy to configure eero devices.  It also gives you a powerful way to check the status of your system and the devices connected to it, and it is much more advanced than Apple’s AirPort Utility software that I previously used to work with my AirPort Extreme routers.  The eero iPhone app received an extensive update in November 2019.

When you open the app, the green color instantly tells you that everything is working well.  You can see the status of your Internet, the status of each of your eero devices, and then you see a list of every item that is connected to your Wi-Fi or connected via Ethernet to an eero.

 

The eero app does a great job of figuring out what each device is — correctly knowing, for example, the difference between an iPhone X and an iPad Pro 3.  But you can tap on each device and give it a more specific name such as Jeff iPad Pro 3.  I love seeing everything that is connected to my Internet.  I use a complex password so I wouldn’t expect a neighbor or someone else to be connected to my network, but it is reassuring to be able to confirm that in the eero app.

If you tap on any item, you will get more information.  For example, if you tap on Internet, eero can run a speed test to tell you your upload and download speeds.  It can also provide you with some statistical information such as your fastest download and upload speeds in the past week.


If you tap on a device connected to the Internet, you can see additional information about that specific device.

You even have the ability to pause the Internet on any specific device.  I’ve tested this feature to confirm that it works, but I haven’t had a need to use it.  I could see some parents using this feature to pause Internet access for a child.

The eero app also allows you to configure guest access.  This allows you to create an additional Wi-Fi network with a unique name and password that you can provide to a guest who is at your house.  The guest will get Internet access, but will not have access to any files on your network and will not be able to control your smart devices.  Guest access also blocks streaming audio; I’m not sure why it does that, except perhaps to limit bandwidth use.

Updates and eero Labs

Another nice thing about eero devices is that they get regular updates to add new features and other improvements.  The iPhone app manages that.

In the eero Labs feature of the app, you can even preview upcoming new features as they are being beta tested.  For example, I’m currently testing a feature called Band Steering, which improves performance by encouraging capable devices to connect to 5 GHz when they can do so — which provides faster speed than the older 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi technology.  Another eero Labs technology is WPA3, which provides additional security for the newer devices that support the standard.

Another interesting feature in eero Labs is called Optimize for Conferencing and Gaming.  If one of the devices in your network is in a videoconference — something I have been doing much more frequently since the pandemic started — eero will ensure that the device in the conference gets sufficient bandwidth, even if it means that another device might be just a tad slower as it is loading websites.  It does the same thing to improve game performance.

HomeKit

One of the tabs in the eero app is called Discover, and it allows the eero to go beyond just a traditional Wi-Fi network.  For example, eero Labs is located under Discover.  The Discover tab is also where you can find HomeKit support, which was added to eero earlier this year.  Apple’s HomeKit technology allows numerous smart home devices to work with an iPhone and other Apple hardware.  For example, I mentioned the Lutron bridge above, and I have numerous Lutron dimmers and other light controls throughout my house. 

With the new HomeKit support in eero, each HomeKit device can be given only the network access that it needs, as approved by the manufacturer.  Thus, you don’t have to worry about some rogue device getting access to your entire network or to some other HomeKit device.  It also protects against an attack on a HomeKit device from an outside source, and protects against one hacked HomeKit device infecting other parts of your network. 

In an article last year for Computerworld, Johnny Evans explained the security risks associated with connected smart devices in a home and how using a router secured with HomeKit can protect you from the risks.  Apple also has a page on its website explaining why this new security technology is recommended.  It is nice to know that Apple and eero worked together so that my eero Pro can act as a traffic cop to make sure that my HomeKit devices do what they are supposed to do, and only what they are supposed to do.

eero Secure

When you purchase an eero, you get a month of free access to eero Secure, a $2.99/month service that eero started in 2019.  It includes advanced parental controls (such as filtering content for certain devices on your network), ad-blocking, protection against certain unsafe sites on the Internet, and other services.  There is also an eero Secure+ service that adds a subscription to 1Password, the encrypt.me VPN service, and MalwareBytes antivirus software.

If my kids were younger, I would be interested in eero Secure for the parental control options.  The protection against unsafe sites also seems helpful, but I haven’t yet decided if I will subscribe.

[UPDATE 9/18/20:  A few weeks ago, eero sent me an email saying that they were running a special and that the eero Secure service, normally $29.99/year, was on sale for $14.99/year.  At that discounted price, I figured that it was worth it to enable the Threat Blocks system.  The eero website describes this feature as follows:  “By checking the sites you visit against a database of millions of known threats, eero Secure prevents you from accidentally visiting malicious sites without slowing anything down.”  For example, in just the last week, I can see in the eero app that it has blocked 324 threats.  That certainly sounds good to me.  The app doesn’t provide details on what the threats were, but it does tell me the specific device (like my iMac or my son’s iPhone) on which the threat was blocked.  And of course, this service offers the other features described above.  If you are in the same place that I was, and you are not sure if it is worth $30/year, keep an eye out for the next sale.]

Conclusion

The eero Pro is everything that I hoped for and more.  It blankets my house in fast Wi-Fi so that there are no more dead spots.  It also manages the Wi-Fi to maximize the Wi-Fi speed for all of the devices in my house.  I also love all of the features in the iPhone app.  Additionally, I’m delighted to see that eero has done such a good job adding new features over time, such as recently adding increased security for HomeKit devices.  I look forward to my eero system getting even better over time as more features are added.

You can pay less for other mesh networking systems, but you get fewer features and less speed.  If you decide that eero is right for you, you should consider whether the 1 eero Pro and 2 eero Beacons for $399 is sufficient for your needs.  If the considerations that I noted above apply to you — such as a desire to connect two eero devices with an Ethernet cord and/or a desire to get the most out of fast Internet service — then the eero Pro gets my highest recommendation.  This is a fantastic system.

Click here to get the eero Pro 3-pack from Amazon ($499)

In the news

It’s a three-day weekend for many of us here in the United States.  I’m looking forward to watching Hamilton with my family on Disney+, and something tells me that I won’t be the only one doing so.  I strongly suspect that my daughter knows every line of the lyrics to every single song, which hasn’t happened since she was a much younger girl watching Frozen.  And now, the news of note from the past week:

  • Legal technology expert Tom Mighell explains why Apple’s announcements at last week’s WWDC conference should appeal to many lawyers.
  • According to a post from a Microsoft engineer on the official Microsoft Teams feedback forum, Teams will soon support a 7×7 grid with 49 participants on the screen at one time.  And not just for the computer; Microsoft is “targeting full availability including mobile clients for iOS and Android by early September.”
  • Speaking of videoconferences, Joel Stein of the New York Times writes about people who have a “Zoom shirt” that they use to look professional when on a video call.
  • Jason Cross of Macworld explains how Siri will change later this year in iOS 14.
  • Scott Stein of CNet interviews Kevin Lynch, who is in charge of the Apple Watch at Apple, to discuss the sleep tracking feature that is coming to the Apple Watch later this year.
  • Zac Hall of 9to5Mac reviews the Fi smart dog collar, a device for your dog that uses GPS and LTE-M so that you can always track your dog using your iPhone.
  • Dennis Sellers of AppleWorld.Today announces that if you sign up for a new Apple Card and use the credit card to pay for an Apple service, you will get $50 in Daily Cash.
  • J.R. Bookwalter of Macworld reviews Camera FrontBack, an interesting $1 iPhone app that lets you take a video with the back camera while also embedding in the video a picture of you and your reaction using the front camera.
  • Ben Lovejoy of 9to5Mac reports that an Apple Watch helped to save the life of a California anesthesiologist when it discovered a critical heart disease.
  • Julie Cornell of KETV in Omaha, Nebraska explains how an Apple Watch saved the life of a 92-year-old farmer after he fell from a ladder.
  • Nick Statt of The Verge reports that Apple has closed more than 25% of its U.S. retail stores due to the recent increase in COVID-19 cases.
  • And finally, here is a new promotional video for Apple TV+ that provides an overview of some of the best shows currently on the network, plus some that are coming soon — such as the Tom Hanks film Greyhound, which debuts on Apple TV+ on July 10:

Review: Studio Neat Simple Syrup Kit — make and store your own simple syrup

Today, I’m here to recommend an inexpensive kit for making your own simple syrup and, in the process, give you a never-before-published cocktail recipe.  That’s not a typical topic for iPhone J.D., but I have three good reasons for doing so.  First, the kit I’m discussing is made by Studio Neat, a company well known in the iPhone and iPad community.  The Canopy, which I reviewed in 2018, is a great cover for an Apple Magic Keyboard that turns into a stand to prop up your iPad when you are typing.  The Glif, which I reviewed in 2017, is a fantastic device for attaching your iPhone to a tripod for taking pictures and video, and when paired with Studio Neat’s Hand Grip makes it much easier to hold an iPhone relatively steady for a long period of time while you are taking a video.  And the Material Dock, which I reviewed in 2016, is a nice dock to keep on a nightstand to charge your Apple Watch and other devices overnight.  The second reason it makes sense for me to discuss Studio Neat’s Simple Syrup Kit is that iPhone J.D. comes to you from New Orleans, the birthplace and spiritual home of the cocktail.  And third, all of us have now made it halfway through 2020, which means that we all deserve a good drink.

Simple syrup is a key ingredient in many cocktails, including my favorite cocktail, the Old Fashioned.  The version I make was passed on to me by my father and to him by his father, and I believe it to be the best version of this classic cocktail.  (The recipe is below.)  I’d never thought about making my own simple syrup for that recipe.  For as long as I can remember, I’ve mostly used the version sold by Pat O’Brien’s (a famous bar in New Orleans) which sells for about $5.00 a bottle.  But my wife and kids surprised me with the Studio Neat Simple Syrup Kit for Father’s Day this year, and it’s been great fun to use.

Included in this $25 kit are five items.  a bottle, a funnel, a pour spout, a cap, and a dry erase marker.

The star of the kit is the bottle.  It has lines printed on the side which makes it super easy to add the correct amount of the two ingredients:  sugar and water.

Put the funnel on top of the bottle, and then add the two ingredients up to the designated lines.  First, you add the sugar.  You can use any type of sugar that you want, and Studio Neat encourages you to try different sugar types for slightly different tastes.  My wife was a pastry chef before she went to law school, so it won’t surprise you that we have many different types of sugar in my house.  In this next picture, I’m using organic sugar, which is why it has more of a blond color instead of the extreme white of refined sugar.

Next, add the water to the wavy water line.  Given where the lines are located, you might think that you are adding less water than sugar, but these lines are designed to give you a 1:1 ratio.  (The water fills up some of the area where the sugar is located.)  Studio Neat notes that you can adjust these ratios to taste, such as using half as much water to get a richer simple syrup.

With the two ingredients added, you remove the funnel, add the pour spout and cap, and shake until the sugar is dissolved.  Using the dry erase marker, you can add the date to the side.  (Store the mixture in a refrigerator and it will last one to three months.)

I was surprised that all you need to do next is shake.  I always assumed that you would have to heat the ingredients on a stove to make a simple syrup, but this method works well.

Studio Neat created a fun stop-motion animation video to illustrate the process that I just described:

So now you have your simple syrup.  What do you do with it?  The kit comes with a recipe for Whiskey Sour, so I tried that out first.  Although the recipe is super easy, when you combine a fresh lemon with whiskey and this simple syrup, the result was great, one of the best versions of the Whiskey Sour that I’ve ever had.

The pour spout is particularly good in this kit, and Studio Neat brags about it on its website:  “The pour spout allows for a clean, slow pour.  The problem with most bottles is the spout gets all gummed up and crusty over time.  We searched far and wide to find a pour spout that avoids this problem.”  The spout made it easy to pour just the right amount in a nice, slow, fashion. 

Last weekend, I used the homemade simple syrup to make an Old Fashioned.  It was fantastic.  Sitting on a rocking chair on my back porch with my wife, enjoying cocktails and trading stories, is a fantastic way to pass the time.

Did the cocktails taste different using homemade simple syrup instead of a store-bought brand?  In my mind they did, but I’ll concede that might just be because everything seems to taste better when you make it yourself.  It was definitely easier to use than a standard bottle of simple syrup because of the fantastic pour spot, which gives you a slow and steady pour.  With a standard bottle, the simple syrup will sometimes come out too fast, and then you have ruined the drink.  It is also nice to know that I never need to worry about running out of simple syrup in my house.  Sugar and water are always available in my house, so I can always make more whenever I need it.  Additionally, using simple syrup that I made myself was fun.

Richardson Old Fashioned

As promised above, here is the Old Fashioned recipe that has been in my family for three generations — and in a few years when my kids are old enough, I suspect that it will be a fourth-generation recipe.  This version of the Old Fashioned is big on flavor and is on the sweet side.  (When I’m in the mood for a somewhat similar but less sweet drink, I make a Sazerac.)

• Ingredients

An orange and a lemon

Angostura bitters

Simple Syrup — see above

Bourbon Whiskey.  For this recipe, I prefer to use Jack Daniels Old No. 7, the traditional back label version.

Maraschino cherries

Sugar

Water

Ice.

An old fashioned glass.

• Instructions

Add 1.5 teaspoons of sugar to an old fashioned glass.  (Some folks call this a rocks glass.)  Next, add three dashes of Angostura bitters.  (Yes, I realize that Peychaud’s bitters are from New Orleans, and that’s what I would use in a Sazerac, but I prefer the taste of the Angostura bitters for this drink.)  I’m generous with those three dashes; if you are more timid with your dashes, increase that to about five or six.  Next, add a very small amount of water, about a fluid ounce or less.  Mix those three ingredients very well in the glass using a spoon.

Next, add 3-4 ounces of bourbon whiskey.  For me, that means I fill up my shot glass (technically, a double shot glass) almost to the top, twice.  Next, add almost an ounce of simple syrup.  Mix with your spoon.

Next comes the fruit.  Cut an orange in half (top to bottom).  Now cut a wedge from the half of the orange.  Depending upon the size of your orange, your wedge should be big enough that you get about five wedges per half of an orange.  Squeeze that orange wedge into the drink to add some fresh orange juice, and then drop the wedge into the drink.  Now do the exact same thing with a lemon — squeeze the wedge and then drop it into the drink.  Next, take your jar of Maraschino cherries and get about one teaspoon of juice from the jar, and add that to the drink.  Mix with your spoon.

Next, add enough ice to bring the drink close to the top of the glass.  I often prefer crushed ice to keep the drink extremely cold while drinking it; a cold cocktail on a hot New Orleans day is refreshing.  Crushed ice does melt more quickly, but there is enough flavor and sweetness in this drink that it remains delicious even as the ice melts.  However, I also frequently make this drink with regular ice cubes, preferably store-bought (which looks better in the glass) but the ones that your freezer makes will also work.  And sometimes I use a single large cube made using a Tovolo Inch Large King Craft Ice Mold.  Using a single large ice cube is pretty and gives the drink a fun look, although it is not quite as cold.

Finally, add a single Maraschino cherry.

• The more the better

One Old Fashioned is good, but having a second one and sharing with friends is even better.  I will typically make a number of these drinks at one time because it doesn’t take much more time to make two to four of these than it does to make one of these, and that way you don’t have to wait to serve a second round.  When you are making drinks to save for a little later, just stop right before you get to the ice stage.  Then, when you are ready to serve another one, add the ice and you are ready to go.

If I am having a larger number of people over and I know I will be serving a number of these cocktails over a period of time, I’ll follow the above instructions but I’ll pour the ingredients for six to ten drinks into a single pitcher instead of individual glasses and I’ll stop just before the fruit stage.  That way, the bourbon, water, sugar, and bitters are already prepared when someone is ready for a drink.  From time to time, I’ll stir the ingredients in the pitcher using a wooden spoon.  When it is time to make a drink, I’ll stir again, and then pour that mixture from the pitcher into an old fashioned glass.  At that point, all I need to do is cut and add the orange and lemon wedges and the cherry + juice and some ice.  Using this method, the person gets fresh cut wedges in their drink, and by only having to do the last few steps, I can make each new drink in under a minute.

Conclusion

No matter what cocktail you use it for, the Studio Neat Simple Syrup Kit is fun and easy to use.  It makes the process of creating a cocktail even more enjoyable.  If I had known how much I would enjoy this product, I would have purchased it for myself a long time ago. 

Click here to get the Simple Syrup Kit from Studio Neat ($25).

In the news

Apple’s WWDC conference is going on this week.  As a result, all week long, Apple has been sharing a ton of information about what is coming to future versions of Apple software, and that is the focus of most of the links that I am sharing today.  I realize that I probably feel this way every year at this time, but the news of this week has me incredibly excited for how much better my iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and even AirPods will be in a few months.  So let’s get to it, the news of note from the past week:

  • One of the new features in iOS 14 is the ability to double-tap or triple-tap the back of your iPhone to trigger some action.  California attorney David Sparks shows off in a video how to use the Shortcuts app to make these actions trigger the flashlight or open the Camera app.  This sounds useful and I could see myself doing this myself once iOS 14 comes out.
  • In an interesting article in ABA Journal, San Francisco attorney David Lowe discusses how he prepared for a Zoom trial, including why he had to use his PC instead of his iPad.
  • Timothy Lee of Ars Technica reports that the Indiana Supreme Court ruled that it violates the Fifth Amendment for the police to force someone to unlock an iPhone.  As noted in that article, the courts are split on this issue.
  • If you want to see what iOS 14 looks like (at least, the current beta of it), Dieter Bohn of The Verge prepared a good video overview.
  • Joanna Stern of the Wall Street Journal also prepared a good video overview of some of Apple’s announcements at its Keynote.
  • Ryan Christoffel of MacStories discusses the new features to Apple’s Notes and Reminders apps coming in iOS 14 and iPad OS 14.
  • Christoffel also discusses what will be new in tvOS 14.
  • Christoffel also discusses some of the minor, but interesting, new features announced this week.
  • Dan Moren of Six Colors similarly discusses some of the little stuff.
  • Jason Snell of Six Colors discusses a WWDC session focused on the new cursor in iPadOS.
  • Snell also discusses the new App Clips feature in iOS 14.
  • Joe Rossignol of MacRumors explains how iOS 14 will be able to detect the position of your hand or your body pose to trigger actions.
  • Juli Clover of MacRumors notes that a new feature of iOS 14 is that it gives you an alert when an app reads the clipboard.  And folks running the beta version discovered this week, as a result of that feature, that the TikTok app was reading the clipboard every few seconds.
  • Michael Simon of PCWorld discusses features in iOS 14 that are improvements upon similar features in Android.
  • Raymond Wong of Input wrote a similar article comparing iOS 14 to Android.  In that article, he writes:  “I think it’s inevitable someone creates a double-tap Shortcut to launch the camera app, which would put it on par with Android’s double-tap on the power button to activate the camera.”  Obviously, Wong has yet to see the video from David Sparks, linked above, in which David has already done that.
  • Many law firms and other companies use Mobile Device Management (MDM) to manage and protect secure information on iPhones and other mobile devices.  Bradley Chambers of 9to5Mac reports that Apple purchased one of the MDM companies, a company called Fleetsmith.
  • Chance Miller of 9to5Mac shows how sharing Apple Watch faces will work in watchOS 7.
  • In this 90-minute video episode of The Talk Show, John Gruber interviews Apple executives Craig Federighi and Greg Joswiak to discuss the announcements at WWDC this week.  Even if you don’t watch the whole video, watch at least a few minutes to see how beautiful Apple Park is as a background behind Federighi and Joswiak.
  • Ben Keough of Wirecutter recommends his favorite mobile scanning apps.
  • Andrew Cunningham and Thorin Klosowki of Wirecutter pick 1Password as the best password manager.
  • Jonathan Mann created a silly music video called I Just Go Into Jiggle Mode by using clips from the Apple keynote earlier this week.
  • This has nothing to do with technology, but since I’m talking about music, I also enjoyed watching this one.  Andry Greene of Rolling Stone shares a video of Paul McCartney, Dave Matthews, Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters), Elvis Costello, Jim James (My Morning Jacket), Nathaniel Rateliff, Irma Thomas, the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, and others signing When the Saints Go Marching In.  Paul McCartney on the trumpet is something that I haven’t seen before.
  • And finally, Serenity Caldwell of Apple has been producing some great videos at the end of every day of WWDC this week to highlight the big announcements of each day.  Here are the videos for Day 1, Day 2, Day 3, and Day 4.  (I’ll update this post with links when she posts more.)  Each video is short and worth watching.  Here is the video for Day 1: