The countdown for the next iPhone upgrade has started. It depends on when the clock started but with a September iPhone event less than two months away, Apple fans and people with older iPhones or Android switchers are gearing up to get their hands on the iPhone 12 even in the midst of an pandemic and uncertainties going forward. Along with the anticipation the plethora of news and rumors, mostly rumors, about what is new with Apple’s mobile devices. One feature many iPhone users are likely hoping for is Apple Pencil support. It ain’t happening this year.
With iOS 14 instruction and betas widely available, users have a good idea what Apple has planned. A lot of times, new features in iOS 14 are not in the beta until after Apple announces new hardware and the features exclusive to the new devices. Some new camera features in the native camera app were not in the iOS 13 betas until after Apple released the iPhone 11 and 11 Pro. It’s like that is the case with iPhone 12/12 Pro and iOS 14.
However, there are smokes that point to what Apple have planned. For example, form factor leaks were on Twitter for at least a month. Just this week, specs of possible batteries for the 2020 iPhones have become hot topics. And earlier this year, news that the green iPhone Pro could make way for a blue one this year (which would be a shame).
As for Apple Pencil, the best reference of the pencil to an iPhone was a post back in June from an Apple blog site that mentioned Apple Pencil support on the iPhone is a wanted feature. At this point, even a sketchy rumor about it would be greatly appreciated. Alas, there has been nothing on this front.
This is unfortunate given that another rumor about the 2020 iPhone Pro is that it will have a bigger screen with a smaller notch than the current iPhone Pro. With a screen that is close to 7”, having Pencil support would allow users greater productivity even if it may cannibalize iPad sales. But even that is unlike unless users buy the iPhone Pro over the closest iPad competitor in terms of size, the iPad mini. And Apple would definite want users to buy an $1000 iPhone Pro over a $400 iPad mini. It is unlike that the iPhone Pro will cannibalize the 11.5” and 12.9” iPad Pros just because the iPhone Pro now supports the Apple Pencil.
If anything, it’s high-end Android devices that could take the brunt of an Apple Pencil supported iPhone Pro. With better support, the Samsung Note could see its sales take a deep dive. And for Android fans, it might be all that bad in the long term. The Note really has no competitors unless Apple decides to step into this segment of the mobile market.
Another plus for Apple is the sales of more pencil accessories. Starting at $99, consider if even just 10% of the iPhone Pro users buy one, it is a sales of hundreds of millions if not billions in additional revenue.
Apple Pencil support is coming to the iPhone. It makes sense for Apple to bring this feature to the iPhone. After all, picture-in-picture, a previously much sought after iPad only feature for the iPhone, made it into iOS 14 (even for the original iPhone SE), users will eventually be able to draw or scribble on the iPhone with a native pencil support. When? Well, Apple is very busy even during a pandemic.
Apple is in the midst of a move from Intel to Apple Silicon (use of iPhone and iPad chips in the Mac), augment reality, and perhaps even the Apple car. And with the iPhone sell well, maybe support of the Apple Pencil for the iPhone falls in the middle of all that. Or Apple is waiting for the tech to mature even more and additional uses for the Pencil that iPhone users can benefit directly. But it’ll come.
Friday, July 24, 2020
Sunday, May 3, 2020
iPad - Next Major Upgrade Should Include Longer Battery Life
The 5th generation iPad Mini is my laptop. I’m semi-productive on it and I am very satisfied with what I can do with it. And with the lockdown and working from home, I have begun to explore more of what I can do with it including shooting and editing video with it. It means I am spending more time with it and not only consuming media, I am doing more CPU intensive tasks with it. So I think it’s time that Apple rethink what an all-day device means if Apple expects us to use our iPads for more than just play. Ten hours of battery life is so 2010 (when the original iPad was introduced.
Ten hours might have been adequate in 2010. Maybe even through most of the decades but as more users use productivity apps, that might even be fine. From what I gathered, many users use their iPads to write and even do some light video work. But for the next decade, iPads with 12 to 15 hours of battery life is needed. And at some point, I think Apple will release iPads with longer battery life starting at the top with the iPad Pro line.
If you take a look at what’s in the productivity category of the App Store, you still see a lot of writing apps as well as apps your typical mobile warrior will need - organization, meetings, messaging, and collaboration. And you also see apps that were missing from only a couple of years ago: CAD (computer-aided design, design, modeling, and photo/video editing apps. Now, The only things I know about the A-series chips inside our iOS devices is that they are getting more powerful each each and they are more efficient with each generation. But I also know that they are note quite notebook class chips yet. And if we are expected to use our iPads as notebook replacements, that means the iPad chips need to work harder which would be a drain on the battery.
This takes me back to something some iPhone users had been asking Apple to do: give us more battery life and stop making the iPhones thinner and thinner. And Apple did exactly that with the iPhone XR and the iPhone 11s. It would make sense for Apple to starting upgrading the battery life for the next generation of iPads so pro users can use their iPads for high-CPU intensive tasks and not worry about the battery life.
And there is another use for the iPad that Apple recently introduced in iPadOS and Mac OS Catalina. It’s a feature I’ve been using more because I am currently working from home. For me, it’s hit-and-miss with my iPad mini and MacBook. It works at intervals and something happens and I get no response from the iPad side. It could be the MacBook or not, I don’t know for sure. But if it works smoothly, I would be using it more often and that would also be a drain on the battery of the iPad.
Recently, Apple upgraded the iPad Pro. It’s the iPad Pro for anyone who did not get last year’s iPad Pro. It’s a welcoming upgrade but it did not come with a huge jump in performance - on the CPU or battery side. I don’t know what Apple has plan next for the iPad Pro but I anticipate there to be a multi-year transition to make the iPadOS a cousin to the Mac OS, not just a mere little sibling with only a subset of laptop features. IPadOS will have more of its own features that allow users to become power users. I fully expect Apple to upgrade the CPU each year for the foreseeable future. And this would also be a good time for Apple to make sure the iPad, not just the iPad Pro, have longer battery life to support the future power users.
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Should It Be Tim Cook Or Apple As A Company Be Applauded For Its Social Programs, And Would Apple Have Been So Generous If It Was not Apple or With Tim Cook As CEO
I was listening to a podcast today that focused on Apple and Apple products. One of the hosts described Apple as being courageous in the face of the social and political pressures it had faced over the last three years both from the Trump administration, China's totalitarian regime, and others to today's pandemic raging through the world. I wondered to myself if the host should have applauded Tim Cook himself or Apple. There is no doubt that a vast majority of Apple employees share Tim Cook's social and political views. So much of the employees agrees with Tim's actions and his positions. And certainly, it has also helped that Tim Cook made many Apple employees very rich during his years as CEO and, hopefully, for many more years to come.
Still, I want to examine this question further: Tim Cook the man is responsible for all the accolades that Apple has been showered with or should others in the company also share in it as well? Think for a bit. Okay, back? It may not be just one or the other. As with anything today, there is a scale with Tim Cook on one side and Apple on the other. And I suspect who deserves the most credit is somewhere in the middle.
Perhaps in the early part of Tim Cook's years as CEO, he lead the charge with many changes within Apple as a company. And he had cleaned house during those years. I don't need to go back and rehash all that. And Tim Cook, while he appears to be a nice guy, was as certain as Steve Jobs was in that his vision for Apple be carried out. There were a few rough quarters even as Tim has grown Apple during that time. Today, Apple is the most valuable company in the world that isn't a state backed entity. All Tim's vision.
If Tim Cook did not so openly share his political and social views and believe that Apple as a corporation not only have a responsibility to its shareholders but also a responsibility to the society in general, would Apple still be seen as a successful forwarding looking company that is also trying to change the world?
I think Tim Cook deserved to be seen as the person who made it possible for Apple and other corporations to become more vocal in voicing opinions that in the past corporate boards would stay away from and doing something about it. And that in turn has paved the way for its employees to more openly support similar efforts. Okay, mostly liberal and left leaning positions but that is debate for another someone else to take up.
Whatever your political position, President Trump has declared himself a war president and companies like Apple have responded in kind - tens of millions of N95 masks donated, ventilators shipped to hospitals, and Apple even designed face shields for front line healthcare workers. Apple and others are doing the right thing.
Tim Cook's Apple, including himself, has stepped up during the world's time of needs.
Perhaps, the host is right - Apple is to be applauded for its efforts. After all, this is now Tim Cook's Apple.
Sunday, April 12, 2020
Apple Watch and Ten Thousand Steps - Custom Metrics
Who here have not gotten started with a pedometer and than eventually graduating to a Fitbit or an Apple Watch to count the number of steps they’ve walked per day, probably with trying to hit the daily goal of 10,000 steps per day? And if you haven’t, you probably know someone who has a wearable device that counts the steps the wearer walks per day. As an Apple Watch user, I would like to see Apple allow custom metrics in addition to the three circles many of us try to close on a daily basis. And one of these metrics is the goal of hitting a specific number of active steps per day.
The calories ring means nothing to me. Getting up 10 times a day is important to some folks who sit at a desk all day but for someone like me, who does sit at a desk all day, and I get up and move around 15 to 18 times a day, I rather have an alternative goal - instead of the standing metrics, I like Apple to give users an additional circle to close or to replace one of the circles with a set of other metrics.
Maybe one of them can how many minutes of breathing you do (there is an app on the Apple Watch called Breath. I find that to be a very useful app that I use through the day. I rather have the steps goal as a metrics of my choice.
Now, believe me when I tell you that the steps metrics is practiced almost like a religion among us who practice and live by it. Why 10,000 Steps? Probably social media. Or before that, it was what people tell each other or was told by someone at a gym. Even before that? Well, I would like to believe that it came from a bonafide medial study but it probably didn’t. No one knows for sure but it might have originated from a Japanese pedometer in the 1960s that figured 10,000 in Japanese sounds pretty awesome and has cultural meaning.
The adequate and minimum number of steps each person has to take varies. It depends on the person, age, sex, diet, and the level of physical activity. A friend has been doing 10K a day for more than 10 years. Another friend practices months at a time, abandons it, and then picks it up again later and still came out to about 11K a day. For me, as you can see from the screen shot I took from my phone, I averaged about 11.5K in 2019 and is almost 800 steps more a day in 2020 so far. I found that I need to do an average of 12K a day to maintain or lose a pound here or there.
On a personal level, hitting that 12K or more a day is uplifting. And seeing my average go up as a result means more to me than standing on a scale trying to see where I am. So, that why I guess Apple Watch wearers really try to close those three rings.
If Apple wants to keep those three rings as they are now, fine. But I would like to see an extra ring added for a customizable metrics.
What do you think? I think this is more feasible to do in the short run with a better return than wishing for the Apple Watch to have a week long battery life.
Tuesday, April 7, 2020
Your Phone or Tablet Breaks While Trying To Survive This Pandemic
Source: Slate.
You're at home. You're also a cord-cutter. You might have other human contact in the form of a spouse or family. Or perhaps roommate. Your only connection to the outside world is your iPhone, Android device, or tablet. You're doing fine provided that your Internet connection stays stable. Then the unexpected and unfortunate thing happens: your mobile device dies on you. Maybe it just gave out or the screen gets broken.
Now what?
First, I feel for you. I'm sure this is not that common but it is not as uncommon as we expect. The Slate post is about a man whose iPad screen cracked during California's statewide stay-at-home order. He could not exactly head out to the nearest Apple store or the local mall repair kiosk right now. Not next week or next month. Not for a while. We have no idea when stores or malls will reopen. And when it does, you can expected there to be a lot of distancing policies and restrictions on the number of customers who can visit.
So, while you can get still your devices repaired, like sending it in to have Apple, Best Buy, or a third party repair company fix whatever issue is ailing your iPhone, iPad, or Android device, I would certainly not call it convenient. I find a quoted 5-day turnaround to be pretty fast but it is still 5 days without your link to the world. Maybe you have a TV. Maybe not. I did not have a TV for years after mine broke.
For a lot of people, their phones are all they have. And not use getting news but what if your phone or tablet what you're using to stream music and video to help you or your family pass the time? Your devices becomes all the more indispensable.
If it has already happened, sorry to hear about it. Again, I feel for you. For others, perhaps now is the time to do what you can you protect your mobile device. - get a case it a good start. And if you can, get a screen protector. Those are absolute musts at this time.
An alternative is to get a cheap device as a backup or to replace your broken one. You can get a tablet these days for less than $100. Phones as well. Not an iPhone or high-end Android device like the Pixel or the Galaxy but if it connects to the Internet, it's all you need to get by. And there are third party sites that offer older generation or refurbished devices at a reasonable price. My iPhone SE is a refub as is my laptop.
But do it while you can.
Sunday, April 5, 2020
Tim Cook and Apple Stepping Up: Twenty Million Masks (And Counting) and One Million Face Shields A Week
The Tim Cook led Apple is filling the role of the federal and state governments as the pandemic crisis is weeks from peaking. Apple has sourced and delivered over twenty million medical masks and just announced today, Apple has delivered face shields to Kaiser and will be delivering up to a million more per week.
As an Apple fan, I cannot help but be proud of this iconic American company.
Apple is dedicated to supporting the worldwide response to COVID-19. We’ve now sourced over 20M masks through our supply chain. Our design, engineering, operations and packaging teams are also working with suppliers to design, produce and ship face shields for medical workers. pic.twitter.com/3xRqNgMThX
— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) April 5, 2020
I don't know what the cost to Apple is at this point and while I like to say that cost is not the issue here and it's stop the coronavirus pandemic at all cost, Apple definitely has taken the cost into account. And while it's not much given Apple's bottom-line each day, month, quarter, and year, the good will Apple has built cannot be priced. No matter what, Apple and other companies and a vast major of us on Main Street believes we will come out of this stronger.
There have been a void in leadership at the top in the US, other countries, and international health organizations, it's good to see that we have other leader who will step up.
iPhone SE: 2020 Version Is A Welcome Upgrade But I'm Sticking With My Original One
It looks like it is pretty much confirmed that Apple is release an updated iPhone SE in the iPhone 8 form factor. Gone will be the iPhone 8 immediately if not by the end of the next main iPhone upgrade cycle later this fall. Now, Apple should be commended for still giving the smaller iPhone form an upgrade, certainly, we can definitely kiss the older iPhone 5 form factor good bye. The question for most iPhone SE holdouts is if the new 2020 version is enough of an upgrade despite being a bigger phone for them to give up their current devices.
For me, not so much. I have been using the iPhone SE since it came out in 2016. I have gone through different ones since then. I'm currently on my third iPhone SE. Each time, I changed it not because it broke or the fault of the device itself. Rather, I "upgraded" each time because I wanted more storage. I went from 32 GB to 64 GB and eventually to the 128 GB silver version that I am using on a daily basis. And while the processor and camera seem dated by today's standard, the SE works well enough and the photos are not that bad even by today's standard when you compare the quality to the midrange iPhones. It does not have 2X zoom or whatever the new features on the XR and iPhone 11 have like better night photos, the daily photos I take are good enough.
You cannot have an article about the SE without mentioning the size. This is the main reason why the iPhone 5, iPhone 5S, and iPhone SE form is so popular and why the current SE continues to have a dedicated fan base. Want to by one now? You'll have to time it right on third party websites for a new or refurbished unit of the choice you want. My silver 128 GB iPhone SE took almost six months of stalking a website that bought and sold old phones before they had one that works with my network.
iPhone SE - 4.87 x 2.31 x 0.30 inch
iPhone 8/SE (2020) - 5.45 x 2.65 x 0.29 inch
As you can see, the numbers show that there is a difference in the sizes between two phone sizes. Imagine using it with one hand. If you have the XR, Pro, or even just the regular iPhone 8, I would wager a vast majority of you cannot use it with one hand. That's fine. We adjust and will adapt just like I will have to eventually.
I am not some zealot for the 4" form factor. I just like that the SE is light and easy to use with one hand for quick peaks at weather updates and messages. And though dated by today's standard, the iPhone SE from 2016 is great for 90% of my mobile computing needs - emails, messaging, keeping up with the day's tweets and news, and some light gaming. I use it as my main audio media player - music, podcasts, and audiobooks. And if I need more, I'll go to my iPad mini. And when I need even more computing power, I go to the MacBook just as I have been doing while I am working at home during the coronavirus pandemic.
Any maybe it is the pandemic and having to stay at home for days speaking, but I am beginning to be much more appreciative of what I have. And it was only four weeks ago when I was still out walking in a museum in West LA and walking the grounds of the Huntington Library. And all I had was the the photos and videos from my iPhone SE.
I'll upgrade eventually. I don't know what I'll get when the time comes because it will depend on what Apple is offering at the time on the market. For folks who will complain about Apple abandoning the 4" screen, let me say this. I understand why Apple did it and why the vast majority of the market has also moved on. The use of mobile devices has grown and changed since 2016. Everything is bigger and faster and devices are more complicated because they can do so much more.
The 4" form may not be enough for Apple to design an iPhone that can adequately work with the demands of today's needs. Mobile warriors like myself are expecting our devices to do more than what we expected 4-5 years ago.
But who knows what the future really holds. Maybe someone at Apple will figure out how to bring back the 4" screen and it will release the iPhone V (Vintage) along side the SE, XR, and the Pro. Okay, that'll never happen. Know this as a fact: enjoy the Touch ID on the iPhone SE 2020 while you can. That will be away someone day. And the next SE may have a full screen using only Face ID as its main security apparatus.
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Working From Home: Was Not 100% Ready
To start, I'm as productive as I have ever been and as productive as I can be compared to two weeks ago when I was working at my company's office. In fact, I think I managed to get much more done in a shorter amount of time. However, it has not translate to me "getting off work" at 3PM instead of 5:30 PM like I normally do. The main reason is that I was not ready for working from home.
Internet Connection:
First off, you are only as productive as your Internet connection. And while my Internet connection, courtesy of Comcast (yeah, yeah, I know...), is up a majority of the time, the speed is kind "meh". When I am doing mindless Excel calculations or setting up a new sheet, there isn't a whole lot of thinking that needs to be done. So I like to have something play in the background - video from Netflix or one of my science fiction shows. But that could slow things down at times if my wife is also streaming her own stuff, well, it's hit and miss. Oh, did I mention that we have security cameras as well?
All I can say is that it's 2020. I got my first non-analog Internet connection in 1999 via DSL. It's been 20 years. I expect a minimum speed with 99.99% up time for the connection. I'm supposed to be 100 Mbps for what I paid for. I'd be happy to pay the same amount per month at 50 Mbps if the connection doesn't drop and I don't have to reset the modem every other day.
Hardware:
I have a 2016 Macbook. A 2019 iPad Mini. iPhone SE and XR. I'm crunching Excel sheets with around thirty thousand lines and the formulas that took me a long time to set up that are linked to other sheets. So I have multiple sheets open along with a browser, Outlook, the native Mail app, and the Messages open. There are lags between switching apps at times and Excel not working when it's "thinking". It's like that on my Windows 10 PC at work as well but it is faster with the work PC.
At the time when I got the MacBook, I had not anticipated that I would use it as a work laptop. I expected to be using for writing and simple content creation, and learning to code. And if there was work that I need to do for my company, I thought I could use iWork or use the online Microsoft Office apps. I even thought I could use the mobile version of Office as well. Alas, iWork does not have all the tools I need. Nor does the mobile or online version of Office. Microsoft really should have called those versions "Office Lite".
If I had known that I would be using my personal laptop for work, I would have been more careful about the MacBook that end up getting. Prior to my MacBook, I had a 2013 MacBook Pro. I would have to be more careful about which Mac I get in the future. However, who knows what Apple's road map is going to be in a couple of years. There are rumors that Apple could move away from the Intel chips and use chips that it designed like the ones that power the iPhones and iPads. I would except those Macs to be pretty juiced up to at least the same level of processing power as the ones powered by Intel.
But that's a question and decision for another day. I anticipate working at home for another month with the safer-at-home order being extended and will likely be extended in California through at least early May and my company being very adamant about keeping us at home. After that, I may not feel that my MacBook being underpowered once I return to working from my office.
Environment:
I can work anywhere. I'm one of those people. I have something I need to get done today, I'll find a way to get it done. I'm kinda Jack Bauer about it in that sense. my mind starts running in different directions until I find a path that will get me there. It's nothing special. I'm sure most people are like that if you think about it. We all manage, right? Work, home, life. All those things combine to make our lives interesting.
So, I can work on my bed, living room, backyard, or sitting on my steps outside my building. Currently, we are working on the dining table. We squished our laptops together, a small lamp for an ambiance, a couple of plants, a humidifier, iPad, an USB hub, and our phones. And lots and lots of wire. As I mentioned above, I have something playing in the background at times. So, if it's something my wife probably would not listen to, I have a cheap Bluetooth earpiece that pipes the sound from the video or podcast or music through it.
Preparedness:
Nah. I was not ready at all. Ideally, one I was given the instruction to work from home, I should have been ready from the start, right? I have had to go into the office twice a week the first two weeks. And once last week. That's five times. I would rather not go in at all. I probably will not go in starting next week. I still had to go in and get files. When I did go in, I was working on transferring files to the cloud or scanning docs that I needed or thought I needed.
This is very valuable lesson I learned as far as being mobile, not just working from home. Before the pandemic, we were making plans to travel more. We took a few short trips last year but nothing like being away from the office for the whole week. And my iPad mini was up to the task. Did not even think about bringing my MacBook.
Bottomline - I was fine if I had to be away from the office for a few days. But working from home never crossed my mind. I pride myself in thinking ahead a lot of the time. When it came to this, I really did not anticipate it. I would not chastise myself and conclude that I dropped the ball but I certainly have learned from this experience.
All in all, I manage to get what I need done most of the time and my productivity has been up. If work said that I could work from home forever, I would be very happy to do just that.
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Coronavrius In California: What's Normal Anyway and Update On Life
Bike ride through the city. We did that today. The ride was just like any I've had as far back as I can remember. The only difference is that there are way less cars than before. And the remaining cars on the streets are driving so fast I'm considering getting a camera mount for my helmet so I can record and report them.
It's been almost two weeks since the state and large cities like Los Angeles declare self-lock down and ordered temporary closures of nonessential businesses and activities and, on Friday, closed beaches, parks, and trials after thousands did not take the order and social distancing seriously and took to public places in large numbers.
It's a little different this Saturday compared to last weekend. People are still going out but there is a feeling in the air that more people are taking the coronavirus pandemic, which started in Wuhan, Chia in early December (possibly late November) but was not reported by Beijing until January. After all, it's been a week and the number of cases reported in the United States continue to increase out of control as more people are tested and hospitals become overwhelmed with patients suffer from more serious ailments.
This week, I started working from home. In terms of productivity, I have to say that it's gone up, much to my surprise. And without having to commute, I have time "after work" for a walk with my wife. And as with the bike ride, social distancing is observed by everyone as far as I can tell. What I found particularly was how neighbors who normally would be driving or going somewhere else are also walking and share friendly acknowledgements via a wave, a nod, or a "hello".
We still go out to get food. Even before the order to stay at home, my wife and I cooked and ate mostly at home. We go out on an average of one and a half times. And if you made any trips to the market in the last few weeks, you'll noticed taped markings that are six feet apart on the ground with a friendly market employee or two keeping people reminding customers to practice social distancing.
And here are a few new normals during an pandemic:
It's been almost two weeks since the state and large cities like Los Angeles declare self-lock down and ordered temporary closures of nonessential businesses and activities and, on Friday, closed beaches, parks, and trials after thousands did not take the order and social distancing seriously and took to public places in large numbers.
It's a little different this Saturday compared to last weekend. People are still going out but there is a feeling in the air that more people are taking the coronavirus pandemic, which started in Wuhan, Chia in early December (possibly late November) but was not reported by Beijing until January. After all, it's been a week and the number of cases reported in the United States continue to increase out of control as more people are tested and hospitals become overwhelmed with patients suffer from more serious ailments.
This week, I started working from home. In terms of productivity, I have to say that it's gone up, much to my surprise. And without having to commute, I have time "after work" for a walk with my wife. And as with the bike ride, social distancing is observed by everyone as far as I can tell. What I found particularly was how neighbors who normally would be driving or going somewhere else are also walking and share friendly acknowledgements via a wave, a nod, or a "hello".
We still go out to get food. Even before the order to stay at home, my wife and I cooked and ate mostly at home. We go out on an average of one and a half times. And if you made any trips to the market in the last few weeks, you'll noticed taped markings that are six feet apart on the ground with a friendly market employee or two keeping people reminding customers to practice social distancing.
And here are a few new normals during an pandemic:
- Less driving means I'm saving on gas. And gas has been dropping even before the number of cases exploded in the US due to Russia's attempt to crush the US oil industry and breaking from OPEC.
- Less driving also means the air is nice throughout most of the day. I mean, wow, I can see the mountains clearly for days now. And it helped that we have been getting rain.
- I had started stocking up months ago because we live in earthquake country. So I got lucky. I think people will continue to stock up even after the pandemic is over. I've learned and I believe millions of other families have as well.
- Walking. I've always enjoy it. Jogging as well. And I think more people have rediscovered the joy of walking. And perhaps once restaurants and malls reopen and public areas become more assessable, walking could remain more common.
One last thing. Sure, some stuff are still unavailable at the supermarkets. But I would say 90% of what need for day to day survival as available. You might not be able to find your favorite brand of glass bottled organic 2% milk but if you are willing to walk to another store a mile away, you'll find organic milk available, in a carton. And while cheap store branded beans are no longer available, more expensive brands are available. It all depends on what you're looking for and if you are willing to pay an extra buck for it.
Okay, really one more thing. I promise. The local news are good source to get information. But some of the anchors and reporters are not helping with comments like "it's going to be a beautiful day tomorrow. Just look at the gorgeous view of the beach you are not allowed to go to behind me". Seriously, right?
Apple Watch 3 - Battery Dying. Time For An Upgrade When The Apple Watch 6 Comes Out?
I skipped the Apple Watch 4 and 5 and plowed through with my Apple Watch 3. It'll be three years this September 22nd and I can't wait to see what new features the Apple Watch 6 will pack when it is released this year. Of course, with what's going on with the coronavirus pandemic here in the US and the rest of the world, there is no guarantee that Apple will be release products on the annual schedule that we have come to expect.
And while I think I can hang for another six months, I'm not sure my Apple Watch 3 can as the battery life has diminished greatly in the last month. I reset it today in hopes that the reset could fix it. And if it doesn't, well, I'll have to figure out how to work around a shorter battery life until later this fall. It is not as if the Apple stores are open for me to take my watch in for a battery replacement.
But even if I eventually have the chance to take my three in for a battery replacement and that the Apple Watch 6 does not impress me, I can see myself with the three for another year and wait for the Apple Watch 7.
ECG is nice which came with Apple Watch 4 and the always on screen on the Apple Watch 5 is nice, none of those two main features are enough for me upgrade each of the last two years. Rumored features, oxygen blood level monitor, sleep monitor, and faster chip, are all nice but hardly worth upgrades if you've got the four or five. It could be enough to upgrade for someone like me. Still, those features are nice but not necessary. And it's been suggested that the Apple Watch can monitor oxygen level in the blood as far back as 2015.
I can be sold on a new Apple Watch if the next one really offers a much longer battery life. If anyone read my past posts, you'll know that having long battery life is something I've been asking for year after year.
At it's peak, the three offers me enough to get me through the day. And I've got a charger a home, work, and in my car and I charge my watch whenever I get a chance. But I'm not talking about going from twenty hours to thirty or even forty-eight hours. I'm walking about 3-5 days long. I know, I know. That's wishful thinking. Fine, be that as it may, it certainly is something Apple is working on.
People have mentioned a blood pressure monitor in the Apple Watch. Now, that could be something I would jump on immediately. I'm approaching that age in my life that I should be worrying about my blood pressure. And hypertension is something I should worry about given that it is common in my family. But so far so good.
I don't know when the pandemic in California is going to let up so Apple is comfortable to reopening its stores. When it does and I am able to get my battery replaced (should the reset not work - I don't know yet since I just did it today), I will be quite content with my three because it'll feel like a new watch for me. And should the Apple Watch 6 not meet my threshold for an upgrade, I'll still be happy to keep my Apple Watch 3 on my wrist for another year.
One thing is for sure when I do upgrade - I'll be going for the cellular version.
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