Monday, February 3, 2025

Workflow With the Original iPad And iPads From Today

I am in the market for a new iPad but I have not quite gotten myself to pull the trigger on a new one because I simply have not decided what my workflow will be like. Simply put, I am still fine with my 2019 iPad mini though I do need something bigger when I eventually upgrade. So, I have been thinking long and hard about my workflow and, naturally, became a bit nostalgic to the day when I first got my original iPad. 

If you compare the original iPad to today’s iPads, it is natural to note how far we have come since 2010. In many ways, too many to mention here, we have come a long way. I definitely could not have used the original iPad as a laptop replacement as many have done today. One thing that the original iPad had that many of today’s iPads do not have is its simplicity - its ability to offer a distraction free environment. 

Personally, this is an important element of all of my workflows. In the early days, it was easy to stay focused on what you were doing on the iPad because the OS was a lot simpler and apps were a lot limited. There is an argument say that the original iPad was more for content consumption rather than for productivity. I agree all iPads are great for reading and watching videos but the original iPad worked well for tasks like emailing and writing. In terms of generating text content, the lack of distraction made it just as good as a tool for writing as any iPads today, possibly better because it was just the email and notes apps. 

With iPads today, there are different focus modes, apps that offer more features, and have completely replaced laptops for some users. You can do a lot more with an iPad which means that you end up spending more time doing other things like content management whereas with the original iPad, you just write and deal with the content  elsewhere like on the Mac.

And I do want Apple to add more software and hardware features to the iPad. But it is entirely up to the user to decide how to create a workflow that best suit them to take advantage of one of the versatile computing platform ever.

Friday, January 24, 2025

Using AI To Make Cotton Candy and Other Uses

I am very comfortable with using ChatGPT, Gemini, and other AI now. I still use search engines through my work day - DucDuckGo is my go-to search engine with Google coming in next if I do not find what I want o DuckDuckGo. There is a difference between what I use AI for and what search engines for. 

While both AI and search can provide answers I want, they each serve a role that is more suited for one than the other. AI chats can provide most answers, which do require that I fact-check it. For queries that require fact-checking, I go straight to to the search engines. For others, AI chats are fine. This is especially true when I am looking for basic understanding of things like “which is the first book of the Pdergast series” or how do I find a consultant in Asia who is familiar with Oracle for customization.

So, this is what I have used AI chats for this week:

  • I got a composter for my kitchen. I came across a video on the Internet of someone making cotton candy. So I use Gemini to find out how cotton candies are made and at what temperature. Apparently, my composter does heat up the stuff I put inside it but it is no where near hot enough. And probably not a good idea anyway.
  • I was tasked to find an Oracle consultant in Asia who could help us with customization from time to time. I have no idea where to start so I asked a friend who asked ChatGPT. I did it as well but I thad hoped my software engineer friend might know one or two
  • I started a YouTube channel for my dog. Since my puppy is a lot cuter than I am, I thought I would exploit her cuteness and the forever puppy look. I then asked Gemini, ChatGPT, and Claude how I can turn this into a million dollar business. The results were sensible. I will be giving what they suggest a try. Forgetting the money, there are a lot of suggestions like animation that require me to learn new skills. That is what I am most excited about.
  • I asked ChatGPT why my pancakes never come out the same and why my waffles turn out bad half the time. I suspect that heat has something to do with it. And how thick the batter is. And how long I cook it. Turned out that I was right. I just need to keep at it and eventually i will get it right.
  • I wanted to write an app based on suggestions I read recently in books and from YouTube. I asked for suggestions on features that I should include in version 1.0. 
  • I recently read about algorithms that are based on quantum principles that would run on traditional PC because quantum computers are not available yet. I wanted to know if they actually help and run fast enough on traditional CPU. According to Gemini, yes…in theory. Copilot said the same thing but I think my question was not phrased correctly. So I rephrased to “will algorithms based on quantum principles that are written to run on traditional CPU be of any benefit compared to regular algorithms. This time, the answer is no. Is this true? I honestly do not know.
  • I had Copilot rewrite some of my emails and perform translations. I do find AI-based translations better than Google Translate. It is more accurate? When needed, I use AI based translations and Google Translate. The mean from both are pretty much the same though I feel AI results seem easier to understand.
  • Looked for a farm in Los Angeles where I can take our dog to see if she is into bearding. It was a fail with both Copilot and Gemini. I know Copilot is based on ChatGPT but for some reason, ChatGPT gave me the best answer.
  • I searched some literary terms like “knight errant”. Copilot did well enough. 

I continue to use both ChatGPT and Claude on a daily basis to help me develop a YouTube channel I started about two weeks ago for our dog. This weekend, I am considering using one of these AI to help me write a simple app to test how well the Playgrounds app can handle coding on the iPad.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

WatchOS: Apple Should Sherlock Streak Apps

I like my Apple Watch but I am waiting for Apple to go beyond health and one area where the Apple Watch can be of great benefit to users is to help us keep track of habits and routines. And this is one area where I believe Apple Intellgience can really shine because I do not know if another AI or AI-powered app already help users develop habits and become more productive and healthy but it would be great if one is natively developed by Apple.

The watch’s sensors such as the one that monitors heart rate is terrific and has helped countless millions. It is especially useful during workouts and professional athletes. But I'm not an athlete. I do jog and workout. I monitor the number of steps I take through the day. I occasionally use the Breath app. I want to be more engaged with my Apple Watch for other purposes.

And this is where a streaks and habits app would come into play. As for "play", gamifying streaks and habit development could be fun element to the app without being a distraction. 

Speak of distraction, all streak apps should have the pomodoro timer include one form Apple. There is already a timer app on the watch but integrating it into a streak app is definitely a must. It is dedicated to allowing users to continue streaks. I would even go as far as allowing users to creating different pomodoros (and name them) much like how users can creating mutlitple alarms. For example, I can called "writing" for 20 minutes or another one called "cleaning" for 10 minutes. Over time, Apple can add new features - time tracking, progress updates, and even help users develop plans for learning or habit forming like grouping tasks together to make it easier for users perform tasks.

A native streaks app would allow Apple to leverage its ability to log what apps users are using and source data internally. For example, Apple streaks app would be to show that I have used the Breath for eight days straight. Apple Intelligence will be able to analyze my activities to help me creating streaks and build habits to create routines. 

Other than Breath, Apple has other apps like Journals that can help users foster positive habits and mindsets. If iPhone, iPad or Mac users are going spend screen time on its devices, Apple might as well use its streaks and habit forming apps for positive uses.

Saturday, November 9, 2024

I’m I Used AI To Research Birthday Gifts And Other Uses This Week

I am quite comfortable now using generative AI to help me with writing emails. I do not think it knows me well enough to learn what I really want to convey. It is likely taking a lot of sources from other users and combining them to anticipate what a proper email should sound like. And yes, only proper well worded emails. I once asked AI to help me write an email that also convey how little I think of the recipient but it warned me that I should be professional and continued to give me a email that was rather professionally worded (I changed it to give a small hint that I think the recipient was a jerk. A small one that I doubt really drew any attention but it made me feel good nonetheless.)

I have also changed how I write my emails based on what AI has suggested in the past few weeks. So there is that. Here are other uses and my thoughts on how I feel about them this week. So far, I have keep to using ChatGPT, Pilot, Claude, and Gemini.
  1. I used ChatGPT to help me suggest a birthday gift for a friend reaching his 50s who happens to be a techie and is very smart.
  2. I used ChatGPT to help me find the best recipe for chocolate chunk cookies. You know, those scone-sized chocolate chip cookies. I had a couple from a cookie shop in Irvine, California and I brought them home. My wife, who is a chocolate fan but not a chocolate chip cookie fan, took them all. I never saw them again.
  3. I am learning Japanese (and French). I used Gemini and ChatGPT to help me determine proper phrasing or how an actual Japanese person would speak. I used the translation app on my iPhone and Google Translate but I I went beyond that because I just had to make sure the translations were correctly worded. I do not want to sound like I am a translation app when I am speaking Japanese. 
  4. Used Pilot to help me understand the basics of quantum physics because I was wondering just how closely linked our mind might be to exotic particles. Maybe our brains are capable of generating and detecting them (a short story I am writing) because I had read that some scientists theorized that we owe our consciousness to the quantum realm.
  5. I was watch a horror movie about monsters that hunt by sound. With cell signals and power potentially impacting the survivors, I wondered if there was an app that allows users in the vicinity of Bluetooth range message each other. Of course, in silent mode. ChatGPT joined me to Bridgefy while Gemini went into why cross platforms through BT would not work. So I had to narrow it down and asked for such an app on each platform. I think ChatGPT is much better in this instance. I wonder if ChatGPT being less hindered by guardrails while Gemini been critically limited by Google's fear of AI hallucination or offending certain groups.
  6.  I used copilot to help me find out some basics about 3D printing. I did not use other AI to confirm the information or tried to verify the results via search because this was a basic question that I felt copilot had adequately given the answer I was looking for.
  7. I used Copilot to about the election, procedures, and what it takes to pass an initiative. I had to fact-check this through a Google search.
  8. I came across an article in which the physicist theorized that we owe our consciousness to the quantum realm. I asked ChatGPT and Copilot if this was possible.
  9. I am considering collecting pocket watches so I googled, I mean checked with the AI chats (all of them - Claude, ChatGPT, Copilot, and Gemini) about it. 
  10. I wanted to know what "lo-fi" means. I came across it on Youtube while searching for music to help me pass time at work. 
I do believe that generative AI has a place. Obviously, I use it on a daily basis now, split between home, work, and writing projects I am working on. I do not have an iPhone or iPad that currently supports Apple Intelligence but my MacBook Air can. I hope that I can incoporate Apple Intelligence, particularly a much improved Siri, in the near future.

I cannot say that AI has improved my productivity or even saved me a lot of time but I have found them useful to some extent and for certain tasks. I look forward to incorporate these tools into my workflow both at home and work.


Sunday, July 14, 2024

Using Generative AI Has Given Me A New Appreciation For Siri and Excited For The Future of Apple Intelligence

I used generative AI this week to find the dimensions of a refrigerator based on the model number. I googled first because of muscle memory but when I could not find what I was looking for immediately  and was given the dimensions of another refrigerator with a similar model number after going through a couple of the first links from Google results..After checking with ChatGPT and Google's Gemini, I quickly found the correct size with AI chats while the search result was wrong. 

I always have my AI chat app or tab in the browser at the ready. I can see myself going to AI for answers more and more as the first option. 

The point is that I have become accustomed to using AI to quickly look for answers and when needed, confirm the results with another AI or search on the Internet. It is a process. And every day, more and more people are actively engaging with AI in their personal and professional lives. In the last two months, I can safely say that I have used AI at least once a day - including Siri. Recently, I have ran out of my free allotments so frequently that I consider paying for one of the services. I'm pretty close to that decision and deciding which AI service I want to pay for. Until I do, I am alternating between ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude. 

Again, it is a process. And with Apple Intelligence, I think it will also be a process that will take users many weeks if not months of active use to personalize Apple's AI. 

Here are some of what you can do to get started:
  • Just keep using Siri. I'm serious. Use it on your iPhone, iPad, or Apple Watch. Use it on the Mac. I do not use it as much on the Mac only because a lot of what I use Siri for involves mobile computing, scheduling, and quick queries that are necessarily work related like scores and weather. 
  • Open your Photos app and look at the memories it automatically created for you. That is AI generated. 
  • Search Spotlight. I am sure it is one of the most widely used features on Apple's platforms. I'll be honest. It is hit and miss even with some improvements on iOS 18 and before the release of Apple Intelligence. When it work, it works well. When it does not or provides inconsistent results, it can be frustration. But it is one of the better features from Apple using ML. 
  • Use the camera app - AI is highly integrated into the native camera app on the iPhone. Use it to help you capture your life, for journals, and work. 
Getting used to AI prompts and Siri will help you become more comfortable and even creative in getting the results you want. I think we are only scratching the surface of what we can do with AI now. With better and faster models, including ones from Apple that the future improved Siri will run on, we will one day realized how we live without our AI assistants. 

How Siri and AI Helped Me This Week

Here is this week's segment on how I use generative AI and helped me this week. I think it is important we continue to actively engage AI on a daily basis. There is no need to wait for both Apple Intelligence with the improved Siri to arrive and for someone to show us how to effectively use AI. Just use it.

  • I was given a serial number to an old refrigerator to find dimensions. I was able to confirm via ChatGPT and Gemini. 
  • I described to ChatGPT my workout routine, daily activity, and diet and asked why I was not losing weight. The answer it gave me was something I already know. I was still eating a lot of treats and need to cut down my calories. (Personally, portion control has always worked)
  • I asked what the win-loss record is between Messi and Ronaldo when they played against each other. Messi is slightly in the lead. (Apparently, they have earned over a billion dollars over the life time of their careers so far. Far more than American athletes.)
  • I asked about living in places like Sapporo in Hokkaido, Japan. Gemini sold me on the weather. It is a dream scenario. I'm a dreamer. 
  • Siri provided me with scores and game times for soccer and baseball. I have learned to word things carefully to get the results I need. I was able to get some interesting tidbits from Siri on sport stats. 
  • Siri helped me set a few reminders, workout updates, and answered some weather related queries. This was all done on the Apple Watch. During my run today, I was listening to a podcast about Apple related subjects and one of the hosts has turned off Siri access on his watch.
  • At work, I used CoPilot to help me find a few government related regulations. 
  • While at work and because of work, I used CoPilot to estimate how much I need to retire if I supplement my retirement income with Uber and Postmate delivery jobs for a few hours a day. I have an EV with free electric charging. I would not mind driving a few hours a day delivering food while I listen to audiobooks. 
  • Along the line of retirement, I asked a variety of ideas - running a partial newsstand and cafe. Open at 6 AM and closing around 4 PM each day and longer hours on weekends. This was not a viable solution from information CoPilot provided me.
  • I asked where Shakira is from - I thought she was from Spain because of her tax issues but apparently she's from Columbia. I guess I know which team she was rooting for during the Copa America final game.
There was nothing new about what I used AI for this week. I did not purposely sought new ways to use AI or gained any new insight. I just do not want to force things. What I want to do this coming week is write another chapter of a novel that I have been working on perpetually and really finish it. With the help of AI, I like to develop a workflow whereby AI becomes an editor of sort but not as a sounding board. I want all my ideas to be mine. 

Regarding the podcast host who turned off Siri on his Apple Watch because he found Siri to be useless. I agree with his assessment on the limitations of Siri. However, I do not agree that shutting it off is the way to go. 

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Perhaps More Evidence Apple Intelligence Is A Long Game As Features May Be Pushed Closer To Middle of 2025

 Source: Clouding Around.

A week ago, I mentioned that I would not be upgrading my iPhone this year to take advantage of Apple Intelligence for a couple of reasons - timing of Apple Intelligence availability and hardware requirements. From the tidbits released this week about Apple Intelligence, it looks like my decision still stands. From the standpoint of the hardware, uses will still need the very best Apple has to offer in order to use Apple Intelligence - the iPhone Pro.

After that, any new iPhone Apple releases should take advantage of what Apple has to offer with its own AI efforts. It makes sense that both Apple and iPhone users who upgrade future proof their devices in what is consider the next step in mobile computing. What is also important is that we will continue to get a glimpse into what Apple will offer.

So far, Apple Intelligence has done only one thing and that is to make Wall Street very happy. 


Since April 19th where Apple bottomed out, The stock has been on a tear. I have a few Apple shares and I'm happy that it might be enough or me to get a new iPhone in 2025 but it just shows that Apple was masterful at creating a frenzy and duplicating Steve Jobs reality distortion field on a global scale. The RDF is still happening apparently. What it will not do is make Apple Intelligence features be available any faster.

For instance, Apple Intelligence enhanced Siri, a feature that I have long sought and wanted Siri to be and more, may not be released until iOS 18.4 (Macrumors, The Verge)! To give everyone an idea of when that might be, iOS 17.4 was released in March of 2024 (Apple Support). It is not far off given how fast time seems to be flying but it is closer to WWDC 2025 than WWDC 2024 when Apple unveiled the brand new updated Siri. When the Siri came out, it was available day one on the iPhone 4. 

Personally, I am fine with Apple taking its time to get AI right and done the Apple way, ease of use, just works, and privacy. However, there are features I really hope would be available  on day one or as soon as possible with the various betas of Apple's platforms over the summer. 

  • Writing Tools
  • Summerization
  • Siri - even with the full release well into 2025, perhaps there could be other improvements that we will see right away. Having better understanding of context in which users make queries would be a start and not have to carefully work questions to get the correct results.
  • Apple Intelligence on the Apple Watch. Apple is bringing Apple Intelligence to the Vision Pro. We know that for sure. So why not on the Apple Watch as well. If any device needs Apple Intelligence, even a lite version of it, it is the Apple Watch. I use Siri on the iPhone and I have used Siri on occasion and most of the time, my range of reaction to it is mild disappointed to frustration. Apple needs to leverage Siri and really integrate it into the apps on the watch. I think that is happen given what Apple has planned. During the WWDC keynote video, there was no mention of Apple Intelligence on the Apple Watch. I believe this is because the only version of the watch that can run Apple Intelligence will be released in a couple of months.
Other than Siri, a more advanced personal assistant feature will also be available but not until 2025. It will be able to anticipate your needs based on the information available to Apple Intelligence. This itself will be one of those features that become richer over the years to one day you realizing how indispensable is has become. When it comes out, it will be all about reminders and that is one of the main job descriptions of an assistant. It will do more than that. It can anticipate what you might need to do or want to do based on what you're doing on your device. Right now, the examples Apple provided including onscreen awareness, personal context, and Siri across different apps.

Is this enough to get you excited? It certainly has Apple investors excited. They can barely contain themselves. I'm excited and cannot wait to use Apple Intelligence on my M2 MacBook Air and, hopefully, on my new Apple Watch Ultra 3 this fall.

Signing Into iCloud On iPhone Helps Get Around One iCloud Account Per Device Limitation

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