November 15, 2024

Month: October 2016

How to: Update your Apple Watch

AppleWatchMsgEditor's Note: We've had many requests to run this article again.  The below was originally published in March, 2016, but the below should work with the Series 2.

For those of you who are new to the device, upgrading is quite easy - BUT one has to allow enough time for the update, usually 20-30 minutes.

Here's how:

  1. Make sure you update your iOS device(s) to iOS 9.3.
  2. Put the Apple Watch on the charger.
  3. Put your iPhone on the charger.
  4. Go into the Apple Watch app on the iPhone.
  5. Select General > Software Update.
  6. When the update finds the new version, select Update Now.
  7. The iPhone will prep the update and update the near by Apple Watch.
  8. The watch will show a progress dial and reboot itself while the update is happening.

Pornhub.com offers to buy Vine.com from Twitter.com

PornHubLogo(No, this isn't a joke, folks).

Twitter's decision to close its video sharing service Vine has been met with regret from one of the founders just as adult entertainment site Pornhub launched a tongue-in-cheek acquisition bid for the platform.

Vine founder Rus Yusupov, who left his company in 2015, took to Twitter (of course) to express his disappointment in the social media firm's decision to kill Vine – the product it bought in 2012 for a reported $30 million.

Twitter made the decision to discontinue Vine after the company reported an increase in its monthly active user growth in the third-quarter but said it would shed 9 percent of its workforce as it looks to cut costs and focus on its live-streaming offerings.

To read the rest of the CNBC.com article (plus other related content) click here.

Microsoft is doing a better Apple impression than Apple is

apple-logo-red(The Verge/CNBC) - Apple and Microsoft have both announced new computers this week built for professionals, and while the companies' hardware may be very different, the way they're selling these new devices is eerily similar. Check out the MacBook Pro overview from Apple above, then watch Microsoft's introduction for the Surface Studio. Okay, so one has a Jony Ive voiceover and the other has a dramatic cover of "Pure Imagination," but the general arc of the videos — the narrative they're trying to tell the consumer — is the same.

We start with the camera lingering on polished, machined surfaces; gleaming chrome and impregnable aluminum. The inner components break apart as if in zero gravity, giving us a chance to see how each individual part fits together, and then the whole thing reassembles like a slow-mo explosion in reverse. A human enters the frame, touching the computer and bringing it to life. For Microsoft that means adjusting the Studio's display, for Apple it's activating the Touch Bar, but the meaning is shared — we put all this together. Even the test footage used to show off the screens is the same: explosions of colorful powder surely inspired by photographs of the Hindu festival of Holi.

Of course, none of this cinematography is uncommon (what's rare is Apple and Microsoft announcing new computers back to back). Tech companies of all stripes have been using the slow-mo-component-explosion shot for years as way to show off the engineering that's gone into making these devices. What's perhaps most interesting is the reactions to the two videos. The Apple one seems unremarkable, but Microsoft's is genuinely exciting.

The question is: why? It could be a result of over-familiarity with Jony Ive videos, which follow a familiar cadence but are so unchanging they almost slip into self-parody. It could be that Microsoft's video is just better — the music pushes all sorts of emotional buttons, and we get to see the Studio and its peripherals just do more. But there might also be a larger issue with brand. Both companies seem like they're repositioning themselves; with Microsoft pushing into the professional creative market, and Apple moving the MBP more mainstream (e.g. emoji on the Touch Bar). The former move is, to me at least, more exciting.

Amazon offering discounts on Apple’s all-new Touch-Bar Equipped MacBook Pro Models

2016macbookproIf you're looking for deep discounts on the all new MacBook Pro with the new TouchBar, then look no further then Amazon.com.

“The Apple store isn’t the only place selling the just-announced MacBook Pro,” Dan DeSilva reports for 9to5Mac. “Authorized retailers including Amazon, B&H, MacMall and Best Buy are all taking pre-orders with varying delivery estimates. It’s not surprising that Apple’s retail partners are selling the new MacBook Pro, but it is noteworthy in case you have some gift cards, rewards or coupons to burn, not to mention MacMall and B&H only charge tax at the time of purchase for a very limited number of states.”

“But the biggest discount news? Amazon has a pair of models available right now and they’re the only retailer to be dishing up some big savings: The entry-level 13-inch 256GB configuration without Touch Bar and Touch ID is on sale for $1,139.92 in Space Gray and $1,299 in Silver (Reg. $1,499),” DeSilva reports. “The high-end 13-inch 512GB configuration with Touch Bar and Touch ID is down to $1,799 (Reg. $1,999).”

For more information, click on any of the links above.

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