November 15, 2024

Month: December 2019

How to Forward GMail mail to an iCloud account for use with Apple Mail

If you don't like using Google's iOS app to get your mail, there is a way for Gmail to forward any new mail to an iCloud account.

Here's how:

  1. Login to your Gmail account and select the Gear icon (upper-right).
  2. Select Settings.
  3. Select the Forwarding and POP/IMAP tab.
  4. In the Forwarding section, select the Forward incoming Mail to and select the Add a forwarding address button.
  5. Type the email address where you want all of your Gmail to be sent TO.
  6. Click OK.
  7. The next option is entirely up to you.
  8. That's it.

Now login to your iCloud account when ever you want to read your Gmail.

Questions?  Ask them in our FaceBook group.

Chirp debuts a faster, feature-filled Twitter app for Apple Watch

For those of you who use the one-year-old Apple Watch Twitter client, Chirp, which is already used by hundreds of thousands of Apple Watch users, is getting a big upgrade.

The app has now been redesigned for WatchOS6 and includes a new designed timeline that allows you to endlessly scroll through tweets much more quickly than before, along with other enhancements, like support for iOS 13’s dark mode and a way to add colors to your Twitter username.

The app was first introduced to fill the void created when Twitter pulled its own Apple Watch app back in 2017 in favor of using Apple Watch’s notifications platform instead. Chirp, meanwhile, lets users access a real Twitter client from their Watch’s small screen, which included a way to view your Home Timeline, Twitter Trends, @ Mentions, Direct Messages and more… To date, Chirp has around 200,000 installs, according to data from Sensor Tower.

Go to the Apple Watch App Store and search for this app.  It's great.

Apple Watch Alerts Florida man he was in A-Fib

A 74-year-old man from Lake Worth in Palm Beach County, Fla., credits Apple Watch with saving his life after the device alerted him to an atrial fibrillation event during a trip to Baltimore.

Roy Robinson told ABC News affiliate WPBF that he was on a trip to visit family when a notification reading, "You're in A-fib," popped up on his Apple Watch. Alerts continued to sound about once an hour.

Atrial fibrillation is an irregular heart rate often characterized by rapid beats that can lead to heart failure or stroke.

The first warning was triggered when Robinson found himself out of breath after walking up three flights of stairs at his granddaughter's school, an unusual occurrence as he considers himself fairly fit. Notifications persisted throughout the day, but it was only when Apple Watch sounded an A-fib alarm while he was laying on the couch that he and his family decided to investigate.

[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="660"] Via: WPBF TV 25[/caption]

"I had no idea what A-fib was," he said.

Following the sixth alert, Robinson conducted a Google search for "A-fib" and, after finishing Thanksgiving dinner, headed to Johns Hopkins Hospital.

"We showed up at the hospital and they said, 'Why are you here?' I says, [. . .] 'My watch says that I'm in A-fib,'" Robinson said. "So he hooks me up to the electrocardiogram and after about 30 seconds of looking at the electrocardiogram, says, 'We're admitting you.'"

A number of doctors, interns, residents and nurses visited Robinson during his time at the facility, saying they wanted to see the "guy that was saved by the Apple Watch."

"I'm not sure if it saved my life, but it sure as hell helped," he said.

Apple Watch has been credited with saving multiple lives since automatic A-fib detection was added to the device's feature set in 2018. The system works by regularly monitoring a user's heart rate data, which is collected by a specialized sensor embedded in the wearable's backside.

Apple continues to build out Apple Watch's suite of health tools, with current iterations of the device boasting a single-lead ECG to better detect irregular heart rhythms.

Via: WBPF TV

Rise of the Resistance breaks down on opening day with large crowds

The long awaited ride (Star Wars: Ride of the Resistance) opened to the public today, December 5, and it is already bringing in large crowds, but it is also experiencing technical difficulties, which is causing a bit of a fuss.

Parking opened to the public around 4:30am and to no surprise, Disney guests formed lines inside the park very quickly in order to travel to the land of Batuu.

Disney has worked on the ride for the past two years and is supposed to be the crown jewel of Disney's Star Wars experience.

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