Year: 2022

Taylor Swift fans sue TicketMaster over Concert Tickets

Fans of Taylor Swift are not happy with Ticket Master's handling and then canceling seating for her concert scheduled for November 15th.

When fans tried to get tickets via the website, it either crashed, or fans were left waiting for hours because of the demand for the tickets.

The suit, according to Deadline.com:

The fans collective are suing the company for “fraud, price-fixing, and antitrust violations,” accusing it of “intentional deception” that allowed scalpers to buy most of the tickets.

Ticketmaster controls the primary ticket sales market, and has a stake in the secondary market as well. The lawsuit alleges they were “eager to allow” scalpers into the presale event in order to collect extra fees on resold tickets.

To read the rest of the story, click here.

How to show File Extensions in the Files App on iPad

Did you know you can see the file extensions on an iPad while in the Files app?

Here's how:

  1. Open the Files App on iPad. 
  2. Go to a folder with files in it, and go IN that folder.
  3. Choose the List/Icon sort menu.
  4. Find the submenu for View options.
  5. Choose "Show all Extensions"
  6. That's it.

The Files app on the iPad is getting just as powerful as the Finder on Mac. Feel free to experiment and use it often.

Useful HomePod Commands

I've recently obtained a HomePod and am scanning Google to learn all I can about it (yes, I read the manual, and it sucks).

Anyway, here's a little Cheat Sheet for the device.

HomePod Setup:

  1. Turn on the HomePod or HomePod mini and wait for the light to glow on the top
  2. Put your iPhone or iPad near the HomePod or HomePod mini
  3. A window will pop-up asking if you wish to set-up the HomePod mini
  4. Tap Set Up
  5. Set which room the HomePod is going to be
  6. Choose whether or not to Enable Personal Requests. This is whether or not you want to be able to dictate text messages, add reminders, or take notes via the smart speaker.
  7. Agree to transfer your iCloud account, Wi-Fi and other HomeKit settings over to the speaker.
  8. Say "Hey Siri, what can you do?" followed by "Hey Siri, play some music"

HomePod Touch Controls:

  • Tap once to Play/Pause.
  • Double-tap to skip to the next track.
  • Triple tap to skip back to the previous track.
  • Touch and hold to access Siri without saying "Hey Siri"
  • Tap or hold the plus icon to turn the volume up.
  • Tap or hold the minus icon to turn the volume down.

How to update the HomePod:

  1. Open the Home app on your iPhone or iPad
  2. Tap the House icon in the upper left-hand corner
  3. Tap 'Home Settings'
  4. Scroll down and tap Software Update
  5. Tap the 'Update (All)' button to begin the update or pull down to see if there is one
  6. Tap 'Agree' on the Terms and Conditions page.

How to use HomePod to Control Music:

  • Hey Siri, turn the volume up
  • Hey Siri, turn the volume to 85 per cent
  • Hey Siri, turn the volume down
  • Hey Siri, stop
  • Hey Siri, play
  • Hey Siri, next song
  • Hey Siri, skip forward 30 seconds
  • Hey Siri, previous track

How to send an Intercom Message (when having two or more HomePods):

  • "Hey Siri, intercom 'Who ate the last Oreo cookie?'"
  • "Hey Siri, announce 'I'm home!'"
  • "Hey Siri, ask everyone where are my glasses?"
  • "Hey Siri, let everyone know I found my glasses"
  • "Hey Siri, tell everyone I'm taking the dog for a walk"
  • "Hey Siri, intercom 'On my way home, want me to pick anything up?'"

How to use Find My (You'll need Apple's AirTags enabled for this step):

  • "Hey Siri, find [name of keys] car keys"

That's all for now - but stay tuned!

CNN: Meet the new B-21 Raider Stealth Aircraft

(CNN) - The Air Force is set to unveil its newest stealth bomber aircraft, the B-21 Raider, on Friday in Palmdale, California. Built by Northrop Grumman, the bomber was named in honor of the “courageous spirit” of airmen who carried out the surprise World War II Doolittle Raid.

The sixth-generation aircraft is expected to help the Air Force “penetrate the toughest defenses for precision strikes anywhere in the world,” Northrop Grumman’s press release said. Six bombers are currently in “various stages of final assembly” in California, according to the release.

The event on Friday will be even more significant given that it will mark the first time in more than 30 years a new US bomber has been publicly unveiled since the B-2 Spirit was presented in 1988. While the US originally planned to have a fleet of 132 B-2s, just 21 were ultimately purchased.

The release of the new bomber comes amid heightened tensions between the US and both China and Russia. Just days ago, the Pentagon released its annual report on China, which said the country has doubled its number of nuclear warheads in a fraction of the time the US expected it to.

By 2035, the report said, China could have roughly 1,500 nuclear warheads – an “accelerated expansion” of its stockpile, a senior defense official told CNN.

The B-21 was designed with that competition in mind. Northrop Grumman’s rundown of the new bomber’s abilities said that while adversaries “continue to invest in and develop advanced weapons,” the B-21 will allow the US to penetrate enemy air defense and hit targets “anywhere in the world.”

While Friday is the “first time the world’s first sixth-generation aircraft will be seen by the public,” Northrop Grumman said, airmen and aircraft enthusiasts alike will have to wait until next year to actually see one in the air.

The first B-21 flight is expected to happen in 2023, Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said, though she emphasized that the timing of the first flight “will be data and event, not date, driven.”

The Air Force previously said that the new nuclear-capable stealth bomber, which has the ability to carry both nuclear and conventional weapons and which will fall under the Air Force’s Global Strike Command, will be “the backbone of the future Air Force bomber force,” designed in a way that is ripe for future modernization efforts.

The service named Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, as the home of the B-21 and home to the aircraft’s training program. Each aircraft was anticipated to cost $550 million when the price was set in 2010; after adjusting for inflation this year, Stefanek said, the cost of each aircraft, including training materials, support equipment and other components of the bomber, is $692 million. The Air Force plans to purchase at least 100 of the stealth bombers.

The B-21 has been built with long-term sustainability and maintainability in mind, Northrop Grumman said in the release. It has also been designed to be rapidly upgraded when future threats demand it – a process that can often be slowed down by bureaucratic red tape and delayed timelines when it comes to older military aircraft and vehicles.

The bomber won’t undergo “block upgrades,” according to Northrop Grumman, which is a method of periodically upgrading parts of a system. Instead, the company said new “technology, capabilities and weapons will be seamlessly incorporated” through software upgrades.

“This will ensure the B-21 Raider can continuously meet the evolving threat head on for decades to come,” the company said.

Honoring the past

The name “Raider” was submitted by airmen with the 337th Test and Evaluation Squadron out of Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, and beat out more than 2,000 other suggestions. It refers to the April 1942 Doolittle Raid, during which 80 airmen flew a retaliatory mission to bomb Japan just months after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Led by then-Lt. Col. James “Jimmy” Doolittle, the airmen flew roughly 650 miles to Japan, bombing military installations, storage facilities and factories, according to the Air Force. But because of limited fuel, they knew it was unlikely they’d make it back to safety as planned.

Instead, the pilots and crew “ditched at sea, bailed out, or crash-landed in China,” according to the National Museum of the US Air Force, many reaching safety with the help of Chinese citizens. According to the museum, as many as a quarter of a million Chinese citizens were later executed by the Japanese as punishment for assisting the Americans.

Former Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James announced the new bomber’s name in 2016 alongside one of the airmen who flew on that World War II mission, retired Lt. Col. Richard Cole, who died in 2019.

“We wanted [to] ensure the aircraft had a strong name airmen could take pride in, especially those who will have the opportunity to fly and maintain the B-21,” Lt. Col. Jaime Hernandez, commander of the 337th, said in 2016. “We also wanted to take an element of our history into account, and the story of the Doolittle Raiders embodies just that.”

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