November 15, 2024

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Developers: What IS Xcode Cloud?

Xcode Cloud is a continuous integration and delivery service built into Xcode and designed expressly for Apple developers. Learn about requirements, tools to get started, and managing your subscription.

Configure a workflow

To use Xcode Cloud, you’ll need Xcode 13.4.1 or later and membership in the Apple Developer Program. Get started by configuring a workflow in Xcode. This can be done by the Account Holder, an Admin, or an App Manager. It can also be done by a team member with the Developer or Marketing role who has been given access to create app records in App Store Connect. Learn more about roles. You’ll get 25 compute hours per month for free.

For more information about Xcode Cloud, click here.

What IS iCloud anyway?

Before I start this article, you'd be surprised at how many new iOS, tvOS, and Mac users have no idea what iCloud is, or how to even use it with their device(s).  Hopefully, this article will let them know what iCloud is, and how to use it.

What IS iCloud?

When you get a new Mac, iOS, or tvOS device, it comes with an Apple service called iCloud.  iCloud enables any Apple-related user to share, sync, backup, almost any information (including pictures and videos) to secondary storage that can be accessed as long as the device has internet access.  When a person first sets up their device, they will be asked to either sign up or sign in to iCloud.

Does it cost money?

All iOS, tvOS, and Mac devices come with up to 5GB of free storage.  After that, the price depends on how much storage you'd like to have.  For more and current information about pricing, click here.

How do I sign in on a device?

After you sign up for an account, the first thing to do is to sign in that account. If you wish to share items such as photos, music, and more on each device, those device(s) must be signed into the same account (there is a way to share other information with other iCloud accounts, but it is beyond the scope of this article.  Yes, I will cover that in the future).

How to sign-in to iCloud:

  1. Go to SETTINGS > Tap on YOUR NAME > tap SIGN IN & SECURITY and sign in with the username and password you used to sign-up with.
  2. After that, you're now on iCloud.

This is where you can view all of the information that's currently in your iCloud account.  Take the time and get to know what's here (and NOT here) so you can refer to it quickly when necessary.

Now that you've started using iCloud, go to https://www.apple.com/support and type in iCould Information to learn even more about this valuable service.

Apple’s marketing of Apple TV+ is putrid

Apple’s streaming service has a ton of compelling original series that relatively few people seem to know about. Why is the company, famous for creating some of the best marketing the world has ever seen (at least when Steve Jobs was alive), so bad at marketing Apple TV+?

Ever since its launch in 2019, Apple TV+ has been carving out an identity as the new home for prestige shows from some of Hollywood’s biggest names — the kind of shows that sound natural coming out of Jimmy Kimmel’s mouth in monologue jokes at the Emmys. While the company never provides spending details, Apple is estimated to have spent at least $20 billion recruiting the likes of Reese Witherspoon, M. Night Shayamalan, and Harrison Ford to help cultivate its award-worthy sheen. For all the effort Apple has expended, and for all the cultural excitement around Ted Lasso during its three-season run, the streaming service has won nearly 500 Emmys… while attracting just 0.2% of total TV viewing in the U.S.

“It seems like Apple TV wants to be seen as a platform that’s numbers-agnostic,” says Ashley Ray, comedian, TV writer, and host of the erstwhile podcast TV I Say. “They wanna be known for being about the creativity and the love of making TV shows, even if nobody’s watching them.”

How is it possible for a streaming service to have as much high-pedigree programming as Apple TV+ does and so relatively few viewers, despite an estimated 25 million paid subscribers? How can shows starring Natalie Portman, Idris Elba, and Colin Farrell launch and even get renewed without ever quite grazing the zeitgeist? How does a show set in the same Monsterverse as Godzilla vs. Kong, and starring Kurt Russell and his roguishly charming son, not become a monster-size hit?

For many perplexed observers, the blame falls squarely on Apple’s marketing efforts, or seeming lack thereof.

Via: Fast Company

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