jcoh
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ESR HaloLock review: everything a MagSafe car charger should be
Bought this charger. It only charges at 7.5 watts. Saw an add for a similar product on teckape.com. Similar price so I took a chance. It is great. Connected to a usb c car charger with at least 20 watt output it charges at full power. The way you can tell is if you get the MagSafe animation when you connect the phone it’s charging at full MagSafe power. The tech ape one is great. Many different mounting options.Teckape.com.Using the esr charger and the Cplaytoair wireless CarPlay adapter the phone would not charge. More power being drawn then supplying. A one hour car ride with the wireless car play and I actually lost 2 percent charge. The teckape charger actually charges the phone. -
Mac mini, 14-inch & 16-inch MacBook Pro rumored to get M2 Pro in the next year
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Apple guts internal communication tool, crippling union organization
The retail employees are a bunch of idiots to use an internal company owned platform to go against the company. (Insert any company name). Have Apple employees not heard of WhatsApp, telegram, discord, etc. I don’t blame Apple at all. They aren’t saying you can’t be negative but they sure as hell aren’t going to provide the outlet to do it. This is not censorship in any form. This is called management rights. Yes , I think that companies should do their best to make their employees happy but no you don’t let the tail wag the dog. If you don’t like your working conditions (as long as they are not dangerous or illegal) you have free will to leave and find a place you “believe” will be better. But posting on a company owned and monitored platform is just plain stupid. -
Stage Manager for iPadOS 16 limited to M1 over memory, storage speed requirements
dewme said:I can relate to both sides of this issue. There’s always been an undercurrent of belief that the iPad Pros are being “held back” by limitations in iPadOS. Apple itself has often touted how some of the iPad Pros hardware specs eclipse those of traditional laptop and even desktop PCs. So yeah, when Apple rolls out a cool new feature that many folks believe releases the iPad Pro from its supposed shackles and these new features are not terribly unlike the sort of things that are common on all of those supposedly eclipsed competitors, why wouldn’t it raise a lot of questions for owners of slightly older iPad Pros?
On the other hand Apple wants to make sure that whatever it releases meets their quality standards, which include performance and user experience. Apple owns both the software and hardware pieces of the puzzle, so anything that comes across as substandard will reflect directly on Apple. Contrast this with Microsoft, who in the past, placed very few restrictions on which systems could install Windows 10. Some of the resulting installations would yield absolutely abysmal performance and be practically useless, but that was the hardware vendor’s problem, not Microsoft’s. Apple can’t point the finger at itself - even when it’s their own fault.
I posed the question earlier whether those who feel left behind by Apple’s restrictions on Stage Manager would have been happier if Apple delayed the release of the feature a year or two so “left behind” iPad Pro owners would feel better. I personally think that doing so would be a mistake. I’d rather see Apple pushing the envelope at the cost of slight fragmentation rather than designing around a lowest common denominator. That’s just my take..
As far as the shrinkydink feature shown in the linked article, all I can say is that there’s a big difference between a prototype and a release ready feature. It’s also not uncommon for proponents of individual features to struggle to get their feature into a product release. Determining what the “release defining features” of a product will be has always been a friction point between engineering and marketing. I’ve seen supposedly release defining features dropped at the last minute, only to reappear 3 or 4 releases later or even never. Head spinning. Who’s wrong and who’s right depends on which side of the fence you’re on. Unfortunately, it’s not easy to project at the point of inception what the cost (to the customer) of holding back one feature so another one can get released will be. Maybe if Apple had a fully trustworthy set of Alpha/Beta customers who would respect NDAs and not leak like a sieve they could field test some of these things more intensely and make smarter choices. Highly unlikely.At that point if you want stage manager you buy the iPad that supports it that you can afford. If you just want the budget ipad than I suspect that stage manager is not an important feature to you anyways. They had to pull the trigger on it eventually and yes that means that some current “pro” iPads miss out. That’s par for the course with tech. And I agree. You don’t half ass it on the older ones if the experience is going to suffer. That’s bad for your brand as a whole. Actually a smart long term play by Apple, although I suspect many won’t agree. -
Apple AirTag anti-stalking features aren't working in a lot of cases
geordiekorper said:This clickbait title was the last straw. I am taking the site out of my RSS feed. -
Benchmark showdown: Samsung Galaxy S10+ versus iPhone XS Max
Not to say that the S10 didn’t make huge improvements but my XS Max geek bench scores are. 4821 and 11441. These are consistent scores on my iPhone. You should be getting better multicore scores.
Regardless. Looks like Qualcomm finally figured out how to compete with apple chips. At least until sept.
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iPhone 14 Pro Max already backordered, amidst Apple Store issues
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Level Lock+ review: Must-have HomeKit smart lock with Apple Home Key support