whether one vertex can be reached from another in a graph
POPULARITY
How to Ride Through This Bitcoin Bull Cycle with Vijay Boyapati SLP559My friend Vijay Boyapati (Author of the Bullish Case for Bitcoin, and part of the Swan team) rejoins me on the show to talk about HODLing, share his analysis on things, and offer some tips on how to HODL. We talk: What phase of the cycle we're in HODLer psychology Does Bitcoin get captured? Is Bitcoin for Everyone? Self custody tech GBTC and Bankruptcies Common traps and how to avoid them Links: X: @real_vijay Genesis thread https://twitter.com/real_vijay/status/1744454450138526162 Sponsors: Swan.com (code LIVERA) CoinKite.com (code LIVERA) Mempool.space Nomadcapitalist.com Stephan Livera links: Follow me on X: @stephanlivera Subscribe to the podcast Subscribe to Substack Chapters: 00:00 - Introduction and Overview 03:01 - The Excitement of Bull Markets 05:54 - The Slow Build-Up and Parabolic Moves 08:46 - Hodling Through Adversity 13:07 - The Nature of Bitcoin Cycles 16:02 - The Reachability of Bitcoin Participants 19:45 - Coinkite.com 21:00 - NomadCapitalist.com 22:08 - The Challenges of Self-Custody 30:00 - The Feasibility of Self-Custody for All 34:14 - Bitcoin as a Superior Monetary Base 35:10 - Concerns about Concentration Risk 38:07 - Mempool.space 39:16 - Swan.com 40:12 - Government Influence on Bitcoin ETFs 43:32 - Multipolar World and Bitcoin Adoption 44:01 - US Favorability towards Bitcoin 46:51 - Genesis Bankruptcy and Grayscale's Future 50:11 - Common Traps in a Bull Cycle 59:54 - Dealing with Corrections in a Bull Cycle
It is estimated that the eCommerce market in Europe is expected to reach a revenue of
בפינה זו, נגיש לכם מידע על העבודה היומיומית בסביבת ענן מנקודת המבט שלנו.דוברי הפרק: אריאל מונפו ודביר מזרחי. בפרק הקודם, הצגנו דמו בלייב על: * איך מתחילים לבנות DIY למוניטורינג לארגון שלכם. * איך להסתכל על תהליך הניטור הראשוני במלואו, שמורכב מהסתכלות על פעילות בודדת. * איזה ניטור יש על אותה פעילות (במקרה שלנו בדמו, שרת EC2). * בחירת המדדים שמעניינים אותנו מהמטריקות ניטור הקיימות (במקרה שלנו בדמו, אחוז שימוש המעבד). * בניית קוד פשוט שמוציא את המידע הזה עבור אותה הפעילות. בפרק זה, נדבר על VPC Reachability Analyzer. נסביר מהו VPC, נציג דמו על השירות עצמו ונבין למה הוא מיועד ואילו בעיות הוא פותר. בנוסף, נפרט על אפשרויות האוטומציה שניתן לבצע כדי לשדרג את הניטור וה- Compliance של התשתיות ענן שלנו. רוצים להתעדכן בתכנים נוספים בנושאי ענן וטכנולוגיות מתקדמות? הירשמו עכשיו לניוזלטר שלנו ותמיד תישארו בעניינים. להרשמה: https://www.israelclouds.com/newslettersignup
Listen to a recap of the top stories of the day from 9to5Mac. 9to5Mac Daily is available on iTunes and Apple's Podcasts app, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players. Sponsored by ALOGIC: Order the new ALOGIC Clarity Monitor will get the Iris 1080p webcam for free. New episodes of 9to5Mac Daily are recorded every weekday. Subscribe to our podcast in iTunes/Apple Podcast or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they're available. Stories discussed in this episode: iPhone 14 Pro: How to use Reachability with Dynamic Island iPhone 15 rumor: Dynamic Island coming to all models iPhone 14 Pro camera shaking and rattling in TikTok, Snapchat, and other apps Enjoy the podcast? Shop Apple at Amazon to support 9to5Mac Daily! Follow Chance: Twitter: @ChanceHMiller Listen & Subscribe: Apple Podcasts Overcast RSS Spotify TuneIn Google Play Don't miss out on our other daily podcasts: Quick Charge 9to5Toys Daily Share your thoughts! Drop us a line at happyhour@9to5mac.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show!
A discussion of how the changes and advancements in static application security testing (SAST) and intelligent software composition analysis (SCA) have helped development and DevSecOps teams work better together to fix security issues faster. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw206
A discussion of how the changes and advancements in static application security testing (SAST) and intelligent software composition analysis (SCA) have helped development and DevSecOps teams work better together to fix security issues faster. Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw206
Celebrating National Disability Employment Awareness Month - "America's Recovery: Powered by Inclusion" In today's episode, Teresa talks with Tova Sherman, author, speaker, and CEO of Reachability, about the 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Know. October marks the start of National Disability Employment Awareness Month. In honor of this year's theme “America's Recovery: Powered by Inclusion” we're dedicating a two-part series to stress the importance of ensuring that people with disabilities have full access to employment as our nation begins to recover from the devastating impacts of COVID-19 on our country's workforce. Teresa and Tova dispel some of the more common myths about inclusion in the workplace for those with disabilities. Tova explains 2 of her 18 Inclusion-isms; 'Education Osmosis' and 'Everyone had/has a disability.' To learn more about Tova or to purchase her book, click here. To find out more about National Disability Employment Awareness Month, click here. Episode Timeline 00:06Introduction and Disclaimer 02:12Dispelling Common Myths 19:30Break and Public Service Announcement 19:59Inclusion-isms 33:10Teresa's Closing Remarks Removing architectural barriers is a lovely step – but it is the attitudinal barriers, from the top down, that we really need to focus on Tova Sherman
Celebrating National Disability Employment Awareness Month - "America's Recovery: Powered by Inclusion" In today's episode, Teresa talks with Tova Sherman, author, speaker, and CEO of Reachability, about the 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Know. October marks the start of National Disability Employment Awareness Month. In honor of this year's theme “America's Recovery: Powered by Inclusion” we're dedicating a two-part series to stress the importance of ensuring that people with disabilities have full access to employment as our nation begins to recover from the devastating impacts of COVID-19 on our country's workforce. Teresa and Tova dispel some of the more common myths about inclusion in the workplace for those with disabilities. Tova explains 2 of her 18 Inclusion-isms; 'Education Osmosis' and 'Everyone had/has a disability.' To learn more about Tova or to purchase her book, click here. To find out more about National Disability Employment Awareness Month, click here. Episode Timeline 00:06Introduction and Disclaimer 02:12Dispelling Common Myths 19:30Break and Public Service Announcement 19:59Inclusion-isms 33:10Teresa's Closing Remarks Removing architectural barriers is a lovely step – but it is the attitudinal barriers, from the top down, that we really need to focus on Tova Sherman
Let's Coach with Carolyn - Career Strategist, Leadership and Life Coach
Episode 198:Becoming A Disability Confident Employer with Tova Sherman With the recent events that have occurred, employers are taking steps to embrace diversity and inclusion. However, there is a group that is often left out and forgotten. In this episode, Tova Sherman joins us to break the silence surrounding disabilities in the workplace. Tova Sherman is a seasoned leader with over 25 years of expertise in the diversity and inclusion arena. As the CEO of reachAbility and an award-winning agency devoted to destigmatizing disabilities of all kinds, she is committed to empowering anyone without a voice. In her book, "Win, Win, Win! The 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Become a Disability Confident Employer", Tova offers a fresh perspective on workplace inclusion, not only exploring the definition of disability but also acknowledging the fact disabilities are not as uncommon as some of us may think. Her personal challenges associated with living on the ADHD spectrum inform her empathy and commitment to equalizing the playing field for those with disabilities. Tune in and learn how you can become a disability confident employer and leader. Connect with Tova: https://www.reachability.org/tova Connect with Carolyn: https://carolyn360.com
This week Steve, Rob, and Ryan welcome Tova Sherman, co-founder and CEO of reachAbility, an organization in Nova Scotia that provides a variety of employments services and programs to people with disabilities. We discuss everything from reachAbility's origins and mandate to the uniquely holistic organizational philosophy of “no one goes nowhere”, and so much more. It's a jam-packed episode that you won't want to miss! Show Transcript: https://atbanter.files.wordpress.com/2021/07/at-banter-podcast-episode-248-tova-sherman.pdf Show Notes reachAbility https://www.reachability.org/ Win, Win, Win!: The 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Become a Disability Confident Employer https://www.amazon.ca/Win-Inclusion-isms-Disability-Confident-Employer/dp/0981323146 Bluenose Ability Arts & Film Festival https://www.baaff.ca/ AT Banter is brought to you by Canadian Assistive Technology, providing sales and training in Assistive Technology and Accessibility with over 30 years of knowledge and experience. Visit them online at www.canasstech.com or call toll-free 1-844-795-8324. Need repairs on your device? Chaos Technical Services offers service and support on almost any piece of Assistive Technology, while also providing parts and batteries. Visit them online at www.chaostechnicalservices.com or call 778-847-6840.
Why do many workplaces exclude people with disabilities? To engage and get the maximum out of your community, you have to be inclusive. Melanie Parish's guest is Tova Sherman, the award-winning CEO of reachAbility. ReachAbility is an organization that provides supportive and accessible programs dedicated to workplace inclusion for anyone facing barriers. In this episode, Melanie and Tova discuss Tova's new book, Win, Win, Win! The 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Become a Disability Confident Employer. Join in the conversation and learn how people don't come with instructions, why it's not a lack of capacity that keeps persons with disability out of the workplace, and why leadership from the top-down has to acknowledge that bias exists against persons with disability so they can address it. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here's How »Join The Experimental Leader community today:melanieparish.comYouTube
Tova Sherman is the Canadian born, award-winning CEO of reachAbility, an organization that works directly with companies to build their capacity for inclusion through education, training, and consultation. She's also a TED speaker, and author of the brand new book, Win, Win, Win! The 18 Inclusion-isms You Need to Become a Disability Confident Employer. On this episode of the Strategy & Leadership Podcast, Tova joins us to discuss what people are missing about diversity & inclusion, tips to become more inclusive, the importance of values, biases in the hiring process, and much more. Here's a breakdown of our conversation: - What people are missing with diversity and inclusion - Tips for being more inclusive - Why you have to start with values - & more! // Learn more about strategic planning & implementation: ► Subscribe so you never miss a video: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOHLNRrpk3rGUdg7qUQjiog/?sub_confirmation=1 ► Get free workbook to guide you along the process: https://www.smestrategy.net/strategic-planning-process-template-workbook ► Learn how to successfully lead your next strategic planning process: https://www.smestrategy.net/strategic-planning-steps-course // More strategic planning resources: ► Join our free community: https://strategy-and-leadership.mn.co/ ► Are you looking for someone to facilitate your strategic planning process? https://www.smestrategy.net/strategic-planning-facilitator-consultant ► Want software to track your strategic plan. Get a 90-day free trial of Cascade Strategy: http://www.smestrategy.net/cascade // Connect with us: Blog ► https://www.smestrategy.net/blog Strategy & Leadership Podcast ►https://www.smestrategy.net/podcast Alignment Book ► https://www.smestrategy.net/alignment-book Contact us ►https://www.smestrategy.net/contact Subscribe on YouTube ► https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOHLNRrpk3rGUdg7qUQjiog/?sub_confirmation=1 // ABOUT SME STRATEGY CONSULTING: SME Strategy is a management consulting firm that specializes in helping organizations develop and implement their strategic plans. We work with teams to facilitate conversations about strategic direction and business strategy so that our clients can focus their energy on what will move them forward faster. Based out of Vancouver, BC, we've worked with organizations all over North American and beyond in various industries including nonprofits, universities & government organizations. For more information on working with a facilitator for your next strategy session: https://www.smestrategy.net/strategic-planning-facilitator-consultant
In this Episode of Sources and Sinks, Vickie Li hosts Alok Shukla (VP of Products) at ShiftLeft. Alok talks about ShiftLeft's new code analysis platform called ShiftLeft CORE. Alok also talks about "Attacker Reachability" - an innovation from ShiftLeft that drives software composition analysis component of ShiftLeft platform.
The movement for more inclusion and diversity in the workplace is here to stay, and it is imperative that your organization learn to adapt. Advocating for this is Tova Sherman, the author of Win, Win, Win! and the CEO of reachAbility, an organization that provides supportive and accessible programs dedicated to workplace inclusion for everyone facing barriers. In this episode, she joins Alicia Dunams to talk about how you can be inclusive and disability confident. She also discusses the myths surrounding the hesitance of inclusivity and diversity in the workplace and shares the nine leadership lessons that will prove how you treat people and establish lasting change. Plus, Tova also gives some relationship-building habits that will help you become more relatable to team members.Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here’s How »Join The Authoring Life Community today:aliciadunams.comAlicia Dunams FacebookAlicia Dunams TwitterAuthoring Life PinterestAlicia Dunams YouTubeAlicia Dunams InstagramAlicia Dunams LinkedIn
This week 9to5Google's Abner Li, Ben Schoon, and Kyle Bradshaw discuss the changes seen in the developer preview of Android 12. Changes to notifications, what new settings there are, new gestures that are in, and those that are coming. Alphabet Scoop is available on Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Castro, Pocket Casts, Overcast, and through our dedicated RSS feed. New episodes of Alphabet Scoop are recorded every Thursday afternoon at 4-5 PM ET and published on Friday mornings. Subscribe to our podcast in Google Play or your favorite podcast player to guarantee new episodes are delivered as soon as they're available. Hosts Abner Li Ben Schoon Kyle Bradshaw Links Google launches Android 12 Developer Preview for Pixel phones Notifications redesigned w/ bigger icons, dedicated snooze button Notifications to gain ‘Automatic' option for whether or not to alert Privacy toggles can block camera and microphone with a tap Markup tool now lets you add emoji and text to screenshots You can now edit any image with the Markup tool meant for screenshots ‘Reduce Bright Colors' button tones down screen brightness Navigation gestures work instantly in fullscreen apps Dark theme on Pixel is no longer AMOLED black Wallpaper-based theming tool showcased ahead of release [Gallery] Settings app gets revamp with new search bar Here's a look at One-handed mode in action [Video] Lockscreen readies redesign with larger clock Scrolling screenshots are here, but disabled for now Lockscreen and notification shade media player gets UI redesign Pixel 5 readies ‘Double tap' gesture, doesn't work yet Android TV 12 preview is now available, months ahead of previous releases Feedback? Drop us a line at gtips@9to5g.com. You can also rate us in Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, or recommend us in Pocket Casts to help more people discover the show. Transcription Abner Li: And welcome to alphabet scoop episode one theme. This week, we are discussing everything. The thing about Android 12, which launched last as they unexpected which is a day or eight compared to the past five years or so. But we had a week to live with Android 12 and. We've we we've dived a lot into it. Android 12 Developer Preview launches [00:00:31] So just to get, to get out of the way, this is starting with a developer preview, there will be three of them followed by full betas and then the before final release, but Android 12 live now, as it is every year is just for developers. And this year Google with. And like 12, what for developers? They want to give them new tools for building great experiences for users. [00:01:03] That's the official quote. And we're definitely seeing that in notifications, for example, that may have been completely redesigned with bigger icons, the, a bit more friendly. Google has the, we arranged everything again. And. I think for the most part it's well, in the case of the media player, I like how they went back to enlarging the cover art after shrinking at this with Android, you Evan. [00:01:35] So there's some nice peaks, all lounge. We won't get to appreciate any of the changes until active app has stopped updating the apps, but so far so good. [00:01:47] Kyle Bradshaw: I don't know though. It seems interesting with the, that this that they're talking about tools to give to developers for, for great experiences. [00:01:54] And it just doesn't feel like that's the, that's not what I would describe as what we've seen with Android 12 so far, that seems to be the promise of Android 12, but it doesn't feel like what we've seen so far. None of the, the headline changes to Android 12 feel. Like their developer empowering or, or experience driving, [00:02:17] Abner Li: you know, I can see that, but I, I think in some ways what they mean about when they get in the case of notifications, it's I think putting the app, I caught, like there, it's kind of a big deal. [00:02:33] And in terms of that, the conveying that you're doing with an individual. Either, the notifications always felt a part of the system, but there's a level of theming here that that's, I don't know, empowers the developer to make it more of their own experience. [00:02:53] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. I can see that, especially with, by comparison to Android 11, which kind of lumped social apps together into that conversation's view. [00:03:02] I feel blank Android 12. With the way that it, you know, as you're saying, put the, the app icon on the side, it brings back that level of the division between apps. Like sometimes I'd, I'd get confused. What apps different notifications are, even from when I'm looking at the conversations view on Android 11, [00:03:25] Abner Li: but at the same time, It's I hope, well, it being able to put your own spin on something within limits is better than a wild West approach that pot, but it'd be fine the early days of the platform, but I hope it keeps it. Notification redesign [00:03:44] I hope this free, this free expression that Google's allowing apps and Android 12 notifications is still within limits. Yeah. So notifications, how, how either of you like this year is innovation on a lock on media notifications? [00:04:05] Ben Schoon: It looks visually a little bit nicer. It's minor, but it's nice. [00:04:10] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. [00:04:12] Iteration is all it needed. It, it, it was already kind of a revolution as it were last time. This was, it was nice to just have a new iteration this year. [00:04:21] Abner Li: Hmm. I don't know. They always change it from . That's like They always change it. Yeah. [00:04:29] Ben Schoon: It's not an Android release without a tweak to media and a tweak to notification. Camera and mic privacy toggles [00:04:36] Abner Li: That's fair. That's, that's pretty true. So, yeah. That's notifications and I think another big tentpole that we're starting to see is privacy with privacy toggles to block the kava and microphone. In practice. I, okay. So there's the urban myth, I guess, of people thinking that Facebook is listening to them, but Instagram is listening to them to serve. [00:05:06] And to be [00:05:07] Ben Schoon: fair, seems like it's happening even though it's not. [00:05:12] Abner Li: It's perfect. It's those moments. There has to be some. Psychological explanation to why those moments feel so, so visible, but yeah, and, and I doubt that Google is going to be that explicit that he's privacy toggles. Meant to mitigate that, but I like the idea of these toggles, especially with the microphone also that also than the Metabo. [00:05:40] Ben Schoon: Yeah. It just, it feels like a kill switch, which, you know, we've seen on a lot of laptops have like a physical switch to cut off the camera either with a privacy cover or with a it just cuts off the software. I mean, like one of the things I liked about it was there's been a lot of times where I've been tied into like a video conference from my phone and it's a time I really don't want to be seen this. [00:06:02] I'm always worried. Like I'm always checking, make sure I'm muted, make sure I'm that the camera's off, but it'd be nice to just hit a toggle and make sure that that definitely can't happen. So. I think it's, it's nice. It's a good, [00:06:15] Abner Li: yeah. So yeah, privacy. I'm sure we'll see more of that. Going forward and that's, I think there, there are quite a handful of user facing changes that are all of the UI and develop a pre-vis one. Emojis and text on screenshots [00:06:29]Mockup got a nice with a boost. You can now add emoji and tax a screenshots while it's also available. Not just a screenshot. So I think this is, it would be more comprehensive editor. What does Samsung do? Could they keep the mock up tool or do they have their own custom thing that they have their [00:06:48] Ben Schoon: own? [00:06:50] Yeah. They have their own, which is optimized for the S pen and stuff. Frankly, it's a lot better, but it's, it's one of those things where it's, it's a negative, like negligible difference. It doesn't really matter. They both, they both get the job done. I think I just like, Samsung's a little bit more. New 'Reduce Bring Colors" feature [00:07:10] Abner Li: Hmm. Gotcha. What does reduce blight colors do in terms of how's it actuary? Is it make a big impact? [00:07:18] Ben Schoon: Feels like it does nothing. Like I was messing around with it. Basically the idea is to cut down on the screen. Brightness really quickly is basically the best way I can describe it. It's an accessibility shortcut, which means that you can have it triggered by either pressing the two volume buttons or swiping up from the bottom with two fingers. [00:07:38]So really it'd just be, it'd be a good way to cut down on a bright image if you're sensitive to bright images without without having to constantly have your screen brightness low. So like, let's say, you know, you're on your phone in dark mode, you use dark apps. So it doesn't bother you, but you might open up a video or an article and it's bright white. [00:08:00] This just would let you quickly tap a button. And the brightness goes down by a preset percentage. That's the utility I see in it so far, but I'm sure there's more to it than that. Yeah, it's, it's an accessibility feature. It's not going to be for everybody, but it will be useful for those who do, who do need it. [00:08:18] Abner Li: Gotcha. So navigation gestures working instantly in full screen apps. I've tried test this on YouTube, but since YouTube has that polls, that you can hide the full screen player by swiping down. It's not as noticeable, so it's just useful. Fullscreen navigation gestures [00:08:36] Ben Schoon: So it seems like this one is basically opt-in. It's not. From what I gather, this is like, if developers implemented navigation gestures the right way, what this does is if something is in full screen, you swipe once and the gesture kicks in. [00:08:55] If they did not, or if they changed it, however they needed to change it then it will. It'll act like it normally does. You have to swipe once to reenable gestures and then again, to perform that gesture, but in Google photos, which is the best example if you're viewing a photo in complete, full screen, you swipe once to go back and it does it, you swipe wants to go home and it does it I'm kind of glad. [00:09:19] It seems like it's opt-in because this could suck in video games. [00:09:25] Kyle Bradshaw: Hmm. Yeah. There's, there's a lot of scenarios where it would be very bad. Like you'd have to even photos. It's very tricky to way the implemented, because you may be just trying to swipe from one photo to another, and then you just back out and you're in the gallery view again. [00:09:39] Yeah. [00:09:40] Abner Li: Not the biggest deal in the world, of [00:09:42] Kyle Bradshaw: course, but it still could be frustrating. [00:09:46] Ben Schoon: It'll be good. In some, some places it'll be really bad in others, which is. Like I said, it's good that this is, it looks like it's optic. Yeah. New dark theme on Pixels [00:09:57] Abner Li: So, so yeah, those like what I would call the user facing changes that add a lot of nice. Well, usability, fat for end-users, but some of the biggest stuff is not quite here yet, but we're starting to get peaks of the, what Android 12, the final design will be. And I would say that we start to see that in the pixels, doc theme is no longer an AML that black it's. [00:10:31] It's almost a kind of bluish gray bluish [00:10:36] Ben Schoon: it's that GRI that they use in most of their apps, [00:10:40] Abner Li: it really comes off as booth to me. I'm not sure why I think that, but yeah, [00:10:45] Ben Schoon: it doesn't to me, but I like it. I don't like Emma lit black. [00:10:50] Abner Li: No, I feel ammo at black. It makes sense to me. Why is the system of color and. [00:10:57] Aye. That's in regular doc theme apps. I prefer the light gray that Google ops were everywhere, but like in the one place, I think ammo and drag is acceptable. Is the system any part of the system touches? [00:11:14] Ben Schoon: I can agree with that. I didn't like, I didn't mind it in the system settings, but if I have the choice, I'm going to pick the light gray. [00:11:22] Abner Li: Hmm. Yeah. That opens us up to a big redesign, which again, since e-vapor previews adjust developers getting the app. So I'm giving feedback to Google though. The whole big consumer changes that you would expect sometime in may. They're not here yet, but we have been. Able to get some books at it. [00:11:50] And first there's the regular settings app, which has been tweaked with this new search oval search bar and separated avatar icon top left corner. But the, the big change here is something with Kyle you're able to activate. Wallpaper-based theming [00:12:08]Kyle Bradshaw: So yeah, well, we were able or what's, what's been able to happen. The community found a way to to create a theme that is applied across the system. [00:12:19]Something that we had detailed ahead of time, ahead of the release, but wasn't by default in the Android 12 release, but they. And you're able to just add a, a color, basically just a, a single color, like an orange or orange purple and green are some of the examples that were shown off by a community member. [00:12:38] K dragon. [00:12:39]Abner Li: But what [00:12:40] Kyle Bradshaw: it does, is it Bri colors? Quite literally everything, like, as you were saying, the, you know, how the MLS black looks kind of blue that's that's that seems to be because the default color of Android 12, or at least of the pixel variant of Android 12 is. This blue color. So when you put on an orange or you put on a purple theme, suddenly that is now a, a dark purple instead of a dark blue, a dark orange. [00:13:09] So it's a, it's an interesting shift that I'm intrigued to see how Google. Or what colors Google themselves decides to choose. We all we've seen are guesses that people have created. We don't know what color Google's going to use necessarily. [00:13:29] Abner Li: And again, there's no UI for it, so to speak, but. What do we think that, okay, so light now, if you long press on the on the pixel Anja, you got the styles and wallpaper section, do we think that's what Google is going to the customization of these themes? Again? [00:13:49] Kyle Bradshaw: I'm not so sure to be honest, just if only because that particular UI, as part of the pixel launcher, as it were, where this seems to be something more broader for, for Android 12, rather than something, just for the pixel line. [00:14:03] So it might just live somewhere in the settings app. Settings app revamp [00:14:08] Abner Li: Hmm. Okay. And that's, that's the, the wallpaper based theming that again, like you said, we spot that the head of the race, but there's something way more substantial in the settings app. A peek at the new design language. Isn't that? [00:14:28] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. So the, with some enabling, we were able to. [00:14:36] Turn on something called a silky home is basically what's what has been kind of referred to it. It seems to be this, this complete material redesign of the settings app, bringing it to like the, the search bar at the top has been redesigned and, and The all of the items are thicker and more spaced out. [00:15:01] And they, they kinda edit this one UI like touch where you have a heading that is taking up the top. Third of the screens that you have, the rest of the screen is reachable by your thumb. It's a. It's an interesting, it's an interesting shift and seems to be like we might be moving forward from the material theme redesigns of a couple of years ago. [00:15:30] Abner Li: Hmm. That's so the theorial theming was born out of the appeal design, which was Google's foundation of their modern design language out of material design, not allowing enough customization. And the idea that Mateo theming is that the theme allowed people to. About third party developers to put more of their style and such into the apps are doing so it's I think what the, this so usability, if, from what we can see with the Samsung one UI style pop thirds, Heather It's usability. [00:16:16]Reachability which ties directly to a one-handed mode. But I I'm curious what else defines T-Mobile next as it's being called by some people, I mean, document in early documentation. [00:16:32] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. It's, it's, it's hard to say. I mean, I would think that the theming and the the. The the reachability is, are the, are the two, the two core aspects that they've talked about so far, but to tie it back to what we were saying earlier, these seem like major points in Android 12, and they aren't included for for developers to, or they weren't publicly mentioned for developers to start thinking about it ahead of time. [00:17:02] It's weird to me. One-handed mode [00:17:03] Abner Li: Hmm. Maybe you could see that thing. The. The next two, develop previews rather than waiting for the beta. So that could be something that like, cause we mentioned one hand at mode a bit earlier, but we've been able to use it. Have how you liking it, honestly it, [00:17:21]Kyle Bradshaw: It's it's it's it's not really for me. [00:17:23] I haven't, I don't. It's mostly because I got the pixel five because it can reach everything with my thumb. It's not really for me, but there, I know that there are people who will make good use of this and it's for those people that this was designed. But I think also that it might just be like a, a stop gap as it were for those apps that don't implement the reach of the implement their own version of reachability. [00:17:53] Abner Li: Hmm. Interesting. Yeah. One habit. Yeah. It's, it's something else. It's something that Apple did the visionary reachability but this one handed mode seems, I know it seems to wait for Google to add this feature, to make this a stock feature of Android. It just seems like in terms of catching up trends, if anything, I would think people have gotten used to these super watch phones. [00:18:23] And that there's no longer a demand for it. So to speak. [00:18:29] Kyle Bradshaw: I mean, I will say I like the implementation that they did rather than some of the ones that I've used in the past, like the LG V 20, which was definitely a massive phone for its time. They would bring, it would just shrink the whole screen down into into a movable pop-up window, which [00:18:48] Ben Schoon: is still super common. [00:18:51] I don't like it. I have, I think most Android manufacturers still do. I think Samsung still does that. Ooh, I like it. Yeah, no, I agree. [00:18:59] Kyle Bradshaw: I hate that. I, I would much rather take Google's version, which is basically stealing Apple's version to I'll take that any day. That's just shrink, just shrink it down vertically. [00:19:13] Bring it closer to my thumb. [00:19:14] Ben Schoon: I agree. But I've also never used it on an iPhone cause I hated it the way, like I never found the utility in it. [00:19:24] Abner Li: Do you have a pro max? [00:19:27] Ben Schoon: No, I'm just saying I've never, okay. I've never found it more convenient to perform the gesture, to do a reachability thing than to just move the phone in my hand. [00:19:36] Like, I've just, I've never found that more useful. I'm sure some people do. I just, I've never found it more useful and yes, I had an iPhone six plus at the time. [00:19:46]Abner Li: That, that, that definitely needed it. Yeah. It's I agree with that. There's it's a more elegant solution rather than like blocking it. And then not being able to access that, putting shrinking your screen and putting massive black borders everywhere. [00:20:04] That's just seems like you're not that, that bags like you should've just gotten a small phone rather than adapt that time to adapt this big phone too. To smile and make it work with a smart display virtual display. [00:20:21] Ben Schoon: I mean, I know a lot of people don't like it, but I really do like how a Samsung handled in one UI and which, you know, Google's kind of adopting where it's just, you know, in certain menus, the, you can scroll down. [00:20:36] From the bottom and then everything comes down and the title just gets bigger. It's kind of a waste of space, but it's also really useful. Lockscreen prepares for redesign [00:20:45] Abner Li: Yeah. And again, that's useful. Usefulness theme is without a doubt, echoing 12 Amarillo 12. This is well besides one handed mode in terms of block, screen lock screen with XY at recent pixel devices. [00:21:02] And. Basically AOD customization, or have we have, I don't think we've have seen what this rearranged a lock screen looks like on the AOD. Right? We have seen it on, on the AOD. Yeah. So it translates over. Nice. [00:21:19] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. It's it's really It's gorgeous. Actually, I really like it. I just hope that we get to see some more of those clocks that we missed from. [00:21:28]What was that Android 10 that into [00:21:31] Ben Schoon: this 10 or nine? It feels like forever ago. [00:21:34] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. Well, one of the past Android betas had the, all these clocks and I, I still like the one where it's like, It spells out in words it's 10, 15. [00:21:45] Ben Schoon: Oh, that was the best one. I loved that. [00:21:48] Abner Li: Yeah. That's basically a desktop call. [00:21:52] Quite nice that [00:21:55] Ben Schoon: I don't [00:21:55] Kyle Bradshaw: remember. I think I [00:21:57] Abner Li: just wanted to text on. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So Samsung has always allowed a great, the level of customization of the AOD. [00:22:07] Ben Schoon: You can put a GIF on your LD. [00:22:10] Abner Li: Yes, you can. I believe you can put a full calendar like before the one day calendar. Yeah. The balance between like the full feature set and being able to customize it and simpleness, which I think I'm AOL and always on the space should be first and foremost, that's going to be an interesting balance, but it reminds me of. [00:22:36]Nexus seven days when you had a walk screen widgets, even though [00:22:41] Ben Schoon: I do [00:22:43] Abner Li: love them. Yeah. That, that, and the concept of widgets have went away, but you kind of be nice to those clocks to just widgets. And the VAP was could pill, small pioneers topics, experiences. [00:23:00] Kyle Bradshaw: That was part of the joy of Android. And way back then that was, those were like one of the selling features, at least in my, in my book. [00:23:07] I, I love Scrolling screenshots are coming [00:23:08] Abner Li: that. Yeah. That was delightful. So, yeah. Let's see what other use of things all day? Squalling screenshots, which, okay. I know everybody wants that, but sell, sell it to me. Why do I want this feature? Because you don't, you end up like cutting it in half anyways to like. [00:23:33] Ben Schoon: The, where I've always found it useful is in, you know, sometimes you just want to send one screenshot, but it's like, it just cuts off a little bit of information. [00:23:41]Like I don't think it's useful to just take this infinitely long screenshot cause you can't share it like usefully, especially if you're trying to share it with someone like who's looking to view it on their computer, it's impossible to read, but it's nice to just be able to, if you need to get a little more information, you have that ability. [00:24:01] I think it's definitely been, over-hyped but it is useful. I use it all the time on my full two and my S 21. I use it all the time on Samsung phones. And on that note, Samsung does this way better than Google. It's probably just because it's early, but in its current state scrolling screenshots natively work. [00:24:24] So they're not nearly as good there. The animations are super choppy and like in Twitter, for example, if you do a scrolling screenshot, you have floating action button, just like five times. [00:24:34] [00:24:34] I hope it gets cleaned up in time, but just because of how rough it is right now, I'm not fully confident in that. [00:24:44] Or at least in the, the other problem is it's not consistent yet. Like I could take a scrolling screenshot in the settings menu and in Twitter, but I couldn't do it in like Google discover and that's just kind of weird. So yeah, I hope they clean it up and just honestly, if they just took Samsungs and threw it into native Android, it would work out great. [00:25:06] I don't know why Google has this opinion that just. For some fundamental reason, it can't work as Samsung has said. I mean, it's basically what they've said is that the way that third parties have done it isn't right. Whatever the case, I'm glad it's coming. It's really rough right now though. [00:25:25] Abner Li: Speaking of laugh, the new screenshot notification, which is the most minor thing in the world. But the fact that they removed the X-Box and you have to swipe away is the, was it's the, I agree was [00:25:41] Kyle Bradshaw: sporadic though. Some people will still have the ax. I [00:25:44] Ben Schoon: do. I still have it. [00:25:46] Kyle Bradshaw: And then it'll, it'll show up and then they'll disappear. [00:25:48] I find like different times where it takes screenshots it's there. And then other times it's not. [00:25:53] Abner Li: And then, okay, so basically, so when the screenshot notification makes sense, tiny owl, where you have the screenshot on the left and on the bottom edge, you have the song strip to either share or edit. Now you have to swipe to the left, to get with a bit previously you had a tiny X button, which again was small as a tiny touch target, but compared to the left. [00:26:17]The swiping to the left and you can't swipe to the light for that reason you [00:26:22] Kyle Bradshaw: can swipe to the right. It just doesn't do anything. It moves, it moves under your touch and then it just goes right back. [00:26:31] Ben Schoon: Yeah. Yeah. I, I hope they keep the X because that is one of my problems with I'm going to go back to Samsung team, the screenshot on a Samsung You just get the bar, come across your screen and there's no obvious way to get rid of it, which is really frustrating if you don't plan on doing anything with the screenshot. Pixel 5 readies for 'Double tap' gesture [00:26:49] Abner Li: Yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, that's a minor tech and I guess another. Upcoming feature is Columbus Kyle the Columbus, the double tap, just the quick pop pop. [00:27:06] Kyle Bradshaw: So as we've talked many a time before [00:27:09] Abner Li: indeed [00:27:11] Kyle Bradshaw: pixels are going to get this double tap where you just, just like the iPhones have, but you can say Google came up with the first. [00:27:18] Or you, maybe you can't, I don't know, you can tap the back of the phone twice and it does something, at least it's supposed to the default action is going to be the assistant, which is a good replacement on the the pixel five and four, a and four eight 5g. And w. 48 5g XL, wood and knuckles. Yeah, [00:27:40] Abner Li: you just, [00:27:42] Kyle Bradshaw: you give a quick double tap to fill up the assistant because if you don't have the squeeze gesture anymore, the, the active edge. [00:27:47] So you just double tap open up the assistant rather than doing that swipe gesture from the corner. But it's, it's the codes there, but, and the UI is there, but giving the double-tap does not work no matter what we trying. [00:28:05] Abner Li: So yeah, this is without a doubt, the pixel one it's hardware exclusive, and there'll be undoubtedly limited to the pixel experience. [00:28:15] Google does. Yeah. It's about them, adding them next to the button, allow it Sony loves to do and Samsung creasing and has Nokia. Yeah. Yeah. That's like Berry, [00:28:33] Ben Schoon: but Hey, they had a dedicated [00:28:34] Abner Li: button. All the Mt. Dedicated buttons. And, but yeah, this is more elegant tuition, but I know speaking from the iOS side, I don't think it's taken people like craze. [00:28:48] It's not, I thought it would be a more of a bigger thing like now, or like a more like a hit, hidden feature to add more functionality, AFL, I guess not Audrey. [00:29:01] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah. Google made a mistake by getting rid of the active edge. I'll say it to the day I [00:29:05] Abner Li: die. I agree. Why do you know [00:29:08] Ben Schoon: both of you? It was great. It was great if you like, if you didn't like it, just turn it off and shush. [00:29:16] I know, honestly, I just, I just wish. More than anything more than squeezes and back taps and all this stuff. Just give me Motorola's classic gestures on every phone and be done with it. Absolutely familiar, [00:29:31] Abner Li: but [00:29:33] Ben Schoon: they were perfection and no one can tell me otherwise, and I want them on everything. [00:29:39] Abner Li: Before I explain what the Motorola does. [00:29:43] I'm not going to throw at you. Sidetrack me to defending myself on my active edge is a very awkward idea. For one thing. So the sensors for active edge, that pressure that's the pressure, right? They detect based on the, based on the size of the phone, they Is that how much pressure you're applying and inherently as you squeeze something it breaks. [00:30:07] Why do you want to use your phone? Why does using your phone feel like you're breaking it? Because on an infinite timescale, squeezing something reads the breaking it. And I don't know. I, you want that to be a feature? It feels awkward. If it's a, [00:30:25] Kyle Bradshaw: if it's a metal or glass phone it's not going to break. It's fine. [00:30:31] And if anything, what you're feeling the haptics kick in, it's not like the phone's breaking. [00:30:37] Ben Schoon: Yeah. I mean, I get where you're I get where you're coming from, but I don't know. It also to me, if I like haptics, not haptics tactile experiences and a squeeze is not the same as like a button, but it does have a tactile component to it, especially because of the haptics. [00:30:58] [00:30:58] Kyle Bradshaw: Yeah, that was the haptics I've ever enjoyed. [00:31:01] Ben Schoon: Yeah. I, I, I like it. It's but it's fine. Like I said, if you like it you'll like it. If you don't just turn off that it could have stuck around. No problem. [00:31:12] Abner Li: Fundamentally it's this tasteful, but anyways, what I hope to Lola has gestures. [00:31:20] Ben Schoon: Yeah. And then we'll talk about them for awhile. [00:31:23] Basically. [00:31:27] Abner Li: You will be treated to an extended treat us after this podcast on the multiple boy. Yeah, we'll see. Anyways. So Motorola what are they called? Moto actions. I think they're called the underlying name is motto actions. Anyways, you could double post your phone to watch the cat to watch the camera. How do you, [00:31:48] Kyle Bradshaw: how do you twist [00:31:51] Abner Li: twist your do you need is [00:31:53] Ben Schoon: definitely an action that you had to get used to, but it was like if you twisted it kind of like if the two corners of the foam two diagonal corners were the axis, you would twist it that way. [00:32:06]And it would. Kicking the camera. [00:32:09] Abner Li: So actually this is available in Google camera right now. selfie and the front facing [00:32:16] Ben Schoon: camera. Oh, you got me really excited for a second. Yep. [00:32:20] Kyle Bradshaw: I've never gotten that gesture to work with once never. [00:32:24] Ben Schoon: Okay. So hold your phone on an axis and it'll do it. [00:32:29] Kyle Bradshaw: I will try. It's fun. [00:32:31] You keep describing, but I, I will, I will sit here. Okay. Okay. I got it to work. [00:32:35] Abner Li: That's good. [00:32:37] Ben Schoon: Eats it. You say, Oh, but if you, if, if it was the, to wash to the camera, you would use it all the time. It's so good. Fair. [00:32:46] Kyle Bradshaw: If it works [00:32:47] Ben Schoon: consistently fine, but it does. I don't get how, what a role I had them. Perfect. They always worked. [00:32:56] Abner Li: It always worked. There's no doubt about that, but chopping yes, you [00:33:04] Ben Schoon: could chop twice to get to the flashlight and that was fantastic. [00:33:08] Abner Li: What is it? Just those two. [00:33:11] Ben Schoon: Those were the two most useful, there were more like you could like the waves to get to your always on display. [00:33:17] Abner Li: Oh, that, Oh, I missed that so [00:33:20] Ben Schoon: much. [00:33:21] Which, I mean, they, I liked that, but it was weird just because they had like little IRS sensors, which looked really weird in the time of white bezels, which I still can't. Yeah. I'll never forgive them for doing that. And [00:33:32] Abner Li: all these things here. So, yeah, there's no point in [00:33:36] Ben Schoon: that. Yeah, they had, they had a few more, but those were the two like really, really useful ones. [00:33:41] And I just, I wish they were on every phone and that's a complete just side ramp, but I, I, I love those. I miss [00:33:49] Abner Li: those. Yeah. And it's ironic that it's white now, that only thing is that Google owned Motorola for a few years. They could have honestly swiped the idea and kept to themselves into Android, but they didn't do that for that reason. [00:34:07] And it's a, it was a very, just a clever way of doing more of unique, uniquely launching things. But. That's history. I [00:34:19] Ben Schoon: mean, really think about it. They were, they got that right in 2013. [00:34:24] Abner Li: It's incredible. It's been [00:34:26] Ben Schoon: eight years and they, and no one has copied them. [00:34:30] Abner Li: Do you think it's patented? I [00:34:31] Ben Schoon: doubt it, [00:34:33] Kyle Bradshaw: but if it was then Google could have kept it in the, when selling Motorola. [00:34:38] I think that's what Ben's getting now. [00:34:41] Ben Schoon: I don't know it's I wish they, those were still around. That was way off topic. Why often [00:34:49] Abner Li: a bit off topic, but yeah. So that's Columbus. Yeah, it was Columbus and we'll see, [00:34:56] Ben Schoon: that was Columbus and the better version of Columbus. Android TV 12 preview [00:35:03] Abner Li: Oh man. But, yeah. So let's see other things that have happened very briefly. Android TV, 12 I'll [00:35:12] Ben Schoon: S I'll spoil my own posts. That's going up tomorrow. It's nothing. There's nothing changed. There's a, but we did realize that because, because we sideloaded enter a TV 12 which was briefly broken, but is now fixed. [00:35:24]That Google TV has a basic mode, which just turns off all the smart features and has meant for like panels that ship with Google TV. It's really cool. It's not exclusive to Android 12 though, which is good. But yeah, user-facing features there's nothing because. Android updates don't really matter for TVs because everything's all the important stuff is like play services and app updates. [00:35:48] Abner Li: Yeah, I think our stack, because lot other day he had, he had the brilliant, he made, he, he made. Okay. Basically his point was Google. Should divorce, Android versions from Android TV and definitely well less [00:36:04] Ben Schoon: 100% [00:36:05] Abner Li: agree. However many years old, I now. Oh [00:36:08] Kyle Bradshaw: yeah. We've we've that that's already happened with wireless. [00:36:11] It's been on Android now this whole time. [00:36:13] Ben Schoon: Yeah, that's true. Yeah. Cause they, it doesn't even show it in the settings, but Android TV and Google TV, they do show it on the settings and yeah, it, it's not important. Like I w w I was putting together something today on, you know, why it doesn't matter. And like Android eight was obviously a big deal because it introduced the whole new UI and way of working. [00:36:33] You go to Android nine, like the biggest change was the redesign settings menu. And then Android 10 and Android 11, everything was in the background. There were no user facing changes that were like actually important [00:36:47] Kyle Bradshaw: and Andrews changes. Google TV. Yeah. [00:36:50] Ben Schoon: But that's that it works on Android 10. That's what the Chrome cast ships with. [00:36:54] There's just, there's nothing. Nothing in Android TV is actually like tied to the version except for platform specific things. And most of the time, those don't matter for Android TVs. [00:37:10] Abner Li: This isn't a diversion, but if you think about it well as an Android TV, in terms of how you can update. Components the lector and the price store to make a big impact and the features and stuff that really was the precursor to mainline. [00:37:26] If you think about it, it's that doesn't well, S was definitely first to that model and the wearable platform doesn't get enough credit for that. Of course they didn't do anything. That's true. Nothing to see here. Not think Dawn date. Yeah. [00:37:48] Ben Schoon: The one thing I will say that Android TV 12 though, which is like the actual important thing is okay. [00:37:53] It got it's preview the same day as phones and that's never happened before. So it's a really good sign that Google is finally going to actually take updates, not necessarily major platform updates, but just updates in general, more seriously on Android DV. And another good sign of that is that the for the preview builds for the ADT three are. [00:38:16] They include this month security patch, which again, never happened before last. I think the Android 11 public build for ADT three that came out last year. It came out in September and I'm pretty sure it had like a July watch on it. They've never been and up to date. Like I think even the Chromecast I think is like a month out of date right now. [00:38:40] Two months. It's yeah. It's. I think it's just, it's a good sign that they're finally gonna take this stuff seriously. Which is great. [00:38:48] Abner Li: Yeah. So yeah, that's Android TV. I'm sure. Over the coming months or have we'll learn more, what the focus of Android 12 for Android TV is, but to wrap up today is so we all have outgo 12 installed. [00:39:06]It's surprisingly stable speaking from all my experiences. Well, Ben, you definitely [00:39:13] Ben Schoon: the biggest issue I had as well. Yeah. So we've, we have an article that kind of goes over everything that we've noticed so far, it is pretty stable. The biggest thing I had issues with was biometrics my fingerprint sensors, not reliable. [00:39:27]Two part, I think part of that is due to some of the stuff we enabled, but Damien was having the same issues where. The fingerprint sensor, just wasn't listening when you tried to use it on the lock screen. And I've seen reports of like apps crashing and stuff, but it's, you know, for a first preview it's pretty stable. [00:39:42]But I think it was the same. It was the same thing last year. And the second one broke everything. [00:39:47] Abner Li: So. And to qualify that Damian you then, and I we're on pixel fois and pixel fives on the pixel three XL, Kyle. [00:39:58] Ben Schoon: It's, it's interesting. It doesn't [00:40:01] Kyle Bradshaw: inconsistent. I would say the stable, stable, but just, it just doesn't feel the pixel three Axl with its with its center notch just doesn't or the pixel, the pixel three XL just doesn't. [00:40:14] The center notch just doesn't feel right here like it did before. I don't know, like a, the power menu is behind the notch. There's there's just little, little details. It just tells you or feels to me like this phone wasn't really considered. Is for stability though. It's been fine. It hasn't really crashed. [00:40:35] It's been okay. [00:40:37] Abner Li: Yeah. And of course, a major takeaway is if you use Google pay, do not install this because Google pay or not work and you won't be having a good time, but yeah, Android 12. The madness has begun. We're in it for a few months, definitely into the summer. Yeah. Thank you everyone for joining us about on this episode of alphabet scoop, we record every Thursdays. [00:41:09] And publish Friday mornings. You can find us on all your favorite podcasting platforms, such as Google podcasts, pocket, CAS, iTunes, Apple podcasts, and you can even Western on our site@ninefivegoogle.com. If you wish, thank you for tuning in and thank you to Kyle and Ben for joining me. Hopefully we'll see you all next week. [00:41:31] Bye. Transcribed using Descript
最新情報を "ながら" でキャッチアップ! ラジオ感覚放送 「毎日AWS」 おはようございます、サーバーワークスの加藤です。 今日は 12/10 に出たアップデートをピックアップしてご紹介。 感想は Twitter にて「#サバワ」をつけて投稿してください! ■ UPDATE PICKUP Amazon VPC が Reachability Analyzer を発表 AWS Transit Gateway が IGMP をサポート SD-WAN とのネイティブ統合を行う AWS Transit Gateway Connect を発表 Amplify CLI が AWS Fargate を利用したコンテナのデプロイに対応 ■ re:Invent 開催中 公式ページから登録して今すぐ参加しましょう! re:Invent に関するサーバーワークスの情報発信はこちら ■ サーバーワークスSNS Twitter / Facebook ■ サーバーワークスブログ サーバーワークスエンジニアブログ
Subscriber-Only: Today's episode is available only to subscribers. If you are a Point-Free subscriber you can access your private podcast feed by visiting https://www.pointfree.co/account. --- It's straightforward to design the dependency for interacting with an API client, but sadly most dependencies we work with are not so simple. So let's consider a far more complicated dependency. One that is long living, and involves extra types that we can't even construct ourselves.
In celebration of National AccessAbility Week, we speak to Tova Sherman, the co-founder of the Halfiax-base non-profit reachAbility. She describes their accessible supports and programming available to the community during COVID-19. This is the June 1, 2020 episode.
In this episode: Result comes to the standard library, the App Store is going down for Christmas, Paul replaces Reachability at last, and we discuss how best to contribute to the community. - Sean's book, It's Only Crazy Until You Do It: https://gumroad.com/l/sean-allen-origin - SE-0235, Add Result to the Standard Library: https://github.com/apple/swift-evolution/blob/master/proposals/0235-add-result.md - How to game the App Store: http://davidbarnard.com/post/180568817995/how-to-game-the-app-store - App Store Connect shutdown schedule: https://developer.apple.com/news/?id=11272018 - Contributing to the Swift Benchmark Suite: https://patrickbalestra.com/blog/2018/11/12/contributing-to-the-swift-benchmark-suite.html - Pointfree’s new snapshot library: https://github.com/pointfreeco/swift-snapshot-testing - Paul's pick: NWPathMonitor – https://developer.apple.com/documentation/network/nwpathmonitor - Sean's pick: Programming Sucks – https://www.stilldrinking.org/programming-sucks - Open Ballot: what's the best way to contribute to the Swift community?
This week we talk about Instagram posts about doing the dishes and how we would be doing the world a service if we featured a little more of the mundane in our feeds. In addition, this week's podcast is brought to you by Reachability and the Bluenose-Ability Film Festival. Check out www.BAFF.ca for full details.
This week on Riding In Cars With Cats we talk bad movies and good ideas. We'll be focusing on the idea of your "one true swing". What is the thing you were born to do? What is your purpose and how in the world can you find it? I've spent the last couple of years...ok...decades trying to figure out my purpose in life. I feel like I'm getting closer. Hopefully. This week's episode is brought to you by Reachability and the Bluenose-Ability Film Festival. This is an amazing initiative and I encourage you to listen to the full podcast and check out www.reachability.org and www.baff.ca for details about the organization and about this incredible event.
Topics: -One of Jerry's local clients needs assistance with updating the OS. He ends up working on it off-site and doing his magic to bring it back to life. -The guys discuss working off-site vs in front of the client's eyes as well as keeping equipment like external monitors on hand -Sam talks about setting up Ubiquiti equipment in his office to be in his comfort zone and coming to the client with a fully configured Wi-Fi setup -Sam realizes a downside to having an office...spending money on lunch! -The topic of nutrition comes up again, when the work day gets away from you. Sam likes the Clif Bars and Jerry is a fan of the Lara bars. -Jerry loves the podcast How I Built This and interestingly enough, they had Lara on to talk about how she started her business. https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510313/how-i-built-this -Right up to the start of the show, Sam was working on an iPhone with water damage with a good friend of the family. An odd situation came up with relation to iCloud backups. Jerry has a suggestion based on an old trick to resolve Time Machine backups. Stay tuned to the next show to find out what happens! -A pet peeve of Jerry's is when he might shave off some time to be nice. A client pays and then keeps you around to enter information in the register, delaying you even more. -Sam recalls that awkward moment when a client was opening a safe in front of you and trying to make sure you aren't able to see -As Jerry is running, he listens to podcasts. He shares another pet peeve for playing sound effects that scares the heck out of you while running on the road. -Working with SonicWall is nothing new to Sam but he had a moment of frustration setting up the SSL VPN client on Windows 10 -While on the Windows topic, Jerry has problems with a computer that ended up being Windows Home Edition -The dreaded employee or friend that gives a client bad advice that makes them second guess you -Jerry deals with Windows 5?? (Windows NT) and trouble with UPS -Sam shares a funny story about hanging out with Adam Rice at ACEs and learning that Reachability actually does exist on the iPhone X! Chalk that up to something he should have known. -We have probably all been there before: Jerry talks about a client that swears that a feature existed before when it actually didn't.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We begin our US Thanksgiving Episode looking into the iPhone's density from our #askMTJC as well as Reachability. iOS 11 has some layout bugs. The HomePod will be delayed until the new year. Fact Check: Face ID does learn from its mistakes, also you need to focus on it sometimes. Tim shares some experiences updating apps for the iPhone X. The iPhone SE may get updated in the new year. We ponder that Swift code will run on Google's Fuchsia OS. iOS 11.2 will allow introductory subscription pricing. We discuss the issues around Net Neutrality as the FCC votes on it. We discuss Uber's attempt to cover up a major hack where 57 million user accounts are stolen. Coding can be done at the same time with Atom's Teletype and Visual Studio's Live Share. Picks: iOS Thanksgiving 2017: Tools & Libraries We’re Thankful For, Optimize Swift Build Times, Avoiding force unwrapping in Swift unit tests, Skydio is hiring: iOS Engineer, Android Engineer, Mobile QA Engineer
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We discuss #askMTJC on iPhone Plus models landscape SplitView mode, PGP encryption apps, the iOS 11 Calculator bug, and Blockchain diplomas. We follow up on GPG encryption tools, iPhone X Demand, and Reachability on the iPhone X. We discuss experiences of trying to pre-order iPhone X models by ourselves and others. We also discuss Gluon: a new library for machine learning from AWS and Microsoft, SiriKit in 11.2 beta brings commands for the upcoming HomePod. Picks: Tips and Tricks: Ten Safari long-press shortcuts for iPhone and iPad and Xcode's Show Live Issues.
Bienvenue dans le cent-soixante-quatrième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: NSNorth 2016 - Que d’émotions (Justin Miller @incanus77) et de Karaoke WWDC 2016 - Nos prédictions IPV6 - Êtes-vous prêts? Reachability - Mis-à-jour pour IPV6 Ecoutez cet épisode
From Symmetric Nets to Symmetric Nets with Bags (2015 edition, full HD)
The previous sequences have set all the basis necessary for the construction of the Symbolic Reachability Graph. It takes advantage of the symmetry between markings, and between firings, so as to study the behaviour at a symbolic level.
From Symmetric Nets to Symmetric Nets with Bags (2015 edition, full HD)
The previous sequences have set all the basis necessary for the construction of the Symbolic Reachability Graph. It takes advantage of the symmetry between markings, and between firings, so as to study the behaviour at a symbolic level.
From Symmetric Nets to Symmetric Nets with Bags (2015 edition, full HD)
In this sequence, symmetries of both markings and firings are formally defined. Symmetries are a powerful tool to reduce the size of the reachability graph, thus making it amenable.
From Symmetric Nets to Symmetric Nets with Bags (2015 edition, full HD)
In this sequence, symmetries of both markings and firings are formally defined. Symmetries are a powerful tool to reduce the size of the reachability graph, thus making it amenable.
01:36 - Mike Ash Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Plausible Labs PLCrashReporter VoodooPad NSBlog, Friday Q&A mikeash.com/lispob3.c mikeash.com/tmp/tetris6.c 06:26 - Synchronization and Collaborative Editing Dropbox 09:41 - Existing Solutions? Differential Synchronization by Neil Fraser 11:32 - VoodooPad Snapshots 14:43 - Common Approaches for Document Syncing Images Audio Text 19:02 - Conflicting Changes 21:56 - Merge Strategy 24:27 - Use Cases, Connection AT&T Mark the Spot App Network Link Conditioner Designing for Real-World Networks 33:51 - Online/Offline Detection, Handling Slow Responses Reachability 39:32 - Retries Slack 41:35 - Dropbox and Document Syncing Problems 42:50 - Support Picks Differential Synchronization by Neil Fraser (Mike) MailRoute (Andrew) SCSI2SD (Andrew) GFood Lounge (Jaim) Calzone's Italian Restaurant in San Francisco (Jaim)
01:36 - Mike Ash Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Plausible Labs PLCrashReporter VoodooPad NSBlog, Friday Q&A mikeash.com/lispob3.c mikeash.com/tmp/tetris6.c 06:26 - Synchronization and Collaborative Editing Dropbox 09:41 - Existing Solutions? Differential Synchronization by Neil Fraser 11:32 - VoodooPad Snapshots 14:43 - Common Approaches for Document Syncing Images Audio Text 19:02 - Conflicting Changes 21:56 - Merge Strategy 24:27 - Use Cases, Connection AT&T Mark the Spot App Network Link Conditioner Designing for Real-World Networks 33:51 - Online/Offline Detection, Handling Slow Responses Reachability 39:32 - Retries Slack 41:35 - Dropbox and Document Syncing Problems 42:50 - Support Picks Differential Synchronization by Neil Fraser (Mike) MailRoute (Andrew) SCSI2SD (Andrew) GFood Lounge (Jaim) Calzone's Italian Restaurant in San Francisco (Jaim)
In this sequence, symmetries of both markings and firings are formally defined. Symmetries are a powerful tool to reduce the size of the reachability graph, thus making it amenable.
The previous sequences have set all the basis necessary for the construction of the Symbolic Reachability Graph. It takes advantage of the symmetry between markings, and between firings, so as to study the behaviour at a symbolic level.
The previous sequences have set all the basis necessary for the construction of the Symbolic Reachability Graph. It takes advantage of the symmetry between markings, and between firings, so as to study the behaviour at a symbolic level.
In this sequence, symmetries of both markings and firings are formally defined. Symmetries are a powerful tool to reduce the size of the reachability graph, thus making it amenable.
After having modelled a system using Petri nets, the objective is to verify it satisfies some interesting properties. To do so, the construction of the reachability graph is introduced, which exhaustively explores all possible states of the system.
After having modelled a system using Petri nets, the objective is to verify it satisfies some interesting properties. To do so, the construction of the reachability graph is introduced, which exhaustively explores all possible states of the system.
Neben neuen Appleprodukten auf dem Radar, haben wir als Gast Timo Josten, den Entwickler von Dropshare, mit im Flieger. Und da Timo ein netter Kerl ist, gibt es drei Lizenzen für euch zu gewinnen. Als Gast haben wir Timo Josten (@activeOtwo), den Entwickler von Dropshare, mit im Flieger. Und da Timo ein netter Kerl ist, gibt es drei Lizenzen für euch zu gewinnen. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überentwicklung Ja. Falls ihr schon auf Play gedrückt habt, dann habt ihr es gemerkt. Ganz brandneu-neu-neu beim Übercast, die Elektronik im Flugzeug wurde auf Vordermann gebracht und nun gibt es mehr oder minder hilfreiche Durchsagen, welche euch zum einen durch die Segmente unserer Show führen und zum anderen etwas mehr Niveau in die Sendung bringen. Da Patrick am Drücker für die Soundeffekte sitzt, entschuldigt er sich vorab für die eventuelle Überbeanspruchung der Knöpfe – ihr kennt das sicher… wenn etwas neu ist, dann will man damit auch rumspielen. Nun aber zu unserem neuen Segment: In “Überentwicklung” reden wir 20 Minuten lang mit Entwicklern und anderen Fachgästen über ein spezielles Thema. Der Unterschied zur bisherigen Herangehensweise ist also schlicht, dass ihr (a) in den Genuss kommt jetzt öfters mal einen Gast auf’s Ohr gedrückt zu bekommen - nein, nicht jede Sendung - und (b) das sich dieser Exkurs und Blick hinter den Vorhang nicht über die komplette Show streikt. Wie Eingangs bereits erwähnt ist unser Gast heute Timo Josten, und Timo erzählt unser geradewegs wie es überhaupt zu Dropshare kam. Und zwar fiel er dem klassischen “scratching your own itch” Syndrom zum Opfer: Eines Tages war er der bereits etablierten externen Hostingservices zum Teilen von Dateien überdrüssig und entschied sich dazu ein selbstgeschraubtes kleines Tool zu nutzen, um die volle Kontrolle über seine Daten zu haben. Timo entwickelt seit 1,5 Jahren mit Cocoa und es so oft ist, man lernt am besten, wenn man direkt an einem praktischen Beispiel übt. Schnell hat sich dann herausgestellt, das die Idee an sich für ein solches Sharing-Tool sehr populär ist und daraus ist dann Dropshare er- und entwachsen. Timo hat eine UI gebaut, damit sich auch unsereins ohne tiefgreifende Kenntnisse seine Verbindungen einrichten kann, für die Dateiübertragung hat ist er vom STP Protokoll auf sicherere Schnittstellen zur Dateiübertragung gewechselt und hat jede Menge Userwünsche mit eingebaut die Dropshare zu dem machen was es heute ist. Der Lösung für das schnelle, kostengünstige und private Sharing auf OS X mit jede Menge Optionen. Features Dropshare kann auf den eigenen Host (per SSH) hochladen, auf Amazon S3 oder auf Rackspace. Das coole ist, dass ihr mehrere Verbindungen angeben könnt und somit Dateien an unterschiedliche Ziele hochladen könnt, z.B. auf die private Sharingseite, die eigene Webseite oder euren professionellen Webauftritt. Hochladen könnt ihr indem ihr die Datei auf das Dropshare Icon in der Menüleiste zieht. Die Verbindung kann momentan per Shortcut gewechselt oder per Einstellungen in den Settings die man ebenfalls mit ein paar Klicks erreichen kann (Menübar-Icon > Preferences > Active Connections, dann öffnet sich ein Dropdown-Menü). Unterstützt werden ebenfalls die OS X Services, so das ihr Shortcuts mit Apps wie Keyboard Maestro oder FastScripts zum hochladen von Dateien direkt im Finder verwenden könnt, also ohne Drag’n’Drop. Um Ordnung zu halten, könnt ihr über das Icon auch wieder Dateien vom Server löschen. Noch einfacher geht das über den Verlauf, dort werden alle Uploads gelistet, die ihr je hochgeladen habt. So behaltet ihr den Überblick und könnt den Frühjahrsputz angehen. Optional können die Links zu den hochgeladenen Dateien als gekürzte URL in die Zwischenablage kopiert werden. Unterstützt wird der offizielle Google URL shortener (goo.gl), Dropshares eigenes Kürzel dsh.re und für die ganz wilden unter euch auch das eigene Shortener-Skript. Ebenfalls wahlweise kann man Markdown Dateien als HTML Seiten hochladen, um eine schöne, leserliche Seite zu generieren. Geplant ist hier auch die Möglichkeit Themes für diese Option zu integrieren. Bei der Landing Page funktionieren Themes schon heute. Ist dieses Feature aktiviert, wird für jeden Upload eine schicke Seite angezeigt mit Informationen zur Datei und Downloadbutton angezeigt. Wenn ihr HTML/CSS/JavaScript-kundig seit, könnt ihr euch je nach Expertise eine eigene Downloadseite bauen inklusive Logo, Kontaktdaten und Beipackzettel. Falls gewünscht kann Dropshare auch eure Bildschirmfotos automatisch hochladen und bei Bedarf gleich die Datei von eurem Computer wieder löschen. Als kleiner Vorausblick, nach Patrick’s bohrenden, inquisitativen Fragen zum Thema Dropshare für iOS atmet Timo einmal tief durch und gesteht, dass es ihm eine Freude wäre die App sofort anzugehen. Da es aber zeitlich im Moment nicht drinnen ist und er lieber eine App gescheit mit Updates versorgt, als auf zwei Hochzeiten gleichzeitig zu tanzen ist dieses Projekt verschoben. Nichtsdestotrotz steht das weit oben auf Timo’s persönlicher Todo-Liste und man darf mit einem iOS Pendant rechnen – nur halt nicht jetzt und direkt. Exkurs – Common Markdown Auf Sven’s Standard Markdown Spitze hin hier noch ein paar Links zum schmökern, falls das Drama an euch vorbeigegangen ist und ihr in Soap-Oper-Laune seid: Offizielle Webseite: CommonMark Diskussion auf Hacker News: Standard Markdown Diskussion auf Reddit: Standard Flavored Markdown Offizielle Entschuldigung: Standard Markdown is now Common Markdown Kontakt Wer mit Timo in Verbindung treten will oder Einkaufen gehen will, wird hier fündig. Webseite: mkswap.net Kontakt: josten.biz Twitter: @activeOtwo Apps: OS X: Dropshare (Direktversion für ca. 3,88 €, App Store Version 4,49 €) Anmerkung: Es gibt keine Unterschiede zwischen den zwei Versionen. IAP: Wer mehr als zwei Verbindungen anlegen möchten kann für unter zwei Euro diese Option per in-app purchase freischalten. Auf Twitter: @DropshareForMac iPhone: MoneyGone (2,69 €) Für Entwickler gibt es auf der offiziellen Webseite unter Projekt noch mehr Apps aus dem Hause Josten. Dropshare giveaway Was gibt es abzustauben??? 3 Lizenzen für Dropshare die Standalone Version Wie nehme ich teil? (1) Hört euch den Flug UC#012 an. (2) Werdet sozial aktiv: Auf allen sozialen Netzwerken findet ihr einen speziellen Post zu unserem Gewinnspiel. Es gilt diese frohe Botschaft zu verkünden. Es reicht sich ein soziales Netzwerk auszusuchen, dem Übercast dort zu folgen, bzw. zu liken Auf Facebook den Beitrag teilen und liken Oder auf Twitter den entsprechenden Tweet retweeten Es geht sogar bei Google+ plusen und sharen Oder bei App.net reposten Mit diesen zwei Schritten seid ihr im Pool und vielleicht einer der glücklichen Gewinner. Klar, wenn ihr auf mehreren Netzwerken aktiv werden, so steigert ihr damit auch eure Chancen. Teilnahmeschluss ist Mittwoch, der 17. September 2014 (12 Uhr). Die Bekanntgabe der Gewinner erfolgt bei Veröffentlichung der nächsten Episode am 26. September 2014. Des weiteren werden die Gewinner persönlich auf dem jeweiligen sozialen Kanal ihrer Wahl benachrichtigt. Überbleibsel Heute mal ganz kurz und schmerzlos – im Zuge der Fülle an Information die gleich auf euch zukommt, werden in Punkto Überbleibsel nur die Gewinner des »MacSparky Presentation Field Guide« verkündet: @3_5x5_5 @logolife Thomas Schlosser @codeh_de Herzlichen Glückwunsch und vielen Dank für die Teilnahme! Schlüsselnotenzeit Die historische Überleitung zu unserem heutigen Hauptthema erfolgt sogleich durch Sven. Die Keynote wurde nämlich im Flint Center of Fine Arts abgehalten. Was einige vielleicht nicht wussten, dies ist ein geschichtsträchtiger Ort für Apple, denn hier stellte Steve Jobs nach seiner Rückkehr zu Apple den ersten iMac vor. Heute ist es Tim Cook, der unglaubliche große iPhones und die lang erwarte Apple Watch vorstellt. Der Live Stream der Keynote hat dieses Mal nicht wirklich gut funktioniert. Auf Twitter gab es die komplette Bandbreite an Emotionsausbrüchen zu bestaunen. Sven hat allem Anschein die Antwort parat, aber bei so einem brandaktuellen Thema kann es selbst dem ältesten Hasen passieren, dass mal nicht der allerneuste Artikel aufgegriffen wird. Deshalb hier die von Andreas ausgegrabene Korrekturrecherche: Weshalb ruckelte der Livestream? Andreas selbst hat die Keynote natürlich wieder geschwänzt, um seinem Ruf als Streaming-Bolkottierer von Marketingevents gerecht zu werden. Natürlich hat er sich trotzdem für unsere Show die nötigen Informationen handverlesen aus diversen Blogs zusammengebrowst. iPhone 6 und iPhone 6 Plus Link zum Bild: Bastelstunde im Kindergarten Wenn wir den ersten Teil der Keynote zusammenfassen müssten in einem Bild, dann wäre es jenes Bild welches unter der Überschrift drohnt. Patrick hat die einzigen iPhones in der Hand die er sich momentan leisten kann, Andreas sein Blick könnte nicht mehr Kritik ausstrahlen gegenüber den “Phablets” und Sven sitzt immer noch völlig (an)gespannt da und wartet auf die Uhr. Wer mitbasteln will bekommt hier Links zu Druckvorlagen: http://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/iphone-scale.pdf http://img.wonderhowto.com/img/download/iphone-6-and-6-plus-scale-cutouts.pdf Inkl. Homescreen um zu sehen was der Daumen so alles erreichen kann: Which iPhone 6 Size Is Best for me? Das Unwort “Phablet” und viele Fragen dazu So unschön das Wort ist, jetzt steht es nun einmal da. Wie groß das iPhone in der Tat ist seht ihr hier… Link zum Bild: Größenvergleich … oder in dieser Montage von LadyX aus dem MacRumors Forum: Link zum Bild: LadyX Montage Sven mutmaßt, dass Apple sich mit der Größe der Smartphones womöglich um die Teenie-Klientele für iPads bringt, da speziell dieser Zielgruppe fortan ein Gerät alleine genügt und nicht immer das Geld so locker sitzt. Patrick merkt an, dass er Teens prinzipiell in der Stadt nur noch mit Gesicht und Hand am Handy in der Stadt sieht und gibt folgende Erfahrungswerte eines Freundes der 2 Jahre mit einem 5,5″ Handy durch die Welt gegondelt ist weiter: Es ist unwahrscheinlich, dass du am Flughafen mit der einen Hand deinen Koffer ziehst und mit der anderen textest – not gonna happen. Ist es unmöglich? Nein. Du hast nur immer im Unterbewusstsein, dass dir das gute Stück aus der Hand fällt. Das Flughafenbeispiel, weil das der Ort ist, an dem es ihm immer auffällt: Du musst dein Handy benutzen, bist aber dazu noch in Eile. Schlechte Kombo. Eines ist Sicher: Es kommen jede Menge “Mein iPhone ist hingefallen” Geschichten auf uns zu! Wie Andreas schon sagte, es ist klar, dass nun mit 5,5″ der Umstieg auf ein Gerät möglich ist (statt einem Smartphone und einem Tablet). Patrick schiebt nach, dass so ein dickes Handy je nach Anwender reicht, … oder halt auch nicht. Jeder muss für sich selbst entscheiden, was er für Anforderungen an ein Gerät stellt. Nur so kann man sich für das richtige Gerät, bzw. Gerätekombination entscheiden. Fest steht, dass das 6 Plus nicht unbedingt als “iPad Mini Killer” gewertet werden muss. Das iPad Mini ist viel breiter und hat einen komplett anderen Formfaktor (4:3 Bildschirm). Bücher, Comics, Spiele, Internet und Videos darauf zu konsumieren ist eine andere und oft schönere Baustelle. Wir halten fest: Beide Geräte haben ihre Daseinsberechtigung. Wer jetzt bei den verschiedenen Modellen vor der Qual der Wahl steht, für den gibt es hier noch ein paar hilfreiche Hinweise: Option 1: Das Beste was ihr tun könnt → In eine Fachgeschäft gehen und selbst ausprobieren. Option 2: Eine der verlinkten Vorlage runterladen, ausdrucken (fit to page ausstellen), ausschneiden, auf Pappe kleben und selbst schauen wie es sich anfällt und transportieren lässt. Beim Hosentaschentest nicht vergessen, wenn das Stehen sich “okay” anfühlt, heißt das nicht, dass sitzen und knien auch locker drinnen ist. Also testen! Option 3: Spigen Case für iPhone 6 Plus (12 EUR). Die teurere Alternative zu den Schablonen, kauft euch ein Case und tragt es mal einen Tag mit euch rum. Äußere und Innere Werte Da wir hier in den Show Notes sind, gibt es noch eine Extra-Auflistung was sich so alles geändert hat, bevor wir uns dann den Unterschieden zwischen den Modellen widmen. Der Look leicht geschwungener Bildschirm an den Seiten wie beim iPad und iPod Power-Button nun an der Gehäuseseite Lautstärkeknöpfe ebenfalls wie beim iPad Gut nach Patrick, denn “die lassen sich wirklich leichter drücken”. Kritisch nach Patrick, denn evtl. können die Knöpfe in der Hose unabsichtlich ausgelöst werden. Die alten Knöpfe sind in der Tat nicht so leichtgängig. Preisübersicht Preis/Speicher iPhone 6 Plus iPhone 6 iPhone 5S iPhone 5C 8 GB X X X 399 € 16 GB 799 € 699 € 599 € X 32 GB X X 649 € X 64 GB 899 € 799 € X X 128 GB 999 € 899 € X X Vorgriff: Zusammenfassung der Unterschiede Akkulaufzeit: Das iPhone 6 Plus hält wesentlich länger. Die Linse: Das größere Model hat optische Bildstabilisation. Ist also auch bei Fotos einen Tick besser als der “kleine” Bruder. Hinzukommt noch der erweiterter Landscape Modus beim 6 Plus durch welchen Apps mehr Inhalte darstellen können. Ebenso die höhere Auflösung. In Punkto Gewicht unterscheiden sich die Geräte wie folgt: iPhone 6 Plus iPhone 6 iPhone 5S iPhone 5C 172 g 129 g 112 g 132 g Chips Prozessor: Es wurde vom A7 auf A8 Chip gewechselt (nach wie vor: 64-bit). Dieser soll 25% mehr Turbo-Boost bringen. Der M8 Chip für’s Tracking von Schritten kann nun mehr als der bisherige M7 Chip: Distanz schätzen, nicht nur Schritte Unterscheidung zwischen rennen vs. radfahren Ein Barometer (Höhenmesser - kennen wir vom Altimeter im Cockpit hier) für fleißige Treppenbergsteiger ist auch mit dabei. Schnelleres WiFi – 802.11 ac (bis zu 3x schneller as der N-Standard) Ist so. Patrick’s iPad Mini rennt allen anderen Geräten im Haushalt davon. Gratulation iPhone, du bist nun mit dabei. Falls unterstützt von eurem Anbieter: Anrufe per Wi-Fi annehmen, wenn ihr aus dem Wi-Fi-Bereich kommt, wird ohne Probleme und ganz sanft auf das Funknetz umgestiegen. Akkulaufzeit So, nun aber ans eingemachte: Die Akkulaufzeit. Erst ein wenig vorschnell von Pilot Sven überflogen und als “mit nur leichten Unterschieden” deklariert, merkt der sich auf die Internetnutzung versteifende Pilot (dort beträgt der maximale Unterschied nur 4 Stunden) beim überfliegen der Tabelle doch noch, dass es da in der Tat doch schon frappierende Unterschiede gibt. Aber seht selbst: Link zum Bild: Übersicht – Akkulaufzeit Wie ihr oben seht, ist die Akkulaufzeit deutlich besser beim größten aller iPhones. Ein nicht unerhebliches Kaufkritierium wie Patrick findet und deshalb gibt es noch eine kritische Anmerkung dazu aus der “The Verge Live: iPhone 6 and Apple Watch” Diskussionsrunde. Hier die wichtistgen Punkte zum Theme, die Patrick für sich rausgezogen hat: Die Industrie will erst einmal die Smartphones nur dünner machen. Wenn das Limit erreicht wird, dann ist erst die Batterie dran. Schade, weil mehr drinnen ist laufzeittechnisch. Kürzlich gab es eine Forschung zum Ergebnis hatte, dass man als Konsument den Unterschied quasi nicht mehr erfüllen kann zwischen den paar Millimetern an Breite. Vorrangig ist es also bei den Smartphones ein ziemliches Optikrennen, anstatt ein Gefecht um die beste Akkulaufzeit. Denn wo mehr Platz ist, da passt auch eine größere Batterie rein. Display, Landscape Modus, Reachability Das 4,7er (1920 x 1080 px bei 401 ppi) und das 5,5er (1334 x 750 px bei 326 ppi) haben deutlich mehr Pixelmost. Letzteres wird sogar als Retina-HD betitelt. Patrick gibt eine kleine Falschauskunft im Podcast. Auch wenn er 4,7″ sagt, hat er irgendwie noch Sven’s 5S im Hinterkopf. Hier die offizielle Entschuldigung: “Lieber Sven, natürlich hat dein (ebenfalls) großes 4,7″ iPhone auch den horizontal Modus für das Springboard, nur halt nicht - wie bereits erwähnt die Extra-Freifläche die Entwickler künftig einbinden können. Irgendwie habe ich es geschafft, mir kurz vor der Aufnahme einzureden, dass es noch ein normalgroßes iPhone gibt und das du das holen willst und wirst. Über die späte Erkenntnis, dass es überhaupt noch ein solches 4″ iPhone gibt, war ich selbst sehr überrascht. Leider zieht sich der grobe Schnitzer nun über alle Aussagen zu “deinem iPhone” hinweg. Aber die Redaktion hat mir versprochen da keinen großen Hehl draus zu machen.” Also noch einmal für alle zum mitschreiben: Die neuen iPhones haben beide diesen Modus, nur das alte 5er logischer Weise nicht – ist ja kein Platz. Das Plus kann auch noch mehr darstellen und man darf gespannt sein, ob Entwickler einige Bedienelemente die sich bisher in den Settings verstecken dorthin auslagern oder wie diese Freifläche allgemein genutzt werden wird. Den Ein-Hand Modus (“Reachability”), welchen man per Doppel-Touch auf den Touch ID Button auslöst, hat Sven zukünftiges iPhone 6 natürlich ebenfalls. Reachability sorgt dafür das der obere Teil des Bildschirms nach unten rutscht, dass man diesen Teil bequemer erreichen kann. Noch ein zusätzlicher Touch und ihr gelangt zurück zum Vollbildmodus. Basketballspieler brauchen die Funktion übrigens nicht. Link zum Bild: Shaquille O’Neal Nebenbei erwähnt, eine ähnliche Funktion haben andere Hersteller ebenfalls bereits integriert – es handelt sich also nicht um einen Geniestreich aus Cupertino. Das muss bei solchen Abmessungen einfach sein, denn wer erinnert sich nicht gerne an diesen iPhone 5 Werbespot. Am Ende des Tages kann es natürlich sein, dass man zum größten Teil für beide 6er prinzipiell eher 2 Hände braucht. Kamera-Fakten Autofocus doppelt so schnell Panorama Modus: bis zu 43MP (größere Panoramas) Neuer Gyroscope-Sensor: besseres stitching bei Panoramas Fortgeschrittene Gesichtserkennung und ein “Bester Schnappschuss” Modus Linse 6+: Optische Bildstabilisation kann sich bewegen und so das Bild stabilisieren Justierung und Stabilisierung Noch besser bei schlechten Lichtverhältnissen 6: Elektronische/digitale Bildstabilisation Video Framerate verdoppelt 1080p von 30 fps auf 60fps Zeitlupenmodus von 120 fps auf 240 fps NFC (Near Field Communication) Die Katze ist nun aus dem Sack. Bezahlt wird nicht per iBeacon wie von der Tech-Szene vor einem Jahr noch vermuten und wie von PayPal bereits umgesetzt per Bluetooth 4.0 mit Beacons. NFC ist bei Patrick heute NVC, weil seit der iPhone-Affäre von oben einfach der Wurm drinnen ist. Bei Android ist NFC dagegen schon immer NFC und auch schon eine kleine Ewigkeit am Start. Apple war allerdings so nett und hat gleich mal diverse Partner mit ins Boot geholt. Sven freut sich auf jeden Fall auf die schöne neue Weltm in welcher er ins Flugzeug und ins Hotelzimmer per Handy einchecken kann. Ebenso begeistert es alle Piloten, dass man nun komplett anonym hinter seinem iPhone ist. Man bekommt eine Accountnummer von Apple und das war’s. Apple selbst sagt von sich auch: »Security is at the core of Pay, but so is privacy. We’re not in the business of collecting your data.« Der Großkonzern aus Cupertino weiß also weder “was ihr wo gekauft” habt, noch sonst irgendwas. Ebensowenig sieht der Kassierer euren Namen. Ihr müsst auch nicht mehr den dreistelligen “Sicherheitscode” eingeben. Wie versprochen gibt es hier in den Show Notes noch mal eine Liste zum Thema NFC und Sicherheit. Sicherheit: PC-WELT: Zahlung per NFC - bequem aber sicher? PC-WELT: Ist das Bezahlen per Funk sicher? Zusammenfassung: Betrugsfälle sind nicht auszuschließen, aber bisher ist keiner bekannt. Bis zu 10 cm muss sich ein Betrüger dem Smartphone nähern. Ein dicker Geldbeutel oder ein Spezialhülle die abschirmend wirkt sollen wohl helfen. Verbreitung und Integration: Ausserdem hat Patrick noch ein wenig recherchiert, wo und wie das Ganze - insbesondere in Deutschland - umgesetzt wird und was der Status Quo ist: Bezahlen per NFC macht man problemlos bei Kleinbeträgen bis zu 20-25 EUR. Danach ist die Pin-Eingabe erforderlich. Das entfällt wohl bei der Apple-Lösung. Das Bezahlen per iPhone started zunächst in den USA (American Express, Mastercard/VISA) und Entwickler können die Funktion auch in Apps integrieren. Besonders Beispiele wie die Einbindung beim Taxi-Dienst “Uber” sollten Registriermuffel aufhorchen lassen, dort kann man nämlich ohne extra einen Account anzulegen sich ‘ne Taxe bestellen. In England und Australien ist die ganze Geschichte schon wesentlich verbreiteter und beliebter, doch auch bei uns gibt es Hoffnung. So kündigt Mastercard kündigt zum 1. Januar 2015 einen NFC-Zwang für neu aufgestellte Kassensysteme an. Momentan sind nur 5% der 700.000 Mastercard-Akzeptanzstellen umgerüstet. Hier eine Liste wo sich bereits per NFC bezahlen lässt: Aral-Tankstellen (Esso will nachziehen) Galeria-Kaufhof-Warenhäusern Hit-Supermärkte (noch nie gehört) Hannover, Hildesheim, Braunschweig und Wolfsburg DM Drogeriemärkte, Edeka, Jet und McDonalds. In Frankfurt sollen 1.400 Taxen mit NFC-Chips ausgestattet werden. De facto: Bei uns dauert es also noch und man muss hoffen, dass die Kritiker, welche auf zu geringe Vorteile gegenüber dem herkömmlichen Verfahren beim Bezahlen mit Bankkarten verweisen, einfach ignoriert werden. Aber auch nur, weil das Bezahlen per Handy einfach zu praktisch, um es längerfristig zu ignorieren. NFC Automatisierung Trigger (ehemals NFC Task Launcher) aus dem Google Play Store ist die App, um die Android-Nutzer schon seit Jahren von Patrick beneidet werden. Aufkleber holen, programmieren, Aktion ausführen. Das stellt sich der junge Pilot sehr geil vor und zudem noch aller Wahrscheinlichkeit nach erschwinglicher als überall iBeacons aufzustellen. Anwendungsbeispiele: Haustür: Beim Verlassen der Wohnung WLAN ausschalten Auto: Bluetooth aktivieren Schlafzimmer: Flugzeugmodus aktivieren, Lautstärke auf Leise stellen, Bildschirmhelligkeit auf 1% fahren. Noch besser wird’s wenn man Webseiten, quatsch, x-callback-url’s öffnen bzw. ausführen lassen kann. Patrick würde sich sofort ein analoges Launch Center Pro bauen mit dem er ein Festplattenbackup anstoßen kann, Blog-Posts veröffentlicht und das letzte Bild automatisch an Heinz und Ulla sendet. Daneben hat die App noch folgende Trigger: Akkustand Standort Zeit-Trigger Die Frage ist nur, ob Apple irgendwann mal Zugriff auf diese ach so unantastbaren Systemeinstellungen gewährt. Sollte sowas in Cydia auftauchen, so wäre dies womöglich wieder ein Anreiz genug für Patrick zu jailbreaken. Video-Links Um das Thema iPhone gebührend abzuschließen noch ein paar Videos zum Ausklang. Trigger Happy TV - Der ‘großes Handy’ Typ und noch mehr The Verge: iPhone 6 and 6 Plus hands-on Apple: iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus - Seamless Apple: iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus - Health Apple: Introducing iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus _ WATCH = “One more thing” »We believe this product will redefine what people expect from its category.« Als erstes hat sich Apple ein wenig selbst die Schulter getätschelt. Der eigene Erfindergeist und der konstante Fokus auf das Wichtigste wurden hochgelobt: Das User-Interface. Mac => Mouse iPod => Click-wheel Apple watch => digital crown Erhältlich ist das gute Stück im Frühjahr 2015. Sven lobt das Apple allem Anschein nach verstanden hat, dass die Uhr ein individuelles Schmuckstück ist und man so viel Kombinationsmöglichkeiten hat (bis zu 2 Millionen… eine unfassbare Zahl die Patrick beim ersten Ohrenkontakt gar nicht glauben wolle). Anbei ein grober Überblick. Varianten 3 Modelle: Apple Watch: hochglanzpoliert in Edelstahl oder Space Black Apple Watch Sport eloxierten Aluminium in Silver und Space Gray. Apple Watch Edition 18-karätigem Roségold oder Gelbgold 2 Größen (ebenfalls bei den versch. Bändern) Bänderwechseln - sieht gut aus, hoffentlich hält’s auch Gliederarmband, Milanaise (feingliedriges Metallarmband, nicht flach ausstreckbar), Leder, Plaste, etc. Features und Alleinstellungsmerkmal Das berühmt-berüchtigte (unverkratzbare) Saphir-Kristallglas “Digital crown” - die Krone, das Drehrad, welches als Homebutton-Ersatz und Scrollrad daherkommt. “Force Touch” macht die UI drucksensitiv. Es kann zwischen Tap und Press unterschieden werden. Die Uhr kommt außerdem mit haptischem Feedback daher und drückt euch sanft, wenn ihr Neuigkeiten bekommt. Meinungen und Mutmaßungen Für Sven steht fest, dass die Apple Watch das Schmuckstück unter den Smartwatches ist – auch wenn sie nicht im klassischen und etablierten runden Look daher kommt. Dennoch würde er seine heiß geliebte Tagheuer nicht in die Schublade stecken dafür… was ihn aber nicht abhalten wird als Technikfreund irgendwann einmal das Handgelenk mit der Apfeluhr zu umrahmen. Das die Navigation mittels haptischem Feedback (ganz dezente Druck-Vibrationen die noch nicht einmal der direkte Sitznachbar mitbekommen soll) gelöst wurde gefällt Patrick wiederum, der sich im Großstadtdschungel regelmäßig mit flachem Akku verläuft. Sportfreund Andreas macht eine klare Ansage: Er würde sich überlegen, eventuell die $349 zu investieren. Der Preis sei zwar eine ordentliche Stange Geld, aber für die Wertigkeit und die Integration ins bevorzugte Ökosystem könnte sich das lohnen. Wir werden sehen, ob wir Anfang nächsten Jahres die Checkliste vor der Show per Uhr abarbeiten. Dann geben wir natürlich sofort bescheid geben und verkünden das Andreas zugeschlagen hat. Dank des Triathlontrainings von Sven ist die Uhr für ihn in Version 1 zumindest erst einmal runter vom Wunschzettel. Er braucht eine Wasserdichte Uhr. Bisher sagt das Durchgesickerungskommando, dass die Apple Watch nur Spritz- und Regenwasser fest ist. Patrick hat anfangs gezweifelt, ob Apple es nicht in Punkto “Gimmicks” bei dieser Uhr übertrieben hat. Der Homescreen sieht sehr (über)wuchernd aus, die Nachrichtenfunktion mit Herzschlag, Zeichnung und animierten Emoji’s kommen auch eine ganze Nummer verspielter daher, als man es aus Cupertino gewohnt ist und dann war da ja noch das Astronomy Watchface mit dem man auf den Mond geflogen wird. Sein finales Urteil nach anfänglichem Zweifeln ist, dass so eine Horde an Spielereien für eine auf Individualismus ausgerichtete Uhr durchaus okay ist und auch Sinn macht. Gerade die Astronomy App hat da noch einmal das Ruder rumgerissen und ihn restlos überzeugt… auch wenn’s eigentlich tragbarer Nippes mit Lexikonanbindung ist, aber als Sci-Fi Anhänger ist das natürlich eine versteckte Botschaft von Kupido. Wo Patrick allerdings noch Verbesserungsbedarf vermutet ist die Nachrichtenfunktion. Die Uhr hat ja soweit bekannt ist keine Tastatur, man diktiert also seine Nachrichten ein. Die unausgesprochene Frage von Leuten die oft in zwei oder mehr Sprachen texten ist dem zufolge, wie man die Sprache wechselt. Patrick mutmaßt, dass man wahrscheinlich wie beim iPhone in die Systemeinstellungen der Uhr muss. Bei den iOS Geräten kann man auf der Tastatur direkt umschalten und dann in der jeweiligen Sprache des Keyboardlayouts diktieren. Wenn man irgendwann per Siri schnell umschalten kann anstatt in die Settings zu gehen, wäre das eine willkommene Option, im Speziellen für die Apple Watch. Sven hingegen lobt den Mut von Mr. Lynch (Ex-Adobe Technology Rudelführer), dass dieser vor versammelter Mannschaft sich getraut hat per Siri einen komplexen Satz zu diktieren. Der Übercast schließt daraus, dass der Satz entweder zig’ tausendmal geprobt wurde oder einfach ein Video abgelaufen ist. Andreas zuckt an dieser Stelle verschreckt und man ist sich ab da sicher sein, dass zCasting 3000 involviert war und die Demo abgefilmt hat. Unser Sven stimmt dann noch in den Chorus ein, dass dies nun Tim Cooks Apple ist. Sein Baby ist die Uhr (… und die Riesenhandys). Besonders löblich findet er nach wir vor, dass die Uhr als Lifestyleprodukt verstanden und konzipiert wurde, hier also nicht der Fokus auf Techniknerds gelegt wurde die sich X Features wünschen. Patrick ist trotzdem noch ein wenig baff, weil halt so wenig Informationen rausgehauen wurden, z.B. die einmal am Rande erwähnte SDK und die fehlende ganz spezielle Apple-Begründung, warum die Uhr nicht als autarkes Gerät geplant wurde. Klar, man kann es sich denken, aber trotzdem ist es noch einmal was anderes es aus erster Hand zu hören. Im Grunde ist Patrick auf jeden Fall, trotz nicht gezündetem Kauf-Impuls gespannt auf das Gerät, schließlich hat man bei den Hands-on Demos der Journalisten ja auch nur Videos auf der Uhr gesehen. Eine Fähigkeit der Apple Watch wo er ebenfalls neugierig ist, wie sie sich in der Realität schlägt, ist das ‘Arm-heben - Uhr an’ Feature. In der Show führt er das Beispiel aus dem Klassenraum an, und zwar wenn sich Anton aus der 11b meldet und dann die zuletzt geöffnete Tumblr-Seite mit Food-Porn aufgeht. Link zum Bild: Food Porn Beispiele von der Keynote Die Bedienung sieht ja schon einmal vielversprechend aus. Mit “Glances” kann man per Swipe nach ↑ eine Art Dock aufrufen, in dem die Lieblings-Clock-Faces liegen und zwischen welchen man dann per Swipe wechseln kann. Vorgestellte Apps oder Watchfaces waren unter anderem: American Airlines = Ein Tap um einzuchecken. In Hotels = Ein Tap um die Tür zu öffnen Im BMW = Automatisch bei Bedarf zurück zum parkenden Auto navigiert werden Video-Links The Verge: Apple Watch announcement in 6 minutes The Verge: Apple Watch explained in under 2 minutes The Verge: Apple Watch hands-on (…man bemerke die zitternden Hände beim bedienen der Uhr welche ja auf Autopilot läuft – ist halt neu, da freut man sich). Unsere Picks Timo: Dash von Bogdan Popescu bringt Entwicklern Zugriff auf die Dokumentationen von sämtlichen APIs und dient gleichzeitig noch als Snippet Manager. Die Schnupperversion ist umsonst, die Vollversion kostet 17,99 €. Patrick: Timerlist von Strauss ist ein super flexibler und durchdachter Timer Manager für Yoga, Intervall-Training und komplexe Workouts. Die App kann ebenfalls gratis getestet werden, die Vollversion schlägt dann mit 2,69 € zu buche. Sven: OmniFocus 2 für’s iPad ist zwar noch nicht draussen, aber Insider Sven macht euch hier einfach trotzdem schon einmal den Mund wässrig, da diese Version wohl seine Erwartungen bei weitem übertroffen hat. Andreas: After Shave Milch von Esbjerg. Ja, genau… wenn ihr kein Programmierer seid und mit Dash nix anfangen könnt, lieber auf der Couch sitzt als auf dem Laufband unterwegs seid und demzufolge Timerlist nix für euch ist, oder richtig gut lesen könnt und bemerkt habt, dass OmniFocus 2 für das iPad noch gar nicht draussen ist, dann, ja dann kommt Andreas jetzt mit einer echten Testosteronpackung, die euch aus der Pick-Wüste rein in eine erfrischende Oase für die Nassrasur zieht. Hätte Cleopatra Bart getragen, so wäre sie wie Andreas im Wiener Shop von Esbjerg gelandet.Dort hätte sie sich mit Rasiermilch ausgestattet als gäbe es keinen Morgen. Weil das der mit einem globusumrundenden Abstand bei weitem der beste Pick ist den wir je hatten, gibt’s zum Abschluss noch ein Lächeln wie es nur ein Esbjerg-Nutzer nach einer Frischekur mit seiner Lieblingsmilch hinzaubern kann: Link zum Bild: Aftershave In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.
Google Patent: Sites You Link Should Have Reachability; Google AdWords Compliance; China Blocks Google Search (is it temporary?); Links Are The Webs Building Blocks.
Google Patent: Sites You Link Should Have Reachability; Google AdWords Compliance; China Blocks Google Search (is it temporary?); Links Are The Webs Building Blocks.
Google Patent: Sites You Link Should Have Reachability; Google AdWords Compliance; China Blocks Google Search (is it temporary?); Links Are The Webs Building Blocks.
Bienvenue dans le soixante-cinquième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: Conférence Çingleton - Une nouvelle conférence à Montréal UDID et iOS5 - Ne sera plus disponible dans iOS5 AFNetworking - Un framework réseau élégant des créateurs de Gowalla Reachability - Pour déterminer facilement si le réseau est accessible sous iOS MBProgressHUD - Pour informer l'utilisateur d'une tâche qui prendra du temps et qui est nécessaire t - Un gestionnaire de tâches simple et efficace Ecoutez cet épisode