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Posts tagged ‘Apple’

9
Oct

iOS 9 Users Having Issues With POP Email Accounts and Attachments


mailappiosSince iOS 9 was released to the public on September 16, some users with POP email accounts have been having trouble opening emails with attachments. There’s a 22 page thread on the Apple discussion forums covering the issue, which currently has more than 200 replies from users who are all experiencing the same problem.

Customers with a wide range of devices are receiving a “Message not yet downloaded from server” error whenever they attempt to open an email message with an attachment. The problem appears to be affecting Apple customers who have POP email accounts and is causing issues with both new and old emails.

I am having exactly the same issue. Many of my old mails on my iPad just saying not yet downloaded from the server. I am using a pop account on both my iPad and windows live mail. I have tried deleting my email accounts and adding back in. Even some emails that were received this morning are now showing as not being downloaded from the server.

Deleting email accounts and adding them back in does not fix the issue, but downloading an alternate email program from the App Store seems to have worked for many users as a temporary fix. Turning off Wi-Fi also allows some users to read their previously downloaded emails and access attachments, but images are not viewable.

One customer experiencing issues received a response from Apple’s engineering team, suggesting the email issue occurs when an email account has been configured to remove a copy of emails on the server. This has left some wondering whether the behavior is an intended function or a bug, but while leaving messages on the server solves some of the problem, sent and trash emails remain unaccessible. The requirement to leave messages on the server also defeats the purpose of a POP email account.

This issue usually starts if one of the devices/computers that was setup with this email account has been configured to remove a copy of emails on the server. If this is the case, the customer will need to check the settings of all the devices and computers that are running this email account.

iOS leaves messages on the POP3 server by default. iOS never stores email permanently, whether POP3 or IMAP. If they are removed from the server by another device then this issue can occur.

A test that you may want to do to confirm this is to have the customer produce the error by opening one affected mail on the iOS device, and then locate that specific email on his webmail. If not found, then the device is behaving as expected. If found, please try to forward it to the same mailbox and see if the same issue occurs.

While these email problems have been plaguing users since iOS 9 was released, Apple did not fix the problem in iOS 9.0.1 or iOS 9.0.2, the two minor bug fix updates that have been released to the public since September 16. It is not clear if iOS 9.1, the first major update to iOS, fixes the issue, and Apple has not given any statement on whether some kind of fix is planned or if there’s been an intentional change to the way POP email accounts work on iOS in iOS 9.


9
Oct

Relay FM Launches New iOS App, Overcast Goes Free and Adds Streaming Capabilities


Independent podcast network Relay FM today launched its first iOS app, giving Relay FM listeners a dedicated spot to listen to their favorite podcast shows. The app is designed to allow users to discover new podcasts to listen to and then subscribe to their favorites, with push notifications sent whenever a show is streaming live.

Relay FM’s new app has a clean, vibrant look with eye-catching animated artwork. Relay FM lets users listen to podcasts live and catch up on recent episodes, but it’s not a complete podcast client. As noted by TechCrunch, there’s no way to subscribe to shows within the app or listen to past episodes.

relayfm
Also new in the world of podcasting apps is an updated version of Marco Arment’s popular Overcast app. Overcast 2 has gone free, with all of the app’s features available at no cost. The in-app purchase in Overcast 2 is an optional way to support the app. Overcast 2 also includes streaming for a better listening experience.

Episodes can now be played immediately without waiting for them to download, and new episodes can be listened to through streaming instead of via download in order to save storage space. A built-in storage manager lets users see how much space downloaded podcasts are consuming and it includes options to delete downloads and stream episodes on demand.

overcast
According to Marco Arment, Overcast 2‘s streaming architecture has improved battery life and made all playback faster to start and more reliable. Features like Smart Speed and Voice Boost have been enhanced, with Smart Speed adapting dynamically to quieter voices.

There are also 3D Touch launch shortcuts, better search, improved communication with the Apple Watch app, and more. A full list of features is available on Marco.org.

Relay FM can be downloaded from the App Store for free. [Direct Link]

Overcast can be downloaded from the App Store for free. [Direct Link]


9
Oct

Ebro Darden: the DJ who curates the sound of New York on Beats 1


AWXI - Kick-Off Concert

“Beats 1 worldwide. Always on,” Ebro Darden’s voice booms on the radio. A little over three months ago, Darden became the voice of New York on Apple Music. When the service was announced, Apple was already late to the music-streaming battle. But it hoped to gain some ground, and listeners, with a human edge. In addition to streaming music on demand and personalized playlists, Apple threw Beats 1 into the mix. The radio station would offer “human curation” in the form of three distinctly different DJs in music capitals of the world. But it also promised a star-studded lineup of hosts who would share their own playlists. Ever since, Drake’s OVO Sound Radio has dropped exclusives; St. Vincent’s quirky mixtapes have struck a note with fans sending in personal snippets; and Elton John’s Rocket Hour has often taken listeners back to a pre-streaming era.

Darden’s two-hour spot on the radio, however, is programmed for a diverse range of listeners. On any given day, he plays a heady mix of chart-toppers and obscure tracks. But for the most part, his eclectic tastes reflect the city he’s been chosen to represent. While he switches between the likes of J Balvin, Fugees, Fetty Wap, Justin Bieber and Beyoncé, his sensibility remains clearly rooted in hip-hop. His interview with Chvrches, for instance, sounded like an awkward first date, but his recent interaction with Skepta, a London-based artist often called the “King of Grime,” felt like a private conversation between two friends.

“I get scared; I’ve been scared for hip-hop several times,” Darden told Skepta on-air. “I get scared that, you know, obviously when it goes mainstream, it goes pop; it gets watered down, right? And I know that’s a part of the process. But I always trust that in hip-hop the essence of it is street. So there’s always gonna be someone who wants to ram their stories over music, so I know it’s never gonna be gone; you know what I mean?”

Darden’s been on the radio since the early ’90s. After his first stint at a station in Northern California, where he was raised, he worked his way to Hot 97, a popular New York-based radio station that’s dedicated to hip-hop. “[He’s] a real radio veteran, who knows every single side of it,” says Peter Rosenberg, who co-hosts “Ebro in the Morning” with Darden on Hot 97. “He’s a classic radio guy in that sense, he’s been on the air and behind the scenes in multiple markets and lots of different stations so you get someone who really understands that side of the business.”

Over the last decade, Darden carved his niche with his unabashed opinions and personal insight into the world of hip-hop. While he presented legends on-air, he kept his ear to the ground for the next big names. As the music director and, later, program director of Hot 97, he became well-versed in the dynamics of the industry, where labels, MCs, DJs and clubs come together to make artists. “He knows all sides of music breaking in [the city],” says Rosenberg. “You get someone who has a complete view of the music landscape.”​ This view made Darden one of three DJs, along with Zane Lowe in LA and Julie Adenuga in London, who were chosen to be on the front lines of Apple Music’s multibillion-dollar gamble on Beats radio.

https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/138636484&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true

Now, three months in, post-free trial, Apple Music’s fate hangs in the balance. Whether or not its human DJs and star guests will help convert free listeners into paid customers has become a question that’s more pertinent than ever. Even so, while the tech giant’s music aspirations are abundantly clear, its operations and consumer base have been hidden from view.

I recently caught up with Darden while he hosted his evening show on Beats 1. In between frequent pauses — where he stopped to queue the next track, shared snippets about an upcoming artist or dropped his hashtag (#EbroBeats1) — he talked about his love for hip-hop and his role as the gatekeeper of New York sound.

As someone who represents New York on Beats 1, what would you say is the sound of New York?

If you go around New York, you have everything from the Ramones to disco to electronic, which became house music, became hip-hop music, became freestyle. You know, obviously, you have the break beat bands of the ’80s, Malcolm McLaren and things like that, which all kinda play into this overarching idea of hip-hop that we’ve fallen in love with. [It] pools music samples from all formats of music, and people tell their stories about being New Yorkers over that music whether it’s singing or rapping.

New York’s music sound is really diverse. It’s as diverse as the cultural roots here. Today while you have hip-hop, you also have Dembow, which is going on in the Dominican clubs. You have reggae music and Afrobeat; there’s a big Nigerian population here and Afrobeat’s really popular. Then you still have soca music, which is big and, all the while, there’s been pop music; like disco was pop music. You know you gonna go to a club and you’re gonna hear all of that music. That’s what we try and create everyday on Beats 1 — the things that are popular internationally, nationally and then things that are popular locally. It’s like artist discovery … discovering new artists from the local scene, whether they’re pop artists or indie bands or indie hip-hop — whatever it is.

https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/214869231&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true

You’re one of the most recognizable voices on Hot 97. How do you go from a hip-hop-centric station to Apple’s more global, mainstream radio? In what ways are the two formats different for you?

You must know, to be in love with hip-hop, in its truest sense, you have to be in love with music first. Hip-hop pulls from all formats to create sound. If you look at A Tribe Called Quest, their records are basically jazz samples. If you look at Run-DMC and Beastie Boys, that was rock and roll. If you look at even what Jay Z has done, there’s rock samples and soul music. The basis for all that music pulls from other places. In hip-hop, when I was growing up, it was not only about enjoying the songs that are available, but doing research to know the original song that’s been used. Hip-hop, to me, was loving all formats.

I started in radio in 1990 when I was 15 years old. [Back then] hip-hop was not allowed to be played on the radio before 6PM or [it was] only on weekends. It wasn’t mainstream; it was seen as aggressive. Obviously as the ’90s progressed, hip-hop formats became more common. Working in a multi-format radio station is where I started.

But in terms of format, on Hot 97, there’s a lot of room for you to set the record straight or come in strong with your opinions on many hip-hop issues. Are there some things that you can and cannot do on Beats 1?

You have to know your audience; I think that’s anywhere. If you’re live in a club, you gotta know who your audience is so you’re always aware of what they’re coming to you for and what their expectations are. Also keep in mind: We’re in over 100 countries. You wanna be careful about subtle things like cultural nuances country to country. You wanna keep things just about loving the music and [not] get into things that are not about the music.

There are a lot of opinions about Beats 1 — what it does and doesn’t do — but there’s been very little insight from the curators and the company. What does it take to build a daily show for a global audience? How do you decide what goes on the air?

The first is what’s popular, no matter where it’s from. Is it popular with a large quantity of people on Earth? So that’s kinda the first thing: Is the song popular or is the artist popular? Let’s expose that. After that, you wanna throw in things and hits from the past that people already love. And then layered on top of that is, “Hey, you like these songs and you fell in love with these songs many years ago; here’s some new music that falls in line and has a level of cohesiveness with all of these things you already love.”

For each [of us], whether it’s our London crew, our LA or New York crew, we have a collective of people. We get together each week and talk about music that we’re hearing and love and things we believe are ready — you know, cause you wanna make sure an artist is ready for the opportunity. Like I may fall in love with a song from an artist, but they’re not prepared for me to say, “Hey world, check this guy out,” because if that song kicks off they may not have a manager or an album prepared; they may not be able to see that moment, go on tour. Here comes this moment; this song becomes super popular and now the band is not able to connect with the consumer and then that moment is gone and the band loses out on that opportunity. So we really try to be in step with the music that the artist is creating as well as give the consumer enough time to digest the things that we’re exposing them to.

What makes human curation such a big part of what Apple Music wants to do?

In the simplest terms, people like people. Social is the world we live in. Human curation is in and around someone that you trust or someone you just met. It’s like walking up to a bar to have a drink or sitting next to somebody listening to something. That’s what we’re trying to create: a gathering moment, sitting around discovering music together. If I haven’t heard a song that Julie in London or Zane in LA [dropped] and I just walked in … I’m like, “You know what, let’s play it and let’s all listen to it together; hear it for the first time together.” It’s about having fun, listening to music and connecting to people in a real way. I don’t believe it’s more complicated than that.

Your playlists on Beats 1 often introduce new artists to listeners. Is that a personal choice as a DJ or is it something Apple Music wants to do?

That was our mantra from the beginning. We wanted to be the place that’s helping artists contact consumers as well as helping the consumer have discovery. That is the basis of what we’re doing, creating a place for people to discover music. It’s what we set out to do.

Broadcast radio has been around for decades. But with internet radio, there’s a sense that “radio” is somehow new. What’s new about this format and what’s old?

The old and traditional is that we still call everything radio. Even though streaming technically is not radio, [because of] our love for what radio means to our culture and music, you know, we call everything radio. Even though it’s not necessarily a broadcast.

I would also say human curation is also not a new concept. Radio stations got so corporate that they began to get watered down by the desire to chase advertising. Like everything that goes mainstream — broadcast television or radio — everything gets repetitive and redundant and watered down in its effort to simplify and garner the biggest audience that you can. There’s some still human curation pieces to that. I would say what’s new is the fact that we at Apple and Beats 1 have knocked down format barriers, knocked down the structure and format of repetitive radio and broadcast. So we’re giving a larger sample of what’s available daily. There’s still some repetition, because obviously people are coming in and coming out sampling their product, but all in all we’re taking more risks and breaking more acts than traditional radio is. So that’s new.

Even though you’ve been on-air for years, would you say the Beats 1 format is challenging for you?

I would say the only challenge today is not knowing the exact data on usage, so we don’t know what’s working [and] what’s not, technically, other than the fact that we’re getting a great response. Because we’re new, we can’t actually see how people are consuming the platform just yet. We wanna know what’s working, so we can make the product better and do a better job.

Beats 1 DJs, from left, Julie Adenuga, Ebro Darden and Zane Lowe

What about the impact of playlists on individual artists? Whether it’s humans or algorithms curating them, what do you think playlists bring to the listeners and what do they take away from the experience of an artist’s catalog?

If a consumer wants their music that way, who can say it’s wrong? I’m sure an artist that creates an album might not be happy that their album has been plucked apart, taken out of order and placed in a playlist because they created something and they want it that way. But you know, it’s up to the consumer to decide what they want. There’s no one right answer on that.

I’m not the guy who wants to tell people how to consume their entertainment. I believe people [who like] an artist will go buy an album and buy concert tickets and a T-shirt, et cetera. For people who don’t have that deeper relationship with an artist, they won’t buy an album. That choice is amazing for the consumer; it may not be so amazing for the artist and the creators of content because they have less control. But I’m in favor of the consumer having the choice. Power to the people; that’s just the kind of person I am.

What inspires you to stay on radio decade after decade?

First, I was raised around music — the instruments, the melodies and stories. I love great voices and great soulful music — I mean heartfelt, not specifically just a soul sound; really just the human spirit. Next after that, being able to put something together that would allow someone to escape from their problems or be connected in a real way to someone else who’s going through a similar problem. That’s kinda how I fell in love with radio … creating something for someone that’s helping them through their day.

[Image credit: Robin Marchant via Getty Images (top), Beats 1 (center and bottom)]

9
Oct

Ebro Darden: the DJ who curates the sound of New York on Beats 1


AWXI - Kick-Off Concert

“Beats 1 worldwide. Always on,” Ebro Darden’s voice booms on the radio. A little over three months ago, Darden became the voice of New York on Apple Music. When the service was announced, Apple was already late to the music-streaming battle. But it hoped to gain some ground, and listeners, with a human edge. In addition to streaming music on demand and personalized playlists, Apple threw Beats 1 into the mix. The radio station would offer “human curation” in the form of three distinctly different DJs in music capitals of the world. But it also promised a star-studded lineup of hosts who would share their own playlists. Ever since, Drake’s OVO Sound Radio has dropped exclusives; St. Vincent’s quirky mixtapes have struck a note with fans sending in personal snippets; and Elton John’s Rocket Hour has often taken listeners back to a pre-streaming era.

Darden’s two-hour spot on the radio, however, is programmed for a diverse range of listeners. On any given day, he plays a heady mix of chart-toppers and obscure tracks. But for the most part, his eclectic tastes reflect the city he’s been chosen to represent. While he switches between the likes of J Balvin, Fugees, Fetty Wap, Justin Bieber and Beyoncé, his sensibility remains clearly rooted in hip-hop. His interview with Chvrches, for instance, sounded like an awkward first date, but his recent interaction with Skepta, a London-based artist often called the “King of Grime,” felt like a private conversation between two friends.

“I get scared; I’ve been scared for hip-hop several times,” Darden told Skepta on-air. “I get scared that, you know, obviously when it goes mainstream, it goes pop; it gets watered down, right? And I know that’s a part of the process. But I always trust that in hip-hop the essence of it is street. So there’s always gonna be someone who wants to ram their stories over music, so I know it’s never gonna be gone; you know what I mean?”

Darden’s been on the radio since the early ’90s. After his first stint at a station in Northern California, where he was raised, he worked his way to Hot 97, a popular New York-based radio station that’s dedicated to hip-hop. “[He’s] a real radio veteran, who knows every single side of it,” says Peter Rosenberg, who co-hosts “Ebro in the Morning” with Darden on Hot 97. “He’s a classic radio guy in that sense, he’s been on the air and behind the scenes in multiple markets and lots of different stations so you get someone who really understands that side of the business.”

Over the last decade, Darden carved his niche with his unabashed opinions and personal insight into the world of hip-hop. While he presented legends on-air, he kept his ear to the ground for the next big names. As the music director and, later, program director of Hot 97, he became well-versed in the dynamics of the industry, where labels, MCs, DJs and clubs come together to make artists. “He knows all sides of music breaking in [the city],” says Rosenberg. “You get someone who has a complete view of the music landscape.”​ This view made Darden one of three DJs, along with Zane Lowe in LA and Julie Adenuga in London, who were chosen to be on the front lines of Apple Music’s multibillion-dollar gamble on Beats radio.

https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/138636484&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true

Now, three months in, post-free trial, Apple Music’s fate hangs in the balance. Whether or not its human DJs and star guests will help convert free listeners into paid customers has become a question that’s more pertinent than ever. Even so, while the tech giant’s music aspirations are abundantly clear, its operations and consumer base have been hidden from view.

I recently caught up with Darden while he hosted his evening show on Beats 1. In between frequent pauses — where he stopped to queue the next track, shared snippets about an upcoming artist or dropped his hashtag (#EbroBeats1) — he talked about his love for hip-hop and his role as the gatekeeper of New York sound.

As someone who represents New York on Beats 1, what would you say is the sound of New York?

If you go around New York, you have everything from the Ramones to disco to electronic, which became house music, became hip-hop music, became freestyle. You know, obviously, you have the break beat bands of the ’80s, Malcolm McLaren and things like that, which all kinda play into this overarching idea of hip-hop that we’ve fallen in love with. [It] pools music samples from all formats of music, and people tell their stories about being New Yorkers over that music whether it’s singing or rapping.

New York’s music sound is really diverse. It’s as diverse as the cultural roots here. Today while you have hip-hop, you also have Dembow, which is going on in the Dominican clubs. You have reggae music and Afrobeat; there’s a big Nigerian population here and Afrobeat’s really popular. Then you still have soca music, which is big and, all the while, there’s been pop music; like disco was pop music. You know you gonna go to a club and you’re gonna hear all of that music. That’s what we try and create everyday on Beats 1 — the things that are popular internationally, nationally and then things that are popular locally. It’s like artist discovery … discovering new artists from the local scene, whether they’re pop artists or indie bands or indie hip-hop — whatever it is.

https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/214869231&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true

You’re one of the most recognizable voices on Hot 97. How do you go from a hip-hop-centric station to Apple’s more global, mainstream radio? In what ways are the two formats different for you?

You must know, to be in love with hip-hop, in its truest sense, you have to be in love with music first. Hip-hop pulls from all formats to create sound. If you look at A Tribe Called Quest, their records are basically jazz samples. If you look at Run-DMC and Beastie Boys, that was rock and roll. If you look at even what Jay Z has done, there’s rock samples and soul music. The basis for all that music pulls from other places. In hip-hop, when I was growing up, it was not only about enjoying the songs that are available, but doing research to know the original song that’s been used. Hip-hop, to me, was loving all formats.

I started in radio in 1990 when I was 15 years old. [Back then] hip-hop was not allowed to be played on the radio before 6PM or [it was] only on weekends. It wasn’t mainstream; it was seen as aggressive. Obviously as the ’90s progressed, hip-hop formats became more common. Working in a multi-format radio station is where I started.

But in terms of format, on Hot 97, there’s a lot of room for you to set the record straight or come in strong with your opinions on many hip-hop issues. Are there some things that you can and cannot do on Beats 1?

You have to know your audience; I think that’s anywhere. If you’re live in a club, you gotta know who your audience is so you’re always aware of what they’re coming to you for and what their expectations are. Also keep in mind: We’re in over 100 countries. You wanna be careful about subtle things like cultural nuances country to country. You wanna keep things just about loving the music and [not] get into things that are not about the music.

There are a lot of opinions about Beats 1 — what it does and doesn’t do — but there’s been very little insight from the curators and the company. What does it take to build a daily show for a global audience? How do you decide what goes on the air?

The first is what’s popular, no matter where it’s from. Is it popular with a large quantity of people on Earth? So that’s kinda the first thing: Is the song popular or is the artist popular? Let’s expose that. After that, you wanna throw in things and hits from the past that people already love. And then layered on top of that is, “Hey, you like these songs and you fell in love with these songs many years ago; here’s some new music that falls in line and has a level of cohesiveness with all of these things you already love.”

For each [of us], whether it’s our London crew, our LA or New York crew, we have a collective of people. We get together each week and talk about music that we’re hearing and love and things we believe are ready — you know, cause you wanna make sure an artist is ready for the opportunity. Like I may fall in love with a song from an artist, but they’re not prepared for me to say, “Hey world, check this guy out,” because if that song kicks off they may not have a manager or an album prepared; they may not be able to see that moment, go on tour. Here comes this moment; this song becomes super popular and now the band is not able to connect with the consumer and then that moment is gone and the band loses out on that opportunity. So we really try to be in step with the music that the artist is creating as well as give the consumer enough time to digest the things that we’re exposing them to.

What makes human curation such a big part of what Apple Music wants to do?

In the simplest terms, people like people. Social is the world we live in. Human curation is in and around someone that you trust or someone you just met. It’s like walking up to a bar to have a drink or sitting next to somebody listening to something. That’s what we’re trying to create: a gathering moment, sitting around discovering music together. If I haven’t heard a song that Julie in London or Zane in LA [dropped] and I just walked in … I’m like, “You know what, let’s play it and let’s all listen to it together; hear it for the first time together.” It’s about having fun, listening to music and connecting to people in a real way. I don’t believe it’s more complicated than that.

Your playlists on Beats 1 often introduce new artists to listeners. Is that a personal choice as a DJ or is it something Apple Music wants to do?

That was our mantra from the beginning. We wanted to be the place that’s helping artists contact consumers as well as helping the consumer have discovery. That is the basis of what we’re doing, creating a place for people to discover music. It’s what we set out to do.

Broadcast radio has been around for decades. But with internet radio, there’s a sense that “radio” is somehow new. What’s new about this format and what’s old?

The old and traditional is that we still call everything radio. Even though streaming technically is not radio, [because of] our love for what radio means to our culture and music, you know, we call everything radio. Even though it’s not necessarily a broadcast.

I would also say human curation is also not a new concept. Radio stations got so corporate that they began to get watered down by the desire to chase advertising. Like everything that goes mainstream — broadcast television or radio — everything gets repetitive and redundant and watered down in its effort to simplify and garner the biggest audience that you can. There’s some still human curation pieces to that. I would say what’s new is the fact that we at Apple and Beats 1 have knocked down format barriers, knocked down the structure and format of repetitive radio and broadcast. So we’re giving a larger sample of what’s available daily. There’s still some repetition, because obviously people are coming in and coming out sampling their product, but all in all we’re taking more risks and breaking more acts than traditional radio is. So that’s new.

Even though you’ve been on-air for years, would you say the Beats 1 format is challenging for you?

I would say the only challenge today is not knowing the exact data on usage, so we don’t know what’s working [and] what’s not, technically, other than the fact that we’re getting a great response. Because we’re new, we can’t actually see how people are consuming the platform just yet. We wanna know what’s working, so we can make the product better and do a better job.

Beats 1 DJs, from left, Julie Adenuga, Ebro Darden and Zane Lowe

What about the impact of playlists on individual artists? Whether it’s humans or algorithms curating them, what do you think playlists bring to the listeners and what do they take away from the experience of an artist’s catalog?

If a consumer wants their music that way, who can say it’s wrong? I’m sure an artist that creates an album might not be happy that their album has been plucked apart, taken out of order and placed in a playlist because they created something and they want it that way. But you know, it’s up to the consumer to decide what they want. There’s no one right answer on that.

I’m not the guy who wants to tell people how to consume their entertainment. I believe people [who like] an artist will go buy an album and buy concert tickets and a T-shirt, et cetera. For people who don’t have that deeper relationship with an artist, they won’t buy an album. That choice is amazing for the consumer; it may not be so amazing for the artist and the creators of content because they have less control. But I’m in favor of the consumer having the choice. Power to the people; that’s just the kind of person I am.

What inspires you to stay on radio decade after decade?

First, I was raised around music — the instruments, the melodies and stories. I love great voices and great soulful music — I mean heartfelt, not specifically just a soul sound; really just the human spirit. Next after that, being able to put something together that would allow someone to escape from their problems or be connected in a real way to someone else who’s going through a similar problem. That’s kinda how I fell in love with radio … creating something for someone that’s helping them through their day.

[Image credit: Robin Marchant via Getty Images (top), Beats 1 (center and bottom)]

9
Oct

TextExpander 5 Updated to Fix Crashing on OS X El Capitan and Other Bugs


Smile Software has released TextExpander 5.1.2 with a fix for OS X El Capitan-related crashing on launch and other minor bug fixes and improvements. The update is free for all users running TextExpander 5 or later.

TextExpander-5
TextExpander is a popular typing utility for Mac that can expand custom keystroke shortcuts into frequently-used text and pictures. The tool can insert text ranging from email signatures to paragraphs, automatically fix typos, autocomplete forms and more.

What’s new in 5.1.2:

  • Addresses El Capitan related crash on launch
  • Other minor fixes and improvements

    What’s New in Version 5:

  • Suggests snippets from phrases you habitually type
  • Reminds you of missed opportunities to use your abbreviations
  • Customize snippet file location
  • Sync via iCloud Drive or any sync folder
  • Simplified expansion of lengthy fill-ins and scripts
  • Search and expand snippets, abbreviations, and suggestions inline as you type
  • Preview expanded snippet
  • Refreshed statistics display
  • Supports JavaScript snippets that also operate on iOS
  • Updated for Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite (required)


  • TextExpander 5 is $44.95 with a free trial available, or $19.95 for users upgrading from a previous version.


    9
    Oct

    ‘Steve Jobs’ Releases in Select Theaters as First Full Scene Debuts Online


    The much-anticipated Steve Jobs film today releases in select theaters across the United States, following its debut at a few film festivals throughout September and October. To coincide with the film’s release, on its YouTube channel Universal Pictures has published a handful of new TV spots, inside looks, and the first full clip from the movie. In the scene, Seth Rogen as Steve Wozniak confronts Michael Fassbender’s Steve Jobs over the impending launch of the NeXT Computer.


    Alongside the scene, Universal shared four new TV spots for the movie that have been promoting its release over the past few weeks, most of them centering around Rolling Stone’s four-star review of the film. The company also shared “a look inside” the newly released film, including short interview clips with its cast and crew that focus on writer Aaron Sorkin and director Danny Boyle.

    The first impressions of the film at festivals in Telluride and New York have been largely positive, centering on Fassbender’s performance and the risky, yet rewarding liberties that Sorkin takes with certain aspects of Jobs’ life. Currently, the film sits at a 91 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with 50 fresh reviews to 5 rotten.

    Steve Jobs launches today in select theaters in New York and Los Angeles and will see a slow rollout to more select theaters in places like Toronto and Boston on October 16. The actual, wide release is set for closer to the end of the month on October 23.


    9
    Oct

    Apple’s iPhone 6s and 6s Plus are now available SIM-free


    Apple is now selling unlocked versions of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, giving you options if you’d rather not be tied to a contract or want a handset that works in other countries. The downside, of course, is that you’ll pay the full retail price without those carrier subsidies — starting at $649 for the (controversial) 16GB iPhone 6s at Apple Stores or online. In addition, Apple has started rolling out its latest iPhones in 36 new countries, including Mexico, Russia, Taiwan and Spain. They’re now available in 48 nations, and will hit about 80 more by the end of the year.

    Via: 9 to 5 Mac

    Source: Apple

    9
    Oct

    Apple Watch Launches in South Africa on October 23


    Apple has updated its regional website for South Africa to indicate the Apple Watch will be available in the country on October 23.

    apple-watch-trio-new
    Apple Watch is available for purchase starting today in Belgium, Finland, Norway, Luxembourg and Poland. The wrist-worn device expands to Brazil and Columbia on October 16 and to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates on October 22.

    • April 24: Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, UK, US
    • June 26: Italy, Mexico, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, and Taiwan
    • July 17: The Netherlands, Sweden, and Thailand
    • July 31: New Zealand, Russia, and Turkey
    • September 25: Austria, Denmark, and Ireland
    • October 9: Belgium, Finland, Norway, Luxembourg, and Poland
    • October 16: Brazil and Colombia
    • October 22: Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates
    • October 23: South Africa

    Apple Watch prices in South Africa are not yet available on the Apple Online Store.


    9
    Oct

    Apple pulls ad-blocking apps that can ‘compromise’ security


    Apple has removed several ad-blocking apps from its Store that created a risk of “man-in-the-middle” security breaches. While Apple now permits ad-blockers for Safari, the banned apps also block ads from native apps by installing their own “root certificates” and shunting all traffic through a VPN. From there, they read the unencrypted traffic and remove ads, provided you enable the feature. As spotted by Techcrunch, one of the apps Apple removed was “Been Choice,” software that even removed ads from Apple’s own News app. However, it was also gathering “behavioral data” and sharing it with other companies, offering users points and cash rewards in exchange.

    While there were no reported breaches, Apple decided to pull the apps, noting that they “install root certificates which enable the monitoring of customer network data that can in turn be used to compromise SSL/TLS security solutions.” However, it promised to work with the developers “to quickly get their apps back on the App Store,” provided there’s no risk to customer privacy and security. Starting with iOS 9, Apple decided to allow regular ad-blockers for Safari and other browsers, provided they don’t monitor user traffic.

    Apple is deeply committed to protecting customer privacy and security. We’ve removed a few apps from the App Store that install root certificates which enable the monitoring of customer network data that can in turn be used to compromise SSL/TLS security solutions. We are working closely with these developers to quickly get their apps back on the App Store, while ensuring customer privacy and security is not at risk.

    As some observers have pointed out, Apple is likely to demand that the root certificate and VPN monitoring features be removed altogether, as they seemingly go against its Store policy. Meanwhile, Been Choice said that “we will remove ad blocking for FB, Google, Yahoo, Yahoo Fin., and Pinterest and resubmit tomorrow, to comply,” but added “we will continue to block the majority of ads in apps, as well as Safari.”

    Source: Reuters

    9
    Oct

    Apple Watch owners can use Facebook Messenger on their wrists


    The dedicated Facebook Messenger app Apple promised for its wearable’s latest operating system, the watchOS 2, is finally here. So long as you’ve already installed the updated platform, you can start using third-party apps on your Apple Watch, including the social network’s messaging application. Since the watchface is too small to type on, the app lets you send and receive voice clips, stickers, Likes and emojis — abbreviated interactions that suit a tiny display. Facebook also upgraded the app to show your Messenger contacts and conversations via spotlight search on iOS 9 and to work with the iPad’s multi-tasking capabilities.

    Source: iTunes