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Geekz Snow 2019-08-10
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While iPhone owners may pine for the latest new models, many are actually hanging on to their older handsets for longer than ever before.

That’s likely because these older phones still work just great and perhaps because newer phones have become way more expensive over time, making it harder to justify a new purchase.

Whatever the reason, the day will come to replace your old iPhone with a new or different one, and when it does, you’ll want to have all your data assembled just the way you like it.

For that, you’ll want a convenient way to transfer your data from your old iPhone to your new one.

There are several easy ways to transfer data from one iPhone to another — or between iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.

Unpairing will automatically back up your watch to your iPhone so you can easily restore the data later.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-10

Back to school sales at Walmart and Best Buy are in full swing, and it's a perfect opportunity to find discounts on laptops, tablets, headphones, and more.

It's also a fantastic time to find deals on smartwatches, and Walmart and Best Buy have the Apple Watch Series 3 on sale for $299.

That's an $80 discount for the smartwatch that includes cellular and GPS technology.

The Apple Watch 3 is a health-focused smartwatch that also keeps you connected with the ability to make calls, send messages and receive notifications.

The Apple Watch also tracks steps, popular workouts, calories burned, and offers continuous heart rate monitoring.

The Series 3 will even notify you when an irregular heartbeat is detected and provides a breathing app to help manage day-to-day stress.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
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Right now the most ironic paradox in most people’s lives is the complete lack of motivation they feel for keeping their body healthy.

I’ve got a hard enough time trying to act on things I know are right, I’ve got ADHD, now you want me to remember that going for a bike ride makes me feel good the rest of the day?

They’ve done this for the past decade, and they’ve done very well for themselves as such.

Global smartwatch shipments around the world show three major players, including Fitbit, Samsung, and Apple.

In Q2, according to Strategy Analytics, Global smartwatch shipments looked like what follows.

Q2 2019 Global Smartwatch Vendor Shipments:

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
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When Apple announced that its promised multi-device AirPower charging pad had officially been cancelled, people immediately began wondering what might take its place.

After all, just because Apple had given up, that didn’t mean people didn’t want a simple and convenient way to recharge a range of Apple products.

So now, almost half a year after AirPower got killed off, Mophie has finally released the first Apple-approved multi-device charging pad available for sale from Apple’s web store.

While it doesn’t look quite as sleek or pretty as AirPower, Mophie’s £130 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Pad should still be able to get the job done.

It features three distinct charging zones that can juice up an iPhone, AirPods, and an Apple Watch simultaneously, complete with a listed power output of 7.5 watts (which is Apple’s current limit for wireless charging).

Mophie’s 3-in-1 charging pad is actually quite clever, and possibly an improvement over AirPower, as the angled rest for the Apple Watch makes it easier to use the watch in Nightstand mode while the device is recharging.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
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The dream of Apple’s AirPower has been dead for a while now, but plenty of third-party companies are working on offering their own multi-device wireless chargers for Apple products.

Mophie is the latest company to allow users to charge all their Apple devices at once, thanks to the new dual wireless charging pad and 3-in-1 charging pad.

Both of the products are aimed at offering a relatively sleek design, and can deliver up to 7.5 watts of power to any Qi-enabled device — including the iPhone and AirPods.

Like any other wireless charging pads, they’re pretty easy to use — just put your device down on the charging pad, and it should start charging.

The Apple Watch is the most difficult device to deal with here, as it doesn’t actually use Qi as its wireless charging standard.

It instead uses Apple’s own Magnetic Charging standard.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
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The Mophie Dual Wireless Charging Pad and 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Pad aren’t quite as elegant as the Qi pad Apple had in mind to make, but a strong mark in their favor is that you’ll actually be able to buy them.

AirPower, if the disastrous wireless pad passed you by, was Apple’s concept for an incredibly flexible Qi charger.

Capable of recharging two or three devices at the same time – such as an iPhone, an Apple Watch, and a set of AirPods in their wireless charging case – it would have supported positioning them anywhere on the upper surface.

Problem was, that elegant theory proved fiendishly difficult in practice.

AirPower was delayed, amid leaks suggesting untold engineering headaches around heat and power management, and then Apple finally opted to pull the plug on the project altogether.

Now, Mophie is here to give a similar look and experience, but in a more straightforward way.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09

Apple has begun selling two multidevice wireless chargers from Mophie.

Both the Dual Wireless Charging Pad ($79.95) and 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Pad ($139.95) are coming to select Apple Stores next week and are available for online order now.

The Dual Wireless Charging Pad can deliver up to 7.5W of power to iPhones placed on either of the mats.

AirPods also work fine if you’ve got the wireless charging case, but the Apple Watch won’t charge on this.

To solve for that, there’s a USB-A port around back for juicing up a third device — like an Apple Watch, Powerbeats Pro, or whatever else.

I’ve asked Mophie for details on the power output of that USB port.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
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In 2017, Apple introduced a Qi wireless charging mat by that name that could simultaneously charge an iPhone, an AirPods case, and an Apple Watch—or three items in any combination from those three.

It was repeatedly delayed, and reports indicated that Apple was facing serious technical issues when developing it.

In March of this year, Apple finally confirmed the product would never be released.

Apple just confirmed once and for all that AirPower will never come out

Except now a variation on the original concept has, and Apple is selling it in its store.

Whereas AirPower could charge three devices in any combination—say, two iPhones and a Watch, or two Watches and one AirPods case, or three iPhones—the mophie pad has a dedicated spot for each device type: iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09

Apple is expanding the scope and the financial rewards of its bug bounty programme, offering up to $1 million to security researchers that find flaws in its full range of products.

The company launched a bug bounty programme for iOS three years ago, offering up to $200,000 to ethical hackers that responsibly reported vulnerabilities.

Now, the programme has been extended to cover Mac OS, Apple TV, Apple Watch and iPad OS.

At present, iPads run iOS, but a new operating system will be rolled out to compatible tablets later this year.

For all devices, the maximum $1 million bounty will be available to those who find advanced security flaws, while $500,000 will be given for reporting flaws that could potentially result in the loss of user data.

There will also be a 50 per cent bonus if the vulnerability is discovered in a beta version of any software.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09

There’s no shortage of AirPower knockoffs on the market.

Many have been in the works since Apple took the wraps off its in-house version, positioned as more affordable alternatives.

Since the company unceremoniously pulled the plug on the project, however, they’re the only game in town.

We reviewed a $99 one a while ago.

It seemed fine, and Amazon is currently overloaded with even more affordable options.

It’s probably unfair to lump Mophie in the knockoff.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
img

When Apple announced that its promised multi-device AirPower charging pad had officially been cancelled, people immediately began wondering what might take its place.

After all, just because Apple had given up, that didn’t mean people didn’t want a simple and convenient way to recharge a range of Apple products.

So now, almost half a year after AirPower got killed off, Mophie has finally released the first Apple-approved multi-device charging pad available for sale from Apple’s web store.

While it doesn’t look quite as sleek or pretty as AirPower, Mophie’s £130 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Pad should still be able to get the job done.

It features three distinct charging zones that can juice up an iPhone, AirPods, and an Apple Watch simultaneously, complete with a listed power output of 7.5 watts (which is Apple’s current limit for wireless charging).

Mophie’s 3-in-1 charging pad is actually quite clever, and possibly an improvement over AirPower, as the angled rest for the Apple Watch makes it easier to use the watch in Nightstand mode while the device is recharging.

Geekz Snow 2019-08-09
img

The dream of Apple’s AirPower has been dead for a while now, but plenty of third-party companies are working on offering their own multi-device wireless chargers for Apple products.

Mophie is the latest company to allow users to charge all their Apple devices at once, thanks to the new dual wireless charging pad and 3-in-1 charging pad.

Both of the products are aimed at offering a relatively sleek design, and can deliver up to 7.5 watts of power to any Qi-enabled device — including the iPhone and AirPods.

Like any other wireless charging pads, they’re pretty easy to use — just put your device down on the charging pad, and it should start charging.

The Apple Watch is the most difficult device to deal with here, as it doesn’t actually use Qi as its wireless charging standard.

It instead uses Apple’s own Magnetic Charging standard.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-08

Apple is finally giving security researchers something they’ve wanted for years: a macOS bug bounty.

The technology giant said Thursday it will roll out the bug bounty program to include Macs and MacBooks, as well as Apple TV and Apple Watch, almost exactly three years after it debuted its bug bounty program for iOS.

The idea is simple: you find a vulnerability, you disclose it to Apple, they fix it — and in return you get a cash payout.

These programs are wildly popular in the tech industry as it helps to fund security researchers in exchange for serious security flaws that could otherwise be used by malicious actors, and also helps fill the void of bug finders selling their vulnerabilities to exploit brokers, and on the black market, who might abuse the flaws to conduct surveillance.

Some security researchers had flat-out refused to report security flaws to Apple in absence of a bug bounty.

At the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas, head of security engineering and architecture Ivan Krstić announced the program to run alongside its existing iOS bug bounty.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-08
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Apple has slowly but surely been turning its Apple Watch into a tiny medical lab, equipping it with various sensors to paint a picture of the wearer’s health and medical condition.

There is no shortage of anecdotes and testimonies of how every new Apple Watch feature has saved lives, either through diagnosis or prognosis.

Most of those, however, come from the usual heart-related sensors and measurements.

A new study, however, is now looking into whether the Apple Watch can also be used to determine the wearer’s mental health as well.

Mental health is harder to catch than direct physiological problems.

Without voluntarily submitting to scans and checkups, it is nearly impossible to detect dementia or Alzheimer’s until they’re already there.

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Geekz Snow 2019-08-08
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It works almost seamlessly and is so much more secure than rival systems without being a burden or getting in your way.

Well, that may soon change, as Apple has just been granted a patent for a Face ID-like system that can be implemented in a MacBook.

As I opined last month, this is long overdue.

Its basic idea is that a Mac could be equipped with a set of sensors that detect when you’re near your Mac and, like the dancing elves staring through my bedroom window at night, prevent it from going to sleep.

Where it gets interesting is where the patent mentions what happens if the sensors detect that a person is nearby: “If the [detected] object is a person, the device determines a position of the person relative to the computing device and executes a change of state in the computing device based on the position of the person relative to the computing device.”

Once you penetrate the dense patent-speak, it seems to us this is describing a system that could potentially log you in to your Mac if it recognizes your face.

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0
Geekz Snow 2019-08-08

Apple is finally giving security researchers something they’ve wanted for years: a macOS bug bounty.

The technology giant said Thursday it will roll out the bug bounty program to include Macs and MacBooks, as well as Apple TV and Apple Watch, almost exactly three years after it debuted its bug bounty program for iOS.

The idea is simple: you find a vulnerability, you disclose it to Apple, they fix it — and in return you get a cash payout.

These programs are wildly popular in the tech industry as it helps to fund security researchers in exchange for serious security flaws that could otherwise be used by malicious actors, and also helps fill the void of bug finders selling their vulnerabilities to exploit brokers, and on the black market, who might abuse the flaws to conduct surveillance.

Some security researchers had flat-out refused to report security flaws to Apple in absence of a bug bounty.

At the Black Hat conference in Las Vegas, head of security engineering and architecture Ivan Krstić announced the program to run alongside its existing iOS bug bounty.

Geekz Snow 2019-08-08
img

It works almost seamlessly and is so much more secure than rival systems without being a burden or getting in your way.

Well, that may soon change, as Apple has just been granted a patent for a Face ID-like system that can be implemented in a MacBook.

As I opined last month, this is long overdue.

Its basic idea is that a Mac could be equipped with a set of sensors that detect when you’re near your Mac and, like the dancing elves staring through my bedroom window at night, prevent it from going to sleep.

Where it gets interesting is where the patent mentions what happens if the sensors detect that a person is nearby: “If the [detected] object is a person, the device determines a position of the person relative to the computing device and executes a change of state in the computing device based on the position of the person relative to the computing device.”

Once you penetrate the dense patent-speak, it seems to us this is describing a system that could potentially log you in to your Mac if it recognizes your face.

Geekz Snow 2019-08-08
img

Apple has slowly but surely been turning its Apple Watch into a tiny medical lab, equipping it with various sensors to paint a picture of the wearer’s health and medical condition.

There is no shortage of anecdotes and testimonies of how every new Apple Watch feature has saved lives, either through diagnosis or prognosis.

Most of those, however, come from the usual heart-related sensors and measurements.

A new study, however, is now looking into whether the Apple Watch can also be used to determine the wearer’s mental health as well.

Mental health is harder to catch than direct physiological problems.

Without voluntarily submitting to scans and checkups, it is nearly impossible to detect dementia or Alzheimer’s until they’re already there.