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(播客)顺时针 586:人脸 IDea

2024-12-26 02:43:27

Our likelihood of investing in smart home tech with Apple’s entry, our technology goals for 2025, our end/start of year tech rituals, and predictions for how technology will improve the world in 2025.

Go to the podcast page.

(播客)下游 85:蒂姆-古德曼的假日来访

2024-12-25 01:48:15

Down the chimney comes Tim Goodman, reuniting with Jason to discuss his super-secret insider TV reviews, streaming’s influence in the rise of international TV here in the U.S., and Jason’s top TV shows of the year.

Go to the podcast page.

我们的 2024 最爱应用程序和游戏

2024-12-24 03:30:46

Runestone
Runestone on Vision Pro, framed by Shareshot.

Tailscale

One of my persistent quests over the years has been making it easy to access all my devices no matter where I am. I’ve played with everything from SSH and SFTP to remote screen sharing and VPNs. 2024 was the year I added a new tool to the mix: Tailscale.

The idea of Tailscale is that you create your own little network that all your devices can connect to (it accomplishes this using VPN technology). You can also set up any of your devices to be an “exit node,” so, for example, if you’re surfing the web from a café, you can set it up so that your connection is routed through your Mac mini sitting at home. Plus it lets you access any of the machines on your little network, so it’s easy if you need to retrieve a file or do something on your home Mac.

Tailscale is free, works with any platform—including everything from your iPhone to your Apple TV to your Synology—and is relatively easy to set up. As someone who has more devices than is probably wise, it’s a great little utility for making sure they can always talk to each other. —Dan Moren

Shareshot

For a couple of months each year, framing iOS screenshots is a major task on my to-do list. My book about iOS accessibility features 175 or so. I’ve used various shortcuts over the years to place device frames around the shots I take. Some worked better than others, and most performed the basic task of framing one or more screenshots, hopefully allowing me to create an easy workflow from phone to computer to book document.

This year, I was happily surprised to come upon Shareshot. It’s an iOS app (not a shortcut) that frames your screenshots according to several parameters, and based on the device that took the screenshot. Employ a shadow, a simulated spotlight, a small, medium or large amount of white space – there are many ways to make your screenshots look just the way you want them. It’s a slick, professional app.

Since the product is new, there are features that have yet to be implemented, like support for placing multiple screenshots side-by-side. But the current version has already come a long way in the few short months it’s been available. A surprise bonus for me was the innovative way the developer supports VoiceOver accessibility. Any app can tell you which settings are on and off, as you flick across them. But with Shareshot, tapping your screenshot gives you a full description of everything you’ve done to it within the app. That’s very innovative.

It’s also worth mentioning that when I reached out to the developer about some screen contrast issues I had with Shareshot, he quickly responded, and sought further information about my issue. Two thumbs, way up.—Shelly Brisbin

Sleeve

I discovered quite a few nifty Mac utilities this year, and Sleeve remains in constant use on my desktop. It’s a $6 utility that displays what’s currently playing in Apple Music or (if you prefer) Spotify. I’ve permanently parked a widget on the bottom left corner of my display, showing the currently playing tack. Sleeve also adds global hotkeys for play/pause and volume control, and even scrobbles to Last.fm! I just like seeing pretty album art and song information on my desktop, though.—Jason Snell

A Better Route Planner (ABRP)

My husband and I began our electric car journey this year. We started, as nerds naturally do, by hunting down apps we could use with our new Kia EV6. One of our favorites is ABRP, which will plan routes, based on charging locations between your starting point and destination, and the range of your specific car. You can set parameters, like the speed or provider of a charging station, and you can save routes for future use. This year, ABRP got a big boost in CarPlay integration, making it easy to follow routes from the driver’s seat. You’ll also get efficiency data for your charging and driving experiences, which is especially welcome if you’re just getting comfortable with how measuring EV efficiency differs from the same task for gas-powered cars. There are also all sorts of live data feeds you can use to connect to other EV drivers, if you want them. ABRP was acquired by Rivian late last year. So far, that’s meant rapid feature improvements, no matter what EV you drive, but there are a few Rivian-specific features that seem interesting, too.—SB

SwiftBar 2

On January 2, one of my very favorite Mac utilities got a 2.0 update: SwiftBar. This utility lets you put anything in your menu bar, making it a great place to stash ambient data. The 2.0 update added support for plugins fed by Shortcuts, making it even more accessible to people who aren’t comfortable feeding data via pretty much anything that runs via the command line. I use SwiftBar to display my local weather data, my solar data, and even my podcast live-stream stats. But it can pretty much do anything you want. And it’s free and open source.-JS

Runestone

2024 marked the release of the Apple Vision Pro, and while I don’t think I’m going to award anything to a $3500 developer kit, I do want to praise it as a tool that’s remarkably good at certain tasks, including letting me write in complete isolation. On iPadOS, my text editor of choice is 1Writer, but it only works on the Vision Pro in iPad compatibility mode—and the text rendering in that mode is inferior to native visionOS apps.

Enter Simon Støvring’s Runestone, an open-source visionOS (and iOS and iPadOS) text editor that supports Markdown. It’s pretty bare bones, but it does the job. I’ve written thousands of words on my Vision Pro, and almost all of them have been in an immersive environment while using Runestone.—JS

Star Wars: Outlaws

For me, it’s not a year-end list if there’s not something Star Wars on it. For years I wanted an immersive Star Wars game, one where I could run around on a planet, dealing with stormtroopers or scoundrels, then hop in my starship and take off for space-based combat. Star Wars: Outlaws finally delivers on that, all couched in a fun story about minor criminal Kay Vess and her journey to becoming a serious player in the galaxy. Is it wonky at times? Sure, though patches have fixed a lot of the most egregious issues. And it does, as many AAA games do these days, suffer a bit from over-collectible-ization, but nothing has come closer to the feel of being immersed in a galaxy far, far away.—DM

Balatro

I spent most of this year playing Marvel Snap, but the release of Balatro on the iOS App Store and Apple Arcade broke me out of that rut in a hurry. Balatro is a card game that’s modeled on poker, but that doesn’t do it justice: it’s a roguelike game where you face increasing challenges that you can only surmount by modifying the rules with a series of jokers, and by using your earned cash to change your deck and alter the payout math. Once you lose, all that work is wiped clean and you must start again, which isn’t as bad as it sounds since it basically leads you to explore different winning strategies based on the jokers that come your way. It’s exactly what I want from a game: you can play a session pretty quickly, but there’s always another challenge the next time you sit down to play.—JS

Disney+ for Vision Pro

I feel like I need to praise the third-party visionOS app I’ve probably spent the most time in: Disney+. There are other streaming apps for visionOS, but none (other than Apple’s own TV app) offer the breadth of 3-D content that Disney+ offers. (C’mon, Max, where are the 3-D movies?) Disney also offers some pretty amazing immersive environments for you to watch movies in, including Marvel and Star Wars worlds. My only real complaint is that they’re so good, they should be available as environments throughout visionOS… but Apple is the one who needs to make that visionOS feature happen.—JS

(播客)升级 543:大火鸡的口袋里

2024-12-24 01:44:22

To celebrate the season we discuss Christmas lights, tech gifts, favorite holiday food items, holiday TV and movies, and answer some holiday-themed listener questions. Happy holidays to all Upgradians!

Go to the podcast page.

(赞助商)安全问题的无限循环

2024-12-24 01:00:39

I recently attended the RSA conference in San Francisco–security’s biggest event of the year– and I was struck by how infatuated everyone was with the promise of new, shiny solutions to fix new, shiny problems. On some level that’s not surprising–tech is constantly driving toward the future, and security is one of the fastest-moving areas of tech.

But on the other hand, it seems like the security industry is walking away from some of its most foundational problems before they’ve actually been solved. People would rather talk about AI-powered behavioral analytics that can detect when a worker’s mouse is moving strangely than the decidedly un-glamorous work of rolling out patches and managing permissions.

This disconnect was especially clear in the 2024 Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR). This year’s report found that “the human element” (accidental breaches caused by human error or victimization in phishing attacks and the like) was the number one cause of breaches. The same was true last year, and the year before that, and the year before that.

The single biggest culprit in breaches continues to be weak and stolen credentials. The 2024 DBIR found that “use of stolen credentials” is the number one initial action during a breach, and that credentials are the number one way attackers get in in non-error, non-misuse breaches, followed by phishing and vulnerability exploits.

What’s frustrating about the persistence of credential-based attacks is that they are eminently solvable! Roll out a password manager to your end users, put SSO and MFA in front of sensitive applications, and implement passkeys when possible. Yet in 1Password’s 2022 State of Access Report, only 29% of respondents said they used a password manager at work.

The same narrative about credentials is also true about compromised devices and, especially, employee training. The DBIR’s authors said as much in a webinar about the report, claiming that “You can address two-thirds of these breaches by training and equipping your employees appropriately.”

But at RSAC, it was tough to fill a room for a talk on employee training or credential management. The popular talks tended to focus on things like the dangers of AI deepfakes, which is ironic, since the 2024 DBIR said that GenAI hasn’t made much of an impact on breaches so far.

This needs to change, and the 2024 DBIR offers a clear look at where we’re falling short and where we go from here.

To get more insights about the report and its implications for security, read the full blog.

(赞助商)魔术套索广告块: 难以置信的私密和安全的 Safari 浏览器

2024-12-21 01:00:51

My thanks to Magic Lasso Adblock for sponsoring Six Colors this week.

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