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The Oopsy-Daisy Edition Friday, April 26, 2024

How To Prevent A Lost Phone From Ruining Your Life, by Dorie Chevlen, New York Times

Even if you’re not an oopsy-daisy type like me, you cannot with full confidence guarantee that you will never lose your phone, break it, or have it stolen right out of your hand. You can take several measures to prevent regular misfortune from becoming a disaster, and most of them require only a few minutes to put in place.

Stuff

Apple Mistakenly Tells Customers Their iPhone Trade-Ins Are 'Canceled', by Joe Rossignol, MacRumors

Apple today sent an email to some iPhone Upgrade Program members to inform them that their previously-completed iPhone trade-in has been "canceled," but the email was almost certainly sent in error based on the circumstances.

Automatic Time Tracking With Timing On The Mac, by Mike Schmitz, The Sweet Setup

In this post, I’m going to show you how to set up time tracking rules in Timing that will allow you to track the time you spend on your Mac automatically.

Review: Satechi Launches New Qi2 Charging Stands, by Juli Clover, MacRumors

The folding design is, however, a major improvement over most chargers, so if you want something that works well both on a desktop and when traveling, Satechi's Qi2 options are worth looking at. Compared to a flat charger, being able to unfold the arm and have an upright charger is useful because it enables features like StandBy on the ‌iPhone‌ and Night Stand mode on the Apple Watch.

Notes

China’s Henan Province Sees Drop In Smartphone Exports Amid Supply Chain Changes, by Ben Jiang, South China Morning Post

China’s central Henan province, home to the world’s largest iPhone manufacturing complex in its capital Zhengzhou, reported a 60 per cent year-on-year drop in smartphone exports in the first quarter, showing the impact of Apple’s moves to diversify production outside the mainland.

Can An Online Library Of Classic Video Games Ever Be Legal?, by Kyle Orland, Ars Technica

For years now, video game preservationists, librarians, and historians have been arguing for a DMCA exemption that would allow them to legally share emulated versions of their physical game collections with researchers remotely over the Internet. But those preservationists continue to face pushback from industry trade groups, who worry that an exemption would open a legal loophole for "online arcades" that could give members of the public free, legal, and widespread access to copyrighted classic games.

How Gmail Became Our Diary, by New York Magazine

Twenty years ago this month, Google launched Gmail. At first, user numbers were deliberately kept low, and those with access would hoard invitations and bestow them on friends like precious gifts. Once you were on the inside, though, a whole new world opened up. It’s difficult to remember now (if you’re old enough to remember), but we used to delete our emails. The big-name providers — AOL, Hotmail, Yahoo! — were so stingy with storage that users had to regularly scrub their inboxes, tossing messages into a digital burn box like diplomats abandoning an embassy. Google, however, gave everyone a full gigabyte of storage, enough in those lower-res days to keep, well, everything.

Because of that decision made in Mountain View, we now have a huge accidental archive of our collective past. Awkward flirtations, drunken rants, earnest pleas; friendships fraying or rekindled, personae tried on and discarded, good jokes and bad decisions; every dumb or brilliant or anguished thing we wrote below the subject line — we have an instantly searchable record of it all. To mark the anniversary of this revolution, the editors of New York asked some of our favorite writers to excavate their individual archives and tell us — with dismay or pride or chagrin — what they saw.

Bottom of the Page

It's the weekend. Time to do hobbies, and forget about work life.

(Got to be careful, and not land up with costly hobbies.)

~

Thanks for reading.