about those new iphone 12s

The virtual roadshow introduction of the newest iPhones has come and gone and the pixel dust has finally settled. I’ve decided to give the 12 a pass. I currently have an 11 Pro Max. It has one critical feature I am loath to give up: it doesn’t have 5G support. I’m quite happy not to have a handset with 5G radios that will suck up extra power out of the battery and extra cash out of my wallet. I don’t believe a single word that any of the major providers are saying about their 5G networks. The radios are in place in their networks to be sure, but there’s nothing of significance demanding I drop more money on 5G. I’m more than satisfied with 4G and WiFi, and I don’t see that changing for some number of years to come.

One feature that might be of interest to me is the LIDAR sensor in the camera cluster on the back of the iPhone. It showed up in the last iPad that was also released with Apple’s A14 processor. That’s supposed to provide a “better” Augmented Reality, or AR, experience. But of course, my iPhone was supposed to provide a wonderful AR experience when it was released. Problem was I quickly ran through the AR example apps, and found them all to be gimicky at best, a solution in pursuit of a problem. Sorta like VR…

I’m also not crazy with Apple’s high-handed handling of the App Store, not just here in the US, but around the world. I know I’m the guy who just dropped six grand on a new 16″ MacBook Pro, but that was for a project I’m currently supporting. The Mac’s a far more open platform than the iPhone that will run any tool I can currently imagine. I can do creative work on my MacBook that I can only dream of doing on either the iPhone or the iPad.

The final straw for me was the multiple emails I got from Apple to pre-register so that I could pre-order the iPhone 12. Nope. Nada. They just really annoyed the crap out of me. Even if I wanted to buy a 12, I’m not one to rush out that quickly on something that new. The notable exception to that rule was the iPhone 11 Pro Max, and that’s because I recognized it was the end of a product cycle, the last of the 4G phones, and the one I had has a huge battery that can get me through multiple days on a single charge, especially now that I’m retired. And I haven’t been all that enamored with iOS of late. If you’re curious you can read about my discontent in earlier posts. No, I’m sitting this one out, happy to have what I have, and let the others dive headlong into Apple’s latest iPhone tech. I’m sitting back and watching for the time being.

apple watch series 3 is randomly rebooting on my wrist after watchOS 7 update

When you see an Apple logo on your wrist, you’ve got a problem. Really. I’ve caught it three times since updating to first watchOS 7, then watchOS 7.0.1, when my iPhone updated to iOS 14. The first two times my Apple Watch rebooted it was at my home. This time I was out on an errand, and I had both my iPhone with me and presence of mind to grab a quick snapshot before it finished rebooting.

I don’t know why it’s doing this. Notably I’m not the only user who’s seeing this random reboot issue with with a Series 3 Apple Watch. Here is an example article from Tom’s Hardware documenting it, with other issues: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/apple-watch-3-has-a-serious-new-problem-what-you-need-to-know

I haven’t suffered from any of the other problems listed in this article, but the fact I’ve stared at the Apple logo boot on my watch when I wanted to check the time is annoying as hell. Once again Apple’s software developers [sic] have screwed the pooch, this time on my Apple Watch Series 3.