Ask TUAW

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Stories By Ask TUAW

  • Ask TUAW: SSDs, Bug Reports, and "4G" iPhones

    It's Ask TUAW, our question-and-answer column! Since last we rounded up reader questions, we've seen the release of the iPhone 4S, iOS 5, iCloud, the announcement of OS X Mountain Lion, and, of course, the new iPad. You can head down to the comments and tell us what Apple/Mac/iOS questions keep you up at night. If you'd prefer, instead of asking questions in the comments, you can email your questions directly to ask@tuaw.com, ping us on Twitter or hit up our feedback page. You can also direct your questions (via the same channels) to my colleague in the flowered hat, Aunt TUAW. For our first question, Sepp wonders: How do I actually submit a bug report to Apple? I came across some software fault, found a post in the Apple Support Communities and commented to confirm the bug and give more details on it. I am not quite sure if anybody at Apple actually reads these. Can I do something else to get this bug fixed or do I just have to lean back and wait for things to happen? Hi Sepp. Folks in the Apple Developer Network can file bug reports and enhancement requests through the Apple Bug Reporter. Anyone can sign up as a developer for free, but for the average user who finds an issue and merely wants to notify Apple about it, there is a much easier way. Apple's feedback page at Apple.com/Feedback includes links for nearly every product that Apple sells, including hardware, operating systems, and software products. For example, if you select to give feedback on Mac OS X, Apple requests a number of different types of feedback, including reports on bugs, design and connectivity issues and much more. Messages sent via this page do get read and forwarded to the appropriate departments at Apple, but there is no guarantee of receiving any confirmation or other response from the company. However, Apple has been known to follow up with customers to get more information in some cases. Our advice is to be as professional and detailed as possible with your feedback. The more information the better. Good luck! Jay is looking for some buying advice: I'm looking to upgrade my MacBook Pro's RAM and the hard drive to a solid state drive. I have the RAM part down, and I feel relatively confident that I will be able to install the SSD on my own. What is really throwing me is what type of SSD to buy. I could go the official Apple Store route, but those options are way more expensive than what I could find on, say, NewEgg or Amazon. My problem is that there seem to be a wide range of SSDs, both in terms of price and quality. What should I be looking for, besides the obvious (one that is the correct size for my computer)? I'm willing to pay a little more for one I know is going to work well with my MBP, but I don't even know where to start. Upgrading a MacBook Pro to a solid state drive (SSD) is an excellent way to get the most out of your Mac, and we highly recommend it. The SSD's from Other World Computing are widely praised and the folks at OWC are Mac specialists. They can help you pick out the right SSD for your MacBook Pro and they provide detailed installation videos for do-it-yourselfers. One of the neatest upgrades for MacBook Pro owners -- and one that I have installed in my 2009-era 15" MacBook Pro -- is the Data Doubler. This allows users to replace their optical drive with a SSD, adding even more storage options. OWC offers a USB enclosure for the now-removed optical drive, making it very similar to the USB SuperDrive that Apple offers for the MacBook Air. For you, Jay, which SSD you need depends on which MacBook Pro model you have. OWC offers both 6Gb/s and 3Gb/s-capable solid state drives. Give OWC a call and they can help you determine the best drive for you. Jamie wonders about a recent change to her iPhone 4S: After upgrading to iOS 5.1, my AT&T iPhone 4S now shows 4G in the top-left corner instead of 3G. Is this an upgrade in speed? I haven't noticed any difference, but maybe that's just me. We've got a number of folks asking about this change. We actually addressed it earlier this month, but it's worth mentioning again. In general, "4G" is mainly a marketing term at the moment. No carrier currently supports the recently adopted IMT-Advanced specification, which has a theoretical maximum download of 1 Gigabit per second. There are a number of different cellular technologies at varying speeds that carriers choose to market as 4G. The new iPad supports Verizon and AT&T's 4G LTE networks, which most folks agree is "next-generation" technology. However, the AT&T iPhone 4S supports a technology called HSPA+, which is considered a version of 4G by most carriers; Android HSPA+ phones have said 4G for a while. All that aside, AT&T's HSPA+ network is speedier than the EV-DO networks provided by Verizon and Sprint. The upshot for iPhone 4S owners is that the change is merely cosmetic; nothing has changed inside the phone, and the cellular connection isn't any faster. Anandtech has an extensive rundown on the different cellular iOS devices and the technologies they are using, and our own colleague Rich G. did a thorough dive into the sticky web of cellular data standards. Regardless, enjoy your "4G" iPhone -- and thanks for all your questions!

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  • Ask TUAW: Replacement Batteries, Keychain Sync, AppleIDs, and More! (Updated)

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, our weekly (mostly) question-and-answer column. We're nearing the release of iOS 5, iCloud, iTunes Match and the next version of the iPhone. We get to as many questions as we can, so head down to the comments and tell us what Apple/Mac/iOS questions keep you up at night. If you'd prefer, instead of asking questions in the comments, you can email your questions directly to ask@tuaw.com, or simply ping us on Twitter. For our first question, Ryan asks: I have a quick question, about moving from MobileMe to iCloud. I heard Apple will not support Keychain syncing via iCloud to multiple Macs. I know i can use 1Password, or Dropbox or rsync (yikes), but I loveeee things as is. Do you know if this is true, and if, so, if there is a seamless work around? I have been putting off transitioning to iCloud just for this exact reason.

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  • Ask TUAW: Disk Permissions, Wireless Syncing in iOS 5, Attachments on the iPhone, and More!

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, our weekly (mostly) question-and-answer column. First off, we're back! Our intrepid question-and-answerer has spent the last month moving across the country and getting settled into a new place. Now, finally, it's time to answer some questions! A lot has happened since our last column: Lion has been released, a number of new versions of the iOS 5 beta have been released, iCloud is nearing completion, and now iTunes Match is out in beta. Exciting stuff! I'm sure everyone has lots of questions about all these things, so please ask them! We can't have this awesome Q&A column without the Q, so go to the comments of this post and ask away. If you'd prefer, instead of asking questions in the comments, you can email your questions directly to ask@tuaw.com, or simply ping us on Twitter. For our first question, David asks: I was wondering why Apple has killed support for WinXP for iCloud. Does this mean iTunes will no longer support it either? Is there a programming API that is only supported in Vista/Win7? Many people have older machines such as myself that love Apple products. What is the reason for dropped support (please don't say only that XP is old). I'm sure there is a better answer than that. Until I can save some more money to buy a Mac I'm stuck with this older machine.

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  • Ask TUAW: shuffle by album and AirPlay from iOS, plus lots of iCloud questions

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, our weekly (mostly) question-and-answer column. This week we're again hitting a ton of questions about iCloud and iOS 5. By the way, we can never have too many questions. You can't have a Q&A column without the Q, so please go to the comments of this post and ask away. Believe it or not, we've had a little bit of a drought of questions, so now's your chance to get them answered! If you prefer, instead of asking questions in the comments, you can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or simply ping us on Twitter. For our first question, Guillaume asks: Does the Music (née iPod) app in iOS 5 have a "shuffle by album" feature, rather than just "shuffle by song" like currently? On my old first generation iPod nano, or in iTunes, I can play albums at random. This is not possible on my iPhone. I can only play songs at random, and it doesn't make for a very pleasant experience if you jump into the middle of a classical concerto and then to a song from a rock concert.

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  • Ask TUAW: WWDC/iCloud Edition

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, our weekly (mostly) question-and-answer column. This week we're addressing your numerous questions about Apple's introductions at WWDC. We'll try to tackle questions about Lion, MobileMe and more. By the way, we can never have too many questions. You can't have a Q&A column without the Q, so please go to the comments of this post and ask away. Believe it or not, we've had a little bit of a drought of questions, so now's your chance to get them answered! If you prefer, instead of asking questions in the comments, you can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or simply ping us on Twitter. Now, questions! John asks: How do you remove iCloud music downloads from my iPhone and iPad? There seems to be no way to do it on the device or in iTunes when connected via USB to my computer.

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  • Ask TUAW: AirPlay and the Apple TV, Exchange 2003, enterprise iOS management and MobileMe calendar publishing

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Do you know what my favorite thing in the entire world is? No, besides grilled cheese sandwiches. That's right! Questions! We can never have too many questions! You can't have a Q&A column without the Q, so please go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, queries! Dan writes: The place I work refuses to upgrade their version of Exchange to anything newer than 2003. They also won't enable IMAP for email. On my iPhone and iPad, I have no problem using Exchange 2003, but on the Mac it's a different story. Apple Mail will only see newer versions of Exchange, and even Microsoft's Outlook 2008 can't use this version of Exchange Server. I know you could use the God-awful Entourage software or run a Windows program in emulation, but isn't there anything else? I would have thought that with the plethora of new Mac-based mail apps, there would be at least one that could do mail as well as the iPhone. Help me!

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  • Ask TUAW: Durable iPad Cases, iPhone Mail Signatures and the 'Insert' Key

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. We can never have too many questions, so please go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! Than queries: I am starting to use my iPad to score my son's baseball games, doing the scoring from the dugout/field. Any suggestions on a good case? Would really like something waterproof or pretty air tight. Some of the fields can be pretty dusty in the summer and I don't want the dust getting into the iPad and I don't want to have to worry about some rain drops.

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  • Ask TUAW: Charging MacBooks, securing passwords, color matching and more

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Now, we can never have too many questions, so please, go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! Daniel asks: I have a original MacBook for which I am currently on my third charger. And for the third time, it's no longer working. So I need to buy a new one, but was considering buying the 85-watt adapter (with the new metal end) meant for the larger MacBook Pros. This way, I can use it as a spare charger when I eventually buy a new MacBook Pro. What I'm wondering is if I can use the 85-watt charger with my 60-watt MacBook without any adverse effects? The general idea I've gotten from forums is that it is OK, but is there any documentation from Apple on this?

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  • Ask TUAW: Where is the new Mac mini?, turning off iPhone noises and more

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Now, we can never have too many questions, so please, go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! Muhammad asks: Is there any way to set up a mode in my iPhone that's exactly like airplane mode but still allow phone calls to be received? When I sleep, I want everything like texts, email, push notifications, etc. to be off, but I still need to be available in case of an emergency.

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  • Ask TUAW: iPad browser refreshing, iPhone headphones, laptop upgrades and more

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Now, we can never have too many questions, so please, go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! Mandojustin is frustrated by Safari on his iPad: On my iPad, pages sometimes auto-refresh when returning to them, either during page-switching or when opening Safari. What's up with that? Can it be turned off? When using Google Reader, I'll often check out a link and then decide I want to keep that item unread until later. However, when I go back to the page with reader open, the refresh makes the item disappear. I know I can go back and find it, but this is rather annoying.

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  • Ask TUAW: Apple pricing, which cat is which, and laptop batteries you can't replace

    Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Now, we can never have too many questions, so please, go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! David asks: Why doesn't Apple let me replace the battery myself in any of its current products?

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  • Ask TUAW: iPhone US visitors, RAM upgrades, iPad buying advice

    In case you didn't know, the 2011 edition of the Great American Pastime starts Thursday the 31st. I'll be watching MLB.tv on my AppleTV -- and my iPhone and my iPad. Baseball everywhere! Awesome. MLB's television broadcast rules black out home team games via MLBtv, unfortunately, so I can't watch my local team, but that's OK. I'll watch whatever game looks interesting at the moment. Enough of that! Welcome to Ask TUAW, your favorite weekly question-and-answer column. Now, we can never have too many questions, so please, go to the comments of this post and ask away. To get fabulous answers, we need your fabulous questions. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com, or ping us on Twitter. Now, off to the questions! Prem has a question about prepaid cell plans: I'm having a plan to be in the US for 3 months. While I'm there I'll bring my trusted iPhone 4 with me. However, I don't want to pay the roaming charge, so surely I'll need to find a SIM card and data plan there. What would you recommend me for the carrier and plan? I will be use about 1GB of data for each month.

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  • Ask TUAW: Spring Has Sprung Edition

    Hello all! Welcome to the 'Spring has Sprung' edition of Ask TUAW, your favorite question-and-answer column. Now that many of you have your iPad 2s/are in line to get them/hope to see them show up eventually, we'll be answering some questions (and not answering others, because sometimes even Ask TUAW doesn't know what's going to happen). We can never have too many questions, so if you have anything you'd like to know about your new iPad or the one you're going to buy as soon as they're back in stock, here's what you need to do: go to the comments of this post, think of all the Mac/iPad/iPhone questions that keep you awake at night and fire away. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. Ray writes with a question about data migration: I'm planning on buying the new 17-inch Macbook Pro soon, and I wonder if there's a way to transfer just my iTunes & iPhoto libraries to my new Mac without having to transfer everything else. I currently use a 2009 Aluminium Macbook (Intel Core 2 Duo) running v.10.6.6.

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  • Ask TUAW: The iPad 2 is Here! Edition

    The iPad 2 is finally here! In honor of Apple's super-gadget, we're having an iPad 2 edition of Ask TUAW again this week! Now, we can never have too many questions, so if you have anything you'd like to know about your new iPad or the one you're going to buy as soon as they're back in stock, here's what you need to do: go to the comments of this post, think of all the Mac/iPad/iPhone questions that keep you awake at night and fire away. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. Now, onward to questions! Angel writes: When Apple first released iMovie for the iPhone 4, I purchased the app right away. I am going to be purchasing an iPad 2 tomorrow and I just wanted to know, do I have to re-purchase iMovie on the iPad? Or are they two different versions that should be purchased separately? If I can just use the version I already purchased on my iPad as well, how would I get it on there? iMovie is universal for iPad/iPhone now. If you bought it earlier for your iPhone, you do not need to purchase it again to get an iPad version; both versions are bundled together in the same app. If you purchased iMovie before but no longer have it stored on any of your devices, just download it again from the App Store -- you will not be charged to re-download apps you've bought previously, unlike music.

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  • Ask TUAW: The iPad 2 Is Almost Here! Edition

    The iPad 2 is almost here, and in honor of Apple's latest gadget, we're having an iPad 2 edition of Ask TUAW this week! We got a few interesting queries from last week's post, but this is going to get mighty boring without your questions about the iPad 2, which will be released on Friday! Here's what we need you to do: go to the comments of this post, think of those niggling questions that keep you awake at night thinking about your Mac, iPod, iPad 2, iPhone or AppleTV, and fire away. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. I'll be at my local Apple Store for the iPad 2 launch on Friday, will you? Onward to questions! Chris (and a number of others!) asks: I own a first generation AT&T 3G iPad and will be upgrading to the iPad 2. I am grandfathered into the unlimited data package for $30 a month. Can I transfer my data plan to my new iPad or are the data service "subscriptions" connected to a specific device? Yes, you can! AT&T confirmed with me that it will be possible to grandfather your unlimited data plan to the iPad 2, but it hasn't released the exact mechanism for this upgrade. Most likely it will involve removing your micro-SIM from your original iPad and slapping it into your brand new iPad 2. We've got a few more days for everyone to figure out how it's going to work though.

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  • Ask TUAW: Wait, is this a leap year? Edition

    Just to clear that up, no there is no February 29 this year, but 2012 is another story. Welcome to this week's edition of Ask TUAW -- everyone's favorite Mac and iOS Q&A and advice column. We got a few interesting queries from last week's post, but this is going to get mighty boring without your questions! Here's what we need you to do: go to the comments of this post, think of those niggling questions that keep you awake at night thinking about your Mac, iPod, iPad, iPhone or AppleTV and fire away. You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. So, with that out of the way, on to the questions, including a followup from last week! In the previous edition, TeJay wanted to hook up multiple monitors to his MacBook. We offered a third-party solution to his problem, but it looks like Apple may have just introduced a much better option for owners of the latest 15" and 17" MacBook Pro's. The new Thunderbolt port offers daisy-chaining of up to six devices, including two high-resolution displays, according to the Australian Apple website. The 13" MacBook Pro, with its weaksauce Intel integrated graphics card can't handle two external monitors, however. Curiously, the US website doesn't mention this feature. Perhaps it only works down under? Now, queries!

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  • Ask TUAW: Presidents Day Edition

    Hi everyone! Welcome to the Presidents Day Edition of Ask TUAW -- everyone's favorite Mac and iOS Q&A and advice column. We got a nice group of questions from last week's post, but we always need more! Here's what we need you to do: go to the comments of this post, think long and hard about which burning questions have been bothering you about your Mac, iPod, iPad, iPhone or AppleTV and ask away! You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. When asking a question, it makes life a lot easier for the Ask TUAW team if you include what type of machine you're using, which version of Mac OS X you're running or, if you're asking an iPhone/iPod/iPad question, let us know which generation device and which version of iOS you have -- though, in general, you should always upgrade to the latest version if you can. Now, questions! Henry asks: I have a large iPhoto database of about 50,000 photos. Despite having a very beefy machine (2.8 GHz 8-Core with 32 GB RAM / 4 TB Disk and the 4870 GPU) to say it is slow to work in would be an understatement. It takes almost a minute to open, and is incredibly slow to scroll through. Working in it is unbelievably slow, while Aperture on the same machine is flawless and quick. How can I make this usable (considering I have already thrown huge hardware at it)? It seems to have ballooned to over 300,000 files with all the thumbnails, faces, etc.

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  • Ask TUAW's triumphant return from abroad

    This, my friends, is the triumphant return of Ask TUAW -- everyone's favorite Mac and iOS Q&A and advice column. Unfortunately, a giant beaver ate all of the questions from prior editions of Ask TUAW, and we need more new questions! So, here's what we need you to do: go to the comments of this post, think long and hard about which burning questions have been bothering you about your Mac, iPod, iPad, iPhone or AppleTV, and ask away! You can also email your questions directly to ask [at] tuaw.com. Here are a few perennial favorites asked and answered: Q: Which MacBook Air should I buy? A: Get the 11" if you have another computer, or the 13" if it's your primary machine. Order the BTO memory upgrade, too; you can't upgrade the RAM after the fact. Q: What's the best way to sync my iPhone to multiple computers? A: The only way to win is not to play -- syncing to more than one computer is asking for trouble, honestly. Pick your most accessible machine with the best storage situation for your media and applications library, and sync to that one. If you need to shuffle content around or purchase apps on multiple machines, go with Apple's Home Sharing to keep things synchronized. So, head down to the comments at the end of this post, and do your best. When asking a question, it makes life a lot easier for the Ask TUAW team if you include what type of machine you're using, which version of Mac OS X you're running or, if you're asking an iPhone/iPod/iPad question, let us know which generation device and which version of iOS you have -- though, in general, you should always upgrade to the latest version if you can. We've got a few questions left in the can from last time, so let's get cracking. Dave asks: I am seeing terrible performance from Finder when trying to access a Windows share over a VPN. If I do an 'ls' or 'cd' command to get to the same files, everything is instantaneous. Is there some setting in Finder that will make it act more like the 'ls' done via Terminal? I have looked at a lot of Finder replacements and they all appear to have the same problem. Given this works great on Terminal, I'm a bit stumped at what Finder can be doing that would slow things down so dramatically.

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