Dear Friends,

My daughter, Autumn, and my grandkids are down visiting from the frigid north and are having a great time here in sunny Key West. They all seem to get entertained by their iPads, iPods, or iPhones in between hanging out by the pool or down at the beach. It is great to have them visit. It sure has been a cold winter in Vermont with friends posting pictures of the thermometers in their cars at minus 30 degree temps.

We have added the Kevo lockset to our product offerings as part of our home automation push. I have used Kevo in both my houses in Vermont and down here in Key West and I love it. It works with your iPhone via Bluetooth and you can simply touch the lock with your iPhone in your pocket to open or lock the door. You can send e-keys to people that need access to your home as either an “always” key or a “guest” key that is limited in time. No more lost keys as long as you have your iPhone! It is a simple installation and replaces the deadbolt lock that you may already have on your door. I highly recommend this lock.

The new Hammerhead Lightning cables have arrived! These braided cables have the Apple MFI (made for iPod, iPhone, and iPad) license and come in three colors. They have been a big hit at our stores. I especially like the new packaging with the Vermont scenes that were designed by Jonny and the photos taken by our own Patrick McCormack. For this week’s Kibbles & Bytes, I am offering a bundle of Hammerhead products. We will send you two of these new Hammerhead braided Lightning cables with a 4-port 15 watt Hammerhead USB charger and the Hammerhead 17 watt 2-port automotive charger. This will let you charge two devices in your home, office, or your car! Normally, this bundle would sell for $78, but this week, exclusively for Kibbles & Bytes readers, it is only $65!

2 X Lightning cables
1 X 4-port charger
1 X auto charger

Check it out here!

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  • Why Would I Want to Know About iCloud?

    One of my jobs that I enjoy down here in Key West is doing the on-site consultations for customers. This usually involves riding my motorcycle to some beautiful location to visit a customer in their home. I always ask these customers to make a list before I come so that we can take advantage of my time with them. Almost every one of them will have questions about iCloud including the most common question: “Why should I care about iCloud?”

    As you know, as an Apple Developer, I use advanced versions of the operating system from time to time. The latest version of Yosemite has the new “Photos” app which I promise I will cover in a future issue but it also triggered iCloud Photo Library. This allows you to keep your entire library, including photos and videos, stored in the cloud and up to date on all your iOS devices and on iCloud.com. So, once I had my photo library in the cloud, of course, I had used up my free 5GB of iCloud storage and had to sign up for more so iCloud was on my mind as I sat down to write this issue of Kibbles & Bytes.

    Apple has built and is building huge data storage facilities all over the world to support iCloud. One of the most amazing part of this process, aside from simply the enormous magnitude of the project, is that Apple has committed to power these sites with renewable energy, thus significantly reducing their carbon footprint. iCloud was introduced in 2011 and has hundreds of millions of users now.

    iCloud gives you the means to store data such as documents, photos, and music on remote servers to download to iOS devices, your Mac, or your Windows PC. It also allows you to share and send data to other users and supports Find my iPhone, iPad, etc. to locate and manage lost devices. It also allows for wireless backup of iOS devices to iCloud instead of manual backups.

    Here’s a run-down of some of the features of iCloud:

    * Your stuff everywhere! Access your purchases from iTunes, the App store, or iBooks store on any of your devices and download past purchases anytime.

    * iCloud Drive: You can safely store all kinds of documents in iCloud and then access them from any of your devices or by surfing over to iCloud.com.

    * Family Sharing: One of Apple’s greatest utilities, Family Sharing allows up to six family members share their iTunes, App Store, or iBooks purchases without sharing Apple IDs. You can pay for family purchases with the same credit card and approve kids’ spending right from an adult’s device. Grace and I love Family Sharing since we always are trying to share music and books.

    * Mail, contacts, calendars, notes and reminders are all up to date on all your devices: With iCloud if you set it up on each device and you can access them anywhere through iCloud.com

    * Find my iPhone: Well, I talked about this already but let’s say you forgot your iPhone in a cab. Find my iPhone uses iCloud to locate the iPhone and you can do that from iCloud.com or another of your devices. Once found, you can use Activation Lock or remote wipe to secure that iPhone.

    * Productivity in the Cloud: With Pages, Numbers, and Keynote for iCloud beta, you can create and edit spreadsheets, presentations, or documents right on iCloud.com and then use the same documents with the Pages, Numbers, or Keynote apps on your other devices or your Mac.

    * Bookmarks: You can see the web pages you have open on your Mac or iOS devices (your iCloud tabs). You can read articles from your Reading List even when your are offline. And, most usefully, you have the same bookmarks on all your iOS devices or your Mac or Windows PC.

    * iCloud Keychain: We talked about this last week. Keep your passwords, credit card information and more up to date on all your devices.

    * Backup!: You can never have too many backups. iCloud automatically backs up your iOS device daily over Wi-Fi when it is turned on, locked and connected to a power source. If you ever need that backup you can use your iCloud backup to restore that iOS device or set up a new one.

    * Back to My Mac: This is a handy one if you travel and do not want to take your Mac with you. You can securely connect your Mac to the remote Mac over the internet, then share the screen or files of your remote Mac.

    With all of these features, it is good to get a basic understanding of iCloud. It is one of those things that you will soon forget about but will wonder how you ever did without it! Think of all the millions of people around the world using iCloud and you will understand why Apple is building these gigantic server farms to handle the data.

  • Pesky Text Suggestions, Be Gone

    iOS 8 came with a few new keyboard features including support for predictive text suggestions when you are using the built-in iOS keyboard. This is pretty neat if you’re into it, but if you’re like me, it’s more annoying than useful. This features takes up valuable screen space on my tiny iPhone 5 (tiny when compared to the new 6 Plus), and I’d rather it not be there. If you too find this more irritating than helpful, than here’s a simple way to disable this feature:

    *Temporarily:*

    When you have the iOS keyboard up, tap and hold on one of the text suggestions and drag downward, toward the top row of the keyboard. This will leave you with a little gray line, but you won’t see the predictive suggestions any more.

    *Permanently:*

    To permanently diable QuickType suggestions, you can simply long press on the keyboard selector icon and slide the “Predictive” toggle off.

    Alternatively, you can make a trip into your iPhone or iPad’s Settings app. Navigate to *Settings > General > Keyboard* and turn off the “Predictive” switch.

    How does it work? Based on your past conversations and writing style you’ll see words and phrases iOS thinks you’d probably type next. These predictions may change over time to better fit how you do your typing. It will adjust to a more casual style in Messages, and suggest more formal options when you’re writing email, if that’s how you usually roll. It may even adjust to whomever you’re communicating with. Yes a bit creepy, but don’t worry the data your iPhone uses to perform these feats of prediction is kept on your iPhone. And you thought some employee at Apple was hired to suggest your next word in a sentence?

  • My granddaughter, Gracie, celebrates her 11th birthday this week and since she was born on February 29th, she has gotten totally over the jokes we make about her only being 3. She has been having a ball hanging out by the pool, helping her Unmama cook, and practicing her violin. It is always a comfortable feeling being surrounded by family!

    Grace and I will take next week to get back to normal and then we plan to ride motorcycles up to Daytona for a visit to Daytona Bike Week. We are riding to Miami where we will rent a 2nd motorcycle for the trip up north.

    Thank you for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

    Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,

    _Don, Rachel, Dean & Mike_

  • Emoji Icons to Reflect Diversity

    As of now, your iPhone’s emoji keyboard only lets you select a wide range of pale pink hands as well as white boys and girls.

    A new beta release of iOS 8.3, currently available only to software developers, has six “skin tone modifiers”. Once released (rumors indicate maybe mid-March) you’ll be able to click and hold on any emoji to change the skin tone. Along with this change comes a few new emoticons, including a ton of new family emojis to cover all different family compositions. There will also be a bunch of new country flags, as well as an update to the old style watch which is now an Apple Watch (of course!).

    The new emoji were make possible thanks to a change in the Unicode standard called the “skin tone modifier” which allows users to select the tone of compatible emoji.