Hey Siri! Now on Your Mac

Have you upgraded to Mac OS X Sierra yet? I know that some people wait awhile to upgrade but I have been running Sierra for some time and you will want to upgrade. It is a rock-solid upgrade, it is free and it brings a lot of new features to the Mac. In the words of one big loser, “what do you have to lose?”

Okay, political commentary aside, one of the most exciting and useful features of Sierra is that Siri, finally, has come to the Mac! You know I have been playing around with Amazon’s Echo and I can definitively tell you that Siri is way smarter than Alexa. I still like Alexa but she pretty much is good for telling me dog and pirate jokes.

You can access Siri by clicking on the menu bar icon in the upper right-hand corner of your Mac’s screen or by clicking on the Siri icon in the dock. If you do not see those, you might not have Siri activated so go to System Preferences > Siri and check the box to “Enable Siri”. There you will find the check box to “show Siri in menu bar” which you can toggle on and off as well as options to choose Siri’s language and voice. You can also choose a keyboard shortcut if you would like, F7 is the default.

But, don’t you want to just say “Hey Siri”? That doesn’t necessarily work out of the box but you can make it work! Make sure you activate enhanced dictation in the keyboard system preference. Then, you can go to System Preferences > Accessibility > Dictation to set up the voice command that will activate Siri with a “Hey Siri”.

So, what can ask Siri to do for you? Well, start out by asking her what she can do. You will get a nice long list of things. You can ask Siri to launch apps, tell you the weather, get the Cubs score, FaceTme a friend, get directions to your meeting and so much more. I have been using Siri to find particular files, launch my apps and most of all to settle trivia bets.

Remember PDAs? Not public displays of affection, the other PDA – Personal Desktop Assistant. Well, Siri finally has made that a reality on your Mac. Use Siri to manage your calendar, remind you of appointments or bills to pay, play music for you or just a huge range of tasks. Here’s one huge list of Siri commands.

One of my favorites is searching mail. I can say “find me emails from Hapy” and Siri will give me those almost instantly. Better yet, I can ask Siri to email someone about that Kibbles & Bytes special or set a calendar appointment for the meeting with my service team. I think you are going to like Siri on the Mac!

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    Now, I sport a Cubs tattoo. Grace and I have made the journey to Wrigley just about every year to catch a game. So, I am wondering if any Kibbles & Bytes readers have any Cubs connections. If the Cubbies do make it to the big stage and the World Series, I would love to take Grace. Any season ticket holders out there that want to give up their seats? I’ll be happy to pay, barter, beg or whatever!

    I hope you have an awesome first weekend of the fall. Thank you for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

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    _Don, Emily, Hadley & Amy_

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    Lastly, I’d like to take a moment this week to bring up an important cause. Over the years I’ve had the pleasure of meeting so many wonderful individuals within our sales channel and Amanda Haddock is one of those people. Please consider supporting the “**Dragon Master Foundation**”:http://www.dragonmasterfoundation.org, a cause she along with her family are deeply rooted in and help fight brain cancer.

  • Show Me a Sine

    In my last segment in Kibbles and Bytes I did my best to cram in as much introductory information as I could about alternating current. I talked about the difference between AC and DC and why we use AC at the electricity grid level. For the most part though I didn’t get into some of the finer details about AC, other than that it’s current that alternates and this makes it very easy to transform the voltage of AC power.

    One of the most difficult things to wrap your head around when it comes to AC is the fact that at any given time, the voltage is different. If you charted AC voltage on a graph with time on the x-axis, you’d see a sine wave.

    p{text-align: center;}. !http://blog.smalldog.com/images/4814.gif!

    All waves have some general properties such as amplitude, frequency and phase. Amplitude and frequency you’re probably familiar with already from radio, and in the case of AC they mean the same thing. In the US, the frequency of AC power is 60Hz. This means that it cycles up and down 60 times every second. In other countries around the world the frequency is 50Hz. Actually, only North America, large parts of South America, Saudi Arabia, the southern part of Japan, North and South Korea and Taiwan use 60Hz. Generally speaking, the frequency of the AC power won’t negatively affect electronics as long as the voltage is the same. Most of the areas that use 50Hz also use voltages in the 220-240 range though. Sometimes the 60Hz frequency is used to drive clocks in electronics, though with digital circuitry, this is less common today. So if you had a piece of equipment with a clock that was driven by 60Hz AC, using 50Hz AC would prevent the clock from being accurate.

    Amplitude of AC is where things become a little less straightforward. In North America, standard household power is 120VAC. You might think this means that the AC signal oscillates between +120VAC and -120VAC, but this is not the case. Actually, a 120VAC signal will oscillate between +169.7VAC and -169.7VAC. Why do we call it 120VAC power then? Well, think about the AC wave. At any given time its value is different. When describing the power, what value should you use? 169.7? Why not 40, or even 0? As you can see, choosing any voltage on the AC waveform would be arbitrary and not representative of the power being delivered. 120VAC is the RMS (“**root mean square**”:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Root_mean_square) of the AC signal. The math behind this starts to get complicated, but at least in the context of electricity, the RMS of the AC signal is a representation of the average power delivered by that signal. In other words, the amount of power delivered by a 120VAC signal is equivalent to 120V of direct current.

    Do you wish that was the end of the story? It’s not. When we talk about power delivered in this case, we have to talk about power delivered into a purely resistive load. This is because once again, AC is a sine wave. Now we arrive at the third property of a wave: its phase. The phase can be described as when the signal passes through 0 to go from negative to positive or positive to negative. In AC power, phase is very important because certain types of loads (capacitive or inductive) can shift the phase of components of the signal. Normally we would think about an AC signal as two things in one: voltage and current. The voltage goes up and the current goes up with it proportionally ??in phase??. This is not always the case however. Using inductive or capacitive loading, you can cause the phase of parts of the signal to shift so that, for example, the voltage leads the current by half a cycle.

    Let’s try to round this out. In AC circuits, the concept of direct resistance doesn’t really apply the same way that it does in DC circuits. This is, again, because the voltage in AC is constantly changing. A changing current will create a changing magnetic field, and based on the properties of Lenz’s Law, a magnetic field will be proportional to the electrical current that created it, but it will be in direct opposition to it. In a way, it’s analogous to Newton’s third law of motion. These generated magnetic fields can provide a resistance to changing current via certain devices like inductors. This causes the current component of the signal to advance its phase ahead of the voltage component in the case of inductive loads and behind the voltage component in the case of capacitive loads. This “resistance” in AC circuits is called impedance and the combination of inductive and capacitive factors in a circuit forms the imaginary concept of reactance.

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  • iPhone 7 Plus

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