Connected #366: 5, 1, 4, 6, 9, 6, 3, 4, 7, 8, 2, 2, 3, 5, 9, 12, 12, 3, 4, 1, 5, 9, 11, 8, 6, 4, 11, 5, 1, 1, 2, 8, 8, 2, 8, 12, 3, 6, 6, 11, 12, 2, 6, 1, 9, 1, 7, 10

This week on Connected, we turn to a 12-sided die to shape the order of the show. Topics on the dodecahedron include follow-up, the 10th anniversary of Steve Jobs’ death, tables coming to Craft and Amazon’s recent announcements.

My thanks to our sponsors:

$701,220.26

I just switched off this year’s St. Jude campaign. This year, the Relay FM community donated $701,220.26 to St. Jude. That puts us at $1.5 million raised in the last three years — which is an astonishing amount of money.

I owe a huge thank you to everyone who donated, as well as the Relay FM and St. Jude teams that help run the campaign every year. This is a team effort, and our team is simply the best.

St. Jude is in the business of treating and curing childhood cancer. In 2009, our oldest son was diagnosed with a brain tumor. His treatment at St. Jude saved his life, and the hospital didn’t charge our family a single cent for his care. That is thanks to donors around the world, and it’s a true honor to raise money each year for families who have had to follow in our footsteps.

Explaining the Facebook Outage

Tom Strickx and Celso Martinho at CloudFlare:

Today at 1651 UTC, we opened an internal incident entitled “Facebook DNS lookup returning SERVFAIL” because we were worried that something was wrong with our DNS resolver 1.1.1.1. But as we were about to post on our public status page we realized something else more serious was going on.

Social media quickly burst into flames, reporting what our engineers rapidly confirmed too. Facebook and its affiliated services WhatsApp and Instagram were, in fact, all down. Their DNS names stopped resolving, and their infrastructure IPs were unreachable. It was as if someone had “pulled the cables” from their data centers all at once and disconnected them from the Internet.

How’s that even possible?

I honestly think the world would be better off if they never came back up.

Jony Ive, on the 10th Anniversary of Steve Jobs’ Death

Jony Ive:

Steve’s last words to me were that he would miss talking together. I was sitting on the floor next to his bed, my back against the wall.

After he died, I walked out into the garden. I remember the sound of the latch on the wooden door as I gently pulled it closed.

In the garden, I sat and thought how talking often gets in the way of listening and thinking. Perhaps that is why so much of our time together was spent quietly.

I miss Steve desperately and I will always miss not talking with him.

Series 7 Pre-Orders Open Friday

Apple:

Apple Watch Series 7, featuring the largest and most advanced Apple Watch display ever — and a reengineered Always-On Retina display with significantly more screen area and thinner borders — will be available to order beginning Friday, October 8, at 5 a.m. PDT and available in stores starting Friday, October 15.

Currently, the Series 7 isn’t in the Apple Store app at all. I hope I can save a pre-order like I did with my iPhone.

Mac Power Users #608: DEVONthink & New Apple Hardware

This week on Mac Power Users:

David’s newest Field Guide covers DEVONthink, and this week he and Stephen discuss the application, some example uses and the basics anyone looking at it should know. After that, they review the new iPhone and iPad mini.

My thanks to our sponsors:

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Living with Astro

Carolina Milanesi spent some time with Amazon’s new robot:

At the end of the two-week trial, I was left with mixed feelings about Astro. I was impressed with the autonomous navigation skills it displayed. I was enamored with its WALL-E like cuteness. I was convinced there could be a role for Astro to play in home monitoring and to help care for loved ones using Amazon’s new Alexa Together service. And the $1,000 price is reasonable given how much technology it packs, though Amazon might eventually sell it for less if the robot exits its current invite-only status and becomes a mainstream product.

Loopback

My thanks to Rogue Amoeba for sponsoring 512 Pixels this week. Their application Loopback delivers cable-free audio routing for MacOS. Get your audio where you need it, without having to crawl behind your desk.

Check out Loopback today, with a free trial. Through October 15, 512 Pixels readers can save 21% on Loopback (or any of our other fine products) with coupon code PIXELS21.