A HomePod Intervention

Since wrapping up HomePod vs. iPod Hi-Fi video, my HomePod has been in our kitchen, sitting where our Amazon Echo has been for the last year and a half. I unplugged the Echo and put it away, leading to many questions about where Alexa went, voiced by our three year old son.

That was about three weeks ago, and in those three weeks, the entire family has gotten acquainted with HomePod and this iteration of Siri.

We used our Echo for music listening, checking the weather and news, setting multiple timers while cooking and controlling the handful of smart lights in the house.

Obviously the HomePod blows away the Echo in terms of audio quality. I really like how the HomePod sounds, and as we already pay for Apple Music, we were good to go there.

The Echo’s “Flash Briefing” ability can be adjusted. We have ours read NPR news, play the most recent episode of Subnet then share the weather. This all happens automatically if we ask Alexa to play the news. Siri can do these things as well, but each item has to be requested independently. Annoyingly, Siri constantly reminds us that its source can be changed from NPR to Fox News, CNN or The Washington Post. This reminder should be played one time then never again, with the setting visible in the Home app.1

As a result of this, we’re asking Siri for the news far less than we were Alexa.

Siri’s lack of multiple timer support has been well documented. It is bonkers that Apple products — the iPhone included — can only handle one timer at a time.

On the smart home front, all of our tech can be controlled via HomeKit or Alexa, sans our Nest thermostat. There’s been no real change in our usage when it comes to turning lights on and off with our voices.

Hardware wise, the HomePod may sound amazing but its physical controls aren’t as good as the Echo’s. Our first-gen Echo has a big ring that spins around to control the volume that works perfectly; the HomePod’s touch buttons can be finicky and slow to respond.

Even more annoying is the HomePod’s resumption of music playback if you touch the top of the unit. Our smart speakers have always been under a counter in the kitchen, and we brush the top of them a lot more than we realized after the HomePod would start blaring music after any accidental touch. Apple should have an option to disable it.

All in all, I thought the move to the HomePod was going well right until my family staged an intervention. Their annoyance with Siri misunderstanding or misinterpreting has grown over the last few weeks, and the clumsiness with which Siri handles — or doesn’t handle — some requests has become bothersome.

I’ve overheard several interactions with the HomePod that entail a family member asking for a song or album that ends in getting upset with the device when it starts playing something else. The Echo — coupled with Amazon Music — had a much higher hit rate when it came to accurately playing what was desired.

In short, the increase in sound quality doesn’t make up for the frustration of using Siri. The HomePod is going to live in my studio; the Echo is back in its rightful place in the kitchen.


  1. The Amazon Echo App may have its problems, but cramming the HomePod’s settings into Home.app has proved clumsy at best. I don’t want yet another first-party Apple app on my iPhone, but I think a lot of the HomePod’s software controls need to be revisited. 

Cheaper MacBook Air on Its Way?

KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo via MacRumors:

We expect Apple (US) to roll out the new MacBook Air with a lower price tag in 2Q18. We forecast total shipments of MacBook models will grow 10-15% YoY in 2018 (vs. 0-5% YoY decline for the NB industry), up from 15.5-16mn units in 2017. While Quanta, Radiant, Catcher and SZS are likely to benefit from strong shipments momentum, SZS also stands to benefit from increased market share and a higher ASP.

While the internals of the MacBook Air haven’t been substantially improved since 2015, I think it is safe to bet that the 13-inch, non-Retina notebook is still selling quite well. I would love to see Apple shave some off of its $999 price point and move beyond the Broadwell CPUs the machine uses, but my guess we’ll get one or the other, if anything.

Rogue Amoeba Ending Nicecast Development (Updated)

The Rogue Amoeba staff:

Today, our internet radio tool Nicecast is being retired from active development. Nicecast is no longer available for purchase, and we do not plan any further updates. Nicecast will be supported on MacOS 10.10 through 10.13 until the end of 2018, after which it will be fully deprecated.

Nicecast has been around since 2003, and was designed to make it easy to stream audio to the web. The initial case of pirate Internet radio stations has all but died off, but many, many podcasters (including us at Relay FM) still use the app to stream shows live via our Icecast server. I’d love to see Rogue Amoeba roll that ability into Audio Hijack.

It seems that may be the case, reading on in the company’s blog post:

While Nicecast is now retired, we’re considering future solutions to help users broadcast to more modern streaming options. In particular, we know many podcasters provide a live stream using Nicecast. We hope to eventually provide a more comprehensive solution for that use case.

Fingers crossed!

Update: Rogue Amoeba has published an extremely helpful blog post to help with the migration away from Nicecast when the day comes. While I’ll be using Nicecast as long as possible, it’s good to know there are other options out there.

Apple Granted a Patent for a Dual Display Notebook

Jack Purcher at Patently Apple has pointed out that Apple has been awarded patents for a notebook that uses two displays: one where you expect it to be, and one where the keyboard would normally be:

The device presented in Apple’s patent figure below illustrates a dual display notebook that eliminates a physical keyboard or Trackpad. This way the second display could also be used as a sketch pad, gaming controls and more as discussed in past patents.

Apple notes that in one version, a hinge is permanently holding the two displays together to form a new kind of MacBook.
In a second or alternative version, Apple notes that the hinge could be designed with magnetics so that it becomes a classic 2-in-1 device or second-gen iPad Pro so that the upper display could be detached and used as a standalone iPad.

I hope that falls into the “Apple patents everything it can think of” bucket, and not the “this is a thing that may actually ship” bucket. Yikes.

Connected #182: Wireless Charging Denier

This week on Connected:

Federico and Myke slander Stephen’s good name before talking about iPhone and headphone rumors and Amazon’s acquisition of Ring.

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2018 iPhone Rumors Spinning Up

Mark Gurman and Debby Wu at Bloomberg:

Apple Inc. is preparing to release a trio of new smartphones later this year: the largest iPhone ever, an upgraded handset the same size as the current iPhone X and a less expensive model with some of the flagship phone’s key features.

With the new lineup, Apple wants to appeal to the growing number of consumers who crave the multitasking attributes of so-called phablets while also catering to those looking for a more affordable version of the iPhone X, according to people familiar with the products.

Seems to make sense to me:

  • iPhone X Plus
  • Updated iPhone X
  • “Probably the iPhone 9” that looks like an iPhone X but uses cheaper parts

WatchKit Means Baby Apps

Marco Arment:

Developing Apple Watch apps is extremely frustrating and limited for one big reason: unlike on iOS, Apple doesn’t give app developers access to the same watchOS frameworks that they use on Apple Watch.

Instead, we’re only allowed to use WatchKit, a baby UI framework that would’ve seemed rudimentary to developers even in the 1990s. But unlike the iPhone’s web apps, WatchKit doesn’t appear to be a stopgap — it seems to be Apple’s long-term solution to third-party app development on the Apple Watch.