Devon Dundee

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My Thoughts on WWDC 2017

June 20, 2017 by Devon Dundee

As I’m sure you’ve heard by now, Apple held its annual Worldwide Developer Conference a couple of weeks ago and made some huge announcements about the future of their software and hardware (though, predictably, not the iPhone). I won’t go into all of the announcements here. If you’d like a roundup of those, check out my other site, Prosumable, where I summarized all of them. However, more important than the individual announcements themselves is what Apple’s changes as a whole indicate about the direction the company is moving in. And that’s what I want to get into today.

WWDC is a chance not only to get a preview of what’s to come for all of our favorite devices but also an opportunity to peer behind the veil into the mind of Apple: their process for iteratively adding value to each of their devices, their priorities in creating new devices, and their vision for what the future of technology should look like. This year was particularly insightful, I think, because it represents the culmination of a few moves that Apple’s been working on for a while but kept under wraps. Here are my big-picture takeaways from this year’s keynote and what I think they mean for Apple’s future:

The iPad can actually be your computer now. With iOS 11, Apple is giving the iPad a proper file management system, significantly more powerful multitasking and window management, and a platform-wide drag-and-drop feature that couldn’t be more intuitive. All of this results in a user experience that is truly desktop-class. Apple’s been trying to market the iPad as a laptop replacement for a long time by highlighting what you can do with the powerful apps that developers have created for the platform, but now those apps are supplemented by a full-fledged operating system that pushes the iPad to new limits and makes it a true laptop alternative. Since I started using iOS 11 on my new iPad Pro, my MacBook Pro has been sitting unused on my desk, and I don’t miss it. For casual users, the iPad has been a viable option for an everyday computer for years; now, it’s an option for everyone.

The iMac can actually be your pro computer now. Over the past year or so, there has been an increasing amount of outcry against Apple for allegedly ignoring its professional users. Scandalous tell-alls written by pros who’ve ditched the Mac for Windows have gone viral and been used as evidence that the company has given up on power users. Apple recently invited select members of the press to an event on their campus where executives fessed up to making major blunders with the Mac Pro and promised that Macs for professionals were on the way, but this didn’t convince everyone. Now, with the announcement of more powerful iMacs and the all-new iMac Pro, the company is putting to rest any doubt that pros may have had that they are still a priority in the eyes of Apple. As I’ve argued before, Apple cares deeply for their professional users; pros are Apple’s past and future. And they made that very clear with their Mac hardware announcements at WWDC.

Privacy is more important than convenience, but innovation is possible. In a world where Google and Facebook are hungrier than ever for user data, Apple has emerged as the technology company that prioritizes the privacy of its users, going so far as to protect consumers‘ data even from the company itself. This has earned the trust of the public, but it has also created some serious hurdles in software design and innovation. It turns out that sacrificing users’ privacy makes way for shortcuts in the development of new technologies and applications (especially when it comes to artificial intelligence), so it often looks like Apple is falling behind the competition in these areas. At several points during the WWDC keynote, Apple executives discussed their commitment to protecting user data and how they’re staying innovative and competitive despite the limitations that come along with that commitment. Developing a more powerful, proactive Siri assistant that recognizes a user across his or her various devices without violating that user’s privacy is no simple feat, but they’ve accomplished it. Privacy and innovation can go hand-in-hand. In fact, Apple argues that their way ultimately results in better technology, and I would have to agree with them.

Augmented reality is all fun and games for now, but its future is much bigger. Tim Cook has been hinting at Apple’s augmented reality ambitions for years, but we’ve never seen anything come of it until this year’s WWDC. At the event, the company displayed a very basic application of its new ARKit, a set of development tools that will make augmented reality accessible to anyone who makes apps for iOS devices. For now, the technology is being used to create games that can be virtually placed and played on surfaces in the real world, which is cool but not all that practical or mind-blowing. But with ARKit, Apple has suddenly made every iOS device an AR portal and made every iOS developer an AR developer. It’s only a matter of time before the collective genius of the iOS developer community creates applications for augmented reality that completely change the way we interact with our devices and go about our day-to-day lives. I have no idea what the applications will be, but I’m excited to see what the future holds for AR.

Apple is listening. Throughout its history, there has always been this narrative that Apple doesn’t ask consumers what they want and then give it to them; rather, Apple creates something and then tells consumers, “This is what you want.” The company is known for always being on the cutting-edge of where technology is going and how people want to use it. This story rang true for a very long time, I’d say for as long as Steve Jobs led the company. But Steve’s final Apple project, the company’s new Apple Park campus, is complete, and they have a new leader in Tim Cook. He has a different approach to leading Apple, and that showed more than ever at this year’s WWDC. Announcements like a file system on the iPad and the new iMac Pro may seem sudden to consumers, but these are things that have taken Apple years to develop and implement, all while consumers have been requesting them and lamenting that “Apple doesn’t listen to us” when they aren’t delivered. The truth is that Apple is listening to their customers and taking their concerns very seriously, and we are beginning to see the amazing things that the company is creating to fulfill their customers’ wants and needs.

These are just a few of my key takeaways from watching the event and reflecting on it over the past couple of weeks. While the announcements themselves are exiting, and I’m really enjoying trying several of them out myself, I’m even more excited about what these announcements say about Apple’s mindset and where the company is going. There will always be haters and skeptics out there, but I think that if there’s WWDC is any indication, the future of Apple is bright. And with the announcement of the tenth-anniversary iPhone right around the corner, I for one can’t wait to see what they come up with next.

Thanks for checking out my thoughts on this year’s WWDC. Have an opinion about the event or my analysis of it that you’d like to share? I’d love to discuss it with you! Let’s talk on Twitter, via email, or in the comments section of this post. I’m always happy to talk tech. Thanks for reading, friends. I hope you have a great week!

June 20, 2017 /Devon Dundee
technology, Apple
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Why I'm Happily Paying for Apple Music

September 29, 2015 by Devon Dundee

Let's take a trip back in time, shall we? The year is 2008. A 16-year-old version of me sits at his desk typing and clicking away furiously on his HP laptop. His concentration is so intense that hours pass without notice as he continues to type and click, type and click, pause for a sip of some sugary drink that's terrible for him… and then back to typing and clicking. What is this ridiculously good-looking but also terribly naive young man doing? Well, he's perfecting his iTunes library, of course. He's invested hundreds of dollars into his music collection, which consists of CDs, MP3s, t-shirts, stickers, bracelets, posters, and more, all from his favorite bands. He takes pride in showing off his collection to others, and all of his friends think he's cool because he has "like, the best taste in music ever." His music library has become central to his identity. It's what he's known for. And he spends all of his free time keeping up with his favorite bands, discovering new music, and tweaking his iTunes library so that every minute detail is exactly the way he wants it to be.

Fast forward to three months ago, the day before the launch of Apple Music. Now I'm 23 and in seminary. When I check my Timehop and see what I posted back in 2008, I realize that not only was I not as cool as I thought I was; my taste in music wasn't that great, either. But instead of trying to improve or expand it, I've basically let it become stale. Sure, I still keep up with a few of my absolute favorite bands and buy their new albums when they come out. But my passion has disappeared, and my music routine has basically become limited to listening to the same few songs over and over on the rare occasions that I actually feel like listening to music.

Not only that, but my iTunes library is a mess. Some artists are listed multiple times with slightly different spellings or with "featuring so-and-so" at the end. Albums are missing artwork. There's even a song that has a typo in the title. It's been that way for years, and I've never bothered to change it even though I know it would take approximately three seconds to fix. That one misspelled song title is a symbol for my whole approach to my music library at this time: I just don't care about it.

And then, I wake up the next day and find out that Apple Music is live. I have to try it out, not because I'm excited about the service, but because I have a compulsive need to stay up-to-date on every software platform I can get my hands on. The first thing I think is, "Wow, that new Music icon is pretty cool." I tap it, and I immediately realize that Apple Music is so much more than I expected it to be. It's not just another music streaming service. It's a music streaming service that allows me to mix my streaming songs with my iTunes library. It's a music streaming service that already knows exactly what kind of music I love and suggests playlists that mix music I know with music I don't know but will soon come to love. It's a music streaming service that connects me with the artists I love so that I can keep up with everything they're doing while I enjoy their music. The second I experience Apple Music, it's like a switch gets flipped in my head, and I'm that 16-year-old music-obsessed kid all over again.

I spend the rest of the day obsessing over my music library. I fix all the mistakes that I've allowed to slip in over the years, and I even update some of my old album artwork with newer, higher-quality images. I look up every music artist I've ever had any interest in and add their "Intro To…" playlist to my library. As I explore the app, I remember songs I've heard that I loved, artists I've completely forgotten about, and albums I've wanted to buy for years but never could bring myself to shell out the money for. And now all this stuff is accessible to me. As much of it as I want. For free. And I can't get enough.

I listen to music all the time now. I listen to it at least as much as I did when I was 16, if not more. And now, I have the resources to enjoy my favorite music while also expanding my musical horizons through content discovery. I can finally have relevant conversations about current music trends because I have access to every song that's blowing up right now. And I can discover unknown indie artists and share them with my friends, something I loved doing when I was younger. I'm into music so much right now that I bought a brand new set of wireless headphones just so I could listen to my music in more places. I listen in my car, on my bike, when I'm shopping, when I'm cleaning, right after I wake up, right before I go to bed, and all kinds of times in-between.

Wireless headphones make the man.

And that's why I love Apple Music. It gave me the gift of loving music again. As silly as it may sound, it's been really good for me to reconnect with something I used to love so much. No, I'm not going to go 100% evangelistic fanboy on you like I once did. I won't start wearing band t-shirts again and scouring Google for the latest news on my favorite artists. But I am going to be able to enjoy music in a way that is not only fun, but also meaningful. And that's all thanks to Apple Music.

So tomorrow, when my free trial runs out, I'm going to happily pay the $10 required to stay subscribed to the service. Not only am I supporting artists and musicians. I'm supporting a wonderful music streaming service that has already done me a lot of good, and I'm giving myself even more opportunity to be encouraged, enlivened, and even edified by it more in the future. Apple Music is well worth the money to me, and I hope you'll give it a chance as well. Maybe it won't impact you as powerfully as it has me, but maybe it will. You'll never know unless you give it a chance. Who knows? You may end up three months from now in the same place I am now, handing Apple $10 a month for access to their music streaming service and smiling as you do it.


Well, that's my review of Apple Music! Thank you for checking it out. I know it's a little different than my usual reviews, but I wanted to be completely honest with you about why I love Apple Music so much, and that meant getting a little sentimental. There are obviously other, more objective, reasons why I love the service, and I'd be happy to discuss them with you in the comments, through my contact page, or on social media. I'd also like to know: Have you tried Apple Music? If you have, will you stick with it once the trial runs out? And if you haven't, why not? Let me know in the comments! I would absolutely love to hear from you.

September 29, 2015 /Devon Dundee
technology, music, Apple
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