I would happily use Reading List for reading later, too, but sadly it doesn’t sync reading position yet. I’ve long used Safari for all my browsing except work stuff (where I use Chrome as my all-G Suite work island), and I ride Reader mode all day. Apple News gives me the most relevant news feed I’ve ever had. I even have two subscriptions in there, to the Washington Post and National Geographic. I’m still going to use iBooks as my long-term storage for books and long documents - while holding out the dim hope that Apple will make a good reader someday - but now Amazon gets to own what I’m reading for a while.įor hard news, I have completely extricated myself from third parties and pernicious social media trackers and am completely sold on Apple News. I was all in on iBooks for years, but I finally got tired enough of reading books on my bright, shiny distraction machines that I got a Kindle Paperwhite. One other area has required some exceptions, because it’s the one in which I’m the most picky: reading.
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The one major exception is for the OmniGroup, whose software and services I trust even more than Apple’s. Don’t get me wrong, I still use plenty of third-party utility apps to get additional functionality for the stuff I do all day, but they either have to allow the use of the file browser, so I can keep stuff in iCloud Drive, or they have to just sync with iCloud themselves.
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Even in cases where I can’t escape third-party services - email and calendars being the most notable examples, since G Suite is really the only sensible option for having them on your own domain - I’m using Apple’s client apps for them. I’ve been relentlessly cutting back to first-party apps and iCloud-backed services wherever I can. It’s been six crazy years in technology since then.Ĭall me old and conservative - or call me aware that consumer tech is inherently dangerous - but I’ve since joined a movement of perfectly tech-savvy people who nevertheless think the safest, easiest, most survivable approach at this point is simply to hide out in Fort Apple. At the beginning, I thought I was shrewd enough to protect myself, but I was disabused of that notion in 2012 when I found out one of my favorite new apps was stealing my friends’ info from my address book.
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Tech companies are spying on everyone on behalf of oligarchs and gangsters, entire cities are getting pwned, and the little HAL 9000s everyone’s voluntarily putting in their kitchens are literally laughing at them. These days, if you ask me, complexity has outstripped even the most eager private citizen’s ability to adjust technologically, and it’s wreaking havoc. Am I getting old? I used to like taking risks with my technology choices, trying out the new apps and services - even whole new ecosystems - trying to constantly delight myself by mastering fresh new interfaces and gaining new skills.