It was a good run, I suppose, for my MacBook Pro 2015 15”. It joins the ranks of my Mac Mini Servers 2012 and 2011 as devices no longer in the loving embrace of Cupertino. All of these devices are still running and running well, though I need to rebuild the ’12 machine to repurpose it and undo some experimentation with which I flirted. The ’15 will stay in production and I have a replacement battery ready to go in once the current one goes.

The privacy stuff is perhaps the most compelling positive changes announced today. I’ll likely talk about that once more is understood. It’s a weird juxtaposition with the iOS/iPadOS lock screen widgets, which often compromise privacy, but that should be disabled anyway.

This does leave me with decisions about next steps. Apple seemingly doesn’t want to spend much effort in stabilizing their OSes, working on improving accessibility, or in function discovery. They also don’t seem to want to address any issues or improve workflows to solve my problems. This is not new – Apple’s been adding features that are mostly shiny chrome for years now. With decent odds that my iPhone might only see one more major release I can take this opportunity to reëvaluate my tech stack.

Time to start saving monies!

macOS Ventura Drops Support for Older Macs, Works With 2017 and Later Machines:

A full compatibility list is below:

    • iMac (2017 and later)
    • iMac Pro
    • MacBook Pro (2017 and later)
    • MacBook (2017 and later)

These are the Macs that were compatible with macOS Monterey :

    • iMac – Late 2015 and later
    • iMac Pro – 2017 and later
    • MacBook Air – Early 2015 and later
    • MacBook Pro – Early 2015 and later
    • Mac Pro – Late 2013 and later
    • Mac mini – Late 2014 and later
    • MacBook – Early 2016 and later
(Via Juli Clover at MacRumors)

※ Some people like The National. Others do not. If The National gives you joy, excellent! Stop reading here. Go do good in the world.

I’ve been listening to The National (TN) for a couple of weeks. They are headlining the Moon River festival Saturday night here in Chattanooga. Many of the acts I don’t know well, so wanted to boost my familiarity. Most of what I’ve heard I can get behind, but sadly I don’t get The National.

Somehow they never hit my radar until the Pandemic. I’m into music. I like artists that seem to be associated with TN. TN gets categorized into the “dad rock” category, presumably my wheelhouse. And yet, they never did, as I said, hit my radar. I often assume acts I don’t know hit it big in the U.S. when I was working and living overseas. It was pointed out to me that TN’s peak was well before my foreign travels began in earnest.

I’m sure I heard them as I was out and about in the world. I’m fairly certain that, when I did, I wrote each song off as coming from Crash Test Dummies (“Oh, isn’t it nice those guys are still going.”) or Coldplay (“Oh, isn’t it nice those guys are still going.”). If I heard the band’s name I’m sure I thought it was something about the nightly CBC news show hosted by Peter Mansbridge. Actually, I know I thought that at least a few times in retrospect.

Here I was these last few weeks, giving TN concerted attention. I started with asking Apple Music to play TN. Presumably, Apple Music starts with the biggest hit and goes form there. I struggled to differentiate one song from the next. I went to Reddit to see what r/TheNational had to say for newbies. The answers all boiled down to the albums Alligator, Boxer, and High Violet with other albums as the forth. Maybe they’re an album band and I need to disregard the singles, I thought.

I made it through most of Alligator, but fast forwarded through a lot of songs. Boxer wasn’t much better, but it was better. The lead song, “Fake Empire”, musically works but the lyrics and singing are bland. I got a few tracks into High Violet and gave up.

It occurred to me that maybe TN needs to be appreciated without looking at the lyrics, like early R.E.M. It helps in that the lyrics are mostly … not my taste. They’re like something Dave Matthews would write and then discard.

But the singer, Matt Berninger, seems to only have one vocal gear – dragging his baritone across the equivalent of a shopping mall parking lot. There is no change between songs and between albums. Mr. Berninger always offers the same static performance, eating the microphone while competing with the bass guitar.

I thought a comparison with the previously mentioned Coldplay or Crash Test Dummies, or Bauhaus, or Wilco, or Joy Division, or someone else would help me figure this band out. They don’t. Based on my cursory glance, the members of TN seem to be decent people who collaborate with others and help aspiring artists get noticed. I hope that’s true and wish TN all the best, not that they need my good wishes.

They’re not my jam. And that is OK. I wish I could give my pass to someone who would appreciate the show, but sadly the festival organizers forbid such things … and I want back in for Sunday.

In post-Roe world, privacy researcher worries about a ‘scenario where everyone is a sheriff’:

“Your phone is the snitch in your pocket,” cybersecurity researcher Zach Edwards told the Click Here podcast this week. “Every app that you download, the permissions that you give that app, all of the other… companies that are integrated into that app also get those same permissions.”

Edwards’ area of expertise is focusing on data brokers, the companies that bundle up personal information, create anonymous profiles, and then sell it. Among other things, they keep track of the websites you visit, your GPS location, how long you’re staying in one place, and a roster of other bits of your digital dust to create pattern data. Then, anyone with a credit card can buy it.

Shortly after Politico published a Supreme Court draft opinion suggesting the conservative majority was prepared to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark decision legalizing abortion, Edwards went into a roster of data broker platforms to see how the information stored there might be weaponized in states that come to outlaw — and possibly criminalize — abortion. 

Some of his findings were published in a report by Joseph Cox at Motherboard, which made clear that just about anyone with the inclination and a credit card could access granular data about abortion clinics from public sites like SafeGraph and Placer.ai  (both companies have since removed Planned Parenthood as a searchable option).

In the latest episode of Click Here, Edwards explained how simple weaponizing data can be and  why people living in rural areas need to be especially careful. 

(By Dina Temple-Raston and Will Jarvis at The Record)

Zach Edwards is not wrong. The ease with which one can acquire bulk surveillance data in the US without ever having to do the surveillance is frightening.

The US needs strong privacy legislation. Tech moguls don’t want it.

I recommend asking those seeking your vote what they will do in office to protect privacy, among other problems with such legislation.