There is always that greener grass on the other side of the fence.

From E.T.'s Keyboard. . .
  "God for you is where you sweep away all the
  mysteries of the world, all the challenges to
  our intelligence. You simply turn your mind off
  and say God did it." --Carl Sagan
E-mail: [email protected]

On 6/26/2017 5:58 PM, gary-melconian wrote:
Mary, you are forgetting, apple does not care about you any more. They will 
build product charge an darm and a leg . fi you want it you wwill buy it if not 
then you wont. That’s the attitude of apple lately. So I wold not bbe surprised 
that they will not bother to work on accessibility any more. Wahthe point if 
they are to get a few customrers  to upgrade in the long run.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Monday, June 26, 2017 5:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Full Article: iOS 11 public beta: What it does for the iPhone - 
CNET

Well, if I'm understanding this correctly, I have to say I'm disappointed about 
the scanning in the PDF. Yet another excuse to have a not editable text in a 
PDF file. Very sad. Apple, if you care about excess ability, you'll change this.
Mary


Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 26, 2017, at 4:26 PM, M. Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:

CNET News - Monday, June 26, 2017 at 1:01 PM iOS 11 public beta: What
it does for the iPhone - CNET The iPhone 8 could end up being an
amazing, transformative 10th-anniversary iPhone. At first glance, iOS
11 doesn't seem quite so ambitious. It's more of a series of targeted
upgrades, with some of them being downright fantastic.
Apple's newest version of its operating system for iPhones and iPads
doesn't formally arrive until later this year, but it's here in public
beta form now. You can install it on your own iPads and iPhones, if
you dare. Don't do so on your primary device, however, only experiment
with it on a secondary device, and be ready for plenty of bugs. Betas
do weird things sometimes and App Store apps aren't optimized for it yet anyway.
I've already been using it for a few days, testing it on an iPhone 7
Plus (for this story) and a new 10.5-inch iPad Pro (to see all the
extra features it adds on the iPad). With the caveat that this is a
beta -- and not a feature-complete one at that -- here are my first impressions.
The killer features:
You can pluck the best shots from Live Photos When Live Photos first
launched in 2015, they seemed clever but gimmicky. My brother-in-law
asked me back then, can Live Photo pick another shot to grab a moment
you thought you missed? It couldn't before, but it can now. Editing a
Live Photo now allows any of the shots to become the "primary photo."
Missed your kid's smile? Maybe you didn't. It's now a time machine for
snapshots and a backup plan. I'm never turning it off after the iOS 11
upgrade. Added GIF-like loop effects and a nice long exposure trick
are great too, but nothing beats editable shots.

Pick your best shot.
Sarah Tew/CNET
A one-page Control Center
The iPhone's handy swipe-up panel sprawled into a weird multi-page
monster with iOS 10, but it fits on one pane in iOS 11. New features
are added, too, and shortcuts to key apps can be added or removed like
widgets. Nice adds are Notes, Voice Memo and a great Apple TV remote
tool built-in. I can keep my lost Apple TV remote wedged in the sofa
permanently. Still, it could have added even more. Control Center
doesn't use 3D Touch as much as I thought it would to deep-dive further in 
settings. But, hey, it's progress.

Control Center has sub-sections, now.
Sarah Tew/CNET
Screen recording
It's not going to be for everyone, but it's so easy to start recording
what you do on your iPhone, even add voice-over commentary and share as a video.
How-to videos and self-help sites are going to benefit tremendously.
Maybe I'd use this to show my mom how to adjust her phone settings the
next time she calls -- I could just email the video.
Marking up (almost) anything
The next time you want to share what you see on your iPhone (or iPad),
remember that screenshots (home plus the power button together) now
launch a markup tool that lets you scribble or highlight anything.
Well, almost anything... movies and protected videos ended up blacked
out (on iOS 10, that doesn't happen). Circle a weird comment, add a note with 
your finger.
Safari has a "markup as PDF" feature that does the same thing. It'll
be great for Twitter or Facebook. In a similar vein, PDFs are easy to
make and even add signatures to.
A built-in scanner in Notes
Apple's Notes app keeps getting serious upgrades, pushing it further
into Evernote country. Tables can be added in iOS 11, and there's also
a scanning tool to add receipts or other documents. It does a pretty
good job stretching and evening out off-angle scans, but it doesn't
convert into editable text.

One-handed keyboard!
Sarah Tew/CNET
Some other things to try:
Siri sounds different and can translate Siri is supposed to be
somewhat smarter now. I didn't see a giant boost yet, but Siri
definitely sounds different. The "more natural" style actually threw
me off a bit. Siri's nicest new feature is instant audio translation
into French, German, Italian, Mandarin Chinese and Spanish. It's in
beta -- so be wary of relying on it in a serious setting -- but it's
nice to have at a quick button press. (Google Translate is still my
go-to, though.) One-handed keyboards A little iOS 11 trick is to press
and hold the "emoji" button in the keyboard to get a new left- or
right-hand-squished keyboard optimized for one-handed typing. It's
reminiscent of the old compressed keyboard on the iPhone SE.
The Files app
There's now a place to consolidate folders and apps locally or in
cloud accounts. It's taking some getting used to in the beta, but it's
finally a central place to dump your stuff. But, so far, I found I
couldn't just instantly make folders on my iPhone without putting them
into pre-existing folders... which is disappointing.
Portrait mode for 7 Plus gets flash/HDR/effects Extra camera modes
mean Portrait mode's bokeh-type effects can be used in more
situations.
'Do Not Disturb While Driving'
At long last, iPhones have a new filter to remove messages while driving.
It's a more targeted variation of "Do Not Disturb." It can be
triggered automatically, manually or while connected to a car's
Bluetooth, and it also auto-replies to contacts (or only some of them)
to let them know you're driving. I haven't used this a ton yet, but I'm curious.

OK.
Sarah Tew/CNET
Not so hot:
The new App Store
Apple's redesign of the store feels like Apple Music, Apple News and
many recent redesigned parts of iOS. After a few days in it, I'm not
sure it's easier to discover what I'm looking for. There are a lot
more Apple-curated lists, it seems, and articles written about
featured apps by Apple's editorial staff. Games are split off from the
rest of the App Store to allow other apps to be featured better. Does it make 
things better?
Added Siri suggestions in News and other things Supposedly, Apple News
makes suggestions from what you're looking for in Safari. I haven't
seen that emerge for me yet. Quick-type suggestions in Safari's
keyboard bring up more specific things, often based on what you're
looking at. But not always, and I found some oddities.
What you don't get yet (but will eventually):
Augmented reality
Apple's amazing ARKit doesn't have any apps or demos to show off in
this beta, so you'll have to wait for software developers to show
their stuff in the fall... or watch developer experiments online.
Apple Pay in iMessages
In-message person-to-person Apple Pay promises to challenge Venmo,
Paypal and other peer-to-peer payment solutions. But it's not
launching until the fall.
https://www.cnet.com/news/ios-11-public-beta-what-it-does-for-the-ipho
ne/#ft
ag=CAD590a51e

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