In his spare time, John-Anthony can be found watching any sport under the sun from football to darts, taking the term “Lego house” far too literally as he runs out of space to display any more plastic bricks, or chilling on the couch with his French Bulldog, Kermit. John-Anthony also loves to tinker with other non-Apple technology and enjoys playing around with game emulation and Linux on his Steam Deck. He is also an avid film geek, having previously written film reviews and received the Edinburgh International Film Festival Student Critics award in 2019. John-Anthony has previously worked in editorial for collectable TCG websites and graduated from The University of Strathclyde where he won the Scottish Student Journalism Award for Website of the Year as Editor-in-Chief of his university paper. Living in Scotland, where he worked for Apple as a technician focused on iOS and iPhone repairs at the Genius Bar, John-Anthony has used the Apple ecosystem for over a decade and prides himself in his ability to complete his Apple Watch activity rings. Get more done with the new Google Chrome. John-Anthony Disotto is the How To Editor of iMore, ensuring you can get the most from your Apple products and helping fix things when your technology isn’t behaving itself. Download Chrome on your mobile device or tablet and sign into your account for the same browser experience, everywhere. Check out Everything you need to know about iOS 16 to learn more about what the latest major iPhone software has to offer. IOS 16 is filled with features that improve your iPhone experience, including Lock Screen customization and better Maps. ![]() If you want to get done sooner, then the fastest way is by updating with a Mac or PC through Finder/iTunes. The easiest way is definitely over-the-air, but it isn't always the fastest. Enter the Passcode on your iPhone if promptedĪs you can see, the process for getting iOS 16.3.1 on your iPhone is very easy and straightforward.Click on Check for Update in the Summary pane.Under Finder, click on the device icon at the top left to go to the device tab.Plug your iPhone in using your USB to Lightning.Simply connect your iPhone via USB and head to Finder on MacOS Catalina and newer. If you have limited space on your device or Software Update isn't working for whatever reason, you can update using your Mac. ![]() Tags APFS Apple AppleScript Apple silicon backup Big Sur Blake bug Catalina Consolation Console Corinth diagnosis Disk Utility Doré El Capitan extended attributes Finder firmware Gatekeeper Gérôme High Sierra history of painting iCloud Impressionism iOS landscape LockRattler log logs M1 Mac Mac history macOS macOS 10.12 macOS 10.13 macOS 10.14 macOS 10.How to install the iOS update using your Mac I don’t recall Apple announcing this at WWDC back in June. So is Apple going to eventually get round to providing write support for this wonderful new format, or is it going to be the first read-only image format supported on macOS? And how come iOS 11 cameras can write HEIF/HEIC images, but Macs aren’t important enough to Apple to merit such support? Thanks to who confirms that other apps such as Adobe Photoshop CC 2018 can’t write HEIF/HEIC either. Third party apps like Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, and GraphicConverter won’t play either – with the latter informing me quite simply that writing HEIF/HEIC files is currently not possible in 10.13. Photos and Preview seem able to read them, but not write to them, except in Photo’s case as unchanged exports (it can’t export changed HEIF/HEIC, though). Imagine my surprise when I was unable to find any app which was prepared to save an imported RAW file in HEIF/HEIC. So today I went to my High Sierra system, and tried to compress one of my 16 MB Camera RAW files to the new format, also known as HEIC. Apple has told us how exciting and efficient the new HEIF image compression is in iOS 11 and macOS High Sierra.
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