MacStories Unwind: Road Trips, Casino Heists, and Apple Podcasts

AppStories+ Deeper into the world of apps
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AppStories+ Deeper into the world of apps


This week on MacStories Unwind, Federico and I compare road trip notes and somehow wind up talking about Federico’s fascination with casinos, before turning to the latest content updates to Apple Podcasts from Music and News.

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Road Trips

John’s Pick:

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Photo Scout: An Excellent Photographer’s Companion for iPhone and iPad

Taking a great photo requires a lot of variables to fall into place. It’s amazing when this happens by happenstance, but what if you could stack the odds in your favor? That’s the question Photo Scout by Cascable answers.

Photo Scout, available for the iPhone and iPad, combines location data with weather conditions, date and time information, sunlight, and night sky variables to recommend when you should grab your camera or drone and head out for a photo shoot. The app can account for many variables, but what’s best about Photo Scout is that it makes managing them simple.

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Hue Widgets’ Interactive Widgets Are the Easiest Way to Control Complex Hue Lighting Scenes

I’ve never been a big fan of the Philips Hue app. It has improved over time, and I appreciate its fine-grained control over my lights and its Shortcuts support, but the app has always felt a little clunky. That’s why I was happy when I discovered Hue Widgets over a year ago now. It’s a simple widget creation tool that lets you activate your Hue lights and scenes from your iPhone’s Home Screen, which is a much easier and nicer experience than using the Hue app. Better yet, with iOS 17, the app’s widgets are interactive, so lights and scenes can be triggered without ever opening the app.

Many Hue lights support features you can’t control from Apple’s Home app. For instance, many Hue lights can create animated and multi-color gradient lighting scenes that aren’t supported by HomeKit. These extended features can be accessed in the official Hue app, but it doesn’t have widgets, which is a faster and easier way to control your lighting and where Hue Widgets comes in.

Controlling lights and scenes from Home Widgets.

Controlling lights and scenes from Home Widgets.

The Hue Widgets app has two main tabs: a list of the rooms in your home, and an interface for creating widgets. The Home tab allows you to turn on an entire room or zone’s lights or control them individually, turning lights and scenes on and off and adjusting brightness levels, light temperatures, and colors. The official Hue app works similarly, but Hue Widgets’ interface is simpler and faster.

Building a widget.

Building a widget.

However, I’ve spent most of my time in the Widgets tab. Here, you can set up small, medium, or large widgets to control your Hue lights. The small version of the widget controls one light or scene, while the medium and large sizes control four and eight, respectively. After you pick the widget size you want, it appears in the Widget tab’s main interface. Then, tapping on each widget’s tiles walks you through picking a room and light or scene to control. Hue Widgets also lets you assign a color for each tile in your widget. It’s a quick and simple process but requires you to set up your lights and scenes in the Hue app first because Hue Widgets acts as a controller for the Hue app, not a replacement. When you’re satisfied with the widgets you’ve designed, return to your iPhone’s Home Screen to add one of the widgets you built, choosing the size you created in the app.

One thing I wish I could change in Hue Widgets is how it names widgets. Each is named automatically along the lines of ‘Small Widget #1’ and ‘Small Widget #2.’ If you create a lot of widgets, this isn’t ideal because it makes it hard to remember which widget is which. I’d prefer to assign more memorable names myself. I’d also love to see Hue Widgets on the iPad, where it could offer an extra-large widget.

Hue Widgets pairs nicely with Home Widget, which [I recently reviewed](https://www.macstories.net/reviews/home-widget-unlocks-homekit-device-control-that-apples-home-app-doesnt-offer/).

Hue Widgets pairs nicely with Home Widget, which I recently reviewed.

I was a fan of Hue Widgets before iOS 17, but having tried the interactive versions of its widgets, I can already tell I will be using them a lot more than before. Paired with the recent addition of Matter support for Hue hubs, which seems to have improved the responsiveness of my lighting, Hue Widgets has become a core part of my growing home automation setup.

Hue Widgets is available on the App Store for $1.99.


Introducing MultiButton: Assign Two Shortcuts to the Same Action Button Press on Your iPhone

MultiButton.

MultiButton.

I got my iPhone 15 Pro Max last week, and I’m loving the possibilities opened by the Action button combined with the Shortcuts app. But as I was playing around with different ideas for the Action button, I had a thought:

Wouldn’t it be great if instead of just one shortcut, I could toggle between two shortcuts with the same Action button press? That’s exactly what my new MultiButton shortcut does.

With MultiButton, you’ll be able to assign two separate shortcuts to the Action button. Unlike other solutions you may have seen that always make you pick shortcuts from a menu, MultiButton automatically cycles between two shortcuts if you press the Action button multiple times in rapid succession. You don’t need to pick shortcuts from a list; just press the Action button and MultiButton will take care of everything.

Toggling between two shortcuts with MultiButton.Replay

Allow me to explain how MultiButton works and how you can configure it for your Action button. In the process, I’ll also share some new shortcut ideas that you can start using today on your iPhone 15 Pro.

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AppStories, Episode 352 – Widgets Everywhere

This week on AppStories, we take a look at some of our favorite apps with interactive widgets for iOS 17, iOS 17, and macOS Sonoma.

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Apple Announces ‘Meet with Apple Experts’ for Developers

Apple announced a worldwide series of events for developers who want to improve their apps through a combination of online and in-person resources.

The program includes more than 50 workshops, consultations, labs, and other sessions focusing on a broad range of topics, from developing for each of the company’s OSes to business and marketing assistance. For example, Apple’s developer website currently lists one-on-one App Review consultations, an in-person Apple Vision Pro event, and an online session on app discovery and marketing, as well as a wide variety of other topics hosted from several cities around the world. Sessions are offered in multiple languages and incorporate what was previously part of programs like Ask Apple, Meet with App Store experts, and Tech Talks.

The new Meet with Apple Experts events look like they’ll be a fantastic resources for developers. I especially like the blend of in-person and online resources. It’s hard to beat the kind of one-on-one interaction that used to happen in WWDC labs, but in-person events impose a lot of constraints that make them hard to host and attend. With a mix of in-person and online events, Apple should be able to reach a wider developer audience, which is great to see.


macOS Sonoma: The MacStories Review

Conclusion

As I wrap up this review at my desk with an iPad Pro on one side using Universal Control and my iPhone on the other in StandBy mode, I’m struck by how well these three devices work in concert as well as individually. That’s no small feat, and it highlights how well-integrated Apple’s systems are now.

A big part of that integration is widgets. Apps vary from system to system based on screen size and device capabilities, but widgets are the same system-wide. They’re the glue that links an iPhone to an iPad to a Mac. They provide continuity across devices, allowing you to spread your work out across any number of them. Yet, at the same time, widgets work just as well on a single device.

That wasn’t really true before Sonoma. Sure, we’ve had widgets on the Mac for a while, but I’ve yet to meet someone who used them a lot before Sonoma because they were hidden away behind the menu bar’s clock. Desktop widgets won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, and you may prefer to stick with widgets on an iPhone or iPad as you work at your Mac, but with Sonoma, desktop widgets are a critical link in a mixed device environment that recognizes that for many people, the Mac isn’t their only work tool. I’ve never worked solely on a Mac, which is why I’m such a big fan of widgets on the desktop.

I’m also struck by how far apps like Reminders and Notes have come from their origins. There was a time when Reminders was a barebones checklist tool, and Notes didn’t support formatting. Now, they’re both worthy competitors to some of the best alternatives available from third-party developers. What’s more, they scale elegantly from their original, simple use cases to more complex ones, which is a testament to their thoughtful, considered design.

Widgets everywhere.

Widgets everywhere.

Safari single-site web apps complete the Sonoma triumvirate of my favorite features. I’m sure it’s a product of when I began using computers more than anything else, but I can’t help it. I prefer native apps to web apps. However, in my hierarchy of computing needs, I prefer the best tool for a job over anything else, and increasingly, in recent years, that’s a web app. Still, I’ve never enjoyed working in browser tabs, whether they’re at the top, on the side, or part of a special-purpose profile. There are third-party apps with more bells and whistles, but over the past few months with Sonoma, I’ve found that Safari web apps have been the perfect lightweight solution to the internal MacStories web tools we use, as well as a laundry list of third-party services. I’d still prefer native apps that take advantage of macOS-specific features like the share menu and Shortcuts, but I’m glad Apple has embraced the reality of web apps and given me and other users a practical solution.

Those are my personal favorites among the many Sonoma updates, but the best part is that there’s something in this release for everyone, from significant improvements to video calling to gaming to password management. It’s a grab bag of utility that’s only marred this year by the neglect of Shortcuts and Stage Manager, both of which got off to a good start when they debuted but have felt stuck in first gear ever since then.

On balance, though, there’s never been a better time to be a Mac user who also uses other Apple devices. It wasn’t that long ago that the Mac seemed like an also-ran platform without much of a future. Computing has changed. Mobile is dominant, and web apps are a growing segment of the app landscape. There’s still plenty of room for the great native Mac app experiences we’ve enjoyed for years, but with Sonoma, Apple has shown it can adapt. Bringing the Mac further into the fold of its other OSes with the help of widgets and giving users a better way to use web apps. Paired with Apple silicon, it’s an exciting, dynamic time on the Mac again, and I can’t wait to see what the future holds.