Most Epic Nerf War
Nerf, enough said.
Nerf, enough said.
I thought I would keep this table up to date with iPhone availability. I'm not sure how long this will stay up to date, but I will keep periodically updating it. This is current as of 8:15AM Central Time.
The iPhone 6 Plus is still stating 3 to 4 weeks for all models, on all carriers and in all colors. I would not expect this to change drastically anytime soon. The only change is that the 64GB Space Gray model on AT&T is now at 7 to 10 days.
Update 2:30PM Central Time: The 64GB Gold on T-Mobile is now stating 7 - 10 days. This has been the only change since 8:15AM Central Time.
Update 8:00PM Central Time: The 128GB Silver on T-Mobile, 16GB Space Gray on AT&T, and 64GB Gold on AT&T, are all now stating 7 - 10 days. If you are still looking for phone to get on Launch Day, the 128GB Gold version is still available on all the carriers, through Apple, in the United States.
Last Update 09/13/2014 at 8:00PM | |
T-Mobile | 128GB Gold |
Sprint | 128GB Gold, 128GB Space Gray |
AT&T | 128GB Gold |
Verizon | 16GB Gold, 16GB Space Gray, 64GB Space Gray, 128GB Gold, 128GB Space Gray |
iPhone 6 | ||||
T-Mobile | Sprint | AT&T | Verizon | |
---|---|---|---|---|
16GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days
Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
64GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 9/19 |
128GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
Here is the iPhone 6 Availability as of 7:15PM Central Time.
All iPhone 6 Plus models are sold out for release date shipping, and even 7 to 10 business day shipping. All iPhone 6 Plus models have a 3 to 4 week lead-time now. Most of iPhone 6 models are on a 7 to 10 day until shipment. As of this writing, none of the iPhone 6 models are 3 to 4 week wait times, yet. If you still want an iPhone 6 on release day, here are your options:
T-Mobile | 64GB Gold, 128GB Silver, 128GB Gold |
Sprint | 128GB Gold, 128GB Space Gray |
AT&T | 16GB Space Gray, 64GB Gold, 64GB Space Gray, 128GB Gold |
Verizon | 16GB Gold, 16GB Space Gray, 64GB Space Gray, 128GB Gold, 128GB Space Gray |
iPhone 6 | ||||
T-Mobile | Sprint | AT&T | Verizon | |
---|---|---|---|---|
16GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 9/19 |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
64GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 9/19 |
128GB |
Silver: 9/19 Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 9/19 Space Gray: 9/19 |
Issues are always expected for early adopters and today has been no exception. Apple stated that pre-orders would begin today, September 12th, for their iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. The Apple Online store was still down at 4AM Central, and came up some time by 5AM Central. The only way that users seemed to be able to access the store was through the Apple App Store application on their iPhones and iPads.
There are many reasons to deal with all of the issues and try to pre-order as soon as possible. The primary reason is shipping delays. As of 5:45AM Central Time, the shipping times for the iPhone 6 from all the carriers (AT&T, Sprint, Verizon, and T-Mobile) and in all sizes (16GB, 64GB, and 128GB) and in all colors (Silver, Gold, and Space Gray) is still 9/19. However, the iPhone 6 Plus is a different story.
Update 7:45AM Central Time. All iPhone 6 Plus Models are now at 3-4 weeks for all carriers and colors. These must be in shorter supply than the iPhone 6.
Table information from 7:45AM Central.iPhone 6 Plus | ||||
T-Mobile | Sprint | AT&T | Verizon | |
16GB |
Silver: 3 - 4 Weeks Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 3 - 4 Weeks |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 3 - 4 Weeks |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
64GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 3 - 4 Weeks |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 3 - 4 Weeks |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
128GB |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Business Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 3 - 4 Weeks Space Gray: 3 - 4 Weeks |
Silver: 7 - 10 Days Gold: 7 - 10 Days Space Gray: 7 - 10 Days |
I posted that my iOS 8 for Users and Developers e-books were available for pre-order. These books still are available for pre-order. However, the release date has been moved up from October 1st to September 17th. Get your copy now.
Pre-orders are available from Apple (ePub), Apple (iBooks), or Amazon (ePub).
In case you are not aware, Apple is having an event on September 9th, 2014 beginning at 10AM Pacific Time/1PM Eastern/1700 UTC/1800 London Time. Typically, we would not know until the day of the event whether Apple would be live streaming the event or not. This time around, Apple has set up a page with a countdown. It can be viewed here. This link is also the link to the live stream. With the event a mere 4 days away now, there have been a plethora of rumors for what Apple will announce. Here are my thoughts about all of it.
Apple is holding their event at the Flint Center for performing arts in Cupertino. This has some significance for Apple. The original Mac, released in 1984, was unveiled last the Flint Center, as was the original iMac. It would make sense that Apple would release another "original" product at the same location. The Flint Center holds three times as many people as their typical venue, the Yerba Buena Center.
The last significant item regarding the location is that Apple is building a three-story large structure around the Flint Center's statue. It is not known what the purpose of this building is, but we will find out on Tuesday. Below is a picture of the structure. Regardless of what Apple does have in store for us, be sure that it will not be a small affair and that it will be one to be sure to live stream.
Picture via MacRumors
Here is an in-depth look at the new Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare's Multiplayer.
I've spent the last three months working hard on writing two new e-books. They are "iOS 8 for Users and Developers" and "OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Users, Administrators, and Developers". These are available in two different formats, iBooks and ePub.
iOS 8 for Users and Developers looks at all of the new features for iOS 8 including Family Sharing, Health, Spotlight, iCloud, Extensions, Custom Keyboards, Handoff, HomeKit, Changes to Messages, Safari updates, and Mail changes.
Specifically for developers we look at Handoff, HomeKit, extensions, Custom Keyboard Security, Touch ID API, Sprite Kit, Scene Kit, CloudKit, PhotoKit, WebKit (WKWebView), Universal applications and Size Classes, switching to Modern Objective-C, Visual Debugging, the basics of Swift, and how App Bundles will affect developers.
Pre-orders are available from Apple (ePub), Apple (iBooks), or Amazon (ePub).
OS X 10.10 Yosemite: for Users, Administrators, and Developers looks at all of the new features of OS X 10.10 Yosemite, including Handoff, SMS Relay, the updated look, Extensions, and changes to Safari and much more.
For Server Administrators we look at the ability to customize connectivity globally as well as on a per-service level and the implications of some configurations. Also discussed is the new “Reachability” feature and security.
For the Developers we take a look at the new Frameworks available with OS X 10.10 Yosemite, the changes to Xcode, and a brief look at Swift.
OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Users, Administrators and Developer has something for all users of OS X.
Pre-orders are available from Apple (iBooks), Apple(ePub), or Amazon (ePub).
One section of the OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Users, Administrators and Developers has also been made into a separate e-book. That e-book is titled "OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Server Administrators"
OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Server Administrators looks at all of the new features of OS X 10.10 Yosemite, including Handoff, SMS Relay, the updated look, the ability to customize connectivity globally as well as on a per-service level and the implications of some configurations. Also discussed is the new “Reachability” feature and security.
Pre-orders for OS X 10.10 Yosemite for Server Administrators are only available from Apple. The two versions are iBooks or ePub.
This post is an off-shoot by my post "How I Use Twitter". Originally I was going to publish it was one post, but after looking at the length of each, I decided to separate them out. Either way, both of these stem from Episode 3 of Analog(ue) on Relay.fm where Casey and Myke discussed Identify. There was one section in particular that got me to thinking about it, because I can completely relate.
During the conversation Casey stated:
"I think of myself...and as a hard worker, and decent at my job. I scratch fewer itches with my JOB job, and I scratch more itches with this...that's been an odd thing for me to come to terms with. Where I used to put 150% into my JOB job, I don't feel as though I haven't gotten a lot out of my J.O.B. job lately, and because of that I would say that I'm not putting in 150% anymore."
This last sentence, absolutely rings true for me. Sure, I still do my job and get things done but I am no where near as happy, nor as fulfilled, with my J.O.B. job as I used to be. It could be due to burn-out, or it could be due to having to pick up too much slack from others. Regardless of the reason, this also got me to thinking "How have I been "scratching my itches?" For the last 3 months it has been writing two e-books (which are almost ready as I write this). That's how I have been scratching my itches lately. In the past I have done other things to scratch my itches, more on those in a bit.
There's another show on Relay.fm, Inquisitive where the first question is always "What do you like to be known for?", and it's a very good question. When I first thought about the question, I honestly didn't know how to begin to answer it.
But, after some thinking about it I did determine how I would respond. My answer would be "Writer". You might be thinking, "But you don't write for a living" and yes, you would be correct. However, I do write. I may not be writing what most people would considering "traditional" writing, but it is writing none-the-less. Yes, I do write e-books and I write blogs posts, like this one. Do I write for a living, no. I write in my spare time. It's what I use to "scratch my itch". The things I do write are Objective-C Code, HTML, CSS, and Javascript. These are most definitely not what one would consider "writing", but it is writing. The writing of e-books is pretty self explanatory. Thus far I have only written non-fiction e-books. I have not yet delved into the world of fiction. While all writing requires effort, Non-fiction requires some effort with unique items. Effort in the actual writing, through research, in editing the e-books, assembling the book and even posting them to the different stores. All of these take time and when something doesn't go right, it requires additional effort to fix the issue. I'm an engineer by nature. As an example, in a meeting after Amazon announced their Drone program, the topic of having a drone fleet at work came up. Instead of worrying about the implications and policy of what a drone fleet would mean, I was thinking "How would one control a drone fleet?", "What servers would be involved?", "How would one keep them charged?" and countless other engineering questions. Given my engineering nature, writing non-fiction could easily be seen as a natural fit. Non-fiction, much like engineering, makes you think about how everything fits together and works together. As an engineer you want to make sure everything is working, and most importantly, to do it yourself. Yes, you will have to rely on others for some things, yet you want to accomplish a majority of this by yourself. Since I like to write, would I like to write for a J.O.B. job? I think I would. If it's a "traditional" writing position it would have to be one where I can do some more in-depth research and does not necessarily have a strict quota for churning out posts. Sites that require a huge turn out, particularly at being the first to break some news, are the sites that I despise the most. When I write an e-book, I do have a deadline. It is typically the release date of the item that I am writing about. However, when I'm writing a web-app, or an actual app, there typically isn't a deadline. It's ready when it's ready. Regardless of what I'm working on, some days I make significant progress, others I do not. It just depends on what happens during that day. Overall, I want to be known as a writer. A writer of not only words, but code. Whether you write words or write code, the end result is a product, and that product should be what defines you. You shouldn't be defined by what clothes you wear, what phone you use, nor whether you are up to date on the latest trends. All of these are fleeting and in the grand scheme of things, not really worth the time. However, the result of these products that could last forever. These are what defines us. So my question to you, "What do you like to be known for?"