LG G3 Unboxing
Definitely not the same vibe as the unboxing of an Apple device, but the LG G3 was efficiently packed in a fitted box.
A few things though. After opening the box, you pick up the phone and marvel at its lightness. Only after fully emptying the contents of the box do you realize the (heavy and huge) battery is not installed. Also, there’s no mention of having to install the battery or a guide how to install the battery. It was easy enough to do, but I would have thought the Quick Start guide would say something about the battery. Anyways, once the battery is installed the L3 isn’t featherweight anymore.
Check out the clunky charger. After seeing it, you start to really appreciate Apple’s designs and attention to details, even with its accessories.
Succumbed to the iPhone 6 Hype
That was a crazy launch of Apple’s latest iPhone 6. Pre-orders opened on September 12, 2014 at 12:01 am, meaning 9:01 pm HST. But, you couldn’t actually connect to the Apple Store until much later. Heck, I think store.apple.com is still down, nearly two hours later. But the Apple Store apps fared better (maybe by design).
Anyways, after several stalled attempts, I finally got to the iPhone 6 pre-order screens. My goal – 4.7in iPhone 6 in silver with 64 GB (the middle option). Initially, this configuration looked available on the Apple Store app, but clicking elsewhere then coming back caused a screen refresh where mostly all configurations showed “currently unavailable.” Then one combination finally yielded an “add to cart” option – 4.7in silver with 128 GB. While I planned to go beyond my current 32-GB iPhone 5 configuration, Apple’s convenient storage bump to 64 GB was the obvious choice unless none of these were available. So, I succumbed to the hype and proceeded with the purchase of a 128-GB model.
I encountered a few more errors along the way, but a confirmation email seems to verify my iPhone 6 order went through. How about you? Did you get what you wanted?
Taking Screen Shots in Android
One of my first lessons of living the Android Life was figuring out how to take a screen shot. Sounds easy enough, but this became my first exposure to the differences between Apple and Android phone makers.
For all iOS devices, holding down the physical power and home buttons trigger a screen shot. For Android, taking a screen shot depends. Yes, it depends on your version of Android and the hardware of your phone. In general, the key combo for an Android screen shot is the power button and volume down held down for a bit, but again, it depends.
Then the screen shot isn’t necessarily saved to the standard “camera roll” as with iOS. The screen shot is copied to the internal clipboard and needs to be “pasted” somewhere. Android will prompt you to choose which app to store the captured screen shot, Google+ Pictures, the phone’s Gallery app, or others.
When emailing a screen shot (or any image for that fact), Apple Mail typically asks the user to resize the image before sending. Android though wants to send the full resolution, multi-megabyte image file. You’d need a third party app to resize the image on Android before emailing.
Remember When iPod Sales Converted Buyers to Macs?
Remember times past when the sales of iPods led to Windows users switching to Macs? I wonder if a similar situation will occur with the Apple Watch and the iPhone. Because you need an iPhone to link with an Apple Watch, will this spur more iPhone converts as the Apple Watch gains momentum?
And before you pooh pooh the starting price tag of $350 for the Apple Watch, just remember how much iPods used to cost.
- March 2002 – Original (non-touch) Wheel 10GB $499
- September 2003 – 20GB and 40GB for $399 and $499
- September 2006 – iPod Video 30GB, 80GB for $249 and $349
iPod purchases led to purchases of $1000+ Macs, so could a $350 Apple Watch lead buyers to a $650 (unsubsidized) iPhone 6?
Dou’ssants Are Now Croissant Donuts
Fluffy like a croissant.
Sweet like a donut.
That’s all you gotta know as Safeway’s version of the cronut has changed names yet again. When the cronut apex was upon us, Safeway advertised Donut Croissants. Then came the more sophisticated French name of the Dou’ssant. Darn delicious I say. Now Safeway has dropped the pretense and has simply gone with the Croissant Donut. Still same price, different packaging, but still there.

Apple Security Emails
From the celebgate disclosures, Apple tightened up its security measures and now emails you when anything changes with your account. I logged into iCloud to check something, and I received an email notifying me about this login. For iTunes, I had to update my expired credit card information, and there was an email notifying me of this update.
I wonder how far this goes?
Apple’s “One More Thing”
Uttered the first time since the death of Steve Jobs, the one more thing was the expected wearable, the Apple Watch.
Hmmm, the typeface used on Pulpconnection isn’t displaying the Apple logo when typing Option-Shift-K. This should be the logo ?.
Lucerne Lactose Free Milk Tastes “Cow Like”

Recently the Lucerne milk line at Safeway changed cartons, going with a different look. Or did the entire carton itself change?
Different milk drinkers say the milk from this new carton tastes “cow like.” There’s a bovine quality to the milk that’s not welcomed. Maybe meant to mimic “farm fresh,” but the city dwellers and suburbanites don’t appreciate drinking milk that smells/tastes like a cow. This is specifically for the fat free, lactose free milk, both regular and calcium-enriched varieties.
So if you like that farm fresh feel, stock up on this milk. Otherwise, complain to Lucerne or find another brand of lactose free milk.




