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Jeremy’s 5: HoverDock for Apple Watch / iPhone, Error 53, Apple in Small Business + Apple Pay

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Welcome to the latest edition of Jeremy’s 5, my latest roundup of 5 interesting little things that aren’t big enough for full articles, but are still worth sharing with you.

This week, I’m sharing some thoughts on Just Mobile’s latest iPhone and Apple Watch docks, iOS’s mysterious Error 53, experiences integrating Apple products into a small business, and Apple Pay…

1. Just Mobile’s HoverDock for Apple Watch. My guide to the Best Apple Watch Stands and Docks has been updated quite a few times over the past year, as pretty much every major accessory maker has weighed in with an option for the daily-recharged wearable. Just Mobile is now on its third such accessory, following up the $40 TimeStand and Lounge Dock with the $35 HoverDock for Apple Watch.

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HoverDock scores some points for elegance, as the aluminum and plastic puck is sexier and more compact than Apple’s official Apple Watch Magnetic Charging Dock, using better materials at a lower price. It also achieves the same goals, mounting your Watch in a Nightstand Mode-friendly orientation modestly above any flat surface. Finally, it makes charging cable management as easy as spinning the plastic core inside the aluminum frame. I personally prefer the heavier weight and look of TimeStand, but if you want to save a few bucks and have a dedicated base for Nightstand Mode, HoverDock’s a nice alternative. People with long charging cables and/or plans to travel may well find it to be Just Mobile’s best solution.

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2. Just Mobile’s HoverDock for iPhone. Virtually identical to the Apple Watch version, the $35 HoverDock for iPhone also works with the iPod touch and iPad mini. You still have to self-supply an official Apple cable — here, Lightning — but unlike Apple’s official iPhone docks, HoverDock includes an adjustable plug insert to tailor the Lightning connector’s height to your bare or encased iPhone. It feels a bit light in weight, but the minimalist design and cable management will certainly appeal to some iPhone users.

3. Error 53 and Me. Remember when I mentioned the mysterious iOS Error 53 in a December edition of this column? Just over one month later, Apple has started to acknowledge that Touch ID-related issues can, as I said, completely brick your device when you attempt to upgrade iOS to a new version. In short, if your Touch ID sensor fails for any reason and you try to use iTunes to update iOS, your device will — without warning — fail mid-way through the update process and be rendered unusable.

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Following a report in The Guardian, an Apple spokesperson said that affected users should “contact Apple support.” I did so for my wife’s iPhone 6 back in December, and was required to spend out-of-pocket cash to replace the device. It appears that The Guardian is agitating for a class-action lawsuit to be filed on behalf of affected iPhone users; to avoid that mess, Apple should really make repairs free and refund those of us who paid to replace Error 53-crippled iPhones.

4. Apple In The Small Business. If you haven’t seen my Twitter account, you mightn’t know that I’ve spent the last month deeply immersed in opening a restaurant, including (amongst many other things) the ground-up building of its digital infrastructure. Not surprisingly, we’re using as much Apple hardware as possible: our office is filled with MacBook Pros and iPhones, all tied together using AirPort Extreme wireless hardware and common apps. My goal has also been to use as much Apple software as possible, eschewing Microsoft Office for Apple’s iWork suite, completing (numerous) forms with OS X Preview, and powering our audio system with iTunes (and, believe it or not, AirPlay speakers).

By and large, I’ve been thrilled with how all of the pieces work individually and together — despite a growing chorus that Apple’s days of “just works” hardware and software may have passed, all of our Apple gear does in fact work 95% of the time. The problems we’ve had are largely on the fringes: one of us has a recently AT&T-refurbished iPhone 5s that never worked quite right, another (me) has an iPad Pro that rarely gets used due to a lack of compelling software, and none of us has yet found good uses for several spare iPads, iPad minis, and an Apple Watch we’d expected to use in the business.

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The latter point is surprising for a couple of reasons. First, we had fully anticipated using an iPad-powered point-of-sale (POS) system, but after exploring our options, we concluded that First Data’s hugely impressive, Android-based Clover system was a much better (and more reasonably priced) option than any of the iPad POS software and hardware solutions we examined. Clover looks and feels like an Apple product in every way, is easy to set up, has its own app store, and supports Apple Pay.

Second, although iPads have numerous applications within a restaurant, we will barely use them for their highest purpose (as little computers); instead, most will wind up as limited-use wine menus or something of the sort. Similarly, though I can think of ways a fleet of Apple Watches would be handy, such as coordinating staff using discreet taps on the wrist, sluggish watchOS apps and the inability of iOS/OS X devices to easily trigger Digital Touch features such as Taptic feedback limit the platform’s potential. I’m ready to use more Apple gear in our business, but without the right apps, the added investment is hard to justify.

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5. Apple Pay. Apple’s Maps Connect system lets businesses manage their listings on Apple Maps — and now it’s also helping to build support and awareness for Apple Pay. When I went to update our listing on Apple Maps this week, I was offered the opportunity to tag our business within the Maps app as accepting Apple Pay, and if so, to get free decals from Apple to promote Apple Pay on our windows and payment terminals.

I was personally very enthusiastic to accept Apple Pay — we ironically chose those Android-based Clover terminals over iPad payment solutions because Clover includes Apple Pay and EMV support; other POS systems are seriously lagging behind. It seems like a no-brainer that Apple will introduce its own payment terminals, if not a complete point of sale solution, to support Apple Pay at some point in the not-too-distant future. Jony Ive’s mid-2015 shift to Chief Design Officer was said to free him to focus on redesigning Apple’s retail stores, and it would make a lot of sense that he’d be involved in crafting an elegant payment platform to replace the clunky terminals currently carried around by sales associates. I’d expect that such a platform would appear in Apple Stores and a handful of Fortune 500 retailers before trickling down to “the rest of us,” assuming it was designed to be affordable enough to compete with Clover, which it might or mightn’t be.

More From This Author

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Comments

  1. Marc Orcutt - 8 years ago

    It was my understanding that the ‘Error 53’ issue only came up if your device was repaired by an unauthorized service provider that is using non-Apple finger sensor and failing to register the new sensor properly with the rest of the hardware, or if a defective fingerprint sensor is left in the device. If this is the case, I don’t see why it is unreasonable for Apple to brick the device (the fingerprint sensor is integral to the core of the device’s security, including for Apple Pay) and require that you pay for them to fix the issue/replace the device. It is unfortunate, but as stated, the fingerprint reader is a core component of the phone and its security for more than just unlocking the phone.

    • Lederh (@EderH) - 8 years ago

      thing is Marc, i have a 6+, never been opened, fixed or repaired i updated to public beta 9.3 and BUM!!!! my iphone is effin Dead! and apple wants to state that is a 3rd party error when it is not, is a flaw in their operating system, dont want to accept the blame, and in spite of that, they tell you its not reparable and in spite of that they are telling people as an option to buy a new iphone for half a price. why would i want a new iphone that might happen the same thing if its total guilt of apple.

      • Marc Orcutt - 8 years ago

        Well, I can understand your frustration with that then. If you have a factory-originally or even factory repaired/refurbished iPhone, that is under warranty, then it is inexcusable for Apple to refuse to repair it. That seems like a blatant warranty violation that is a lawsuit waiting to happen.

    • Jeremy Horwitz - 8 years ago

      Unfortunately not true. Any failure of Touch ID leads to Error 53.

  2. Jake Becker - 8 years ago

    If you have a full article dedicated to #4 up anywhere in the near future I’m sure there will definitely be an audience interested in reading.

  3. viciosodiego - 8 years ago

    Funny I have found nothing about error 53, only the news reporting on it. No complaint tho. This shit will blow over like Bending problem. Now, Lets see people blowing this out of proportion.

    • viciosodiego - 8 years ago

      ON other news, google has access to 74.9 of total android devices.
      Yet nobody is saying anything about it.

    • Charlypollo - 8 years ago

      I have never seen by myself a wahle, so I guess they dont exist and people are blowing out proporsion common dolphins and fishes.

  4. orthorim - 8 years ago

    My iPhone 6 was replaced free of charge for the home button / error 53 issue. My home button had given out after a – third party – screen repair. I did put the original broken screen back in, returned it to the Apple store SF. I expected to have to pay the $300 accidental damage replacement fee because my phone was out of warranty.
    But they just said, oh, it’s only a month out of warranty, here’s a new one. *happy faces* – especially because I’d broken this phone twice already before that. The entire case was battered and bruised, and at one point the whole thing was bent like a banana – a very careful repair tech managed to bend it back to almost straightness.

    • Jeremy Horwitz - 8 years ago

      My wife’s iPhone 6 was on the edge of warranty when the Touch ID sensor failed, and just beyond it when an iOS update bricked it. It was in physically perfect shape. Initial replacement charge after the Error 53 was $300, lowered to ~$90 as a courtesy. Maybe she should have tried to destroy if first. :)

  5. Tom Kaier - 8 years ago

    I’m just refurbishing a flat and re-investigating which AirPlay speakers to go for – I’d love to keep and extend my Sonos speaker, but the fact I have to use their app is still rather counterintuitive on an Apple platform. But then, looking for decent alternatives that do a similar or better job, has yielded nothing convincing. Any ideas out there, any solutions that people were happy with in their home environment?

  6. antonioolmos - 8 years ago

    It was my iPhone that was featured in the Guardian article about error 53. My phone was bricked during a software update. I had my phone repaired in the Balkans while I was on assignment in the Balkans. Guess what folks, there are no Apple stores or service centres in Macedonia. I needed my phone repaired asap as I needed it for work. The Phone worked perfectly until the update. Of course if I had known of the issue I wouldn’t have updated my phone. Apple never told me. I knew I voided my warranty when I had a third party repair. I made an informed choice but I never expected for my phone to be killed by apple. A Few points. If it was about security the phone should have been bricked when the third party repaired it not 5 months later. Instead of a potential hacker having access to my data, I ended up being the one unable to access it. Had Apple had the courtesy to warn me this would have never happened and I wouldn’t be complaining. The issue is that no one knows about this. So many people can’t afford Apple repair charges or don’t have easy access to an apple service centre. We all don’t live in London where there are dozens of Apple stores . How can a company render someone’s property useless without permission or informed consent? It’s criminal. These devices cost £600 in the UK. The simple courtesy of letting their customers know the pitfalls of a software update would have prevented all of this.