MacVoices #13178: A TidBITS MacJury Discusses The iPhone 5c and iPhone 5s

Sep 11, 2013 | Business, Commentary, Events, Graphics/Photos, Hardware, iOS, iPhone, MacJury, Productivity, Software, Tech Topics, Video, Web | 3 comments

Adam Engst

After a long, hard day of journalistic effort, we corralled part of the TidBITS brain trust to analyze Apple’s announcement of the iPhone 5c and iPhone 5s. The topics ranged from the art-deco colors of the 5c to the A7 chip that powers the 5s. Along the way, the panel had strong opinions about slo-mo video, the improvements to the camera in the 5s, the security and convenience aspects of the new Touch ID scanner, and more. You won’t find a panel of experts with better commentary or more laughs than this MacJury of Josh Centers, Michael E. Cohen,  Adam Engst, Tonya Engst, Joe Kissell and host Chuck Joiner.

This edition of MacVoices is sponsored by Squarespace. Go to Squarespace.com/macvoices and click “enter an offer code” under the pricing and put in the code “macvoices9” to receive a 20% discount. Squarespace: Everything you need to create an exceptional website. Squarespace


Links

Chuck Joiner is the producer and host of MacVoices. You can catch up with what he’s doing on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, App.net and LinkedIn.

Subscribe to MacVoices in iTunes Subscribe to MacVoices audio-only in iTunes, or subscribe to MacVoices Video in iTunes to see all the action.  

This edition of MacVoices is sponsored by  Squarespace. Go to  Squarespace.com/macvoices  and click “enter an offer code” under the pricing and put in the code “macvoices9” to receive a 20% discount. Squarespace: Everything you need to create an exceptional website.

Josh Centers is the Managing Editor of TidBITS. He’s also an occasional contributor to Macworld, Boing Boing, and The Sweethome. You can keep up with him on Twitter, App.net, and his blog at joshcenters.com.
 

Michael E. Cohen  has worked as a teacher, a programmer, a Web designer, a multimedia producer, and a certified usability analyst. He’s the author or co-author of several books, including  The iPad Project Book,  Apple Training Series: iLife (iLife ’09 Edition),  Take Control of Syncing Data in Snow Leopard, and  Take Control of PDFpen 6.  

Adam C. Engst is the publisher of TidBITS and Take Control Books. He has written numerous books, including the best-selling Internet Starter Kit series, and many magazine articles – thanks to Contributing Editor positions at MacUser, MacWEEK, and now Macworld. His innovations include the creation of the first advertising program to support an Internet publication in 1992, the first flat-rate accounts for graphical Internet access in 1993, and the Take Control electronic book series. His awards include the MDJ Power 25 ranking as the most influential person in the Macintosh industry outside of Apple every year since 2000, inclusion on the MacTech 25 list of influential people in the Macintosh technical community, and being named one of MacDirectory’s top ten visionaries. And yes, he has been turned into an action figure. Want more? Follow Adam on Twitter for 140-character musings on a variety of topics.

Tonya Engst spends her days immersed in Apple technology, serving as editor-in-chief at TidBITS Publishing, which she co-founded. She works behind the scenes on the TidBITS Web site (Apple news for the rest of us) and on the front lines of theTake Control ebook series (highly practical, tightly focused ebooks about technology, mostly Apple-related), where she thinks about the big picture, edits many ebooks, and occasionally gets to write one. Follow her on Twitter.

Joe Kissell is the author of over two dozen Take Control ebooks, as well as a host of print books. He is a senior editor for TidBITS, and a Senior Contributor to Macworld. Keep up with him if you can on his personal blog, JoeKissell.com, and on Twitter.