iOS Today 749 Transcript
Please be advised this transcript is AI-generated and may not be word for word. Time codes refer to the approximate times in the ad-supported version of the show.
00:00 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Coming up on iOS Today, rosemary Orchard and I, micah Sargent, talk about utility apps you should be using every day. Stay tuned Podcasts you love From people you trust. This is TWIT. This is iOS Today, with Rosemary Orchard and me, micah Sargent, episode 749, recorded Tuesday, april 15th 2025, for Thursday, april 24th 2025. Daily Utility Apps. Hello and welcome to iOS Today, the show where we talk all things iOS, ipados, dvos, watchos, homepodos and all the other OSs that Apple has to offer. We love to help you make the most of your Apple devices by showing you the apps and the features that you should check out, so you are getting the very best you possibly can. I am one of your hosts and my name is Micah Sargent.
01:07 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
And I am your other host, rosemary Orchard, and excited and happy to be here, as always.
01:12 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Yay, yes, we are both excited, and I am excited about this episode because Rosemary has essentially created a nice little story for us. As you are going along throughout your day and you have pain points, what are the issues you might experience and what are the ways to deal with those issues? And that is what makes, I think, ios in particular magical, because there are so many different app offerings out there that can really kind of settle in and give you exactly what you need just when you need it. And when you don't have something, then you could go take a peek and find new fun things. It's all great, it's all good, but let's kick things off on these utility apps you could be using every day.
02:02 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
Yeah, first up, I'm sure I'm not the only person that has random pieces of paper like this littering my desk or just collecting around my house. These are the instructions for a rechargeable automatic drip irrigation kit. This is the user manual. When I say it's about the size of a matchbook, it's a bit bigger, but it isn't that big. It's dual-sided. The other side is in Chinese, because I just bought something very cheap because I needed to water my plants while I was gone. This is great.
02:29
Am I going to be able to find this when I inevitably need to reprogram it? No, have I considered laminating this hole, punching it and just hanging it on the side of it? Yes, but it'll get in the way and it'll be annoying and it'll still at some point get damaged. So the best thing for me to do is to convert this into a digital format. Now I could, of course, just use the built-in camera on my phone. It's great. It will even have text recognition built in, sure, but maybe there is a better option for that, and that is scanning. Now you can scan things in the file app or the files app or the notes app. That's another option, but I really love an app called Simple Scan, which is by a lovely developer called Agile Tortoise.
03:09
Greg, the creator behind Agile Tortoise, has created many apps over time, and Simple Scan is one of the newer ones, and it allows you to say hey, what am I scanning to start with? So, do you want to make a PDF? Do you want to turn it into images, or do you just want to get the text off of the thing? Because that can also be quite useful, and then you can choose your destination so you can say, hey, um, untitled is one that I've created. We'll get back to that in a moment. Uh, do you want to email it? Uh, send it via messages, save it as a file photos or just throw it, share it through the share sheet, so you could put it in something like dev and think that we've talked about previously. And then you specify your quality so original, large, medium or small.
03:47
So I'm just going to start with the scan document function and I'm going to put that right here in the viewfinder, and then I'm going to take picture button and that allows me to specify where the corners are and as I drag, it's actually magnifying that little corner to allow me to find it more easily under my finger. And then I can say, hey, keep, scan and then save, and then it gives me the option so I can actually send this over to Micah. Instead, what I'm going to do for the time being because I have already saved this where I would like to put it is I'll just throw it into Yoink, which is my shelf app, which I've just realized. I've not mentioned here, but I should, so I'm going to throw that one in. So Yoink is a great place to put files when you're going, okay, like I need this, but I need it for like five minutes, or I need it until I use it again, but like I don't need it forever and ever and ever, and so that is where Yoink comes into play. So you have something you want for five minutes, you share it to Yoink and here it is. That is my PDF for the Rechargeable Automatic Drip Irrigation Kit User Manual. Ooh, it's very exciting, but you know what it works and now I have this and I can do.
05:00
Maybe I need to take a couple of actions with it. Maybe I want to print a copy because you know, mentioned this is really small. The text on it is super tiny. It's actually really not even readable if I put it right up into the camera. So you definitely would need like the magnifying feature on your iPhone if you wanted to use it. Or you can use the good old scan feature and look, I can zoom all the way in and now it's readable. So I could do a couple things with this. I could send it to somebody else maybe I bought two of them, so I'm sending them a copy of the manual and so on save it and then, ta-da, I'm done and that's it. I've got my scan, I've done the things that I want to do. And then um, with yoink, if you have the padlock off, once you've done something with it, like, for example, for example, share it. So I could just put this into, say, devonthink, and save it. Then it will actually disappear. And that is the beauty of Yoink Can especially combine with something like Simple Scan, where you're going to need to take like three or four actions with something instead of just one, needs to take like three or four actions with something instead of just one.
06:08
So that is scanning pieces of paper, which is great if you've got something that's fairly flat, like this. You know it's not perfectly flat, but it's fairly flat. But what if you have something that is not flat, for example this receipt here. Now, in the case of a receipt, you can probably bend it, flatten it back out and then it'll be a flat piece of paper and you can scan it. But something like a passport tends to like to try and close on itself again. And if you're trying to scan your passport for something, you don't want your fingers in the scan of your passport, and personally I would just say I don't recommend breaking the spine on your passport. And that's what happens when you grab the covers and you bend them back on each other to try and pin it so it opens, because that is going to cause more wear and tear to your passport. And if you're going to be traveling a lot, or if your passport at any point takes a beating, having added that little extra wear and tear to it is not great. So instead you might need to use a regular scanner, but just scanning something from your phone through a printer is a little tricky.
07:07
However, the vast majority of printers, such as Canon, for example, have a printing app, and Canon's app is called surprise, surprise, canon Print.
07:18
Now, obviously you're going to need to substitute whatever printer you actually have.
07:23
Here. I'm going to use Canon as an example substitute whatever printer you actually have here. I'm going to use Canon as an example. I don't actually have the Canon here it's my parents' place because I have been managing their printer for them but this allows you to do things like actually scanning and you can specify your color modes and so on, and you'll be able to use the flatbed of a scanner or, if you've got feeder on the scanner, so you need to scan like 20 or 30 pages at once, you can dump those in and then you can use the scanner and it will be able to do that. This is also ideal for doing maintenance on your printer, so usually you can then tap on the printer, you'll be able to connect to it and do things like clean the print heads, check the ink levels and so on, without going and trying to print stuff, and this this can be very, very handy for troubleshooting. Because I don't know about you, micah, but personally in my experience, printers are evil. They are possessed.
08:14 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Yes.
08:15 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
They will do random things and they will almost certainly never do what you expected them to do like print, Because that would be logical or helpful.
08:25 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Yeah, if they printed, then I mean, what troubleshooting would I be able to do? I would just like everything would just work and that's not fun.
08:34 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
Yeah, exactly, and you know we always like a little bit of fun and some surprises in our lives, but maybe, maybe, not that one. So you know that that is. You know I've used the Canon app as the example there. But you know, obviously if you've got a HP printer the Canon app's not going to get you very far, but the HP app that'll work. And yeah, I highly recommend having it downloaded because it's very useful for troubleshooting things and also as a pro tip, if you have a printer that sometimes doesn't show up for AirPrint, try printing through the printer's app and at that point that will be able to communicate with it. It'll send it something called a wake online package which basically goes over the network and goes hello, wakey, wakey. And the printer goes oh, I wasn't asleep, it's fine, um. But for some reason airprint doesn't always do that and I'm not 100 certain why. It's probably down to a variety of network settings and how airprint works and all sorts of things. But yeah, if your printer is not showing up and you know it's on, you can always try the uh, the printing app. Um, but say you want to try and print something and you know you're trying to print, but it's a funny paper size. Okay. So I have my little example here. I wish they were two different colors, but I didn't wait. There we go. So say, for example, this orange fix-it putty is regular paper size? Obviously it's not, but we're going to use that anything as an example. And I'm trying to print something and like it doesn't fit on the piece of paper. Now you can rotate things in the regular print settings, but you know, it's still getting pretty close to the borders and some printers can get a bit funny when you're a bit too close to the borders, and so for that I would recommend scaling it down.
10:22
Now, when you go to print something, I am just going to open up a PDF here. Here's one I made earlier. Thank you, scanner Pro. Then you can say, hey, print. And then that does give you the option of changing things like your paper size and also rotating it so you can put like two pages, two sheets, on a page, or print it as a booklet, et cetera, things like that. But and from there there's also the share option, and that share thing gives you a PDF. So if you don't have something that's a PDF and you need to turn it into a PDF, then you can tap on the share button at the top of the share sheet.
11:01
But if you want to print something and scale it down okay, so that it fits just a little bit smaller inside the sheet, then PDF Expert the free version you don't need to sign in with an account, you can skip all that. You don the free version. You don't need to sign in with an account, you can skip all that. You don't need to pay for anything extra, no subscription, just download the app. Skip all the things.
11:17
There's literally a skip button or an x button on every page and then, when you go to print from here, there's a scaling option. And this is honestly one of those things that you don't need 90 of the time, but when you need it, trying to find it because most apps don't need 90% of the time, but when you need it, trying to find it because most apps don't support that scaling feature in the print sheet is so frustrating. But once you know that it exists and it exists in PDF Expert, I'm sure other apps have it as well then you can scale it down. So I'm just going to scale it onto a 50 size and then that would be obviously half the size in the middle of my piece of paper. Um, and yeah, that that is how you can scale something down for printing, because I don't know about you, micah, uh, but especially if something's colorful, I don't want to be printing right to the edge. It makes the edges of the paper all wavy and it's just not necessary.
12:15 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
All righty. Look, it can be kind of complicated trying to figure out exactly what you're going to do when it comes to printing and getting something to print exactly. As you point out, on iOS, with its built-in print functionality, there are a lot of kind of hidden options, and I've also found it to be the experience that, even if your AirPrint situation works out and it gets in touch with the printer, sometimes it takes a minute for the printer to load what it is able to do, and so then you go back and then you can see in the print dialogue oh wow, I actually have the option to do this, this and this, where I didn't think I did before. What all of that has resulted in is for this household, even though AirPrint is set up, my significant other just sends me can you print this? I take care of it because too many times it's turned out poorly for him as he just tried to use the AirPrint dialogue.
13:22
So, yeah, I completely respect and understand that it can be kind of difficult trying to figure out what to do with AirPrint, even though I have to say overall I remain impressed with what AirPrint is able to do, and oftentimes it comes down to how an individual printer and its individual firmware and the company's decisions have impacted how AirPrint can work. I have one printer that I had to go find a very, very buried setting that was some quote unquote security setting where you had to push a button on the printer itself to confirm that, yes, the air print print I just sent should be printed. No, I don't want that turned on. I need that setting off because I just want to be able to air print to this device. So it can be kind of complicated figuring that out and if you are struggling with air print, sometimes going into the individual as Rosemary pointed out app can be very helpful to figure out what's up and why it's not working as you expect. All right, what's?
14:30 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
next Wizardling in the chat has just mentioned they have a laser printer and I also have a laser printer and, just like Wizardling mine, honestly it just always works. I have a feeling it's because it's made for business people and for them time is money. But if anybody is looking to replace a printer at some point it is well worth considering a laser printer. You can get color ones. I honestly find I can print in black and white 99% of the time and it's totally fine. So, yeah, have to recommend laser printers, because it doesn't matter what paper I throw in there, it just produces a piece of paper which is also it's nice and warm. So I always recommend that experience.
15:10
When you pick it up it's like oh nice, warm paper. But yeah, so, speaking of paper, I discovered recently not recently, I rediscovered recently America doesn't use standard international paper sizes and I was trying to figure out as one does because apparently I don't have a lot to do in my free time how big is our paper compared to Americans' paper. And of course I didn't do something as simple as Google it, because that would have made more sense. So instead I pulled open pCalc, because pCalc, as well as being a calculator application, is actually also a conversion application. It's got things like functions that you can save in it to repeat again and again. So if you have to run numbers through a formula or calculation lots of times at work, then you can save those into pCalc and use those. But one of the things I use pCalc for so frequently is just conversions. So I've written 297 here. Frequently it's just conversions. So I've written 297 here. 297 millimeters is the height of a standard a4 piece of paper. Um, in pretty much everywhere in the world except for america. So if I were trying to convert that, I tap the a to b button at the top. Now I've already been doing some conversions. So I was already in um, uh, length, um, but you've got conversions for angles, area, bytes, so that's like gigabytes, megabytes, terabytes, petabytes, etc.
16:39
Cooking, which would include things like temperatures, but also cups, ounces, pints yes, there's different pints and fluid ounces for the UK versus the US. Of course, us and UK tablespoons all so different, as are the teaspoons, because why would we have standards? But, yes, you can convert things like currency. Now, this is not a currency converter, so it doesn't have all the currencies and these are based on the euro currency. But either way, you can convert things like density, energy, electric vehicle efficiency, all sorts of things. But in this particular case I want to convert length, and I'm going to start with millimeters, and now I can see that 297 is 29.7 centimeters. Whoa turns out decimalization really useful. You just move the decimal point by one to go from milli to centi, but in inches this is 11.69 inches. So 9 by 11 is a standard letter sheet, right for US MICA, if I'm remembering correctly, or was that?
17:47 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
legal 8.5 by 11 is letter 8.5 by 11.
17:50 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
Okay, so yeah, we're not that off. But yeah, it's over 11 and a half. So yeah, but I can also see in nanometers. Or it's 0.32 yards. So the length of a standard piece of paper is 0.32 yards, so about a third of a yard which you know. That that's just a random, fun piece of information. So peak elk is for more than just two plus two equals four or four times six. Because you know, we all know the meaning of life, the universe and everything else. But sometimes you need to do a little bit more with your numbers than just straight addition, subtraction, multiplication, etc.
18:47
Absolutely write things down in a way that you can figure them out. So, for example, I have been looking at rearranging my office. Now I know the length of my office and I know the length of certain items in my office. So, for example, I could write 1-800 and I'll just switch back to the regular calculator, millimeters desk, for example, and then I could write 45 cm, and then I'll just add drawers. And now at the bottom I happen to have a nice little rowing total which tells me 225 centimeters is the total here, and this is Solver S-O-U-L-V-E-R. Now Solver is part of a set app. If you have a set app subscription that you're using on iPhone then you can get it through that, but it's also available on the Mac.
19:43
It is such a great app for writing things down with annotations and calculating them. So if I needed to say, oh actually, no, this one kind of like gets inset, so it's minus 45. I don't quite know how my draws would subtract from the length of my desk, but let's pretend that they do. In this particular case, I can just write a negative and then it will figure it out. And then you know if, instead of this, I were doing something else.
20:13
So, for example, I was visiting Micah so I could put flights down, and let's say that I got really cheap flights for reasons unknown to the world economy at the moment, and maybe I could even get a really great deal at a hotel, and I could get the hotel for I don't know, say, for example, $700. I am just making up prices here. I can now see my total price in dollars, because that's the last currency I used. Solver is honestly just such a great app for scribbling things down to work out the back of the envelope, maths. That's what I use it for and I have to say I highly recommend it for that.
20:56 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Solver is amazing and nothing comes close. Even iOS and macOS and iPadOS adding some of the basic features into the Notes app, it doesn't even scratch the surface of what Solver is able to do. Solver sort of thinks, I think, how the mind thinks and operates in that space, which makes it so much more than just a calculator. It's very, very cool. It's one of those tools that I recommend everybody. At least try, because I think you'll find, oh wow, this is, this is going to be so useful to me in so many different ways. Just any sort of back of the napkin, back of the envelope math that you're trying to do. And then, of course, it can get more complicated from there if you need it to. I just I really I can't speak highly enough of that application, and I know that the next one on the list, the final option on the list here, is one that Rosemary can never speak highly enough about, because it's a great application.
22:06 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
It is such a great application and I am going to attempt to limit myself here, because if you wanted me to, I could probably talk for a good month on drafts, and drafts is honestly one of those applications I find myself using I'm guesstimating here 30 times a day for just all sorts of things, and one of the ways I commonly use drafts is through the widgets, and so I am adding a widget to my home screen here and I'm just going to tap on it to customize it. So I was already in jiggle mode on the home screen, I'd already added a widget and I'm just going to replace the dictate for a new with clipboard, because this is one of the things that I often do Like I'll copy something and I'll be like, oh yeah, no, I just need to like, paste that somewhere where I can find it again. Or you know, you can have go to your last draft and you could even have appending, so you could append to an, an existing draft, for example, and and so on, and so there are all of the things that you could do with drafts, which is just really cool. You can usually trickle through the widgets. Now, folks with an eagle eye who are zooming in on the video.
23:18
Mega bros, you have 1931 items in drafts to which I'll go. Yes, um, I do. These are like my digital post-it notes, however, they are searchable, so I can go back and find them and, unlike a real post-it note for me, these don't just become, uh, you know, a decoration on my monitor, uh, which gets ignored after about five minutes because I can see it and I know it's there and therefore it doesn't exist anymore. But what happens often is I'll be working and I'll copy something and I'll go. Right, I need to remember this to come back to it later. Or, yeah, I wanted to look at this film, but I don't have time now because I will get sucked down a rabbit hole. So I just create a quick note and I throw it in drafts. So I just create a quick note and I throw it in drafts, and this is honestly really really useful for me.
24:07
Or one of the things I do all the time is I share a link from something into drafts. This can be really helpful if you are like sharing a link from safari, say, for example. You found something on amazon, you've opened it and you want to share that link with somebody. That link is going to be about 20 furlongs long. Thank you, chat room for the unit suggestion. I don't know how big a furlong is, but I'm guessing 20 of them is pretty long. And everything from the word ref onwards in an Amazon URL is just tracking junk, which tells Amazon how you got to that link so you can delete it.
24:43
Now I personally because I'm a nerd like that created a custom action in Drafts to clean up those links. But you don't have to do that. You could just share what it is from Amazon or from Safari to Drafts and then at that point it allows you to clean up the link. And here's the best part you don't actually have to create a draft. You can clean it up by seeing it there and then copy and then send it off to wherever you actually want it to go to, and this is one of the things I just love about drafts Like it's a really great place for just working on text, cleaning things up a bit, doing various things with it, and it does have fabulous extensions like tags and all of those things that you can use if you want to, but there is zero obligation to do it and it is free to use as well.
25:34
There is an optional in-app subscription which I believe starts at $30 a year. However, it is just genuinely one of my most used apps. I probably use it 20, 30 times a day, so for me assuming that I paid a dollar every time I opened it, I feel like I'm getting a very, very good deal.
25:54 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Yeah, again, this is another. Just go get it, try it out. I think you'll be impressed and surprised. That is going to bring us to the end of the picks for daily utility apps. I'm sure there are apps that some of you are using out there every day that you think are fantastic. You can always reach out to us iOS Today at Twitter TV to tell us about the apps you use and love.
26:17
Let us move on to the news. The news is next. Us move on to the news. The news is next. All right, I wanted to mention a report coming from you guessed it Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, who is talking about the plans for iPad OS coming up.
26:38
We know now that Apple is well. It's been reported, at least, that Apple is set to do quite the overhaul on its various operating systems at WWDC this year, which is now right around the corner, and we have heard that this will be the largest visual update we've seen in a very, very, very long time update we've seen in a very, very, very long time. Along with that, gurman reports that Apple is going to make iPadOS even more like macOS than it currently is. He says quote I'm told that this year's upgrade will focus on productivity, multitasking and app window management, with an eye on the device operating more like a Mac. It's been a long time coming, with iPad power users pleading with Apple to make the tablet more powerful.
27:29
Interestingly, this morning, as I saw reports of this news, I saw a reply from friend of the show, friend of the network, renee Ritchie, who said that this well, let me I'm paraphrasing here, but essentially said this is kind of a mistake. He says that in this case it seems like Apple is listening to the tech reviewer landscape instead of the people who buy iPads, the people who more likely are the people buying iPads, which is the sort of non-prosumer, but the consumer that just wants this tablet device to be their little gaming system or their little media watcher or whatever it happens to be. And continuing to make the iPad more complicated is a mistake that is born out of sort of a reaction to the critiques of a smaller but louder group, and I wanted to hear your thoughts on that, rosemary.
28:41 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
Yes, I have actually just found it because I saw the same thing from Rene earlier and the exact quote is giving them the faster horses they keep asking for. And obviously you know this is implying the thing that's often attributed to Henry Ford, which is, if we'd ask them what they wanted, they would have asked for faster horses, which he actually never said. But the point is the customer doesn't know always what they want. And I see this right now actually with the iPad, with the Discord app actually, because I'm often in Discord checking on the iOS Today forum there, because we put up a post for every episode and sometimes people have got questions that they pop in there as well, which is lovely.
29:27
And I use my iPad with Stage Manager and a Magic Keyboard which has a trackpad in it, and it's very obvious to me that this is not a combination that ever gets tested with the Discord application, because all of the targets are off. So when you move the trackpad on iOS, it's supposed to sort of snap it to a button. If you're like near a button, okay, so if the button is here and my mouse moves like quite close to it, then it should just sort of snap it and highlight that button and what happens is something near it that doesn't exist gets snapped and highlighted, and then I'm unable to move the pointer to tap on the thing and I have to use my finger instead. And I feel like this is a really obvious symptom of the fact that there's now too many different ways to use an iPad and it's not obvious to the user and I also find somebody who owns both an 11-inch iPad Pro and an iPad Mini the fact that I don't have stage pressure on the iPad Mini, like I get it because it's 7.9 inches, but also it's really confusing for me switching between the two, and it's one of these things where it's like I would love it to be more powerful and for me to be able to do more things that I could do from my mac on my ipad. But is that what the ipad is for? Like, that is the question, and apple are the one that have to try and decide that. Like. Are they okay with sabotaging mac sales by selling ipads? Is that what they're trying to do? Or is the ipad a thing that should exist in its own category and in their ideal world?
31:04
There is the space for an Apple Watch, an iPhone, an iPad, a Mac, an Apple TV and a HomePod in everybody's life, because none of them do the exact same thing the exact same way and at the end of the day, it is down to user preference. You know, my mum, vast majority of the time, is using an iPad Air with a keyboard and she loves it, but every so often she pulls out a Mac because that is the better tool for the job and it works just the way that she's expecting, because there are certain things which are big screen problems versus other things which are little screen problems, like I'm happy looking at my bank statement or checking my transactions in the bank app on my phone, that's, or checking my transactions in the bank app on my phone. That's not something my dad would ever do. But the ipad is one of those things where it's in this awkward in between category, where it's a digital photo frame and it's a computer and it can do a lot of things and every so often it just feels like it can't quite do enough.
31:57
Um, but the way to solve it being not quite being able to do enough, I'm not sure it's making it more Mac-like. I don't know what it is. Maybe allowing us to dual boot it with macOS and iPadOS is the solution. So the nerds can have both Because, let's face it, the hardware in it is more than powerful enough. It is the same hardware as what's in Macs. But I guess we'll have to wait and see what Apple decide to do, and then we can critique it whether or not it's good enough and and as always, we will provide commentary on whether we're happy with it or not. And somebody will always say well, they should have done X, because there's always something that they haven't done.
32:34 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
Absolutely, and that's what keeps us doing what we do. All right, that brings us to the end of this episode of iOS Today. All that is left is to say thank you for tuning in to this week's episode. We will, of course, be back next week.
32:52
If you would like to be part of a fun, exclusive and enjoyable venture, can I invite you to join Club Twit at twittv slash club twit. When you join the club $7 a month and, by the way, we have reintroduced the yearly option yes, you can join Club Twit annually. Then you will gain access to ad-free versions of all of our shows. You will gain access to the TwitPlus bonus feed that has extra content you won't find anywhere else, and access to the members only Discord server, a fun place to go to chat with your fellow Club Twit members and also those of us here at Twit. We would love to see you in the club and have you hanging out having a blast.
33:37
You'll be able to tune in and share your thoughts tomorrow for my show, micah's Crafting Corner, and also have access to that back catalog of stuff that comes by the TwitPlus bonus feed. So if you have yet to join the club, now's the time. With that two-week free trial, you can see if it's for you, and we can't wait to see you there. Rosemary Orchard, if people would like to follow you online and check out all the great work you're doing, where should they go to?
34:05 - Rosemary Orchard (Host)
do so? Well, the best place to go is rosemaryorchardcom, which has got links to all the things apps, books, podcasts, you name it. It's there, and it's got links to all the social media sites. But you can also find me on Discord, in the Club Twit server, where we do have the iOS a day forum that I mentioned earlier, with a thread for every episode, and you can create your own too. And also, sometimes, you know, folks join us in the live chat if they happen to be around while we're recording, which is always fabulous when they are able to do so what about you, Micah? Where can folks find you?
34:34 - Mikah Sargent (Host)
If you're looking to follow me online, I'm at Micah Sargent on many a social media network, or you can head to Chihuahuacoffee. That's C-H-I-H-U-A-H-U-Acoffee, where I've got links to the places I'm most active online. Thank you so much for being here with us this week and, again, we'll see you next week for another episode of iOS Today. Bye-bye.