My custom MagSafe car setup.
This car mount from an obscure company on Amazon is by far one of the best MagSafe mounts that I have tried.
This car mount from an obscure company on Amazon is by far one of the best MagSafe mounts that I have tried.
For a measly $11, you get two different places to mount your MagSafe puck:
CD slot
Any surface with a 3M sticky base.
I use both spots on my car, depending on the season. Summer is perfect for the CD slot since I can keep the AC vent pointing to the back of the phone to avoid overheating the phone, causing the screen to dim. In the winter, I place my phone on a lower spot that has enough space for the 3M sticky mount.
Summer setup in the CD slot (top) keeps my phone cool, and the sticky mount (bottom) keeps my phone cool in the winter.
I jumped on the MagSafe lifestyle since I had the iPhone 12 mini back in 2020, and these mounts have held up quite well. They are almost 4 years old, and these plastic pieces haven’t warped or cracked in the past 3 years, even though I park in direct sunlight all day long.
Occasionally the pivoting ball does get loose, but a quick turn to tighten it makes it firm and like new.
CD slot option provides rubber grips that allow a secure hold.
3M ball joint mount has been holding up for over 3 years.
The 12 mini is a pretty light device, but I also purchased the 13 Pro Max, 14 Pro Max, and now the 15 Pro Max. The increased weight of these devices didn’t make the mount any looser, which is very reassuring.
The best part about these mounts is their modularity since you have to purchase the MagSafe charger separately. For $41, you have the two mounting options and Apple’s MagSafe puck which fits like a glove. If something does break, you can replace either the mount or the charger, but you won’t have to replace an all-in-one solution with an expensive replacement. If I ever need the MagSafe puck outside the car, I can just take it off in an instant.
The funny thing about all this is that, since I have a short commute to work and usually don’t have any low-battery issues, my goal from the beginning was to just have a nice magnetic mount without a proprietary case system. Before MagSafe, the only way to get a magnetic mount was to either glue a magnet to your iPhone or get a case plus a compatible mount. I hate cases on my phone, so these were never an option.
Once MagSafe was a reality on the iPhone, this was the time to get a magnetic car mount the way I wanted it.
This mount and standard MagSafe puck combo works 99% of the time, but if you hit a New York City bump in the road, it would knock the phone right off. This is more a limitation of the MagSafe magnet strength, and not really the mount’s fault. With the 15 Pro Max, I wanted to be a bit more careful with it since I bought it overseas and it has a SIM slot. Yes I have AppleCare+, but if I damage this phone, I feel like Apple will only give me the eSIM version as a replacement here in the US, which doesn’t work on my carrier. In order to prevent this, I made another modification for my phone’s best interest.
I bought Moment’s wall mount, which has a significantly stronger magnet than the standard MagSafe magnet. The wall mount diameter is bigger than the MagSafe charger, so it does not fit in the car mount cut out by itself. I would need to use the 3M backing of the wall mount and stick it to a MagSafe puck, which would fit directly into the car mount. I didn’t want to waste $30 on a MagSafe puck just to glue another piece to it, so I ended up buying a cheap MagSafe charger on eBay for $15, cut the wire off, and now I had my custom, modular, MagSafe mount with a stronger magnet.
Moment wall mount = stronger magnets.
Once again due to the modularity of this system, I can easily take this puck off and place it on either mount, so I have a stronger connection that is pothole proof.
I even bought another set for my wife’s car so I can use it on longer road trips. The stronger magnet is essential when tapping the screen during navigation, changing podcasts, etc. It provides more confidence knowing that a hard tap or road bump will still keep the phone safe and secure.
Three features I would like to see with iOS 18.
With iOS18 expected to have a radical redesign and more ambitious features, I would like to see these three features added in iOS 18 to make a more personal, consistent, and professional experience.
With iOS18 expected to have a radical redesign and more ambitious features, I would like to see these three features added in iOS 18 to make a more personal, consistent, and professional experience.
1. Extended Dynamic Island Capabilities
All notifications should be coming through the dynamic island, no exception. With its ability to expand to multiple heights and widths, it is a no-brainer for all notifications to come through the Island.
It would make it more seamless, and quite frankly, more dynamic.
2. Fully functioning icon packs that are easy to configure
You can get custom icons for your iPhone, but in its current state, this is sort of a deal-breaker for me since custom icons cannot show the red badge notifications, making me think that I have no messages or emails when I have a ton to read.
I have certain icons that are clean and nameless, but I don’t need red badge notifications for them. Other apps I do need notifications for, so there’s a mix of apps with text and shortcuts without text. It’s too inconsistent and not as personal as I would like it to be.
The process for adding custom icons is also very cumbersome and time consuming with the shortcuts app.
Lastly, 3rd party icons should have access to the proper APIs to be dynamic icons, just like Apple’s Calendar and Clock icons.
3. More Pro camera features
The stock camera app has been practically the same since its redesign in iOS7, but it needs more Pro features. A Pro iPhone should have the ability to set your white balance manually. There’s nothing worse than a video constantly changing color with auto white balance.
The biggest handicap of the Pro iPhones is that you can’t manually pick which lens you are using. Apple uses its algorithm to determine if your zoomed shot will be better with a crop of the main sensor vs the actual telephoto lens itself. This is very frustrating in awkward light situations where the telephoto lens will objectively be the better lens, but the phone still decides to use the main lens with a 5x digital zoom. I had to try to have the phone switch to the telephoto lens (which it finally did) in this grim scene below:
I’m sure I will have more ideas on what I would like to see in iOS 18.
A journey to find a physical SIM slot iPhone 15 Pro Max.
When the iPhone 15 Pro Max launched, I was ecstatic, as I was every year. I had pre-ordered 3 different colors: Blue Titanium, White Titanium, and Natural Titanium. Black was completely out of the question. I didn’t really want a dark color at the time since I had a purple 14 Pro Max for a whole year, and I really was leaning towards one of the lighter colors.
When I got the 3 phones on launch day, I was distraught between two beautiful phones, the white and the natural. I loved the back of the natural, but I really loved the sides of the white titanium.
The slightly yellow tinge of the natural titanium looked like someone pissed on the white titanium phone.
The funny thing is, if I only got the natural phone, I wouldn’t know that the white phone would have a better sheen to it, and I would just be perfectly happy with the natural color. I don’t live close to an Apple store (about an hour away from the closest one), and I didn’t feel like waiting in line, so I had to buy them for myself to make sure I picked the color that would resonate well with me. I finalized my decision to keep the white titanium and to return the other two.
I was at the time with AT&T, and have been with them forever. I have been getting a shoddy signal at work for the last 9 years, but it didn't really bother me since I would use my company’s Wi-Fi. It would be annoying at times though when I had to either make or receive phone calls from work, and I would have to stand outside to have a conversation. I could go to Verizon and pay more money, but I didn’t feel it was worth the extra cash, especially in today’s environment where everything is already going up in price.
I thought to myself, “I have this brand new iPhone 15 Pro Max, and I get the same crap reception as my iPhone SE (1st gen) in the same building. Surely there must be a way to get a better provider for at least the same price.”
When the iPhone 15 Pro Max launched, I was ecstatic, as I was every year. I had pre-ordered 3 different colors: Blue Titanium, White Titanium, and Natural Titanium. Black was completely out of the question. I didn’t really want a dark color at the time since I had a purple 14 Pro Max for a whole year, and I really was leaning towards one of the lighter colors.
When I got the 3 phones on launch day, I was distraught between two beautiful phones, the white and the natural. I loved the back of the natural, but I really loved the sides of the white titanium.
The slightly yellow tinge of the natural titanium looked like someone pissed on the white titanium phone.
The funny thing is, if I only got the natural phone, I wouldn’t know that the white phone would have a better sheen to it, and I would just be perfectly happy with the natural color. I don’t live close to an Apple store (about an hour away from the closest one), and I didn’t feel like waiting in line, so I had to buy them for myself to make sure I picked the color that would resonate well with me. I finalized my decision to keep the white titanium and to return the other two.
I was at the time with AT&T, and have been with them forever. I have been getting a shoddy signal at work for the last 9 years, but it didn't really bother me since I would use my company’s Wi-Fi. It would be annoying at times though when I had to either make or receive phone calls from work, and I would have to stand outside to have a conversation. I could go to Verizon and pay more money, but I didn’t feel it was worth the extra cash, especially in today’s environment where everything is already going up in price.
I thought to myself, “I have this brand new iPhone 15 Pro Max, and I get the same crap reception as my iPhone SE (1st gen) in the same building. Surely there must be a way to get a better provider for at least the same price.”
And then I remembered a friend of mine telling me that he was paying $10/month for unlimited everything with his Ting plan through a promotion he received. The catch was that you have to be a Ting home internet customer. Since I do have Ting as my home internet provider, I thought to myself to check their website to see if they still had this insane promo for only $10/month.
As it turns out, they still had the promo active, and I decided to try a line. Worst case, it won’t be any good and I’ll just be out $10. I had a feeling though that it would be great since they are using Verizon's towers.
I ordered a SIM, and it arrived in 2 days. Pretty seamless process, and I just inserted the SIM into my iPhone SE. When I went to work the next day, I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw my iPhone SE having near full bars, and my 15 Pro Max stuttering along with just one bar. I tried it out for a few days, and I was able to even make video facetime calls over cellular at work, whereas with AT&T, I couldn’t even make regular voice calls!
So now the choice was obvious. Either I continue to pay $130/month with AT&T for 3 lines, or I could pay $36/month (about 12 bucks a line after taxes and fees) and save myself $94 dollars a month. This was a huge savings, especially once again in today’s inflated greedy economy where every corporation can keep raising prices because, who's there to stop them?
This was the clearest no-brainer for me in a long time. I still couldn’t believe that I would be getting unlimited data, unlimited hotspot, and no throttling.
There was one catch though, a HUGE catch.
And that catch would send me for a search halfway around the world.
The catch was that Ting only supports physical SIM cards, and does not support eSIM. That means that any US version of the iPhone 14 or later would not be supported.
The timing couldn’t be better though. I was planning a trip overseas to Makkah and Madinah for a religious pilgrimage, along with a family wedding, and it was coming up in a few weeks. I had to get packed for this trip, but now I also had to rush to send back my iPhones since I knew that they would be no use to me without a physical SIM slot. As much as I loved my iPhone 15 Pro Max in white titanium, it was time to part with it. Saving $94/month is just too good of a deal to keep an inferior provider. Plus if I didn’t return them in time, I would be over the return timeframe and would be stuck with over $4,000 in iPhones.
I did some research on Apple’s Saudi website to see where I could buy a phone, but the stores it told me were all saying that availability was sold out. There didn’t seem to be a reliable way for me to acquire this elusive iPhone 15 Pro Max with a SIM slot.
I also had to set my priorities straight. This trip was after all a spiritual trip first and foremost, and since there will be a lot of family present, there were dinner plans every day, along with other activities that would take up a lot of my time. The average amount of sleep on trips like these is about 4 hours, maybe 5. Of course there were the 5 daily prayers that would be prayed at the Grand Mosques, so I would have to find time in between one of the prayers to somehow acquire a phone.
Needless to say, time was extremely limited.
Before I could even do that, I needed a local SIM card since I had no service with Ting and the hotel Wi-Fi was a complete joke. Ting’s international plans are pretty expensive, and even if I wanted to activate it, it wouldn’t work in Saudi since I kept getting “No Service” in the status bar. The local SIM plans are pretty cheap, and I was able to get a 15GB plan for about $17.
Now I was finally connected to the world once again, so I could do some casual research to see where some of the cell phone provider stores were located. Later in the day, I had an epiphanic moment, “Fahad you idiot, why don’t you just ask the guys who sold you the SIM card where to buy an iPhone 15 Pro Max instead of trying to do the research yourself? They’re the locals, so they would definitely know!”
Since the teenagers who set me up with the plan spoke English (albeit, just enough to get by), I went back to them and asked them point blank, “Where can I buy… iPhone 15 Pro?” I said it just like that, leaving out the “an,” to come down to their level of speech. It’s a thing you do if you speak multiple languages. They immediately told me to go to the Jarir Bookstore. I said, “A bookstore?” They said, “Yes!”
First I thought to myself that they might have misheard me since I was not looking for books, but apparently Jarir Bookstore is like THE place to buy a phone. It never showed up as an official Apple retailer when I searched their Saudi website, but that website honestly didn’t seem that reliable to begin with.
I googled this store, and it wasn’t that far from my hotel, maybe around 15 minutes.
So my last day in Madinah was the day I would go to this store. My brother and I went after breakfast time, which was prime nap time, but sleep would have to wait for this iPhone 15 Pro Max, if they even had one. I couldn’t really call in advance since they weren’t open yet, but I would just have to bite the bullet and pray they had one.
We were able to flag a taxi pretty easily, as the taxi drivers are plentiful, ready to take you wherever you want to go. We had a couple of stops before the bookstore since they weren’t open yet, but once we got there at 8:45am, we just had to wait till 9am for them to open.
It was quite a grand store that could be best described as a mix between Barnes and Noble, Best Buy, and Target. Needless to say it was my favorite store, filled with all kinds of tech. Time wouldn’t allow me to peruse through the whole store, but I just had to get down to business.
I initially went to a booth that looked like a Best Buy Apple display area, but there was no one there to help me. Looking at where all the salespeople were, I turned my eye towards the counter that had practically all the latest Android smartphones from all the brands that are not mainstream in the US: Xiaomi, OnePlus, and Huawei. But it was time to see where the real phones were. Where were the iPhones?!
Instead of looking like a panther trying to catch its next meal, I decided to simply ask the gentleman at the counter without sounding desperate, “Do you guys have the iPhone 15 Pro Max in stock?” I was physically normal in my appearance, but mentally I was flinching to see what they would say. This could literally be my only chance to get this phone, since I would be leaving the following day to go to Makkah.
They did have some in stock! Now it was up to me to see if I wanted to purchase from what they had. At this point, beggars can’t be choosers. My goal was to get a 256GB or even 512GB white or natural titanium, but I might go with another color if I had to.
It seems that the popularity of the white and natural titanium phones is not only a US phenomenon, and the only phones they had were in blue or black with 512GB. They had a regular Pro in natural titanium at 1TB, but I wanted that 5x telephoto zoom.
I decided to go for the Black Titanium 512GB phone because I remember someone saying on Twitter-X that the black phone provides the most immersive experience with the edges disappearing into the color of the side rails. It was a $300 premium over the same phone if I had bought it in the United States, so that SIM card slot literally cost me $300.
I was still a bit nervous after purchasing the device because you can’t return anything here unless it has a defect. There is no return for buyer’s remorse.
Once I got back to the hotel, I unboxed the Black Titanium, and I was in awe of how the brushed metallic finish looked in black. It was better than I had imagined. Yeah it picks up fingerprints, but they can easily be wiped off with my shirt to reveal that shimmery brushed titanium. The look of the Black Titanium with natural light also gives a very striking graphite color that reminds me of a shiny pencil tip. I almost feel like if I rub the phone on paper, it will start writing!
Direct sunlight also shows off one of the titanium phone’s secrets: that lustrous particulate sheen. Under most lighting, the phone looks like brushed metal, but when under direct sunlight, it’s almost as if there is another texture that becomes active in the harsher light. The hue also changes a bit and you can almost see the whitish titanium underneath it, or maybe that’s just my slight desire to want this phone to be white.
Overall, I am glad I was able to get the Black Titanium, even though it wasn’t my first choice. The phone also worked flawlessly out of the box with no issues, so I wasn’t going to have to go through the whole return process. The Blue Titanium that I purchased on launch day did have a slight chip or discoloration on the back panel near the bottom, but this phone was flawless.
A story like this wouldn’t be complete if there weren’t some other plot twists, and there was a twist right at the end of my trip. While I was walking in the airport to find my gate for my flight back to Dulles airport, there was a Jarir Bookstore in the airport itself, and I decided to just ask the guy and see if they had a white titanium iPhone 15 Pro Max in stock.
Of course they did. 512GB too!
How the iPhone 15 Pro Action Button will Probably Work
As much as I would rather have a physical mute switch toggle on my iPhone, it looks like the action button will be taking its place. bring much more functionality since it can easily give you five different functions instead of just two. Here is how I think Apple will implement the action button.
The simplest and most effective way to implement the action button is to copy the power button. The power button currently has five different functions:
Press and hold - activates Siri
Press once - turns on/off the screen
Press twice - activates Apple Pay
Press three times - activates your accessibility shortcut options
Press five times - activates the emergency SOS screen
If Apple uses this approach, we can get five more custom functions from the action button. Might be too confusing initially, but eventually I think people will get used to it. Ergonomically speaking, the action button is in the perfect spot for left handed users. You can easily thumb press the action button with your left hand, and your index finger can easily activate the longer power button. Right handers will have to perform some gymnastics to be able to press the action button with their index finger, but it’s not a comfortable hold trying it out on the 14 Pro Max and even the smaller iPhone 13.
What would I do if I had five more extra buttons? Here is my action button setup:
Press and hold - unmute phone
Press once - mute phone
Press twice - activate camera
Press three times - activate voice recording
Press five times - call my wife
I need my phone to be on mute at certain times, and a simple press should do the trick. Even if I am not sure if my phone is on mute, I can simply press the action button once and voila! Plus, I would rather be on mute when not needed than not be on mute when needed, which is why I would rather press and hold to unmute the phone. Plus with this setup, it still allows me to mute the phone without putting my hand in my pocket.
The other 3 functions are in order of convenience and need. Quick camera access is a huge plus, and even voice recording might come in handy if you wanted to “jot down” your thoughts and ideas. Lastly, having the ability to reach my wife would be a great feature if I am in an emergency and my screen gets damaged. A lot of the times a damaged screen will hinder the ability to get help since it won’t register any touch input. Having a physical button to instantly call a loved one will definitely be handy.
As much as I would rather have a physical mute switch toggle on my iPhone, it looks like the action button will be taking its place. bring much more functionality since it can easily give you five different functions instead of just two. Here is how I think Apple will implement the action button.
The simplest and most effective way to implement the action button is to copy the power button. The power button currently has five different functions:
Press and hold - activates Siri
Press once - turns on/off the screen
Press twice - activates Apple Pay
Press three times - activates your accessibility shortcut options
Press five times - activates the emergency SOS screen
If Apple uses this approach, we can get five more custom functions from the action button. Might be too confusing initially, but eventually I think people will get used to it. Ergonomically speaking, the action button is in the perfect spot for left handed users. You can easily thumb press the action button with your left hand, and your index finger can easily activate the longer power button. Right handers will have to perform some gymnastics to be able to press the action button with their index finger, but it’s not a comfortable hold trying it out on the 14 Pro Max and even the smaller iPhone 13.
A left hand grip makes it easy to press both the action button and power button.
It might not look like it, but the reach for the action button with your right hand is very uncomfortable and unnatural.
What would I do if I had five more extra buttons? Here is my action button setup:
Press and hold - unmute phone
Press once - mute phone
Press twice - activate camera
Press three times - activate voice recording
Press five times - call my wife
I need my phone to be on mute at certain times, and a simple press should do the trick. Even if I am not sure if my phone is on mute, I can simply press the action button once and voila! Plus, I would rather be on mute when not needed than not be on mute when needed, which is why I would rather press and hold to unmute the phone. Plus with this setup, it still allows me to mute the phone without putting my hand in my pocket.
The other 3 functions are in order of convenience and need. Quick camera access is a huge plus, and even voice recording might come in handy if you wanted to “jot down” your thoughts and ideas. Lastly, having the ability to reach my wife would be a great feature if I am in an emergency and my screen gets damaged. A lot of the times a damaged screen will hinder the ability to get help since it won’t register any touch input. Having a physical button to instantly call a loved one will definitely be handy.
iPhone 15 Pro Action Button
Steve Moser from MacRumors:
“The Action button, which could be similar to the Apple Watch Ultra's Action button but with more phone-focused options, is expected to be a new physical button on the next-generation Pro iPhone models that replaces the Ring/Silent switch. The Action button would allow users to quickly access various functions and settings without necessarily unlocking the device or navigating to an app.
According to the code found in iOS 17 beta 4, the Action button could have nine different options that users can customize and assign to different actions.”
My biggest beef with the new iPhone15 Pro action button is going to be its versatility in the pocket. The mute switch lever was an easy, stealthy way to silence your phone, but now you won't really know if it's silenced if you just try to press a button to silence it. You will have to think, "Did I just mute my phone or did I just unmute it?" The positioning of the mute switch lever just by feeling it would always be a tell tale sign with full confidence of your phone's status.
Steve Moser from MacRumors:
The Action button, which could be similar to the Apple Watch Ultra's Action button but with more phone-focused options, is expected to be a new physical button on the next-generation Pro iPhone models that replaces the Ring/Silent switch. The Action button would allow users to quickly access various functions and settings without necessarily unlocking the device or navigating to an app.
According to the code found in iOS 17 beta 4, the Action button could have nine different options that users can customize and assign to different actions.
My biggest beef with the new iPhone15 Pro action button is going to be its versatility in the pocket. The mute switch lever was an easy, stealthy way to silence your phone, but now you won't really know if it's silenced if you just try to press a button to silence it. You will have to think, "Did I just mute my phone or did I just unmute it?" The positioning of the mute switch lever just by feeling it would always be a tell tale sign with full confidence of your phone's status.
Apple’s markup is kind of a mess.
Apple’s markup tool is something that I use probably on a daily basis, but there are some inconsistencies that you should be aware of, especially if you are using it cross platform between iOS and macOS. Here are just some scenarios that I tried and discovered how confusing things can get.
Apple’s markup tool is something that I use probably on a daily basis, but there are some inconsistencies that you should be aware of, especially if you are using it cross platform between iOS and macOS. Here are just some scenarios that I tried and discovered how confusing things can get.
Let’s start with the Mac:
Markup for screenshots are permanent edits once you close out of the preview, whether you do the edit immediately after taking the screenshot by clicking on the small icon in the corner of the screen, or if you access it later from Finder.
Markup for a photo in the Photos app can always be edited and undone.
Markup for a pdf can always be edited and undone.
On the iPhone and iPad:
If you take a screenshot and edit right away by clicking the tiny screenshot, whatever markups you do that way will become a permanent “instance.” The only thing you can do after this point is revert back to the original image, or build upon the current markups you did. You cannot erase part of these markups.
For example, if you added a square and a circle to your markup, you can revert back to the original image with no markup, or you can build upon the square and circle. You cannot erase just the circle or just the square.
If you take a screenshot and flick it away, go to the photos app and then do the markup, you can edit, erase, and undo without any restrictions. Nothing is permanently engraved until you share the photo with the share card.
Markups for a pdf can always be edited and undone.
For cross platform talk:
Pdf files are pretty easily editable without much hassle on either platform. I have had no trouble when switching between the 3 platforms and was able to easily undo any changes seamlessly.
If you have iCloud photo library on, you can edit on an iPad and easily undo those edits on an iPhone, Mac, and vice versa. I was able to verify this on my iPhone and iPad, but since I do not have iCloud photo library enabled on my mac, I can’t confirm whether that works or not. My guess is that it does work.
The tip of the day is: if you are taking a screenshot of anything on iOS or iPad OS, swipe it away and access it from the photos app before you do any markups. This way you have more control in modifying your markups later on. For mac, markups for screenshots are permanent so be careful regardless of when you mark them up.