Macworld (USA)

More Apple products need multi-user support. Here’s why.

The myth of the single-user device.

- BY DAN MOREN

In Apple’s ideal world, we’d all have our collection­s of our own personal devices—preferably Apple-branded. We’d never leave the house without our iphone or our Apple Watch (or probably both); we’d sit down on the couch, browsing the web on our own ipads while binging the latest hot new show on our personal Apple TV. And for anything that might require it, we retreat to our personal Macbooks or imacs.

For some of us, this dream might be a reality. For others it sounds like a bit of a nightmare. After all, many of us live in households with more than one person. How many Apple TVS or ipads do we

need, really? Yes, an iphone or an Apple Watch is certainly a personal device, but why does that need to be the standard across the board?

It’s time for Apple to accept that some of us share our devices. I know! The horror! How could we let anybody, even our nearest and dearest, get their grubby paws all over our beautiful slabs of steel and glass? Well, sometimes it’s about convenienc­e, sometimes it’s about principle, and sometimes it’s just about saving a little money. But the sooner Apple accepts that fact, the sooner it can start making its devices more friendly to multiple-user households.

MORE OF A “WEPAD”

Arguments abound ( see page XX) whether or not the ipad is really a “computer,” but in one way it definitely isn’t: this is not a device designed for people to share.

Sure, it’s doable; you can pass your ipad to your significan­t other if they want to look something up on the web, or maybe even watch something on Netflix. But it very quickly becomes clear that they are merely a guest in someone else’s house. They can’t get their imessages or over their email (and they can access yours), they’re not logged in to their social media accounts, and, most criminal of all, their Netflix viewing habits are going to muck up the algorithm’s suggestion­s for you.

What the ipad needs in this case is nothing less than separate accounts, linked to separate Apple IDS and icloud accounts, providing access to each user’s individual settings, apps, and media. Each user has a separate passcode to log in to their account or, better yet, on the new ipad Pro, it simply recognizes who you are via Face ID.

Believe it or not, there’s actually precedent for this system on the ipad. Apple offers a multi-user Shared ipad system for educationa­l use, providing different accounts so that any student can pick up an ipad and have it be their ipad. It

would be great to see a similar system brought to all ipad users, and perhaps even combined with the Family Sharing features that users already have. That way you can manage not only which users can do what, but also enforce Screen Time limits so your kids don’t end up fighting over whose turn it is to play on the ipad.

MI HOMEPOD ES SU HOMEPOD

Apple’s smart speaker provides great audio, but on many of its other capabiliti­es, it falls short of competitor­s. And, it won’t surprise you to hear, one of those limitation­s is that it doesn’t recognize multiple users. While I’m sure there are plenty of folks who live alone and are perfectly happy to have their Homepod work for them and them alone, many of us would welcome multi-user support.

Now, many of the Homepod features work fine for multiple users: anybody can set a timer, or ask for the weather, or (assuming someone’s Apple Music subscripti­on is hooked up to it) play a song. But when it comes to accessing calendars, or making calls, or sending or reading your imessages, then it would be helpful for the Homepod to be able to handle that for more than just a single person in a household. At the same time, it would help ensure that other people in the house aren’t (by accident or on purpose) getting someone else’s personal messages.

Admittedly, this is a harder problem than your convention­al multiple user setup, given the relative lack of user interface, but given that the “Hey, Siri” training feature on IOS devices already helps prevent other people from triggering the virtual assistant on your iphone or ipad, it seems like that’s a good stepping stone on which to build more robust multi-user support. Plus, competitor­s like Amazon and Google are already offering this feature on their smart home speakers; it’s another place Apple

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 ??  ?? The True Depth camera and Face ID can be used to differenti­ate users on an ipad.
The True Depth camera and Face ID can be used to differenti­ate users on an ipad.
 ??  ?? Another product that needs multi-user support: the Homepod.
Another product that needs multi-user support: the Homepod.

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