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How to Pack your Streaming Apps for your Next Vacation Movie Night

After a fun vacation day on the slopes, my family settled in for a movie on our hotel room TV. Here’s how we did that using my existing Apple ecosystem.

I recently returned from a little skiing vacation with my family at Mount Bousquet in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. We hadn’t been on the slopes for a couple years due to the pandemic, so it felt great to practice some downhill again. (That’s our son having fun on a snowboard in my above photo.)

Pack your Apple TV for your Next Vacation
During our time in the hotel room, I tried using a particularly useful vacation tech trick I’d learned a while back. I had brought our Apple TV puck with us with the intent to jack it into the hotel’s WiFi network. This would allow me to access our entire arsenal of streaming apps and create movie nights using the room’s big TV screen. (Doing this effectively sidesteps having to purchase anything additional from a hotel as long as the base-level WiFi can handle streaming.)

Sadly, the streaming apps on my Apple TV didn’t work this time, because the hotel’s WiFi required a multiple-step login process, which the Apple TV couldn’t access beyond the password step.

Fortunately, I had also packed a lightning to HDMI adapter for my iPhone. (It’s always good to have a backup plan, when vacation movie night hangs in the balance.)

Using this dongle, I was able to substitute in my iPhone as the streaming source and connect it directly to our hotel room’s HDTV via its HDMI cable. Then, my iPhone effortlessly served up the Disney movies we wanted via its Disney+ app.

Tech Ethics
You could say my streaming strategy unfairly took advantage of the hotel’s WiFi network, possibly slowing down WiFi speeds for others. But my iPhone ended up tethering to its cellular connection using its AT&T wireless data plan. So I don’t have to debate tech ethics here (not this time).

I pay for unlimited data on my AT&T account. So, in a sense, I’m already paying full price for my movie tickets while streaming. That said, I’m very happy not to be concerned about blowing through any data limits while on vacation!

Ensuring that Screen Time = Family Time
And why all my effort to project a movie onto a hotel room’s TV? Can’t an iPad or iPhone screen suffice during vacation? Not for me and my family. If you’re also a parent with kids, I imagine you might agree that screen time is a complicated topic.

The last thing I want to do is generate more opportunity for little eyeballs to stare at little screens, separate from the larger family focus.

If there is to be movie screen time on vacation, it’s great when it’s part of a larger family activity…experienced together.

Vacation Tech Joy
When bringing extra tech with you to create your family movie nights on vacation, please don’t forget to pack up all of the pieces before you leave. (Adapters have a way of disappearing if you’re not careful.)

And do put the hotel TV cabling back together. The next family may just want to turn on the TV without ‘Frankensteining’ together their own mini movie theater.

Nevertheless, I do enjoy screaming “It’s alive!” whenever I get my vacation TVs to work. A little tech joy always adds to my overall vacation experience.

In fact, I highly recommend it.

How to Save your iPhone when It Runs out of Storage

Don’t panic! Take these steps when you see that your iPhone’s storage is almost full.

I once pondered why anyone would ever need an iPhone with 512GB of storage. Now, three years later, I know that answer. My 256GB iPhone is packed, and I want more space. Sure, my media files can (and do) live in any number of clouds or hard drives, but of course there’s a cost with maintaining that solution.

If you’re in the same situation and considering upgrading to a device with 512GB or a whopping terabyte of storage, you probably should look at the other side of the same equation and ask yourself why do you really need to carry around that much data on your smartphone.

Let me answer that one… You don’t.

I don’t. (That said, my next iPhone will have more storage. But honestly, that’s a band-aid solution.)

The real problem and solution has to do with media management.

This is not about having enough space to maintain your media library on your smartphone. It’s about not having enough time over the years to thin out the files you don’t need. You wake up one day to realize you’ve got tens of thousands of disorganized photos and hundreds of home videos dancing about.

They’re clogging up your phone, and the irony is many of them are throwaways, minor variants of better versions. You just never found the time to go back and delete them.

iPhone Storage Almost Full
You can ignore this reality for only so long. Eventually, your device will force you to respond. You have to go through all of your media files and hack away at them.

I’ll go out on a limb and say that nobody really needs tens of thousands of photos to represent their day-to-day lives. So it’s time to roll up your sleeves and put on your media management hat.

The Good News
In the process, you might come across some unexpected fast lanes to free up space.

To do that, first review your iPhone’s storage report:

  • Click on iPhone Storage in Settings.

You’ll see a graph illustrating what types of files are sucking up your phone’s memory. You might spot a category that can be easily cleaned up. I did…

Delete All of your Downloaded Podcasts!
I found that I had 40GB in old downloaded podcasts that I could quickly eliminate. (That was a huge surprise.) I hadn’t realized when I started ‘following’ certain podcasts a couple years back that all of the new episodes would continue to download, regardless whether I ever listened to another one.

40GB gone! Whoa!

So, if you’re a podcast listener, you should definitely check that category.

And don’t forget to change the settings to stop your iPhone from automatically downloading new podcast episodes.

  • Go to the Podcasts Settings on your iPhone
  • Turn off Automatic Downloads: Enable When Following

Your iPhone’s storage report also offers a few quick and easy methods to free up memory, such as offloading unused apps. So don’t miss those opportunities.

But sooner or later you’ll need to face all of those photos and videos. It’s time to do the hard work.

Reversing Course Takes Time
You’ve slowly brought yourself to this precipice. And it may feel like death from a thousand nicks. It’s overwhelming.

So give yourself some time to dig out. Five minutes a day can do wonders. As long as you’re deleting more media files each day than your creating, you’ve found the right path.

Take control. Your smartphone will thank you.

The Hidden Value of Old Tech is the Mystery

Here’s the story of how this vintage Bell & Howell 8mm movie camera found its way onto my bookshelf.

When old tech stops working, we usually discard it, like a malfunctioning printer or Wi-Fi router. While important to maintaining Tech Zen, this gear operating in the background usually isn’t at the forefront of our consciousness. Plus, once it glitches out, it’s entirely useless.

Why aren’t You Retiring It?
On the other hand, we tend to proactively retire other items in our aging tech arsenals when they’re replaced by newer models with more advanced functionality. Technically, this gear might still work, but it’s slower and no longer retains the original shine.

While it’s entirely appropriate to discard this older tech, we sometimes can’t actually part with it.

Why?

I think it has to do with the good memories created from their use.

No, it doesn’t make much sense, but if you’re already prone to holding onto ‘things,’ as a way to retain some of your positive memories, you may be a poster child for this scenario. (I’m certainly guilty of this.)

Owning a Little Piece of History
Another twist to this techno-hording phenomenon has to do with someone else’s old tech that you inexplicably crave.

If you acquire this ancient gear that you’ll never use, what’s the point in that?

No, this tech may no longer have any functional value, but its ongoing existence reflects something potentially more important…

I think it’s about taking ownership of the mystery of how this tech might have been used during a more glamorous bygone era.

This gear contains unknowable stories of the other people who’ve used this gear. You can only guess at the history.

So, it’s this mystery that creates an inexplicable psychological value in what otherwise would be viewed as junk.

From the Back of a Closet to the Front of a Bookshelf
Take, for example my father-in-law’s vintage Bell & Howell ‘Electric Eye’ 8mm movie camera from the 1960s.

He passed in 2008, but while he was alive, I was unaware of this camera or how he used it to document family events decades earlier.

It was buried in the back of a closet, forgotten and effectively lost.

When it was finally rediscovered, this tech relic had no use, superseded many times over by newer tech.

Still.

An 8mm camera from the 1960s. How cool is that?

And as it turned out, nobody in my wife’s family wanted it, and the camera was about to be thrown away.

So I rescued it.

And I placed the Bell & Howell on a bookshelf in my home office.

No, of course I’m not going to ever use it, but I still enjoy looking at it.

Sure, 20th century and early 21st century tech can have a certain physical gravitas that today’s lighter, sleeker, cheaper gear long abandoned.

And certain vintage tech has nice “craftsmanship.”

But the real allure is what you can’t really know.

The Joy of Creating the Story
There’s actually not that much mystery to my father-in-law’s camera. I, of course, know the family from which it came. (And yes, there’s also a box of old film reels. So, all of the recorded stories actually do exist.)

But if I had picked up the camera at a stranger’s garage sale or an antique store, then it really would be a mystery.

And that would give it even more value.

The value of an unknowable set of stories from a time long past.

Tales you could imagine from scratch.

When Old Tech Mutates into Art
But you also don’t need to dig so deep into the psychological to justify wanting a piece of ‘junk.’

If looking at a created object pleases you, then how is it any different from owning a piece of art or perhaps an antique?

I’ve got to tell you that having an old film camera on my shelf feels fabulous, especially if visual storytelling is your thing.

And that’s certainly my story.

One man’s trash is another man’s treasure.

The why doesn’t always have to be a mystery, but it helps.