Dear Friends,

It’s mud season in Vermont. If you haven’t lived there on a dirt road you just won’t get it. I have seen some pictures that show roads gobbling up even the most powerful 4WD vehicles. April in Vermont is a good reason for me to stay in Key West awhile longer.

On the other hand, friends are posting photos of crocus blooming and the daffodils won’t be far behind. There are also reports that the bears have awoken from hibernation and are once again on the search for food. Spring is in the air!

Down here spring means iguanas. With no natural predators, the invasive iguana likes the warm weather, and the local paper is full of comments from residents wanting the city to do something about the invasion. So far, I think my pups are keeping them at bay at my house (knocking heavily on wood) but they can be real pests.

We have received our initial inventory of the new 9.7-inch iPad and the new spring colors for Apple Watch bands, too. We also have some inventory of Apple AirPods, but they are still very constrained and could be hard to get when we are sold out. I was amazed, while sitting in South Beach at a restaurant, how popular they are as many of the people were sporting AirPods.

This week’s Kibbles & Bytes Exclusive is the Apple Factory Refurbished silver MacBook Pro 15-inch with Touch Bar. It has the 2.9 GHz Intel i7 processor, 16GB of ram, a 512GB SSD drive, and 4GB of video ram.This unit has a 1-year Apple Warranty but we are bundling it with AppleCare+ to extend that warranty to 3-years that will provide extended free Apple tech support and up to two incidents of accidental damage (after deductible). At Apple’s online store this identical bundle would cost you $2758.98 plus tax. This week’s special for Kibbles & Bytes readers, while supply lasts is $200 off at $2558.99!

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Grace and I are heading up to Miami for a couple of Cubs vs. Marlins games as baseball season gets underway. Us life-long Cubs fans are looking for another title this year. Meanwhile, even though the Boston Celtics are completely decimated by injuries, they just keep winning. It is going to be an interesting spring! If the Celtics are still in it on our way to Vermont we may just have to make a detour to Boston!

Everything seems to be growing faster as the temperatures are heating up down here. I have lemons and oranges on my trees. Of course, they will be ready when we are in VT. I might have to take a trip down just to harvest them!

Thank you for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,

Don & Emily

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At a special education event on March 27th at a high school in Chicago, Apple introduced a new 9.7-inch iPad that offers faster performance, support for the Apple Pencil, and a few new camera-related features. The company also released new versions of the iWork apps—Pages, Numbers, and Keynote—that let users draw, sketch, and write with the Apple Pencil.

Sixth-generation iPad

For the most part, the new sixth-generation iPad is the same as the fifth-generation model it replaces. Its physical dimensions are unchanged, so existing cases and accessories should continue to work. It comes in the same three colors: silver, gold, and space gray. Even the pricing and options remain the same, with a 32 GB model starting at $329—the jump to 128 GB adds $100, and cellular capabilities add another $130.

What sets the sixth-generation iPad apart from its predecessor is its support for the Apple Pencil stylus, which was previously restricted to the iPad Pro line, which started at $649. Thanks to a high-resolution touch sensor in the iPad’s Retina screen and palm-rejection technology, you can now use the $99 Apple Pencil with compatible apps. As with the iPad Pro, the Apple Pencil is sensitive to pressure and tilt so you can vary line weight and shading, much as with a traditional pencil.

Also new in the sixth-generation iPad is Apple’s A10 Fusion chip, with its embedded M10 coprocessor. The company claims that the new processors provide up to 40-percent faster CPU and 50-percent faster graphics performance.

The extra performance may also be related to the iPad’s new camera capabilities. Unlike the previous iPad, the sixth-generation iPad can take Live Photos and supports body detection in images along with the previously supported face detection. Also new is support for the Retina Flash feature that turns the screen into a giant flash when taking selfies.

iWork with Apple Pencil Support

If you haven’t been using Pages, Numbers, and Keynote on the iPad, the latest updates may encourage you to try Apple’s iWork apps—remember, they are available for free in the App Store. Notably, the three apps allow you to draw, sketch, and write directly within documents. Even more interesting, though, is Apple’s Smart Annotations feature, currently in beta. With it, your comments and proofing marks anchor dynamically to text, and stay with the text they were attached to even as the document changes.

Smart Annotations are particularly welcome for those who take advantage of the real-time collaboration features built into the iWork apps. This was an education event, and it’s clear that Apple is building tools that will allow teachers to mark up and comment on student documents. But the same capabilities are equally as useful in the business world. For business users, Apple also announced that the real-time collaboration features in the iWork apps now work on documents stored in the Box file sharing service. Previously they were available only for documents stored in iCloud, which has little adoption in the enterprise.

Finally, the iPad version of Pages gains features that help users create ebooks in EPUB format. Apple also added a new Presenter mode to Pages, which lets you turn your iPhone or iPad into a teleprompter for distraction-free reading.

In the end, if you’re interested in using the Apple Pencil, the combination of the sixth-generation iPad and the updated iWork apps will let you do more for over $300 less than before with the iPad Pro.

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Dear Friends,

The road trip to New Orleans had its ups and downs but we loved the Big Easy and spent some time listening to great music and consuming adult beverages. The Celtics game was a bit of a disappointment as the injury-ravaged team lost that game before heading out on a 4-game win streak out west.

The Apple announcements this week were great. I especially like all the software and tools that Apple has developed for educators. Education has long been a focus for Apple and lately they have been losing some ground to the Chrome books and their ilk. But, I really think that these new tools are compelling and that iPads, especially the new 6th Generation iPad with Pencil support, will be THE new tool in the best school districts.

In addition to the new iPads Apple has also introduced the Space Gray versions of the Magic Mouse, Keyboard and Trackpad. They have also released some new colors on iPad cases and a slew of new spring colors for watch bands.

I was so moved by the March for Our Lives and the incredibly articulate speeches given by high school students begging for our help. It really boils down to our children asking for our help to not get shot in school or on the street. Seems like a sorta reasonable request. These kids inspire me and I believe will change our world!

This week’s Kibbles & Bytes exclusive is a fantastic bundle! It starts out with the Apple Factory Refurbished MacBook Pro 13-inch w/Touch Bar 3.1GHz i5 Dual Core 8GB/512GB in Space Gray. This unit has a 1-year Apple Warranty but we are bundling it with AppleCare+ to extend that warranty to 3-years to provide extended free Apple tech support and up to two incidents of accidental damage (after deductible). To make this deal even better, while supplies last, we will include a pair of Apple’s wildly popular AirPods with each of these MacBook Pros. All this at a savings of $150 for Kibbles readers – your cost for this bundle is only $1977.77!

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Grace and I are riding our motorcycles to New Orleans next week to visit the city and also see a Celtics game. Hopefully, the weather and the motorcycles cooperate with our plans! Both our bikes down here were made in 2003 so they can be cantankerous at times but we will take it slow and try to stay on the 2-lane roads.

Don’t forget to turn your clocks ahead on Sunday and enjoy the extra hour of sunshine at the end of your day.

Thank you for reading this special issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,

Don & Emily

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Dear Friends, Just over a week before winter ends and only a couple days before we change the clocks forward but many of you are covered with snow from the latest nor’easter. Nevertheless, it is time for our first big sale of the spring! This is a special issue of Kibbles & Bytes with some […]

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Autumn and Gracie leave this weekend but my other granddaughter, Khadija arrives so more fun for me! Only a couple weeks to go before Grace and I head to New Orleans on the motorcycles. I was able to complete my work on her bike so I think we are good to go as long as the weather cooperates.

Autumn teaches school in Burlington so I was interested in her reaction to the notion of arming teachers. She basically said she would never do that and it was an idiotic idea. Then of course, this week we had an armed teacher barricading himself in a classroom and firing his gun. Armed good intentioned civilians have never been able to stop a mass shooting.

Basketball season’s regular schedule is winding down and my Celtics very much are in the playoff picture. Meanwhile, the Cubbies open their season playing the Miami Marlins in Miami. Guess who will be going to a couple of those opening games!

Thank you so much for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes! And welcome back, Emily!

Your Kibbles & Bytes team,

Don, Emily & Mike

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Starting today, skiers and snowboarders can use Apple Watch Series 3 to track their activities via new updates to apps available in the App Store. Watch users can now record runs, see vertical descent and other stats, and contribute active calorie measurements directly to the Apple Watch Activity app. See, I have been thinking about you guys up in the north country!

Apple Watch is selling well, in fact, Apple Watch outsold all competing smartwatches combined last year. One in five smartwatches sold was an Apple Watch. We have been selling quite a few Apple Watches at our stores and they do seem to gain functions pretty regularly. I love my Apple Watch and if I was a skier or snowboarder this new feature would be interesting. Emily and Artie might like it since they can be found out on the slopes from time to time.

Developers are taking advantage of the built-in GPS and altimeter in Apple Watch Series 3 as well as custom workout APIs released in watchOS 4.2 to enable tracking of specialized metrics. App updates for Snoww, Slopes, Squaw Alpine, Snocru and Ski Tracks now track new metrics on the slopes including:

*Total vertical descent and horizontal distance
*Number of runs
*Average and maximum speeds
*Total time spent
*Calories burned

Apps can auto pause and resume and users will get credit towards their Activity rings; workout information will also be recorded to the Health app on iPhone with user permission. Using Siri, users can start Slopes and Snoww to track their runs using just their voice.

Having the ability to track the details of runs with Apple Watch is an incredible asset for everyone from training athletes to skiers and riders just looking to have fun and stay active, said Jonny Moseley, Olympic Moguls Gold Medalist and Squaw Alpine Mountain Ambassador. The Squaw Alpine app for Apple Watch helps me when I’m out with my family to not only track exactly where my kids are on the mountain, but also compare our performance so I can make sure I’m keeping up with my sons and add some fun competition to our day.

The updated apps are now available on the App Store and require watchOS 4.2 or later.

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I have got some important visitors coming this week. My daughter Autumn and granddaughter Gracie come and then Khadija visits the next week. It will be nice to have some family hanging out!

I did manage to learn a lot about wiring relays and was able to fix the brake lights on Grace’s motorcycle. That was a relief as it had me baffled for awhile. A few good YouTube videos on automotive relays finally got me pointed in the right direction. Now we are ready for our New Orleans trek.

Spring training has started and the reports from Arizona seem to be great for the Cubbies. I am looking forward to a great season!

Thank you for reading this issue of Kibbles & Bytes!

Your Kibbles & Bytes Team,

Don & Mike

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Basically, Stagecoach Mary ruled! Six-foot-tall, 200-pound Mary Fields smoked cigars, packed a pistol, kept a jug of whiskey at her side, and made certain the mail got delivered. She was the first African American woman to be employed as a mail carrier in the United States, and only the second woman to work for the United States Postal Service–a job she took on at the age of sixty.

Fields was born a slave and grew up as an orphan. After emancipation, she was taken under the wing of an Ohio nun named Mother Amadeus. When Mother Amadeus suddenly got sick, Fields nursed her back to health. She also took it upon herself to protect all the nuns in the convent–with a gun strapped under her apron.

Of course, this sort of toughness, while it may have been appreciated, doesn’t necessarily fit in a nunnery. Fields was ultimately dismissed from her duties. The nuns felt bad, so they provided her with enough money to start her own business. Mary opened a café, but because she was so kind and generous, she gave food to everyone who stepped in the door (whether or not they had money) and her business was run into the ground several times. Eventually, she closed down the café and began working a mail delivery job. She and her mule, Moses, never missed a day of work. Even if it was snowing and the wagon was frozen in its tracks, Mary would make the deliveries on foot, carrying the sacks of mail on her shoulders.

In 1895 she applied for a job with the United States Postal Service delivering mail throughout the Montana Territory. For her job interview, she and a dozen hardened Old West cowboys half her age were asked to hitch a team of six horses to a stagecoach as quickly as possible. The 60-year old Mary Fields blew them all away, hitching the horses and then having time left over to run to the saloon, grab a shot, come back, and smoke a cigar while laughing at the other cowpokes. She became the second woman – and the first black person of any gender – to work for the U.S. Post Office.

For the next six years, 60+ year old Mary Fields rode a stagecoach packed with money and expensive parcels through the Montana territories delivering mail anywhere, any time, through any terrain and weather and all manner of danger. Braving blizzards, heat waves, driving rain and screaming winds, Mary never missed a day of work, never failed to deliver a single letter, and was never late once. If the snow got so high that the horses couldn’t keep going, Mary would tie them to a tree, throw her mail bag over her shoulder, and walk ten miles through waist deep snow and twenty mph headwinds to deliver a letter to some random person on a farm in the middle of nowhere Montana. When the weather wasn’t completely soul-suckingly frigid she had to worry about outlaws and Indian attacks, although she does mention that the latter wasn’t very common – for most Sioux, she was the first black person they’d ever seen, and since they didn’t know what the deal was they usually just left her alone. If anyone got a little too close for comfort she of course also carried that trusty ten-gauge shotgun that, according to her personal experience, was capable of “cutting a man in half at closer range.” It was doing this job where Stagecoach Mary earned her nickname. Any time someone needed something delivered on time Mary would roll up with a boomstick, a pet eagle (!) and a mule named Moses and, I must say, that was a hell of a lot more reliable than any overnight delivery service you could ever ask for.

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One of the more famous tales of Stagecoach Mary’s came one evening when was charging through the countryside on one of her runs to deliver food and medicine to underprivileged nuns when suddenly out of nowhere a pack of psychotic wolves charged in and attacked her horses, freaking them out, ripping them up, and flipping the entire cart on its side. Mary jumped out, used the overturned cart as cover to keep her from being mauled from the back when she wasn’t looking, and then, with only a small lamp as her light source, she fought off several attacks from this pack of ferocious beasts throughout the night, first by blasting them with a shotgun at close range, and then switching to her revolver when she ran out of buckshot. The next morning she muscled the cart back upright, got everything back in place, tracked down some of the horses, made the rest of the trip back, and brought everything to the convent intact – except for a keg of molasses that had cracked during the battle, which the ungrateful Bishop made her pay for out of pocket.

After ten years of delivering the mail, Mary decided it was time to retire, and she settled down in Cascade and opened a laundry. She often ended her day with a drink and a cigar at the local saloon with the men of the community. There, she earned respect for her business savvy. One day a fellow who had not paid is laundry bill came into the saloon; Mary saw him, stepped up behind him and knocked the man down with one blow. She then put her foot on his chest and wouldn’t let him up until his bill was paid. After that, customers made sure their laundry bill was paid up!

She loved baseball and before each town game, she presented the players with buttonhole bouquets from her garden; she also would help out the local mothers if they needed someone to watch their children.

She was known and loved in town, so when cowboy artist Charles Russell lived in Cascade for a time, he couldn’t resist sketching a pen-and-ink drawing called A Quiet Day in Cascade, which depicts Mary being upended by a hog and spilling a basket of eggs.

The town adored her. They declared her birthday a holiday and closed the school on that day.

In 1914 Stagecoach Mary died of liver failure. The whole town participated in her funeral.

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