Macmost: Find Free Apps For Mac
So let's talk about something that I think affects every iPhone user. It's robocalls. There have been a lot of reports that robocalls have been getting worse and my personal experience has been that this is true. They are getting worse. Robocalls are a specific type of spam phone call you get that's done automatically through a machine, a computer. There's no person on the other end or maybe there's not a person until you actually engage with the robocall. So there can be a computer out there that just makes hundreds, thousands, or millions of these things very easily.
I hear lots of advice from people about how to prevent robocalls or stop robocalls or deal with them. A lot of it is just wrong advice that won't help and may actually make things worse. So I thought I'd do some research and figure out what the best way to deal with it is. So what doesn't work? The first thing is blocking the number.
So here's the thing. That caller ID that you get, that's faked. That could be faked just as easily as a return address on an envelope that somebody mails to you. They can put anything they want there. They shouldn't be able to fake it and phone companies are reportedly working on a system for years in the future that will prevent this, but right now they can put any number they want. The current technique is to actually use your area code and even your prefix, the next three digits after the area code, to make it look like a local number or maybe even a number that somehow triggers a memory that, I think this is somebody I know.
So that number is faked. So blocking it isn't going to do anything because it's going to be different every time.
You're going to end up with a huge list of blocked phone numbers and the phone call never actually came from those numbers. In the worst case scenario you may actually end up blocking somebody you know or maybe in the future you might know. So it's just a waste of time to try to do this. It's not actually going to stop the robocalls. So blocking doesn't work in this case.
Reporting is also something that's not going to work. This is not a real caller ID number so reporting this as getting a call from somebody here isn't going to help. What's worse is that the phone number could very well be from a real person. Last week, myself, I actually got a text from somebody saying, hey, stop trying to call me. Of course I hadn't been trying to call anybody let alone this person and I had to go and send him a polite message back saying I haven't called anybody. This is probably a spoofed, faked caller ID number and I'm getting them too. So getting mad at the person with that actual number is probably not going to help.
Reporting it, whether it's to the phone company or some other service, you know some online site where you can list numbers that are doing spam calls, that's not help either and may actually hurt somebody whose number is being randomly used for this. Here's another thing that doesn't work. The Do Not Call Registry. There are various do not call registries for different countries and of course in the United States. Putting your number on that will cut down on the number of legitimate calls you get. Legitimate marketing calls from companies.
But all of these robocalls, they're breaking the law anyway by spoofing the caller ID, the anti-robocall laws, and all of this. They're not obeying the law so at that point they're not going to go and look on the registry and not call you for that. So that's a waste of time too. If you want to put your number on that anyway just to stop some legitimate marketing calls then sure, go ahead.
But it's not going to help this. So let's talk about what does work. The first thing you should do if you don't recognize the number is Don't Answer. It's a waste of your time to answer if you don't know who the person is on the other side.
You've probably realized by now it's almost certainly a robocall. You can let it go to voicemail.
If it is somebody legitimately trying to get in touch with you, maybe you didn't recognize the number, then they can leave a voicemail. But answering actually may make things worse as then they can put a checkmark next to it in the program there saying, hey somebody answers this number. Send them more calls. Here's another thing people don't do.
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If you answer and you hear it's a robocall or whatever on the other end just immediately hang up. You don't need to wait around. You don't need to listen for an option or say something polite or any of that. Just hang up. These people are taking up your time and you shouldn't waste a second.
Just hang up immediately. Here's something I've seen people do and I have tried it in the past too. You can set custom ringtones for contacts on your iPhone. So you can go into Contacts and add some data to that contact. You know Edit the contact and Add a Field.
One of those fields you can add is a Custom Ringtone. Now if you have, say, ten people that call you then you can set a custom ringtone for each of those people. You can set the same one or different ones for each one of them. Then you can go in and set a ringtone that's in Settings, Sounds as your general ringtone that's a very quiet, quick little ringtone. You know if you hear that ringtone that that's somebody that's not one of those ten people that usually call you and you can probably just ignore it. Not even take the phone out of your pocket.
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So if you do see, on your phone, that it's a number you don't recognize and you want to ignore it you don't even have to listen to the ringtone. You can press the Sleep/Wake button on your phone and the person or robot on the other side will continue to hear the rings until the normal amount of rings goes through and then it goes to voicemail. If you want to actually send it directly to voicemail, by the way, you can press the Sleep/Wake button twice and it does that.
But I kind of feel that that's almost sending a signal, in some way, that there is somebody actually at the other end. So you can use once for a suspected robocall and twice for somebody you actually know but you can't pick up the phone at the moment.
Now another things that does work is Provider Services. So these phone calls are coming in from AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, or whatever provider you have. That's the service that's providing your phone connectivity. Not Apple, not your iPhone's hardware. So it's really up to these companies to actually block these.
They do actually provide some services. If you go onto their websites and search around you usually find some settings or something for these. I'm on AT&T and AT&T actually has an app called AT&T Call Protect. This claims to do a better job identifying phone calls, blocking robocallers, things like that.
So I'm giving this a try now. I'm not sure how well it works. Other services have the same thing.
Some of these services charge extra for it. I think Verizon and Sprint currently charge a few dollars a month extra for these services. So, some of them are apps and some of them are things you need to setup in your account on the website for that service. So give that a try. Look through the Help information and if you can't find anything call and talk to your provider and see what they have. Maybe they'll even be able to tell you what they may have coming in the future. Here's what the AT&T Call Protect app kind of looks like so I'm hoping that I get a little better information when a call comes in.
Now, another thing you may want to try to look at are Third-Party apps. Until pretty recently third party apps couldn't do anything because they didn't have the ability to intercept phone calls. That was kind of a security issue.
But now apparently there can be somethings they can do. One app I hear a lot of good things about is Hiya. There are a bunch of other ones in the App Store.
I haven't tried any of these. I'd love to hear, in the Comments, if you have tried them and how successful they have been for you.
Macmost Find Free Apps For Mac
With all those wireless signals bouncing around and through our heads each day it’s a wonder we’re not all zombies looking for Brians (what a dyslexic zombie would eat). Wi-Fi seems to be everywhere, and it doesn’t take much effort to find a signal nearby. Check the Wi-Fi icon in your Mac’s Menubar and you’ll see what I mean. Wi-Fi networks are growing faster than discontent with politicians (which might be a saturation thing anyway). Here are four good ways to find Wi-Fi networks on your Mac. The Free, The Good, And How Much? At the top of my list of Wi-Fi tools to find nearby networks is your Mac itself.
Click the Menubar Wi-Fi icon and you’ll be treated to a list of nearby networks, whether they’re locked or not, and a relative indicator of signal strength. Mac users can choose from a number of Wi-Fi scanner tools, some comprehensive, some not so much. Here are a few of my favorites. First up is which gets mostly four and five star reviews on the Mac App Store. It comes with a built-in speed test option (think Ookla SpeedTest.net, but built-in). It can find most nearby Wi-Fi networks; 802.11 a/b/g/n/ and even ac. There’s an option to join an available network with a click.
The built-in IP scanner can find devices connected to your local network. WiFi Scanner has long been a favorite is gets used often on my Mac. I’m glad I bought when it was 99-cents. It’s 10 times that price now. Second on my list is, priced the same as WiFi Scanner and with similar features, though not the built-in speed test or pretty graphics. WiFi Explorer is easier to use, though, and controls can be filtered to display only those networks or devices you want to view. I appreciate the timescale which displays network performance over a period of time, and the option to adjust and edit column of information so you can view only what you want.
Both WiFi Scanner and WiFi Explorer are good choices, and both provide most of the details you’re likely to need when scanning or troubleshooting your network or nearby networks. What if you need more?
Enter the grandaddy of Wi-Fi scanner utilities for the Mac. This competent utility has been around forever and a week, and though it’s not loaded with eye candy charts and graphs, it doubles down on the details. If you’re only interested in the best, most feature-laden Wi-Fi utility that runs only on the latest Mac hardware, and you’re willing to pay the piper, iStumbler is the iCats iMeow. It lists all the nearby networks, comes with a timescale slider, and inspector, and graphics on network type and encryption status. There’s more. Also displays nearby Bluetooth networks with options to setup Bluetooth devices, pair, browse or send files.
It also lists and details Bonjour network devices (like Printers, other devices connected to a specific network). Where are those local networks? IStumbler’s Location mode displays location coordinates. Even better, all those captured details are logged. If there’s a Wi-Fi utility for the Mac that does more, I haven’t used it yet. It does more so it costs more. What about #4 on the list?
All Macs come with Wi-Fi built-in, and that means the Wi-Fi connection icon in the Menubar can display nearby Wi-Fi network information, too. No, it is not as comprehensive as the commercial apps, but it’s priced right. Sometimes you get what you pay for.