

With just a tap on your wrist, you can control the computers in your home. Use the app to schedule their computer to automatically turn off when it's time for bed.

If you've got kids, you can use Off to limit how long they're spending on their computers. For example, you could create a 'Finished Work' routine that turns off your office lights and shuts down your computer at the same time. With this, you can design your own automation routines that combine Off's ability to control your computers with any other action available through Shortcuts. Off is fully compatible with Apple's Shortcuts app. You can create voice commands like "Hey Siri, switch off my computer" or "Hey Siri, wake up my Mac". It doesn’t require any complex setup or configuration anyone can use it. Off has several commands it can trigger on your computers, including: The game has a handful of modes, from easy to original, which replicates the arcade classic down to the pixel.With Off, you can control your computers remotely, from anywhere in the world. On the iPod, you can listen to your own music while crashing about the mazes or enjoy the original sounds. Pac-Man also offers challenges with tougher ghosts and fruit bonuses that move around the maze. The maze designs are still wicked and the cross-screen tunnels are a huge improvement over the original game. Pac-Man is a better game than the original Pac-Man. Helping matters, though, is the simple fact that Ms. Namco offers a tutorial and an easy mode for learning the nuances of the controls, but the game still feels way too touchy to be even remotely as enjoyable as it is with a real joystick or a reasonable gaming pad. Pac-Man employs the same controls, and so many of the same problems have return with them.

Hard clicks will get you nowhere but the belly of Inky and Pinky. The control scheme required you to flutter your finger around the click-wheel to manipulate the virtual joystick. I wasn't an enormous fan of Pac-Man on the iPod.
