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A few years ago, I chronicled the journey I went on to manually merge two Apple ID accounts into one. I was attempting to rectify a problem that I and many other long-time Apple users had been stuck with: Our dataemails, contacts, movie and app purchases, photos, logins, and morewas spread across two different Apple accounts. This segregation made accessing this data on our various devices a chore. Imagine opening your closet to look for a specific shirt, only to realize its hanging instead in the closet at your old house across town. The process took me days. At the time, Apple provided no automated way for users to merge two Apple IDs. Yet, this week that finally changedwell, kinda. Apple has now developed an official way for users to automatically migrate some Apple account data from one account to another. Heres what you need to know about the new process. The two Apple ID problem If youve only ever had one Apple ID, the login you use for all your Apple servicesiCloud, App Store purchases, music streaming, Apple Pay, Apple Card, or anything else that falls under Apples ecosystemyoure probably a bit confused as to why someone would have this data spread across two different accounts. The explanation, in my case, goes back 20 or so years. Before iCloud was introduced, in 2011, Apple offered various other email accounts, including dotMac and MobileMe, the former of which had served as my Apple IDthe login associated with my iTunes music store account, where I bought songs and digital movies. But then, in 2011, like many others, I signed up for a new iCloud account, mainly so I could get a different email address (one I liked better). However, this now left me with two Apple IDs: one for my media purchases and the other for my email and other online Apple services. At first, this wasn’t a problem, but over time as Apples services offering grew both more robust and more integrated, having data segregated across two Apple IDs led to an increasingly poor user experience. For example, if you wanted to access your documents in iCloud on your Mac, you would need to sign into one Apple ID, but then if you wanted to access your movie purchases as well, youd need to sign into another. Soon, it wasn’t uncommon to forget which Apple ID held which data. To say that these challenges annoyed longtime Apple users like me is an understatement. The two Apple ID problem was a rare flaw in Apples tightly-knit it just works ecosystem. But now, it’s a flaw that Apple has finally taken a step to fix. How to migrate digital purchases from two Apple accounts into one This week, Apple surprised everyone by posting a support document revealing that it now provided a (pretty) straightforward way to merge two Apple accountsto a degree. (Note: As of iOS 18, Apple has renamed the Apple ID to Apple Account, but the terms remain relatively interchangeable.) However, Apples solution is not perfect. It only lets a user migrate their digital purchasesincluding apps, music, movies, TV shows, and booksfrom one Apple Account to another. You still cannot migrate other associated Apple Account data such as iCloud emails, contacts, passes, and Apple Pay cards using the tool. Yet, by allowing the migration of digital purchases, Apple has negated one of the biggest pain points of manually merging two Apple IDs into one. Previously there was no way to move digital purchases from one Apple ID to another. That meant if you wanted to ditch one Apple Account for good, you’d also need to ditch the software and media you purchased with that account. But no more. Apple’s new tool means you no longer have to accept this loss of your digital assets. Its method of migrating digital purchases from one Apple Account to another is also pretty easyonce you have the initial prep out of the way, such as making sure your software is up to date, you know your passwords for both accounts, and you have your payment details for both accounts. If you want to go through the merger process, you can find Apples full instructions and requirements here. Its also a good idea to read this additional support document that dives deeper into the migration process. Apples new account migration tool is promisingbut it needs to go further People with hundreds or thousands of dollars invested in movies, books, apps, and other digital content they purchased from Apple across two different Apple IDs are sure to love the companys new migration offering. No doubt about itits a great first step. However, it still doesnt address all the other problems that arise for those who are still stuck with two Apple IDs. Not only can you still not automatically merge iCloud data (your emails, documents, bookmarks, and more) between two different Apple Accounts, but you also still cannot automatically migrate other critical data, such as your Apple Pay cards, Wallet passes, Sign in with Apple logins, Hide My Email addresses, or passwords. Hopefully, Apple will address these limitations with a future update to its new tool. Until it does, those who want to merge every aspect of two Apple IDs into one are still on their own.
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Compassion comes easily to me. As the granddaughter of immigrants from Lithuania and Poland who spoke little English, I understand what its like to be treated as a stranger in America. As a journalist, I covered stories of war and trauma in the 1990s, including the crushing of Chinese protests in Tiananmen Square and the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, followed by the Soviet Unions collapse two years later. I covered the war between Iraq and Iran. I witnessed ethnic strife in South Africa and the toll poverty takes in Mexico. As a professor of cultural engagement and public diplomacy, I have watched and studied how compassion can help build and strengthen civil society. And having worked in senior levels of the U.S. government for Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama on international conflict resolution, I have learned that compassion is a key ingredient of peacemaking. Especially now, as President Donald Trump seeks to deport millions of immigrants living in the U.S. without authorization and to stop funding the U.S. Agency for International Development, which has long spent billions of dollars a year helping the worlds poorest people, compassion seems lacking among U.S. leaders. Perhaps that all explains my curiosity about a new study on the state of compassion in Americapart of the glue that holds communities together. Defining compassion Sociologists define compassion as the human regard for the suffering of others, and the notion of using action to alleviate this pain. The report that caught my eye was issued in January 2025 by the Muhammad Ali Center, which the late boxer cofounded 20 years ago in Louisville, Kentucky, to advance social justice. As the Ali Center explains, compassion starts with the individualself-care and personal wellness. It then radiates out to the wider community in the form of action and engagement. You can see compassion at work in the actions of a Pasadena, California, girl, who started a donation hub for teens affected by fires that ripped through the Los Angeles region in early 2025. She began collecting sports bras, hair ties, and fashionable sweaters, helping hundreds of her peers begin to recover from their losses in material and emotional ways. Its also visible in the estimated 6.8 million people in the U.S. who donate blood each year, according to the American Red Cross. Were grateful to blood donors across the country who generously give to help patients in need.Severe winter weather and wildfires have impacted our blood supply since the new year, and we appreciate everyone who has made, kept and rescheduled their blood donation appointments pic.twitter.com/TperMufpjq— American Red Cross (@RedCross) January 24, 2025 Resilience in America While Ali is best known for his battles in the ring and his outspoken political views, he also helped those in need in the U.S. and other countries through large charitable donations and his participation in United Nations missions to countries like Afghanistan, where he helped deliver millions of meals to hungry people. The researchers who worked on the Ali Center report interviewed more than 5,000 U.S. adults living in 12 cities in 2024 in order to learn more about the prevalence of compassionate behaviors such as charitable giving, volunteering and assisting others in their recovery from disasters. They found that the desire to help others still animates many Americans despite the nations current polarization and divisive politics. The center has created an index it calls the net compassion score. It approximates the degree to which Americans give their time and money to programs and activities that nurture and strengthen their communities. Cities with high compassion scores have more community engagement and civic participation than those with low scores. A higher-scoring community performs better when it comes to things like public housing and mental health resources, for example. Its residents report more career opportunities, better communications between local government and citizens, more community programs, and more optimism around economic development where they live. The report provides some clues as to what drives compassionate behavior in a city: a sense of spirituality, good education, decent healthcare, resources for activities like sports, and opportunities to engage in local politics. All told, Americans rate their country as a 9 on a scale that runs from minus 100 to 100. The report also identified some troubling obstacles that stand in the way of what it calls self-compassionmeaning how volunteers and donors treat their own mental and physical health. Frequent struggles with self-care can lead to rising levels of isolation and loneliness. From left: Jeni Stepanek, chair of the Muhammad Ali Index; Lonnie Ali, cofounder and vice chair of the Muhammad Ali Center; and DeVone Holt, the centers president and CEO, at the launch of the Muhammad Ali Index on January 16, 2025 [Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Muhammad Ali Center] Doubting their own capacity The 2025 Compassion Reports findings show that many Americans still want to live in a compassionate country but also that Americans view the country as less compassionate today than four years ago. The report delves into gaps in compassion. About one-third of those interviewed acknowledged that there are groups toward whom they feel less compassionate toward, such as people who have been convicted of crimes, immigrants living in the U.S. without authorization, and the rich. Only 29% said they feel compassion toward everyone. The report also identifies gender gaps. Despite expressing greater awareness of systemic challenges, the women surveyed reported less self-compassion than men. Its not the first compassion study ever done. But I believe that this one is unique due to its focus on specific cities, and how it assessed limits on the compassion some people feel toward certain groups. Helping health and humanity The Compassion Institute, another nonprofit, seeks to weave compassion training into healthcare education to create a more caring and humanitarian world. It cites the benefits of compassion for human beings, with everything from reducing stress to alleviating the effects of disease on the mind and body. Academic institutions, including Stanford University, have conducted many studies on how teaching compassion can guide healthcare professionals to both treat patients better and achieve better outcomes. A team of Emory University researchers examined how training people to express more compassion can reduce stress hormones levels, triggering positive brain responses that improve immune responses. Offering an advantage Although there are plenty of adorable videos of dogs and cats behaving kindly with each other or their human companions, historically compassion has differentiated humans from animals. Human beings possess powers of emotional reasoning that give us an edge. Scholars are still working to discover how much of human compassion is rooted in emotional reasoning. Another factor theyve identified is the aftermath of trauma. Studies have found evidence that it can increase empathy later on. You might imagine that in a world of hurt, theres a deficit of compassion for others. But the Ali Centers report keeps alive the notion that Americans remain compassionate people who want to help others. My experiences around the world and within the U.S. have taught me that human beings both have the power to be violent and destructive. But despite it all, there is, within all of us, the innate ability and desire to be compassionate. That is a net positive for our country. Tara Sonenshine is an Edward R. Murrow professor of practice in public diplomacy at Tufts University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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James Chappel is an associate professor of history at Duke University and a senior fellow at the Duke Aging Center. He is the author of Catholic Modern, and his writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Nation, and The New Republic. Whats the big idea? Aging in America is becoming one of our countrys most important policy arenas. With more old citizens than young ones, the relevance of elder members in society has never been greater. Despite great progress in the quality of old age over the past century, there is much need for growth in terms of practical policy and cultural perceptions. Below, Chappel shares five key insights from his new book, Golden Years: How Americans Invented and Reinvented Old Age. Listen to the audio versionread by Chappel himselfin the Next Big Idea App. 1. Population aging is one of the biggest historical transformations of our time. We think about population aging as an issue for medicine and finance, but we dont usually think about it historically. From the broadest perspective, population aging is one of the biggest changes that has happened to American society in the past century. Many people think of politics, iPhones, or AI when considering dramatic societal change, but those things matter less than major demographic changes. Human life is not what it was a century agoits twice as long!and that deserves much more attention. 2. Weve only been seriously contemplating population aging for a century. Most of the major things we deal with as a society (education, politics, health, war, gender) are topics we have publicly debated for centuries. We have reflected long and hard on many subjects, but no one really paid attention to population aging until about the 1930s. Even people thinking very hard about social reform and progress, like Karl Marx, werent thinking about aging at all. So, aging is an issue that has a pretty short history. What to do with old age and how to pay for old age are areas of reflection with a lot of space open for creativity. Its an exciting, vibrant, fresh avenue for collective contemplation. 3. There have been many different approaches to aging. We often think of aging as something nonideological. Education is ideological, and the military is ideological, so we have robust public debate about the meaning of these things. But old age is kind of like, well, you get Social Security and Medicare, and we dont want to think about it too much beyond that. Old age is in a moment of ideological stasis. But for most of the past century, theres been much debate about what it means to age well: socially, politically, and justly. There has been socialist aging, conservative aging, green or eco-conscious aging, etc. One tradition I look at is critical race theory. From that perspective, the history of aging looks quite different. There actually was a robust tradition of Black thought about aging. A lot of inspiring Black leaders said, essentially, that racism and prejudice follow Americans through the whole course of life. Older Black Americans have all kinds of negative outcomes, and Black activists suggested specific reforms to bring the insights of the Civil Rights Movement into old age politics and policy. We need to reinvigorate and repoliticize old age. We should remember how political and divisive it was (and therefore, how exciting it was) to debate old age just a few decades ago. 4. 20th-century solutions to old age are very good. Historians are often quite down on American history. They tend to focus on the persistence of inequality, violence, or disenfranchisement. But when it comes to old age, the situation is much better than it was a century ago. A century ago, older people often lived in squalor, in one-room shacks with dirt floors. There were only a few elders because public health was so bad. Now, older people are quite economically privileged, and they have access to the best poverty reduction program in the country, which is social security. Theyre the only age bracket with something like socialized medicine through Medicare. Theres a lot to be grateful for as aging Americans, but theres also a lot left to be done. There are failures in old-age policy, especially for people over 80, the old old. Issues of frailty, nursing home care, and things like that. Many American middle-aged couples, especially women, are financially or emotionally devastated by caring for older relatives. This is a result of a policy decision that could have been approached differently. There were approaches on the table that would have lessened the burden on unpaid caretakers, and it is not too late. When we think historically about old age, its important that we tell an optimistic story. Im excited to get old. There will be way more social programs for me when Im 65 than I have available to me now. But theres also room for growth, especially in dealing with policy for the old old. Nursing homes and extended care will be the most important policy arenas in the near future. 5. Getting old is an adventure. Old age in America can be very good. It can be very fun. You have access to so much when it comes to opportunities for leisure and health. But what I mean by the adventure of old age is a bit different. As Americans, we tend to believe that we make our biggest contributions as citizens when were young, that politics is a young persons game: green energy, Black Lives Matter, and other movements are for younger people, and old people can step back. I think that is absolutely not true. That is a completely outdated way to think about American politics. I think the age of youth has eclipsed. There are more older people in America than younger ones. The decisions we make about how to age and think about old age policy will matter now more than ever. Being provocative, I might even say that decisions about aging are going to matter more than decisions about youth because I think the age of the youth is over. Theres been a major demographic transition in this country and many others. As we age, we should not think of ourselves as becoming less relevant. We should think of ourselves as becoming more relevant. This article originally appeared in Next Big Idea Club magazine and is reprinted with permission.
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