

The first public beta is over 5GB in size, and installing it takes a while, too. This process will take around an hour in total, depending upon the speed of your internet connection. Tap Install to install the iOS 16 beta update. Once downloaded, you’ll see a pop-up appear asking to install the update.You should see the iOS 16 beta appear – tap Download and Install, and wait for your iPhone to download the update.Once restarted, go back to the Settings app and head to General > Software Update.Restart your iPhone to finish installing the beta profile.Tap Install in the top-right corner to install the iOS 16 beta profile.Head to the Settings app and tap Profile Downloaded just below your Apple ID.You’ll see a pop-up appear asking whether you want to download the profile to your iPhone.Scroll down and tap the ‘Download profile’ button.Scroll down the page and in the Get Started section, tap the ‘enrol your iOS device’ link (shown above).Enter your Apple ID – this may be as simple as using Face ID if you have a newer iPhone.(Only tap Sign In if you have previously registered to get beta versions of iOS.) On your iPhone, in the Safari web browser, head to.And I didn't even get to read Groff or Counterman yet. I will have much more to say about this case. Her entire dissent may be suited for a seminar on race in the law, but only a short excerpt would be needed for a 1L class.

I know that Justice Jackson's dissent will win plaudits from progressives, but there is very little actual law in it. Justice Thomas's concurrence–especially the originalist defense of the color-blind Constitution–would make more sense in the chapter on the Reconstruction Amendments, after Plessy. And Justice Kavanaugh's concurrence repeats the 25-year theme over and over and over and over again. Justice Gorsuch focuses at some length on the statutory issue, which is not really germane to a ConLaw class, so I would probably skip it. In one class, I could reasonably cover the Chief Justice's majority opinion and Justice Sotomayor's dissent. Fisher I and II probably fall out as well. For starters, I think I would reduce the coverage of Grutter and Gratz. I need to give some serious thought to how to cover affirmative action. I realize this cut is probably far too long for a single-class session. (I would have finished sooner, but I was stuck in United Airlines purgatory for much of the day.) The edited version is 57 pages. It took me about ten hours to edit the entire 237-page decision. I finished editing the entirety of Students for Fair Admissions v.
