Apple smart glasses: Everything you need to know Macworld
According to reports, Apple is going to expand its presence in the wearable market with a new product: smart glasses.
The Apple smart glasses that have been reported are a departure from the spatial computing platform of the Apple Vision Pro. They won’t be a headset and they won’t offer AR or spatial computing. They aren’t going to be a computing device in any way.
Instead, they will be glasses like those from Meta AI and other companies. They will be designed like typical eyeglasses, not a headset or goggles. They will have built-in cameras, speakers, and microphones for taking pictures and video, and to interact with the iPhone. These glasses are expected to function as an AI-powered wearable, potentially launching in 2027.
This article will track the latest reports on the Apple smart glasses. Check this space often for the latest news before they are released.
Apple smart glasses design: What will Apple smart glasses look like?
Unlike the bulky Vision Pro, Apple’s smart glasses are expected to resemble a normal pair of eyewear.
Apple is said to be prioritizing a lightweight, accessory-like design rather than the heavy, immersive approach of the Vision Pro. To appeal to a mainstream audience, the glasses are rumored to be significantly lighter and more affordable, positioned primarily as an iPhone companion.
According to various reports, the glasses will look like traditional frames and will not adopt a headset-style design.
To accommodate the necessary hardware, the frames may be slightly bulkier than standard glasses and will likely use plastic or similar lightweight materials.
One potential frame style could be inspired by the glasses worn by Apple CEO Tim Cook.
One of the frame style coule be modeled after a pair of Tim Cook’s glasses.Apple
Frame styles in development
In April 2026, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported that Apple has four frame styles in testing:
A large rectangular frame, reminiscent of Ray-Ban Wayfarers
Larger oval or circular frames
A slimmer rectangular design, similar to the glasses worn by Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook
A smaller, more refined oval or circular option
Apple is also experimenting with finishes such as black, light brown, and ocean blue. The frames are reportedly made from acetate, which Gurman describes as “more durable and luxurious than standard plastic.”
Apple’s design approach
Apple is developing the frames in-house rather than partnering with third-party brands, unlike Meta (Ray-Ban, Oakley) or Google (Warby Parker). The goal is to create a product that is instantly recognizable as an Apple device.
Earlier reports suggest Apple is aiming for a higher level of build quality compared to competing smart glasses from Meta and Google.
Judge says White House can’t ‘strong-arm’ Apple into blocking ICE trackers A judge has ruled that the Trump administration should not have coerced Apple and Google into taking down apps which track the activity of ICE (US Immigration and Customs Enforcement).
A preliminary injunction has been awarded, with the creators of ICE Sightings and Eyes Up told that they are likely to succeed in their argument that the government suppressed protected speech under the First Amendment …
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Apple Set to Add Car Key Support for India's Tata Vehicles Apple is preparing to bring support for its digital car key feature to Tata EV vehicles, based on evidence uncovered by MacRumors on Apple's backend.
Tata is an Indian multinational commercial vehicle manufacturer, headquartered in Mumbai. The company produces trucks, vans, and buses, and is now on an internal Apple list of vehicles that offer car key integration, but it is not known which EV models the support pertains to.
Introduced in 2022, Car Keys allows an iPhone or Apple Watch to unlock a vehicle through the Wallet app. A digital version of a car key is stored in Wallet, and unlocking can be done by holding an Apple Watch or iPhone near a compatible vehicle's NFC reader.
A tap on the door handle is enough to initiate an unlock, and while Face ID authentication is a security option, Apple offers an Express Mode that eliminates the need to authenticate for a faster unlocking process.
At WWDC 2025, Apple confirmed that 13 vehicle brands would "soon" add support for digital car keys, and Tata was on the list. Vehicles from BMW, Genesis, Kia, Hyundai, Lotus, Mercedes, Volvo, and more offer car keys support, with a list available on MacRumors.com.Tags: iPhone Car Keys, IndiaThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
These are rumored to be the four iPhone 18 Pro colors The rumor mill is still churning on the iPhone 18 Pro colors, with a new leak showing what the colors may be.Four possible colors of iPhone 18 ProThe iPhone rumor mill has been on a bit of a color kick lately, with multiple rumors claiming to know which Apple will use in 2028. For the iPhone 18 Pro, it seems that there could be four colors on the way.The image shared by Weibo leaker Ice Universe shows what appear to be rear camera plateaus for the iPhone 18 Pro. It is unclear where they were sourced from, but they may be shots gathered from an accessory maker, rather than the actual Apple supply chain. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Why Nvidia Might Acquire a PC Giant Rumors that Nvidia could acquire a major PC maker signal more than a bold expansion — they point to a potential shift toward fully integrated AI systems that challenge the long-standing WinTel model. The post appeared first on TechNewsWorld.
India says Apple can't delay investigation of a potential $38 billion fine Regulators in India have set a final hearing date over the country's potential $38 billion antitrust fine against Apple and the App Store. Apple is apparently not cooperating.Tim Cook in a previous visit to India — image credit: AppleThe Competition Commission of India (CCI) determined in July 2024 that Apple has "significant influence" over digital products and services, and that it has abused its market dominance. Consequently, the CCI imposed a fine, but in March of the same year, revised laws came into effect which meant that this fine could be much greater.Apple is challenging the law which lets India set fines based on global turnover instead of local. According to Reuters, has so far not submitted financial details that the CCI says it needs to calculate the fine. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Apple Withholds Data as India Antitrust Case Advances to Final Hearing Apple is facing a fast-track decision on regulatory penalties in India because it has not submitted data sought by the country's antitrust body as part of an investigation into its market practices.
The Competition Commission of India (CCI) published a report in 2024 that Apple exploited its dominant position in the apps market by forcing developers to use its proprietary in-app purchase system. The report was the result of a case that began in 2021 after a non-profit group opposed Apple's practices.
Apple in 2024 denied any wrongdoing by arguing that it is a minor presence in India. However, nowadays iPhones have an 9% market share in the country compared to just 4% two years ago, according to data from Counterpoint Research, potentially weakening its case.
According to Reuters, the CCI this month said that Apple has not submitted details of its financials and its views on the investigation since October 2024. Instead, Apple has cited a separate case pending in the Delhi High Court where the company has challenged India's entire antitrust penalty law.
The CCI typically requires financial information from companies to calculate penalties when they are found to have contravened the law, but Apple has said it fears it could be fined up to $38 billion. Apple last year said that using global turnover would result in a fine that's "manifestly arbitrary, unconstitutional, grossly disproportionate, and unjust."
Apple in March requested that the CCI put its proceedings "in abeyance" while the High Court case plays out, but the CCI has rejected that demand and suggested Apple is trying to stall the antitrust case, which is just one of many that the company is facing around the globe.
The CCI has given Apple two more weeks to file its responses and has for the first time fixed a final hearing date of May 21.Tags: Apple Antitrust, IndiaThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
App Store ratings ‘broken’ as your 4-star review could hurt a developer Developers are arguing that Apple’s App Store ratings are fundamentally broken in at least a couple of different ways – including the fact that your 4-star rating could do more harm than good.
They also highlight the conflict between users not wanting their app experience to be interrupted, while Apple effectively forces developers to nag you for a rating and review …
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What One Week with GitHub Copilot Taught Me This week I finally went all in on agentic coding using GitHub Copilot at work. Here are my honest first impressions after one full week of experimenting with AI. https://www.ioscoffeebreak.com/issue/issue71 submitted by /u/Upbeat_Policy_2641 [link] [comments]
10 iPad milestones that changed the tablet computer forever Macworld
On January 27, 2010, Steve Jobs unveiled the very first iPad, boasting a 9.7-inch multitouch display. While it largely functioned like an oversized iPhone, the tablet filled a clear gap for users who wanted to read, browse the web, or play mobile games on a bigger screen. At the time, the iPhone 3GS featured a 3.5-inch display, making it impractical for many of those tasks.
Over the past 16 years, Apple has steadily transformed the iPad into a far more capable device, equipping it with hardware and software features unavailable on both the iPhone and the Mac. This evolution unfolded through a series of key milestones that gradually reshaped what the iPad is, and what it can do.
Cameras
Perhaps the first notable milestone came in 2011, when the iPad 2 launched with very basic front and rear cameras. This change unlocked a couple of handy features, such as support for FaceTime video calls and casual photography. More importantly, it set the stage for future camera technology that would launch in subsequent iPad models.
Today’s iPad Pro is equipped with a LiDAR scanner, support for 4K ProRes video recording, an adaptive flash, Center Stage for automatic subject tracking in video calls, portraits, and much more. Together, these tools allow iPad users to attend online meetings, 3D-map physical spaces, produce social media content, and complete professional tasks with greater reliability. And it all started here.
1st-gen iPad mini
The iPad mini (2012) marked Apple’s first expansion of its tablet lineup. With this launch, the company acknowledged demand for a compact model that fit between the iPhone and the standard iPad.
Following its success, Apple continued to develop the iPad mini, with the next generation widely expected to feature an IP rating for water and dust resistance for the first time, plus an OLED display.
The 2024 iPad mini is a far cry from the 2012 original, but the priority remains portability.Dominik Tomaszewski / Foundry
1st-gen iPad Air
Just a year after the iPad mini’s debut, Apple unveiled another variant. The iPad Air (2013) brought 64-bit computing to the lineup with the A7 chip—extending the architecture first seen in the iPhone 5s. Despite its performance gains, it was thinner and lighter than the regular iPad, making it more portable and aesthetically pleasing.
Today’s iPad Air continues this trajectory, pairing desktop-class Apple silicon with a slim form factor that can power advanced workflows.
1st-gen iPad Pro
In 2015, Apple introduced the first iPad Pro, a new high-end addition to the lineup aimed at professionals and creatives who required more power and screen real estate. The 12.9-inch iPad Pro was also the first model to support the Apple Pencil, enabling precise illustration and input.
These Pro exclusives eventually expanded to other models, with the iPad Air now offering a 13-inch size and all iPads supporting one of the several Apple Pencil variants.
3rd-gen iPad Pro
The iPad Pro quickly became Apple’s go-to platform for launching new technologies, with Pro exclusives often taking years to reach the more affordable end of the range. One example was the launch of the 2018 iPad Pro, when Apple retired the physical Home button in favor of an edge-to-edge design, replaced Touch ID with Face ID, and abandoned the Lightning port for USB-C.
Today, all iPads share this futuristic design language and port selection, although facial recognition remains exclusive to the Pro edition.
Sidecar helps the iPad and MacBook to work together seamlessly.Mahmoud Itani / Foundry
Sidecar
The iPad’s milestones haven’t been limited to hardware upgrades. In 2019, Apple introduced Sidecar alongside iPadOS 13 and macOS 10.15, allowing Mac owners to use a nearby iPad as a wireless, touch-enabled secondary display. The feature requires minimal setup and integrates seamlessly into Apple’s ecosystem.
That integration deepened further when Universal Control launched in 2022 as part of iPadOS 15.4 and macOS 12.3. This feature enables users to control their iPads using a Mac’s keyboard and mouse, while also supporting drag-and-drop file transfers between devices. It doesn’t replace Sidecar, which remains available; the two Continuity features serve distinct purposes.
5th-gen iPad Pro
In 2021, Apple released an iPad Pro equipped with the Mac’s M1 chip, thereby obliterating its rivals in performance and efficiency tests. While iPadOS at the time did not fully capitalize on the chipset’s capabilities, the hardware upgrade prepared the tablet for more advanced features introduced in later software updates.
This was also the first iPad to support 5G connectivity, making it an appealing work machine for digital nomads. Today, the iPad Air has similarly transitioned to the M-series chips, and every iPad model offers a 5G purchase option.
Desktop-class apps
Apple’s transition to M-series processors enabled the iPad to handle demanding tasks that were previously reserved for the Mac. Then in 2023, the company brought Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro to iPadOS, offering video editors and music producers a viable alternative to their MacBooks for certain workflows. Third-party developers, such as Adobe and Affinity, have similarly taken advantage of the increased performance, delivering desktop-class creative tools on the tablet.
Apple’s release of Pixelmator Pro on the iPad as part of its Creator Studio bundle signals a broader commitment to professional apps on the platform. Future updates could plausibly introduce deeper functionality or other Pro apps currently exclusive to macOS.
Viewed side on, the M4 iPad Pro is breathtakingly slender.Mahmoud Itani / Foundry
7th-gen iPad Pro
Arguably, the iPad’s most recent hardware milestone arrived in 2024 with the launch of the M4 iPad Pro. Beyond the performance boost, this model adopted a tandem OLED display, delivering improved color accuracy and true black levels. It’s also Apple’s thinnest device to date… other than the famous Polishing Cloth.
Like previous design overhauls and new features, these changes could eventually trickle down to other iPad models.
Windowed apps
Lastly, Apple significantly transformed the iPad computing experience with iPadOS 26. Released in late 2025, the software update introduced advanced app windowing similar to macOS, along with a menu bar and a redesigned cursor for keyboard-and-mouse use. These changes position the iPad as a more practical laptop alternative for a wider range of workflows.
Multitasking is a breeze on this iPad Pro M4, thanks to the windowing features in iPadOS 26.Mahmoud Itani / Foundry
Learning to make my first AR iOS app: sanity check about simulating the sun’s intensity Hello: I am an experienced web developer who has decided to learn IOS programming with the help of Claude Code. I've started with a simple AR app that uses ARKit and RealityKit to add an object to a flat surface the user picks in the camera. A very simple demo, just to learn how it […]
Apple says it faces world’s largest antitrust fine as India’s regulator hardens stance Apple has said that it could potentially be fined a massive $38 billion in an antitrust battle taking place in India after it refused to cooperate with the regulator. Yep, that’s billion with a B.
The iPhone maker has persistently refused to submit financial data required by the Competition Commission of India (CCI) after being found guilty of abusing its dominant position in the smartphone market …
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RIP Cosmic Orange. You were too fun for this world Macworld
Well, that was fun while it lasted.
For years, Apple stuck inexplicably to the idea that rich people don’t like bright colors. Any iPhone casing that looked funky and vibrant, you could bet your bottom dollar it would be used on a cheaper and more feature-limited model, while drab and serious colors were reserved for the higher-end Pro models. It was as if Apple heard the phrase “cheap and cheerful” and decided to invent the corollary concept “expensive and miserable.”
It’s a similar price-and-vibrancy story with Apple’s other products. The standard iPad models come in pink and yellow, Airs in more muted purple and blue, and the top-end Pros in black and silver only. The MacBook Neo comes in citrus and blush, while the MacBook Pro is stuck in tedious monochrome. Even the HomePod is restricted to black and white, whereas its cheaper mini cousin gets access to glorious orange and yellow.
And as for the iPhone range, that particular pattern was set with the launch of the iPhone 5c back in 2013. It was cheap, it was low-specced… and it got access to four bright finishes that simply weren’t available to buyers of the more expensive iPhone 5s. When the first iPhone Pro came out in 2019, it was limited to black, near-black, and a couple of metallics, while the contemporaneous iPhone 11 came in red, yellow, and vivid candy green. It just seemed unfair. At least give pro buyers the option of a fun color, certain pundits implored.
Apple, somewhat uncharacteristically, heard us loud and clear and took this feedback on board. When the iPhone 17 Pro came out late last year, we were astounded to see bright orange on the menu, and customers went for this color in droves. It’s widely believed, in fact, that the orange finish was the single biggest factor behind the iPhone 17 Pro’s success in China. I guess rich people like bright colors after all, huh.
But what’s this? Goodness me, it’s an exclusive leak of the colors on the next generation of pro iPhones. Macworld’s source tells us that four finishes are in development for the iPhone 18 Pro: silver, dark gray, a relatively muted light blue, and a rich wine color dubbed Dark Cherry as the product’s signature color. Cosmic Orange, it appears, will be retired after a single year in the limelight.
Foundry
Five months or so remain before launch, and one or more of these colors could yet be dropped or even replaced; but it now looks extremely likely that the age of Cosmic Orange is drawing to a close, and that of Dark Cherry is imminent. And while our mockups of the latter, based on the Pantone numbers provided by our source, look absolutely stunning, I can’t help but wonder if this is the right decision. It just seems like a shame, after so much progress was made in 2025.
I appreciate, of course, that Apple can only manufacture its phones in a limited number of finishes before things become cost-inefficient, and that it must prioritise the colors which sell over those which are championed by a few blowhards with weekly columns on beloved technology websites. But let’s be clear: Cosmic Orange was a successful experiment. There were voices raised in dissent, claiming it was garish, and of course, there were some technical issues with handsets degrading from orange to a sort of semi-pink. But it sold well, made a cultural impact, and was overall a fun, interesting, and popular choice.
As regards the future, it strikes me that if you’re going to have, say, four colors per phone (that’s roughly the average for the current generation: three for the 17e and Pros, four for the Air, and five for the baseline 17), then you can afford for at least one of them to be fun. You could go for two standard colors that are guaranteed to sell well: black and either silver or white, most likely. Then you could have something that’s classy and elegant: a navy blue, a deep sage, even Dark Cherry. But that still leaves a slot for a hot pink, or a bright sunny yellow, or an eye-catching scarlet.
That’s my view of it, anyway. And it seems to be a view that’s shared by more than a few actual iPhone customers, particularly in the all-important Chinese market. The people have spoken, Apple. They want fun. And they’re prepared to pay highly for the privilege.
Foundry
Welcome to our weekly Apple Breakfast column, which includes all the Apple news you missed last week in a handy bite-sized roundup. We call it Apple Breakfast because we think it goes great with a Monday morning cup of coffee or tea, but it’s cool if you want to give it a read during lunch or dinner hours too.
Trending: Top stories
What’s the point of the App Store, if it can’t even protect users?
The MacBook Neo is turning the PC world on its head, notes the Macalope. And everyone is doomed except Apple.
Final Cut Pro and Pixelmator reveal the truth: Apple still doesn’t get iPad pros.
Apple’s Mac lineup is nearly perfect. It’s just missing some Magic.
Jason Snell reminisces about the iPhone 4 and the scandals that rocked Apple.
CarPlay ruined every other vehicle for me, says Mahmoud Itani.
Podcast of the week
The iPhone 17e is now available. Is it a compelling affordable iPhone? We review Apple’s new iPhone on the latest episode of the Macworld Podcast.
You can catch every episode of the Macworld Podcast on YouTube, Spotify, Soundcloud, the Podcasts app, or our own site.
Reviews corner
Sonos Play: Big, bold sound in a portable speaker at a premium price.
Klarity Disk: Affordable Mac disk analyzer held back by permissions bug.
Satechi 3-in-1: Foldable wireless charging stand.
Audio Pro Drumfire D-2 W: Powerful AirPlay speaker with impressive sound.
The rumor mill
iPhone 18 Pro colors revealed! We’ve got an exclusive look at Apple’s 2026 models.
New Apple Intelligence features for iOS 27 found in hidden code.
New report explains how Apple will solve the iPhone Fold’s crease problem.
Report: Apple’s upcoming smartglasses to come in up to four different frame styles.
Video of the week
@macworld.com iPhone Ultra rumors update #apple #iphone ♬ original sound – Macworld – Macworld
Our latest short reveals everything we know about Apple’s first folding phone. Enjoy more Macworld videos on TikTok or Instagram.
Software updates, bugs, and problems
Apple Watch hit by major bugs after watchOS 8.8.2 update.
Apple App Store hosts AI nudify apps despite ban, report finds.
And with that, we’re done for this week’s Apple Breakfast. If you’d like to get regular roundups, sign up for our newsletters, including our new email from The Macalope–an irreverent, humorous take on the latest news and rumors from a half-man, half-mythical Mac beast. You can also follow us on Facebook, Threads, Bluesky, or X for discussion of breaking Apple news stories. See you next Monday, and stay Appley.
Rulesets Rate Limiting accuracy Apr 20, 10:13 UTCIdentified - Cloudflare is aware of, and investigating an issue where some requests processed by workers may not be correctly enforcing rulesets rate limiting counts.
Missing metadata in subscriptions cant submit for review and test subscriptions in test flight https://preview.redd.it/h5nv2q4pkbwg1.png?width=920&format=png&auto=webp&s=45b7cb69b5bfe4383274c056181bf1c818121fd2 Hey everyone I'm trying to submit my first app in the App Store and each time I try to send for a review Apple rejects it because they can't find the subscriptions I filled out everything but still it says missing meta data and I don't know how to continue. Is it the localisation? […]
iPhone 18 Pro May Come in These Four Colors Chinese leaker Ice Universe has shared an image showing four camera plateau protection plates with finishes that appear to match the latest color rumors for Apple's iPhone 18 Pro models.
Last week, a Macworld report claimed Apple is working on four color options for the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max: Light blue, dark cherry, dark gray, and silver.
The four anodized aluminum camera lens protector plates shown here are labeled as black, silver, wine red, and blue. Note that the accessories in the picture are not actual phone bodies but third-party camera covers designed to complement the rumored finishes, and we believe the "black" description refers to dark gray. According to Weibo-based leaker Instant Digital, Apple won't be offering its next-generation premium models in a black color option this year.
All four colors are said to be still in development, and Apple still has time to make changes.
The iPhone 18 Pro models are expected to be unveiled this September alongside Apple's first foldable iPhone, which will have its own set of color finishes that are likely to be more muted, with silver, white, and indigo rumored so far.Related Roundup: iPhone 18 ProTag: Ice UniverseThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Best iPhone 17 cases for iPhone 17, 17 Pro & 17 Pro Max, 17e and Air Macworld
Before you even start the setup on your new iPhone 17—be it an iPhone 17, 17e or Air, 17 Pro or 17 Pro Max— you should consider what type of case you need to protect it in. However good Apple’s new Ceramic Shield 2 shell is, it won’t be up to protecting your phone if dropped or scraped. A case just makes sense—and can look fantastic, too. Some are even ultra glamorous.
Cases come in more shapes and sizes and with more functionality than you’d believe. Hit these links to jump straight to our recommendations, reviews and tests to find the perfect case for your iPhone 17, 17e, 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max and Air. Or read on for more case advice before reaching the product charts. Cases for the most recent iPhone 17e have started to appear (keep reading) and we’ll add more here when they arrive.
Best clear iPhone 17 cases
Best-looking iPhone 17 cases
Best protective cases for iPhone 17
Best leather and leather-alternative iPhone 17 cases
Best iPhone 17 cases with wallet
Best iPhone 17 battery cases
Best iPhone bags
Best iPhone 17 camera grip cases
Do I need an iPhone case for iPhone 17?
You may have heard that Apple’s new-generation Ceramic Shield 2 front cover promises 3x better scratch resistance, and for the Pro and Pro Max models Ceramic Shield also protects the back of iPhone, delivering 4x better resistance to cracks than the back glass on previous models. Does that mean that you no longer need a case? A case will keep your iPhone looking at it’s best, which will be a benefit when and if you come to sell it. Also, note that neither the plain iPhone 17 nor Air feature the same level of back protection.
Do I need an iPhone case for iPhone Air?
The iPhone Air is so thin it seems a shame to bulk it up in a protective case. It’s also tough at resisting bending but it is still just as vulnerable to drops and everyday dings. Most cases reviewed here have a variant for the iPhone Air but there are especially thin cases such as the super-slim Thinborne iPhone 17 Case and Pitaka Ultra-Slim Case, or consider the Nomad Magnetic Leather Back that misses the sides altogether and protects just the back.
Why you need an iPhone case
The primary function of a phone case is to protect your high-cost but fragile device from physical damage—caused by accidental impacts such as shocks from drops and scrapes that can leave your phone with a cracked screen, scratches, dents, a shattered back or internal harm. In fact, research shows that within 10 weeks of purchase, half of all new phone users will drop their handset. D’oh!
Just being pulled from your pocket many times a day causes gradual wear that adds to the unseen damage from UV exposure and other environmental factors. Environmental protection safeguards against water and dust damage that can degrade or destroy your precious phone. Putting your iPhone into a case doesn’t make it indestructible, but it will reduce the risk of everyday or unexpected damage that might otherwise save a costly repair or full replacement.
Which type of iPhone case to choose
As nice as Apple makes its phones look there are only a handful of colors, so a case also offers aesthetic personalization through design (there are thousands to choose from) and customized style. Love the Cosmic Orange iPhone Pro but want to save money with the basic iPhone 17 model? Why not just buy a bold orange case for the 17, such as the Beats iPhone 17 Rugged Case in Sierra Orange?
Choosing the right case material (be that silicone, leather, Graphene or Kevlar) is also key—depending on whether you are after better grip, more robust protection or luxurious leather.
Cases can also add functionality, with handy features such as stands for hands-free viewing or wallet holders for carrying cards and cash. If you ever wirelessly charge your phone, make sure the case is MagSafe compatible—most are these days.
Best clear iPhone cases for iPhone 17, 17e, Air, 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max
If covering up Apple’s iPhone offends your inner Jony Ive, look for a clear, transparent case that keeps the iPhone’s looks as wonderful as they were straight out of the box. Why pick out a Sky Blue iPhone Air or Cosmic Orange iPhone 17 Pro Max, only to cover it up in a black plastic case or something with badly drawn flowers on it? With a Clear case, you get decent protection without ruining the look of the phone—although Apple has rather mucked this up with its own version; see review below.
If you want a plain black case or flowery pattern instead of Apple’s small palette of colors, we have plenty for you to choose from further down this feature.
Apple iPhone 17 Clear Case with MagSafe – Simple but flawed clear iPhone 17 case
Pros
Made by Apple
Shows off iPhone 17’s color
Cons
Basic protection
Ugly on Pro / Pro Max
Open bottom section
Expensive
Price When Reviewed:
$49
Best Prices Today:
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Price
$49
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Price comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwide
Product
Price
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MagSafe compatible: Yes
Weight: 29g
Camera edge: 2mm
Button covers: Plastic
Colors: Clear
Available for: iPhone 17 | iPhone Air | iPhone 17 Pro | iPhone 17 Pro Max
Amazon: All iPhone 17 models
Amazon UK: iPhone 17 | iPhone Air | iPhone 17 Pro | iPhone 17 Pro Max
This simple, rigid iPhone 17 protective case from Apple is thin and light. By design, clear cases shouldn’t disguise the color of your iPhone that you chose when you purchased it. The Apple Clear Case is made from a blend of optically clear polycarbonate and other flexible materials, with a scratch-resistant coating on both the inside and outside. While it’s more protective than silicone cases and features a robust-looking 2mm camera lip, you can find tougher cases, which we have reviewed below.
While the Clear Case for the basic iPhone 17 is as you’d expect, Apple has somewhat ruined the idea of a “clear” case for its Pro and Pro Mac versions of the iPhone 17, which feature a slab of white plastic at the back under the camera area. It’s white whatever color of iPhone 17 Pro or Max that you own.
This is because Apple added its second-generation Ceramic Shield glass as a separate panel on the back of the Pro models—it’s on only the front of all the 17 family. To keep the back design visually balanced, the Apple logo was repositioned slightly lower. The white slab on Apple’s clear case is related to this adjustment and the alignment of the MagSafe magnets. Customers are already complaining that Apple should have created cases with a block in the color of the phone. If your iPhone 17 Pro or Pro Max is orange or deep blue that slab of white is, well I’ll say it, ugly.
The bottom of the Clear Case is nearly fully open, which reduces the level protection.
For the iPhone Air Apple has another not really clear solution: the iPhone Air Bumper. This protects the edges of the phone and matches the Air’s color but leaves the back exposed. With a raised bezel it will also stop the screen touching the surface when laid flat. You can choose the bumper color to match your iPhone Air or select another color if you are feeling adventurous.
Apple also sells the iPhone Air Case with MagSafe in Frost or Shadow, with a 0.9mm back panel that’s reinforced with a polycarbonate frame. The inside is lightly frosted, while the exterior is finished to a high gloss.
At 29g it’s super light, and while the rigid case adds a little bulk, it’s worth a little compromise for that layer of protection. All materials and coatings are optimized to prevent yellowing over time.
There are also cheaper clear cases, which we have also tested for you. But the Apple badge is a sure sign of quality, as you’d expect.
iVanky FusionDock Ultra review: New 26-port Mac docking station has it all Macworld
At a glanceExpert's Rating
Pros
26 top-end ports, including four Thunderbolt 5
Supports four displays without daisy-chaining
10Gb Ethernet
Active cooling
Cons
Premium price
Takes two Mac ports for maximum advantage
Fan may produce noise in exacting studio environments
Our Verdict
If 16 USB ports is a lot more than you think you need, the Ultra may be overkill, and at that premium price it will certainly make you double-count how many ports and high-resolution displays you really need. For Mac pros working at the highest level, the iVanky FusionDock is going to be the go-to docking station.
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Who is iVanky FusionDock Ultra for: This dock is best for high-end Mac professionals who need maximum connectivity – especially those running multiple high-resolution displays, fast storage, and 10Gb networking all at once. It’s not for typical users or even most power users, as the sheer number of ports, need for two Thunderbolt connections, and high price make it overkill unless you truly need that level of performance.
In 2025 when iVanky launched its 23-port iVanky FusionDock Max 2 it threw down the gauntlet for the title of “Ultimate Mac Dock” to defending champion, the iconic 20-port CalDigit TS5 Plus.
The TS5 Plus was (just) victorious on the absolute top-end—the TS5 Plus has 10GbE networking compared to the Max 2’s 2.5GbE and all its USB ports are 10Gbps. Only the FusionDock Max 2 could offer three native displays, without requiring extra software, and while the TS5 Plus has plenty of USB ports, the iVanky Max 2 offered a super abundance.
iVanky has now returned with the FusionDock Ultra, which hosts 26 ports including 10GbE and 12 USB ports rated at 10Gbps in addition to the two upstream and four downstream 80Gbps Thunderbolt 5 ports. It can handle up to four 6K displays at 60Hz, and dual 8K/60Hz displays.
CalDigit really has a fight on its hands.
We’ll compare the two later in greater detail further down but first let’s look at everything the FusionDock Ultra offers to the Mac professional who demands the most and the best.
Befitting its premium status (and price) the FusionDock Ultra is presented well in a rather lovely box.Simon Jary
First, it must be noted how well iVanky packages its new top-end docking station. It looks great in its box before you even get your hands on it.
How is the FusionDock Ultra different from other docks?
The advantage this dock has over other Thunderbolt 5 docks is its dual Thunderbolt 5 chips, making it effectively two docks in one case—in essence, it’s two independent dock printed circuit board assemblies (PCBA) integrated together.
The original FusionDock Max 1 has two Thunderbolt 4 chips, and the Max 2 combines a Thunderbolt 5 controller with an additional DP-Alt chip.
These dual-chip docks can natively deliver up to four external displays—a feat that usually takes a docking station that requires third-party DisplayLink compression software to be installed on the Mac.
The release of MacBooks with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips has changed the playing field. These top-end Macs are no longer limited to two external monitors over a single Thunderbolt cable, with the M5 Pro supporting up to three and the M5 Max up to four.
This means that a dock such as CalDigit’s TS5 can run four displays when connected to one of those MacBooks. However, the fourth display must be daisy-chained off the third as the dock has only three downstream Thunderbolt 5 ports. The Ultra is free from this daisy-chaining requirement.
Simon Jary
The iVanky Ultra has four downstream Thunderbolt 5 ports, plus dedicated DisplayPort and HDMI ports, so can handle all four displays without needing to link the last to one of the other monitors.
Using two upstream Thunderbolt connections also provides significantly more bandwidth, avoiding the bottlenecks that often occur with single-port docks.
The downside is that you must use two of your Mac’s Thunderbolt ports to use the FusionDock Ultra. If only one cable is connected, some ports on the dock will not function.
Simon Jary
What ports and features do you actually get?
We thought the mighty CalDigit TS5 Plus was remarkable packing 20 ports, including ten USB, then the FusionDock Max 2 fitted 23 ports into a similarly sized case. Now we’ve got a crazy 26 ports to play with.
As there are so many ports, iVanky has clearly labelled all of them.
Two upstream Thunderbolt 5 ports (80Gbps, 140W)
Four downstream Thunderbolt 5 ports (80Gbps, 15W)
One USB-C port (10Gbps, 45W)
Seven USB-C ports (10Gbps, 7.5W)
Four USB-A ports (10Gbps)
One DisplayPort (2.1)
One HDMI (2.0)
Ethernet (10Gb)
UHS-II SD card reader (312MBps)
UHS-II microSD card reader (312MBps)
One 3.5mm combo audio In/Out jack (front)
One 3.5mm Audio Out audio jack (back)
One 3.5mm Audio In audio jack (back)
One optical audio (back)
240W power supply
Most Thunderbolt docks have one upstream Thunderbolt port to connect to the computer and up to three downstream ports to attach monitors, storage drives and other high-bandwidth devices.
With its dual-chip architecture, the FusionDock Ultra sports six Thunderbolt 5 ports: two upstream and four downstream.
Simon Jary
The two upstream connect to the Mac with the included dual-cable connectors. When connected to a MacBook (pictured above), the two connectors magnetically fit together in the correct position to neatly attach to the laptop’s side-by-side Thunderbolt ports. At the dock end the connectors are placed on top of each other in the dedicated upstream ports. The FusionDock Ultra also ships with a spare downstream Thunderbolt 5 cable.
iVanky
If you are using the dock with a desktop Mac such as a Mac mini or Mac Studio, the upstream cables can be separated to fit that computer’s port layout but you must still connect the dock to two Thunderbolt ports.
The dock will work best with Macs that host Thunderbolt 5, with its 80Gbps data-transfer bandwidth that doubles that of 40Gbps Thunderbolt 4. With a feature called Bandwidth Boost, a Thunderbolt port can switch to a unidirectional 120Gbps for the most demanding video needs.
If you need to connect high performance SSDs or RAID devices Thunderbolt 5 rewards you with a PCIe performance that is doubled (from Thunderbolt 4) to 64Gbps PCIe 4.0, and the dock supports (theoretical) transfer speeds up to 6,200MBps.
The upstream PD 3.1 TB5 ports can supply up to 140W to the connected MacBook, which is powerful enough to fast-charge the top-end 16-inch model. Each of the downstream TB5 ports can deliver 15W.
On the TS5 Plus CalDigit sacrificed the possibility for a third downstream Thunderbolt port for a top-end DisplayPort 2.1 video connection. iVanky’s FusionDock gives four downstream Thunderbolt 5 plus a DisplayPort 2.1 and HDMI 2.0 port. Native Thunderbolt and DisplayPort output supports up to 4K at 240Hz, which is not possible via an HDMI port.
Not including the backwards-compatible Thunderbolt ports, the FusionDock Ultra carries a mind-boggling 12 plainer USB ports: all at 10Gbps. The Max 2 also has 12 USB but three at 5Gbps and another three at the weedy USB 2.0 speed of 480Mbps. Seven of these are USB-C (remember that that the three downstream Thunderbolt can also operate as Type C if you desire) and four are old-school USB-A. The Max 2 had those numbers the other way around, with seven USB-A, which is surely more legacy ports than anyone with a top-end system should need. Top marks to iVanky for shifting to more USB-C than USB-A.
Four USB-A should be plenty for older flash drives and memory sticks, and even a wired keyboard and mouse for people who shun wireless input—maybe for those concerned about the potential instability of Bluetooth signal interference.
Four extended displays are possible with most Thunderbolt 5 docks connected to a top-end M5 Max computer, but only the iVanky FusionDocks (Max 2 and Ultra) have enough video ports to handle them from the dock itself.iVanky
How many displays can it really support (and on which Macs)?
A key purpose of a docking station is to connect multiple external displays without using up all the MacBook’s own ports. The dual-chip FusionDock Ultra is the leader of the pack when it comes to natively supporting up to four displays, although the recent M5 Pro/Max advances in Apple’s processor design have blunted that advantage a little.
To achieve native four-display support you need to use those two upstream ports. You can’t use the plain USB-C ports for connecting to external displays; for that purpose, you need to use the DisplayPort and/or HDMI ports or the Thunderbolt.
Docks used to be limited by the macOS’s lack of support for something called Multi Stream Transport (MST), which limited Macs from being able to connect more than two external displays over a single cable. That’s one reason why Mac docks could be used for two monitors max.
The iVanky FusionDock Max 2 got round this with its own dual-chip/two-upstream cable connection, and the Ultra follows suit.
However, as mentioned earlier, Apple has revealed that its latest MacBooks with M5 Pro can now support three displays over one cable (it must be Thunderbolt 5), and with M5 Max up to four.
The iVanky dock still offers up to four displays for users of M1//M2/M3/M4 Max-chip Mac, but if you have an M5 Max Mac you can now connect up to four displays from other Thunderbolt 5 docks, such as the CalDigit TS5, although the fourth will have to be daisy-chained from the third monitor due to lack of ports on the dock.
The FusionDocks have no such problems with their four Thunderbolt ports and other dedicated video ports: it’s the only Thunderbolt port that natively supports four displays without any daisy-chaining required.
Simon Jary
Quad display: Native vs DisplayLink
If you don’t mind installing third-party compression software such as DisplayLink there are docks—such as the Plugable TBT-UDT3—that support up to five displays via a single connection. The catch is that DisplayLink may introduce noticeable latency in some situations or on certain monitors, so high-end studios and professionals will always prefer a native solution.
Native (without help from third-party software) video provides smoother, full-resolution lag-free video with higher refresh rates (4K at 240Hz), which makes it ideal for video editing and gaming. DisplayLink’s max is 60Hz—fine for most of us but nowhere near enough for video pros and gamers. Natively, the Mac’s GPU can be utilized for processing, so reducing CPU system resource load usage.
Third-party DisplayLink in a dedicated dock or adapter sends compressed video data over USB connection, and bypasses Apple’s native display output limitations, so allowing you to connect multiple external displays to Mac models that officially support only one or two (for example, the base single-display M1 and M2 models, as well as the new MacBook Neo).
DisplayLink also suffers from restrictions to DRM (Digital Rights Management) protected content as used by streamers such as Netflix and Apple TV.
The Ultra’s dual Thunderbolt 5 connections to the Mac mean no extra software is required for the purest multi-display support.
iVanky
Monitor matrix
Unfortunately, even this dock can’t override the built-in display limits of your Mac. The maximum number of external displays is still determined by your Mac’s processor and Apple’s own display engine limits. To check your Mac’s display potential, see Apple’s “How many displays can be connected to MacBook Pro”.
For three displays, you’ll need a Mac with at least an M5 Pro or a Max M-series processor: so M1/M2/M3/M4 Max. Even M4 Pro Macs are limited to dual 4K/60Hz support (see MST explanation above).
The three displays can be 3x 6K/60Hz. If your Mac boasts a Max M-series processor, you can connect four 6K displays at 60Hz.
For dual 8K/60Hz displays an M4 Max or M5 Max chip is required. A single 8K screen is possible even on a plain M4 or M5 chip, or an M4 Pro.
iVanky
To show the display possibilities it’s easiest to check out this grid of possibilities for each type of Mac.
Power station
Thunderbolt 5 has higher power delivery (PD) than Thunderbolt 4: to the connected laptop at least 140W with support for up to 240W; up from TB4’s minimum 100W and max 140W.
The FusionDock Ultra can power a connected laptop at up to 140W, enough to fast-charge a top-end 16-inch MacBook Pro.
The 45W USB-C port at the front of the dock (up from the Max 2’s 30W) is handy if you want to fast-charge your iPhone or iPad. The TS5 Plus has a 35W front port, and the Sonnet Echo 13 has one of its TB5 ports with a 60W rating. 30W should be enough for those devices, and 45W is enough to (slowly) recharge another MacBook if you want to.
The external power supply can deliver a maximum of 240W, which is the same as the FusionDock Max 2 but noticeably lower than the 330W of the CalDigit TS5 Plus that gives that rival dock enough to cope with a full power demand, so the wattage going into the laptop needs never fluctuate to accommodate other hungry devices.
If you were to use all the FusionDock’s ports at full power, it would require 297.5W so you may hit the dock’s power adapter limit. The dock’s active-cooling fans will also use up some of that 240 of power.
While it’s unlikely all the ports would be in use at one time anyway, it’s certainly one aspect where the TS5 beats the FusionDock Ultra.
Unlike the Max 2 the Ultra has no power button at the front. I’m a fan of a power button on a dock as it makes it easier to turn off power to the connected laptop if you want to better preserve its battery life, but the Ultra is in good company with the CalDigit docks in not having one.
Key limitations
Requires two Mac ports
Expensive vs rivals
Fan noise potential
Power supply lower than TS5 Plus
The FusionDock requires two upstream ports to connect your Mac to its double Thunderbolt 5 architecture.Simon Jary
Network speeds
Pro studios (and an increasing number of offices) are turning to networks much faster than the long-traditional Gigabit Ethernet (1GbE), with 2.5GbE, 5GbE or even 10GbE speeds.
Recent pro docks include a 2.5 gigabit Ethernet (2.5GbE) port as standard, including the FusionDock Max 2’s LAN port. The FusionDock Ultra—like the CalDigit TS5 Plus—goes right to the top with 10GbE, which will appeal to those with networks at that speed or planning a future upgrade. It’s a great future-proof solution and is backwards compatible with slower networks.
Storage
Some recent Thunderbolt docking stations—such as the Sonnet Echo 13—include built-in SSD storage so that the dock itself operates like a speedy external disk drive.
Neither the FusionDock Ultra nor the TS5 have this feature but both offer fast 312MBps UHS-II SD and microSD card readers at the front for you to slip in and out your own portable and inexpensive storage cards. That’s faster than the 250MBps SDXC card slot built into Apple’s current MacBook Pro.
Simon Jary
Design
While the CalDigit docks are cased in the iconic vertical or horizontal aluminum shell, the iVanky docks take a horizontal-only approach but also in a fine-looking dark design that has a clever floating aluminum chassis with built-in twin fans for active thermal management engineered to dissipate heat.
The gold-trimmed copper-alloy midframe is therefore cooler. The surface temperature of the Ultra remains relatively low, typically around 40–45°C during normal use, thanks to the suspended-chassis airflow and cooling fan that creates extra thermal headroom and should ensure fewer drops and throttling, even under extreme demand.
The integrated rubber feet lift the dock from the desk further allowing for air to flow under it.
The FusionDock Ultra features a floating aluminum chassis to keep cool.Simon Jary
CalDigit’s docks don’t include fans as some can add noise, which is not ideal in music or video studio environments where pro users need absolute silence. iVanky claims that its fans stay quiet during lighter tasks and only ramp up under pressure. With so many ports, it’s quite possible that the fans will be required if a lot of them are in use at the same time.
The Ultra is a little larger than the Max 2 but otherwise quite similar in design. It measures 8.3 inches (210mm) long, 4.9 inches (125mm) wide, and 2.4 inches (60mm) deep. It weighs in at 3.6lbs (1.65kg).
The ports are well placed. The upstream Thunderbolt 5 ports that connect to your laptop are labelled at the back, avoiding probable cable mess from the front. The two card readers and nine USB ports including the 45W USB-C for charging other devices, as well as the Audio In/Out jack are also front facing.
At the back is everything else: separate 3.5mm audio In and out ports and the optical audio port; the four downstream Thunderbolt 5 ports; DisplayPort; HDMI; one 10Gbps USB-C and two USB-A; plus Ethernet.
iVanky’s two Thunderbolt 5 docking stations, the FusionDock Max 2 (left) and larger Ultra (right).Simon Jary
Price
Top-of-the-range Thunderbolt 5 docking stations come at a premium price point but you do get a lot for your money with the iVanky FusionDock Ultra.
It is priced at $749.99 in the U.S. – either direct or from Amazon, £749.99 in the U.K, and €749,99 in the E.U. However, at the time of the launch iVanjy was offering a 13% discount down to $649.99, £649.99 and €649,99.
The CalDigit TS5 Plus costs $499 so is significantly cheaper but lacks the dual-chip architecture that allows for the abundance of ports—not to dismiss the TS5 Plus’s 20 ports.
iVanky’s other Thunderbolt 5 dock, the FusionDock Max 2, costs $449. It has similar display powers but fewer ports and a different chip architecture.
The $479 Sonnet Echo 13 that includes an integrated 1TB SSD is cheaper, as is the OWC Thunderbolt 5 Dock ($329) and best value of all the $299 Plugable TBT-UDT3 Dock and Wavlink Thunderbolt 5 Dock. Either may make more sense if you don’t need the native super display support or so many USB ports. Take a look at all the best Thunderbolt 5 docks in our roundup that also includes Thunderbolt 4 hubs and docks.
If multiple monitors are the big draw, then also consider DisplayLink docks that can support up to five but require third-party compression software that the top-end professionals may avoid in case any latency is involved but is fine for most users.
The FusionDock Ultra includes the 1.2m dual Thunderbolt 5 cable and the same-length individual TB5 cable.
FusionDock Ultra (top) and CalDigit TS5 Plus (bottom).Simon Jary
iVanky vs CalDigit: Battle of the super-pro docks
The closest rival to the Ultra is the CalDigit TS5 Plus, which is a significantly cheaper ($499) than the FusionDock Ultra ($649). Read our full CalDigit TS5 Plus review. We also include the FusionDock Max 2 ($449) and CalDigit TS5 ($399).
Supported displays
FusionDock Ultra: Up to 4
FusionDock Max 2: Up to 4
TS5 Plus: Up to 4 (requires daisy chaining)
TS5: Up to 4 (requires daisy chaining)
Number of ports:
FusionDock Ultra: 26
FusionDock Max 2: 23
TS5 Plus: 20
TS5: 15
Thunderbolt port power:
FusionDock Ultra: 15W
FusionDock Max 2: 15W
TS5 Plus: 36W
TS5: 15W
Front USB-C port power:
FusionDock Ultra: 45W
FusionDock Max 2: 30W
TS5 Plus: 35W
TS5: 20W
Total power:
FusionDock: 240W
FusionDock Max 2: 240W
TS5 Plus: 330W
TS5: 240W
Ethernet speed:
FusionDock Ultra: 10Gb
FusionDock Max 2: 2.5Gb
TS5 Plus: 10Gb
TS5: 2.5Gb
The Ultra is larger than the CalDigit TS5 Plus.Simon Jary
Where the TS5 Plus beat the FusionDock Max 2 at the absolute top-end in some cases, the FusionDock Ultra at least matches it everywhere except for its maximum power supply (240W vs 330W).
If you need the most displays at the highest refresh rates the FusionDock Ultra is an easy winner with its native support for four (for any Max-chip Mac) and enough ports to connect from the dock. The TS5 Plus does natively support four when matched with the very top-end M5 Max Mac but requires the fourth display to be daisy-chained off the third. The Ultra can connect each of its four displays on the dock itself.
The compromise is that you must use two of the Mac’s own three Thunderbolt ports to connect to the Ultra (as was also the case with the Max 2, and indeed the Max 1), which somewhat defeats the elegance of having a single cable connected to your Mac to connect all your devices but it’s necessary for those four connected native displays.
Should you buy the iVanky FusionDock Ultra?
With an unmatched number of top-end ports and dual-chip architecture, the iVanky FusionDock Ultra is a very serious contender to take the ultimate Mac dock crown.
If 16 USB ports is a lot more than you think you need, the Ultra may be overkill, and at that premium price it will certainly make you double-count how many ports and high-resolution displays you really need.
For Mac professionals working at the highest level, the iVanky FusionDock is going to be the go-to docking station.
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But the real standout? It keeps watching after you book. If your hotel price drops, it can automatically rebook the same room at a lower rate and refund you the difference.
Flights get similar treatment. If fares drop, OneAir helps you figure out whether it’s worth rebooking and how to actually do it without losing money on fees.
You’ll also get access to private hotel rates and unpublished flight deals that don’t show up on the usual booking sites, potentially cutting costs by a noticeable margin.
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GoToMyPC – Maintenance THIS IS A SCHEDULED EVENT Apr 21, 05:30 - 08:00 UTCApr 20, 07:01 UTCUpdate - We will be undergoing scheduled maintenance during this time.Apr 20, 06:59 UTCScheduled - As part of our commitment to provide exceptional service and reliability to our customers, the GoToMyPC team will be conducting service maintenance on the following date and time listed below. Our team will be taking all appropriate actions to minimise service interruptions during this event.Date and Time: April 21st, 2026, 5:30 AM UTC to 8:00 AM UTC Purpose: This maintenance is to ensure and maintain system performance and stability.Duration: All maintenance will be performed within the 2-hour 30-minute maintenance window.What to expect: During the Maintenance, GoToMyPC customers may expect 5 minutes of downtime.We would like to thank you for your patience and understanding during this time.
Issues solving Challenges Apr 20, 05:01 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is aware that some visitors are currently unable to pass challenges. We are investigating the issue.
MacBook Pro With Touch Screen and New Mac Studio Likely 'Postponed' The global memory chip shortage may result in the next MacBook Pro and Mac Studio models launching later than expected, according to the latest rumor.
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman has repeatedly stated that 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models with a touch screen are slated to launch in late 2026 to early 2027. In his Power On newsletter today, though, he said to be prepared for the laptops to potentially arrive towards the end of that timeframe due to the chip shortage.
In other words, early 2027 is now more likely than late 2026.
Gurman previously expected a new Mac Studio to launch around the middle of 2026, which pointed towards an announcement around WWDC 2026 in June. However, in his newsletter today, he wrote that sources within Apple believe that the next Mac Studio models will not ship until around October this year as a result of the shortage.
Touch-screen support will be part of a major refresh planned for the high-end MacBook Pro models, with other rumored features including M6 Pro and M6 Max chips, an OLED display, a Dynamic Island, and a thinner design. The laptops might have MacBook Ultra branding, and macOS 27 will offer a touch-friendly interface.
For the Mac Studio, the key change will be M5 Max and M5 Ultra chips. The current model has mismatched M4 Max and M3 Ultra chips, as Apple never introduced an M4 Ultra chip. No major design changes are expected for the desktop computer.
All in all, expect a Mac Studio refresh around October this year, followed by MacBook Pro models with a touch screen by the end of January 2027.Related Roundups: Mac Studio, MacBook ProTags: Bloomberg, Mark GurmanBuyer's Guide: Mac Studio (Caution), MacBook Pro (Buy Now)Related Forums: Mac Studio, MacBook ProThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Developer Sign in For Testing Question My app has a sign in with google, and with apple, nothing else. When providing demo log ins for developers for testing how do I go about this? Am I allowed to provide a demo google account or demo apple account. Do I need to add a secondary log in system with username and password […]
Web-scraped sources cannot be added to Chatbots, and Agents not returning informatio Status: InvestigatingDue to a third party outage, we are investigating an outage causing failures for chatbot users attempting to add new knowledge sources that require web-scraped knowledge sources.
Existing knowledge sources for Chatbots remain functional.
Agents executions do not crash, or get marked as failed, but users may get a bad response when web browsing/scraping. There are not user facing errors for this behaviour.
Main error periods: 19:18–19:35 UTC and 21:35–22:32 UTC.
Errors began around 19:19UTC, and subsided after 22:32 UTC, and monitoring shows no new failures.
If you need help or have any questions, please contact Support: https://zapier.com/app/get-helpAffected components
Agents (Degraded performance)
Chatbots (Degraded performance)
Apple Testing Two Small Yet Useful iOS 27 Options Apple is planning to add "Undo" and "Redo" options to the iPhone's Home Screen customization menu on iOS 27, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.
These two options will make it easier to reverse or redo your Home Screen changes.
"Right now, when you long-press on the home screen, you get a bubble in the top left corner with four options: Add Widget, Customize, Edit Wallpaper and Edit Pages," he explained, in his latest Power On newsletter. "Apple is looking at adding 'undo' and 'redo' buttons in that same menu to make reversing or redoing changes easier."
Other rumored iOS 27 features include a dedicated Siri app and Apple Intelligence advancements. The update has been likened to Mac OS X Snow Leopard, in the sense that Apple is apparently very focused on bug fixes and stability improvements.
iOS 27 beta testing will begin in June, and the update will be released in September.Related Roundup: iOS 27Tags: Bloomberg, Mark GurmanThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
WWDC 2026 Graphic Teases Major iOS 27 Feature Apple's WWDC 2026 graphic provides "a glimpse of the revamped Siri interface coming in iOS 27," according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.
In his Power On newsletter today, Gurman said iOS 27 will include a new Siri interface in the Dynamic Island. When you trigger Siri, he said the Dynamic Island will show a "Search or Ask" prompt, and this will apparently be accompanied by a "glowing cursor" that looks similar to how the "26" is highlighted in the WWDC 2026 graphic.
There will also be a "thin glow" around the edges of the Dynamic Island when Siri is invoked, and in the search bar of a dedicated Siri app that will be preinstalled on iOS 27, according to Gurman. He previously reported that the Siri app will allow you to have back-and-forth conversations with Siri and view your conversation history.
While the Dynamic Island is available on the iPhone 14 Pro and newer, at least some aspects of the upcoming Siri design will likely be limited to the iPhone 15 Pro and newer due to Apple Intelligence compatibility reasons.
Apple announced that WWDC 2026 will run from Monday, June 8 through Friday, June 12. At the annual developers conference, Apple is expected to unveil iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27, watchOS 27, tvOS 27, visionOS 27, and more.Related Roundups: iOS 27, WWDC 2026Tags: Bloomberg, Mark Gurman, SiriRelated Forum: Apple, Inc and Tech IndustryThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
All of my TestFlight apps just started crashing on launch today Just upgraded from Xcode 26.1 to 26.4 and of the 2 apps I distributed to TestFlight, multiple individuals are stating they are crashing on launch. There's no useful logs at all in the crash diagnostics either. This is really odd, is anyone else experiencing this? Where do I even begin to diagnose this? The apps […]
The newer version of Xcode is absolutely trash! That's it. I am not sure why can't Apple build a decent IDE, it is literally so far behind from the newer IDEs. They integrated ChatGPT but that certainly does not work well. It keeps throwing errors. I don't think Xcode is well optimized either, eats so much of application memory on the go. I […]
Sunday Reboot: Japan ads, AI assistance, and a nice retirement In this week's "Sunday Reboot," Apple Japan shines with its delightful ads, Siri engineers learn about AI, and a feel-good Apple executive retirement story.Ads, AI, and retirementSunday Reboot is a weekly column covering some of the lighter stories within the Apple reality distortion field from the past seven days. All to get the next week underway with a good first step.This week, users were scammed by a Freecash app that somehow got through App Store review, researchers came up with a way to steal $10,000 from a locked iPhone, and details surfaced about a paraplegic pilot's death for an Apple Immersive Video documentary. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
The demand for local AI could shape a new business model for Apple To put it simply: Apple Silicon is Mac minis are impossible to find. There’s a variety of reasons for this – like OpenClaw and other computer-use agents. But there’s also a group of people buying up high-end Macs with swaths of unified memory, which are incredible for running local LLMs.
While I’m sure Apple appreciates the additional hardware sales, I think they could push this even further – by entering a segment they’ve thus far ignored.
more…
iOS 27's home screen update will make customization even easier Apple will be making it easier for users to lay out apps and widgets on the iPhone home screen, thanks to a new addition to the UI in iOS 27.You can already do a lot with the iOS home screen. In more recent updates to iOS and its other operating systems, Apple has made it gradually easier to personalize the home screen. If a report about iOS 27 is accurate, that release could make things even easier.According to Mark Gurman in his "Power On" newsletter for Bloomberg, Apple is testing a new home screen customization option. The tweak consists of new options in an existing menu, to allow users to revert mistakes. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
iOS 27 could make it much easier to switch up your home screen layout: report WWDC26 is just under 2 months away, where Apple will unveil its next generation of iOS, macOS, watchOS, and so on. Rumors for iOS 27 have so far indicated that this year’s release will mostly be focused on stability, with limited new features beyond Apple finally delivering on its AI promises.
Even though iOS 27 won’t have anything major, there still will be a few light customization features – and one of them will let you quickly undo and redo changes on your home screen.
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Today in Apple history: Newton boss departs as device struggles On April 19, 1994, Gaston Bastiaens, the executive in charge of Apple's new Newton MessagePad line, parted ways with the company.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Canonical Apple localized strings database This is not mine, I was just excited to discover it and have never seen it mentioned here: https://applelocalization.com/ This is a community-built, queryable database of Apple's own localized strings from iOS/macOS frameworks, so you can search for terms your app probably uses and see exactly how Apple ships them in other languages. submitted […]
6 weeks and counting for CarPlay entitlement response I applied for a CarPlay navigation entitlement on March 1 and never heard back. I already have CarPlay entitlements for tasks and parking. Last week, I replied to the auto response, asking for status and never heard back. Is It seems that my request went into a black hole. Questions: 1/ Is this normal? 2/ […]
Getting email only from Sign in with Apple Why is it an issue to ask the user for a "name", when I am only requesting email from the the Sign in with Apple service? The rule is you should not request data you've already got from SIWA, so how is this not following the design? submitted by /u/ss_salvation [link] [comments]
Your wait for M5 Ultra Mac Studio just got longer Apple’s M5 Max/Ultra Mac Studio may take longer to arrive than expected, with delays reportedly impacting the next MacBook Pro refresh too.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Mac Studio, touchscreen MacBook Pro delayed by memory shortages The M5 Mac Studio is now expected to be delayed from its summer launch, and the OLED MacBook Pro pushed to 2027, solely because of the industry-wide shortage of memory.The next Mac Studio may be delayedApple has so far weathered the global RAM and SSD shortages better than most, but still it has raised some prices and ceased selling certain Mac configurations. Now according to Bloomberg, the shortage is going to mean that key new Macs will be delayed.Specifically, the updated Mac Studio that Bloomberg recently claimed was due for summer 2026, is now more likely to come in October. Then while the OLED touchscreen MacBook Pro wasn't expected until near the end of 2026, the report claims that it will now most probably be launched in 2027. Rumor Score: 🤔 Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
WWDC 2026's focus will be on iOS 27's Siri overhaul Apple's WWDC event will have a major focus on the long-awaited Siri overhaul, as well as a more blown-out white-light appearance in iOS 27.The glowing 26 in the WWDC logo is a hint of what Siri will become in iOS 27Apple will be holding its Worldwide Developers Conference from June 8 through to June 12. It will be the main preview event for all of Apple's major operating system updates arriving in the fall, including iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27.However, while there will be changes across the board, Mark Gurman for Bloomberg has seized upon the WWDC 2026 logo as an indicator for Siri changes. The logo, he writes on Sunday, teases Siri's new look. Rumor Score: 🤔 Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Apple has already teased Siri’s new design coming in iOS 27 Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says that Apple’s WWDC26 artwork has already given us our first look at the new design for Siri coming as part of iOS 27. Apple’s voice assistant will finally be getting the revamp it deserves in iOS 27, with a bunch of new functionality and a new look.
Gurman says the new Siri design includes visual elements that resemble the glow effect seen in the WWDC26 poster art. It is reportedly most striking when the iPhone is used in dark mode, which is why the WWDC art used a black background.
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Apple’s major MacBook Pro overhaul is reportedly ‘slightly’ delayed due to supply chain shortages A lot of us are impatiently awaiting the next-generation of MacBook Pro, which is expected to feature a bevy of updates including a new OLED display with Dynamic Island cutout, a touch screen a la iPad and iPhone, and the more powerful M6 Pro and M6 Max chip.
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman is today reporting in his newsletter that Apple is facing some production issues due to the industry-wide memory shortages. Supply constraints mean that the MacBook Pro launch is slightly delayed, and possibly won’t arrive until early next year.
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New Mac Studio may not arrive until October In the latest edition of Mark Gurman’s Bloomberg newsletter, he reports that the new generation of Mac Studio may not arrive until October. The current Mac Studio is offered in M3 Ultra and M4 Max configurations, albeit with long shipping delays and several models now completely out of stock.
A refresh is certainly due. However, supply chain constraints are apparently impacting Apple’s ability to deliver the (likely M5-powered) Mac Studio update. Gurman says that Apple had been aiming for a release around the middle of the year, but now that has been pushed back several months.
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Make your iPhone completely hacker-proof — with a huge downside iPhone Lockdown Mode is one of the most aggressive consumer security features ever deployed. Do you need it?
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Crime blotter: Second suspect sought in $2 million iPhone theft iPads are stolen from a Best Buy, G-Love is caught up in the fake Ledger app scam, and AirTags solve two thefts, all in this week's Apple Crime Blotter.Man in handcuffs. Image Credit: PixabayThe latest in an occasional AppleInsider series, looking at the world of Apple-related crime. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
This $1,999 MacBook Pro is $430 today Macworld
TL;DR: Through April 19, get a near-mint condition MacBook Pro on sale for $430.
RAM shortages are making it harder to find computers for a decent price, but there’s still a way to get an affordable MacBook. This refurbished MacBook Pro is in near-mint condition, but it’s still drastically marked down. Instead of paying $1,999, you can pick this MacBook Pro up for $429.97, but that ends soon.
This 2020 MacBook Pro has a 2.0GHz quad-core Intel Core i5 processor, 16GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD. That gives you enough power for office work, web browsing with a glut of tabs open, coding, photo editing, and lighter video work without constantly running into storage limits. The SSD also helps the laptop feel faster day-to-day, with quicker startups, app launches, and file transfers.
The display is a 13.3-inch Retina screen with a 2560×1600 resolution, True Tone, and 500 nits of brightness. Text looks sharp, and the high resolution makes the screen better for reading, editing, and just general use. This model also has the Magic Keyboard, Touch Bar, and Touch ID, so you get fingerprint login and shortcut controls above the keyboard.
This unit is listed as Grade “A” refurbished, which means near-mint condition with minimal to no scuffing, but the price is still a lot lower than it would be otherwise. A 30-day third-party warranty is also included.
Until April 19 at 11:59 p.m. PT, you can get a MacBook Pro on sale for $429.97.
Grabbing this deal? Score a Microsoft Office 2021 license for free when you apply a code at checkout through 4/19: GWP4MAC (for Mac) or GWP4WIND (for Windows).
Apple MacBook Pro (2020) 13″ i5 2GHz Touchbar 16GB RAM 1TB SSD Space Gray (Refurbished)See Deal
Gift with $100+ purchase promo ends April 19, 2026. Exclusions apply. Only one promo code applicable per order. Prices subject to change.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
This iOS app helps you clear up space on your phone, and it’s only $30 right now Macworld
TL;DR: Cleaner Kit helps you find more space on your phone, and it’s only $30 for a lifetime subscription.
Between old apps and accidental pictures of your pocket, phone storage fills up fast, and it’s a pain to manually clear it up. If you want to simplify the process, Cleaner Kit is a new iOS app that helps you free up space by sorting through photos, compressing videos, cleaning up contacts, organizing Gmail, and storing private files in a locked vault. It’s also on sale for $29.99 (reg. $104.97).
Cleaner Kit scans your library for duplicates, similar photos, blurry shots, and other images you probably don’t need to keep. Instead of forcing you to sort through everything manually, it groups photos into batches so you can review them faster.
Video cleanup works a little differently. The app can compress larger video files so they take up less space while still being watchable. Contact cleanup works the same way, finding duplicate contacts, empty entries, and unnamed records so your address book is easier to use.
Cleaner Kit also has Gmail cleanup tools that group messages by sender. That makes it easier to clear out old promos, newsletters, and other bulk emails without opening every message separately.
Clear some space on your phone.
Get a Cleaner Kit Premium Lifetime Subscription while it’s only $29.99.
Want free Microsoft Office for life? This purchase gets you close. Just reach $100+ in your cart, add Microsoft Office 2021, and apply GWP4MAC (for Mac) or GWP4WIND (for Windows) to claim it free through 4/19.
Cleaner Kit for iOS Premium Plan: Lifetime SubscriptionSee Deal
Gift with $100+ purchase promo ends April 19, 2026. Exclusions apply. Only one promo code applicable per order. Prices subject to change.
StackSocial prices subject to change.
Postponed Apple TV series ‘The Savant’ will finally be released this summer The Jessica Chastain thriller series, The Savant, was originally set to air on Apple TV last September. However, the company decided to cancel the release at the eleventh hour. Star Jessica Chastain said she was ‘not aligned’ with Apple on the decision. As months passed, many doubted if the series would ever make it to air.
But finally, Chastain herself confirmed to Variety that “we’re going to see it”. Variety indicates that Apple is targeting a July release date, although that is not yet officially confirmed.
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R2 customers may see an increase of HTTP 500s in KIX Apr 19, 05:20 UTCResolved - This incident has been resolved.Apr 19, 05:07 UTCMonitoring - Cloudflare is investigating reports of HTTP 500 responses for R2 services in the KIX (Osaka) location. We are working to mitigate this, more updates to follow shortly.
B&H's $299 Samsung 32-inch M8 USB-C monitor deal ends today B&H's flash Deal Zone offers a $400 discount on Samsung's M8 32-inch 4K Smart Monitor, which pairs well with Macs.Grab Samsung's 32-inch M8 USB-C Monitor for just $299.99 today only.You can pick up the Samsung M8 Smart Monitor for just $299.99 today only during B&H's Deal Zone savings event.Buy Samsung M8 for $299.99 Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
any open source calendar components Hi, looking for any Swift / SwiftUI based open source calendar packages. Should have multi date selection within same month view & different UI for custom holidays. submitted by /u/usernameDisplay9876 [link] [comments]
Built a TypeScript MCP server that automates iOS crash symbolication, analysis, bug filing, and generates AI Fix Plans If you’re an iOS dev manually symbolicating crash logs and generating fixes, I built a TypeScript MCP server that automates the whole thing. Your AI client (Claude, Cursor) runs the full pipeline: downloads crashes from a crash reporting service (similar to Firebase Crashlytics), exports from Xcode Organizer, symbolicates against your dSYM, groups duplicates, tracks fixes, […]
Looking for opinions on a weather app I’m developing And before anyone asks, yes, I did use Claude Code to help me make it. For those of you who've had iphones for a while, might remember and app from the early days called "Weather Alert USA". It had a simple, straightforward interface, pulled data right from the National Weather Service and provided push alerts […]
I was logging every workout and still had no idea if I was actually getting stronger, so I built something that tells me I've been lifting consistently for over a year. Logging everything. Every set, every rep. And I kept thinking: is any of this actually working, or am I just being consistent? Most apps tell you what you did. None of them tell you if you're improving. So I built LiftIQ. Every workout updates a strength score […]
Why is Watch dev experience terrible? I love my watch, but dev experience is making me want to pull my hair out. I have to toggle wifi, restart xcode, turn on airplane, and keep trying to send app to watch. For a multi billion company, this does not feel like a multi billion experience. Anyone has successfully figured out the combo […]
MacBook Neo has a chip supply problem, here’s how Apple could fix it Apple has a chip problem. MacBook Neo is selling far better than the company had expected, and now it seems like there aren’t enough binned A18 Pro chips to keep the production run going for another 6-12 months before a new version is released.
Some have floated the idea of Apple axing the 256GB trim, and just using an unbinned A18 Pro chip in the 512GB trim. That’s certainly plausible. I do wonder though, how can Apple prevent this from happening with every forthcoming MacBook Neo?
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Shutting Down SlackBITS After Impersonation-Based Malware Attack A convincing impersonation of TidBITS contributor Glenn Fleishman on our public Slack group fooled an experienced IT professional into installing the OSX.Odyssey infostealer. Because Slack is designed for internal groups, its identity controls and logging aren’t sufficient for safe public use, so we’re shutting down SlackBITS and moving to Discourse Chat.
Here are all of the new Apple products worth waiting for, and what to avoid buying now Apple has already unveiled numerous products to date, including new versions of the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro, the iPad Air, the all-new MacBook Neo, and more. Despite having a busy season thus far, there’s still much more in the pipeline worth waiting for.
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Looking for design feedback on an iOS safety app I shipped, especially onboarding, hierarchy, and paywall timing… I recently shipped an iPhone app called TapSafety and wanted feedback from other iOS developers, mostly from a design and product flow perspective rather than a pure implementation perspective. The app is built around a high urgency use case. The goal is to let a user alert trusted contacts or start an emergency flow as […]
Indie App Spotlight: ‘QuakeInfo’ is a fast and easy way to monitor ongoing earthquakes Welcome to Indie App Spotlight. This is a weekly 9to5Mac series where we showcase the latest apps in the indie app world. If you’re a developer and would like your app featured, get in contact.
If you live in a earthquake-prone climate, you might be interested in a tool to help monitor them. QuakeInfo is a long-standing app on the App Store, and it’s recently been updated with a Liquid Glass design and new features.
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Looking for design feedback on an iOS app I shipped, especially onboarding and paywall flow… I recently shipped an iPhone app called TapSafety and wanted feedback more on the design and product side than the implementation side. The core challenge was designing for a moment where someone may be stressed, rushed, or not thinking clearly. Because of that, I tried to keep the UI extremely simple and make the primary […]
Apple’s upcoming AirPods Pro 3 variant could debut a groundbreaking new feature Earlier this year, Apple acquired a secretive startup: Q.ai, for over 2 billion dollars. It’s the companies second largest acquisition to date, and it leaves you wondering: what’s the end game here?
While smart glasses seem like an obvious play, there’s another Apple product in the pipeline that also seems quite fitting for this new technology.
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Security Bite: ClickFix malware authors already bypassing Apple’s new Terminal paste warning 9to5Mac Security Bite is exclusively brought to you by Mosyle, the only Apple Unified Platform. Making Apple devices work-ready and enterprise-safe is all we do. Our unique integrated approach to management and security combines state-of-the-art Apple-specific security solutions for fully automated Hardening & Compliance, Next Generation EDR, AI-powered Zero Trust, and exclusive Privilege Management with the most powerful and modern Apple MDM on the market. The result is a totally automated Apple Unified Platform currently trusted by over 45,000 organizations to make millions of Apple devices work-ready with no effort and at an affordable cost. Request your EXTENDED TRIAL today and understand why Mosyle is everything you need to work with Apple.
As you may know, a couple weeks ago on Security Bite I was raving about Apple’s new warning prompt in Terminal that appears when a user pastes potentially malicious commands. The security feature was bundled into the public release of macOS Tahoe 26.4 to further disrupt ClickFix attacks, which are now the leading delivery mechanism for malware on Mac.
However, it now appears malware authors are already deploying workarounds.
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Would You Pay For This App? Why / Why Not? I’m a solo developer in college with some decent SWE experience, so in my free time I’ve been trying to build and scale mobile apps like a small business. I released this alarm app about a month ago for iOS, but I can’t get past 3k downloads. I have paying customers, but Im trying to […]
From CS university project to App Store: my first iOS coloring app https://i.redd.it/nrepv5emczvg1.gif Just shipped my first iOS app: Intuitive Coloring [https://apps.apple.com/us/app/intuitive-coloring/id6761774708](vscode-file://vscode-app/Applications/Visual%20Studio%20Code.app/Contents/Resources/app/out/vs/code/electron-browser/workbench/workbench.html) Built originally as my CS uni project, now live on the App Store. Would love technical feedback from iOS devs on fill speed, UX, and GIF export quality. (GIF above created fully in my app) Tech Stack Used Swift, SwiftUI + UIKit (UIKit for painting-heavy […]
WARP connectivity Apr 18, 16:36 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is investigating issues with Cloudflare WARP and Cloudflare Zero Trust. Cloudflare WARP and Zero Trust users may experience connectivity issues or a degraded Internet experience.
AirSpace: I made a macOS Space manager with no AI that required 1×1 invisible windows. Hi r/iOSProgramming, you might recognize me as the dev of Stargaze! This project was one of the most difficult ones in my life (work and personal), but I’ve finally completed my second-ever solo indie project, AirSpace! It’s an app that lets you track which Space you’re on in the menu bar, give them custom names […]
not getting any job offers, what to do? i apply locally in huge city and remote jobs for entry/junior positions or that have a few years of experience required since ive self taught for 4 years (don’t have degree) im not ready to move somewhere for a job so i do limit myself by not applying to every on-site role across america ive […]
Icons for workout exercises? Anyone know where to get those svg files of exercises I often see in fitness apps? I seem to see the all the time. submitted by /u/FromBiotoDev [link] [comments]
Repeatedly getting “The app identifier [Bundle ID] cannot be registered to your development team because it is not available” for the same app every week I'm working on a Gecko-based web browser for iOS 14+, and have been encountering this problem for about 3 weeks now. Initially, my bundle identifier was me.minh-ton.Reynard, and I had been using it since the project started in the beginning of February. However, about 3 weeks ago, I got errors from Xcode saying that all […]
What’s your current LLM usage & which model do you actually use the most for Swift-SwiftUI? After watching Jensen Huang on the All-In Podcast (March 2026), I got curious. He straight-up said: if a $500k/year engineer isn’t burning at least $250k worth of tokens per year, he’d be “deeply alarmed.” (If they only spent $5k, he’d “go ape.”) So I checked my own usage from Jan 18 – Apr 18 2026 […]
ICE monitoring app takedowns violated the First Amendment A court has stopped the U.S. government from forcing Apple to take down ICE reporting apps from the App Store, due to it being a violation of the First Amendment.Image credit: TheFire.orgIn February, a lawsuit from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) took aim at the U.S. government over the right to report the activities of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE).The preliminary finding, issued on April 17, lands in FIRE's favor, with the Department of Homeland Security and Department of Justice being prevented from coercing Apple and Facebook into removing apps and interfering with communications. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Never lose a show: This app saves your favorite streams for offline viewing Save videos you care about so you can watch them whenever you want with Keeprix streaming downloader. Works with Netflix, YouTube and more.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
AirPods Weekend Deals Include AirPods Pro 3 for $199.99 and AirPods 4 for $99 Amazon today has the AirPods Pro 3 available for $199.99, down from $249.00. This is a match of the all-time low price on the AirPods Pro 3, and it's accompanied by a solid deal on the AirPods 4.
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with some of these vendors. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.
This model of the AirPods Pro launched in September 2025 and has 2x better Active Noise Cancellation than the previous generation, better audio quality, a revised fit that's meant to improve comfort and stability, Live Translation for in-person conversations, and heart rate sensing for workouts.
$49 OFFAirPods Pro 3 for $199.99
You can also get the AirPods 4 for $99.00, down from $129.00. This is a second-best price on the AirPods 4, which is the base model without Active Noise Cancellation. Amazon provides an April 23 estimated delivery date for free shipping, with faster delivery options for Prime members.
$30 OFFAirPods 4 for $99.00
Head to our full Deals Roundup to get caught up with all of the latest deals and discounts that we've been tracking over the past week.
Deals Newsletter
Interested in hearing more about the best deals you can find in 2026? Sign up for our Deals Newsletter and we'll keep you updated so you don't miss the biggest deals of the season!
Related Roundup: Apple DealsThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Does anyone else feel like the party is over? Save for game-apps and some more obscure apps, I’ve always felt iOS (as an iOS dev of 10 years), conceptually is ultimately arranging rectangles and putting data into them. This was always a total over-simplification, of course. You had to use code to do that, which was the complicated bit. But now AI can do […]
Apple’s smart glasses come into focus [Cult of Mac podcast No. 17] This week on the Cult of Mac podcast: New details emerge about Apple’s smart glasses, including possible shapes, sizes and colors. Now for the important question: Will we — or anybody else — actually want to wear a pair? Also on the Cult of Mac podcast: Apple reportedly plans a last-ditch effort to get its […]
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Apple’s smart glasses come into focus [Cult of Mac podcast No. 16] This week on the Cult of Mac podcast: New details emerge about Apple's smart glasses, including possible shapes, sizes and colors.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
These are my favorite ultra-slim MagSafe batteries you can get today [Video] I love MagSafe batteries and by this point, I have probably tested hundreds of them. There are plenty of great options out there with different capacities, charging speeds, built-in cables, and diagnostic displays, and there seems to be a MagSafe battery variant for any situation. But the feature I like most is thinness. While it’s great to have 10,000 mAh in a battery, that adds too much extra bulk in most daily cases. So over the last few months, I have been on the hunt for slim MagSafe batteries that add the least amount of bulk to my iPhone. These are the three best ones I’ve tested so far.
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Today in Apple history: Apple pays $15 million to promote Mission: Impossible On April 18, 1996, Apple unveiled a massive $15 million promotional tie-in for the "Mission: Impossible" movie starring Tom Cruise. What a disaster!
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
macOS 27 Will Mark the End of an Era During its Platforms State of the Union segment at WWDC 2025, Apple revealed that macOS 26 Tahoe is the final major macOS version for Intel-based Macs.
The upcoming macOS 27 release will be compatible with Apple silicon Macs only, meaning that you will need a Mac with an M-series chip or a MacBook Neo with an A18 Pro chip in order to install the software update. macOS 27 should be available in beta starting in June, and the update will likely be widely released in September.
macOS Tahoe is compatible with the following Macs:MacBook Neo (2026)
MacBook Air with Apple silicon (2020 and later)
MacBook Pro with Apple silicon (2020 and later)
MacBook Pro (16‑inch, 2019)
MacBook Pro (13‑inch, 2020, Four Thunderbolt 3 ports)
iMac (2020 and later)
Mac mini (2020 and later)
Mac Studio (2022 and later)
Mac Pro (2019 and later)Intel-based Macs that can run macOS Tahoe but will not be compatible with macOS 27 include the 16-inch MacBook Pro (2019), the 27-inch iMac (2020), the 13-inch MacBook Pro (2020, Four Thunderbolt 3 ports), and the Mac Pro (2019).
macOS 27's exact compatibility with Apple silicon Macs remains to be seen, but presumably the update will support all Macs with an M1 chip or newer.Related Roundup: macOS 27This article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
How to use the iPhone 16 Camera Control The Camera Control is a new button on the iPhone that opens the camera, takes pictures and adjusts camera settings on the fly.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
How to protect your privacy by opting out of data collection in popular AI apps [Sponsored] A recent study found that around a third of AI app users are having deeply personal conversations with the chatbots. Even if you’re not sharing your deepest fears with an AI app, your questions and conversations may still include a significant amount of personal data.
A separate Stanford study found that six leading US AI companies all feed user inputs back into their models for future training, potentially putting your privacy at risk. Fortunately, there are simple steps you can take to manage this …
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Apple @ Work: Free Apple device management is a baseline, not a finish line Apple @ Work is exclusively brought to you by Mosyle, the only Apple Unified Platform. Mosyle is the only solution that integrates in a single professional-grade platform all the solutions necessary to seamlessly and automatically deploy, manage & protect Apple devices at work. Over 45,000 organizations trust Mosyle to make millions of Apple devices work-ready with no effort and at an affordable cost. Request your EXTENDED TRIAL today and understand why Mosyle is everything you need to work with Apple.
Apple recently announced that the device management portion of its new Apple Business platform is now completely free. If you manage a fleet of Apple devices, this immediately caught your attention. It’s the first free device management system I can remember since Meraki’s System Manager. Giving small businesses a free tool to manage their Macs and iPhones is a huge win for the ecosystem. However, if you are an IT administrator looking at your current device management renewal and wondering if you can just cancel it and move everything to Apple, you need to pump the brakes a bit. Let’s look at why.
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Apple Has Released These 12 New Products This Year Apple has released more than 12 new products and accessories this year. The company kicked things off with a second-generation AirTag in January, and it unveiled a wide range of devices in March, including the MacBook Neo, iPhone 17e, two new Studio Display models, updated iPad Air models with the M4 chip, and much more.
Here is everything that Apple has released in 2026 so far:Apple Unveils New AirTag With Longer Range, Louder Speaker, and More
Apple Introduces New Black Unity Apple Watch Band
Apple Announces iPhone 17e With A19 Chip, MagSafe, and More
Apple Unveils iPad Air With M4 Chip, Increased RAM, Wi-Fi 7, and More
Apple Announces MacBook Air With M5 Chip and 512GB Base Storage
Apple Unveils MacBook Pro Featuring M5 Pro and M5 Max Chips
Apple Updates Studio Display With Thunderbolt 5 and More
Apple Introduces All-New Studio Display XDR: 120Hz, Mini-LED, and More
Apple Announces $599 'MacBook Neo' With A18 Pro Chip
Apple Announces AirPods Max 2 With H2 Chip and More
Apple's Special-Edition Nike Powerbeats Pro 2 Now Available
Apple Releases iPhone Cases, Apple Watch Bands, and Crossbody Strap in New ColorsThe new AirTag is equipped with a second-generation Ultra Wideband chip, enabling the Precision Finding feature to work up to 50% farther away from an item compared to the previous-generation model, according to Apple. The new AirTag also has an upgraded Bluetooth chip for improved overall range outside of Precision Finding mode.
With an updated internal design, the new AirTag features a 50% louder speaker compared to the previous-generation model, according to Apple.
Apple said the Black Unity Connection Braided Solo Loop for the Apple Watch features the colors of the Pan-African flag in honor of Black History Month.
iPhone 17e features the same overall design as the iPhone 16e, but it gains Apple's A19 chip, MagSafe for magnetic wireless charging and magnetic accessories, Apple's second-generation C1X modem for faster 5G, and a doubled 256GB of base storage. In the U.S., the iPhone 17e starts at $599, just like the iPhone 16e did.
The new iPad Air's key upgrades include Apple's M4 chip, an increased 12GB of RAM, Apple's N1 chip with Wi-Fi 7 support, and the C1X modem in cellular models.
The MacBook Air received a faster M5 chip, and a doubled 512GB of base storage, but the starting price increased from $999 to $1,099 as a result of a 256GB configuration being dropped. With the N1 chip, the MacBook Air now has Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6, and it now comes with Apple's 40W Dynamic Power Adapter with 60W Max.
The higher-end 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro models finally received M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, plus up to twice as fast SSD speeds and a doubled 1TB of base storage. Battery life has increased slightly across all of the models, and the N1 chip extends to the MacBook Pro line now for Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6 support.
The regular Studio Display gained Thunderbolt 5 support and improved speakers, and the camera now supports Desk View. There is also an all-new, higher-end Studio Display XDR that gained all of those benefits, plus bigger improvements such as a 120Hz refresh rate, mini-LED backlighting, increased brightness, and more.
The colorful MacBook Neo starts at just $599 in the United States, and at an even lower $499 for college students. Available in Blush, Citrus, Indigo, and Silver, the MacBook Neo is powered by the A18 Pro chip from the iPhone, and it is equipped with a 13-inch display, up to 512GB of storage, and a non-configurable 8GB of RAM.
AirPods Max 2 have a handful of upgrades over the previous AirPods Max, including Apple's H2 chip, increased active noise cancellation, improved sound quality, and features such as Adaptive Audio, Conversation Awareness, Voice Isolation, and Live Translation. Plus, the Digital Crown has a new Camera Remote function.
The special-edition Nike Powerbeats Pro 2 are the same as the regular Powerbeats Pro 2, except they have a two-tone design consisting of black and Nike's signature Volt neon green-yellow color. The earbuds have both Nike and Beats logos.
What's Next?
Beyond the usual annual updates to iPhones and Apple Watches, Apple's all-new smart home hub is finally expected to launch later this year, once the more personalized version of Siri arrives. We are also expecting a foldable iPhone, a MacBook Pro with an OLED display, and long-awaited updates to the Apple TV, HomePod, and HomePod mini this year.
Related Reading: Apple to Launch These 15+ New Products Later This YearThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
My Mac felt slow, but hardware wasn’t the problem. Here’s how I fixed it. I thought my M4 Pro Mac mini was running slow because it needed more RAM. Turns out, it needed some spring cleaning and better usage habits.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Top Stories: 'iPhone Ultra' Rumors, Mac Mini and Mac Studio Shortages, and More It was another busy week of Apple news and rumors, with upcoming Apple product categories like the foldable iPhone and smart glasses featuring prominently in the news.
This week also saw continued tightening of supplies of the Mac mini and Mac Studio, while Amazon announced it will be acquiring Apple's satellite partner that supports a variety of Apple services for users off the terrestrial grid, so read on below for all the details on these stories and more!
Top Stories
'iPhone Ultra' Will Solve Two Key Problems
Apple reportedly plans to unveil a foldable iPhone in September, with one leaker on Chinese social media claiming the device will be called the "iPhone Ultra."
Now, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, the device will have improved screen quality and overall durability compared to competing foldables. "Apple engineers believe they've solved problems with screen quality and overall durability, two long-running flaws with phones in this category," he said.
Rumors on launch timing have been all over the place, with some claiming the foldable iPhone will be available in September alongside the iPhone 18 Pro models while others suggest there could be a delay in availability that might extend even into early 2027. The latest rumor suggests, however, that while production is behind schedule, Apple is still aiming for a fall 2026 launch.
For more on the iPhone Ultra, check out last week's episode of The MacRumors Show.
Apple Stops Accepting Orders for Some Mac Mini and Mac Studio Models
Amid severe global RAM chip shortages and rumors of updated models, some Mac mini and Mac Studio configurations are now completely out of stock on Apple's online store in the U.S.
Mac mini configurations with an upgraded 32GB or 64GB of RAM and Mac Studio configurations with an upgraded 128GB or 256GB of RAM are listed as "currently unavailable" on the storefront, meaning they can no longer be ordered at all.
Other configurations that remain available continue to face lengthy shipping delays, with estimated delivery time frames ranging from one to three months. Last month, Apple entirely removed the Mac Studio's 512GB of RAM option, but supplies are clearly now tightening even further.
Apple Testing Four Smart Glasses Styles Made of High-End Materials
Apple is developing at least four different styles of smart glasses, and the company is betting that their superior design will set them apart from rival products, according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman.
Writing in his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman says that Apple's latest designs are made from a high-end acetate material, which is "more durable and luxurious" than the standard plastic used by most existing brands. In Gurman's words, the designs in testing include:
A large rectangular frame, reminiscent of Ray-Ban Wayfarers
A slimmer rectangular design, similar to the glasses worn by Apple CEO Tim Cook
Larger oval or circular frames
A smaller, more refined oval or circular option
Apple and Amazon Ink Satellite Deal Amid Amazon's Takeover of Globalstar
Amazon has announced that it will acquire Globalstar, which currently serves as Apple's exclusive satellite connectivity partner, but it appears Apple satellite services will be preserved and will perhaps expand under the deal.
Alongside the acquisition, Amazon and Apple have signed a separate agreement for Amazon's Leo satellite network to power existing iPhone and Apple Watch satellite features, including Emergency SOS, Messages via satellite, Find My, and Roadside Assistance via satellite.
Amazon said it will continue supporting iPhone and Apple Watch models that use Globalstar's existing and upcoming low Earth orbit constellation. Amazon also said it will work with Apple on future satellite services running on the expanded Leo network.
Check Who's Using Your iPhone Hotspot Data
If you regularly share your iPhone's data connection with your laptop or iPad, or let family members piggyback on your device's data, you'll be glad to learn that Apple recently made it a lot easier to keep tabs on who's burning through your monthly allowance.
In a welcome change with the release of iOS 26.4, Apple has moved Personal Hotspot data usage info out of its previous hiding spot and put it in a much more convenient location right in the Personal Hotspot menu.
Apple Highlights Photos Shot on iPhone During NASA's Mission to Moon
Astronauts aboard NASA's Orion spacecraft used the iPhone 17 Pro Max to take selfies of themselves with the Earth in the background during the Artemis II mission around the far side of the Moon earlier this month.
Now that the crew members have safely returned to Earth, Apple's CEO Tim Cook and marketing chief Greg Joswiak have both turned to social media to congratulate them on their successful mission and highlight the iPhone's involvement.
"You captured the wonders of space and our planet beautifully, taking iPhone photography to new heights, and we're grateful you shared it with the world," wrote Cook. "Your work continues to inspire us all to think different. Welcome home!"
MacRumors Newsletter
Each week, we publish an email newsletter like this highlighting the top Apple stories, making it a great way to get a bite-sized recap of the week hitting all of the major topics we've covered and tying together related stories for a big-picture view.
So if you want to have top stories like the above recap delivered to your email inbox each week, subscribe to our newsletter!Tag: Top StoriesThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Apple Says CarPlay Ultra is Coming to These Vehicle Brands Last year, Apple launched CarPlay Ultra, the long-awaited next-generation version of its CarPlay software system for vehicles. Nearly a year later, CarPlay Ultra is still limited to Aston Martin's latest luxury vehicles, but that should change fairly soon.
In May 2025, Apple said many other vehicle brands planned to offer CarPlay Ultra, including Hyundai, Kia, and Genesis.
CarPlay Ultra features deeper integration with a vehicle's instrument cluster and systems, built-in apps for radio and climate controls, rear-view camera feed support, and more. The connected iPhone provides app-related data, while the vehicle provides information like the current speed, fuel level, tire pressure, engine temperature, and more.
The interface is tailored to each vehicle model and automaker's identity, and drivers can choose from various preset design options.
Earlier this year, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman said he was told that CarPlay Ultra would come to at least one major new Hyundai or Kia vehicle model "in the second half of this year," so hopefully an expansion is just a few months away.Related Roundup: CarPlayTag: CarPlay UltraRelated Forum: HomePod, HomeKit, CarPlay, Home & Auto TechnologyThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
U.S. ITC won't allow Masimo to bring back the Apple Watch ban The U.S. ITC has denied a request by Masimo to reinstate a ban on the Apple Watch, closing its case on alleged blood oxygen patent infringement.The rear sensor of the Apple WatchThe long-running lawsuit over the Apple Watch has continued, this time with a partial win for Apple. In the latest development, which saw Masimo accuse Apple of infringing on its blood oxygen patents, the medical tech firm was denied a review of a preliminary ruling.On March 19, the U.S. Court of Appeal for the Federal Circuit backed the original ruling by the International Trade Commission. However, on March 18, the ITC made a ruling that Apple wouldn't have to do anything else to remedy the case. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
I replaced 7 apps on my Mac with this one thing I built. Lifetime $24.99, no subscription. Hey everyone, My Mac had turned into an app graveyarrd. HandBrake for video compression. Preview for PDFs. Some random website for MOV to MP4. ImageOptim for images. Online Audio Convertter. And I still ended up in the terminal for half the stuff I needed to do. So I built ClearCut. One native Mac app that […]
Is the concern about AI replacing iOS developers working in companies a real one? Seems like every month there's a new AI tool that writes more of our code. I know the common take is "AI won't replace devs, devs using AI will replace those who don't." But honestly does that math hold up if one dev with AI can do the work of three? Curious what people working […]
Top Stories: iOS 27 rumors, Apple Glasses design, more Welcome to 9to5Mac’s top stories of the week, where we recap the biggest news in the Apple world every Saturday. This week, we have iOS 26.4.1, more iOS 27 leaks, Apple Glasses rumors, and more Apple news. Plus, our usual slate of new podcast episodes, opinion pieces, and much more. Read on for all of this week’s top stories.
more…
voyage – a free, iOS native geography app with travel tracking and daily quizzes I know there already are apps for this. I've used them. However, all of them have some premium features you have to pay for, and are often built around a 2D map. I wanted to create an open-source, modern (but playful), completely free app centered around 3D earth. No ads, no data collected, no BS. […]
Got rejected for “manipulation”. I was trying to emulate an apps onboarding where if you skip the first payment a second discount price appears. I just thought it was a clever way to offer a second discount. Is this guideline something new? or did the app Im emulating just get lucky and slip through? How do you offer a discount like second special offer if this is manipulation? submitted by /u/0__O0–O0_0 [link] [comments]
INIU Cougar P64 140W review: Affordable fast MacBook power bank Macworld
At a glance
Pros
140W PD 3.1 charging
Large 25K battery capacity
Cool looks
Good value
Cons
Lower max output than rivals
Our Verdict
The Cougar P64 is a compellingly affordable power bank for MacBook owners with its speedy recharging and compact, lightweight form.
Price When Reviewed
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Price When Reviewed$89.99
Best Prices Today: INIU Cougar P64 140W Power Bank
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Who is the INIU Cougar P64 for? This power bank is rated at 140W for 16-inch MacBook Pro fast charging but is a good-looking battery recharging solution for any MacBook owner, from the Neo up.
If you’re away from a power socket long enough even a fully charged MacBook battery will eventually dry up, and that might be in the middle of a complex Excel spreadsheet, deep PowerPoint or just as the streamed movie is getting good.
We’re used to carrying around a power bank for our phones—check out the best magnetic power banks for iPhone—but lugging one around that’s big enough to top up a thirsty laptop is not an everyday backpack companion.
When you’re travelling having a high-capacity power bank nearby might just save that spreadsheet or presentation and get you to the end of the movie.
Laptop power banks come in different capacities—the higher the milliamp hours or watt hours the more recharge power it brings—and at different speeds: the more watts, the faster the charge.
We loved INIU’s Cougar P62-E1 laptop power bank for its lightweight compact form and fun color choices in a world of gray pillar designs. That model topped out at a 65W power output—just about enough watts to fast-charge a MacBook Air but falling a little short for a MacBook Pro. It can handle the Pro but a little slowly.
Now it has a senior sibling, the Cougar P64 that is rated at PD 3.1, which means its Power Delivery is up to the 140W demanded by the 16-inch MacBook Pro for fast-charging. It will work at the max speed of all Apple’s other MacBooks, too.
Simon Jary
Full specs
Battery capacity: 25000mAh (92.5Wh)
Fastest Power Output: 140W
Total Power Output: 145W
Power Input: 80W
USB ports: 1x USB-C (140W PD 3.1); 1x USB-C (45W); 1x USB-A (18W).
Dimensions: 6.3 x 3.2 x 1 inches (159 x 81 x 25mm)
Weight: 17.5oz (496g)
Airline compatible: Yes
Macworld Test Score: 119%
It’s the slimmest and lightest of all the 140W laptop power banks we’ve tested, and maybe the best looking depending on whether you prefer the slab shape compared to its rivals’ pillar form.
It ships with a 2-foot 240W USB-C to USB-C cable and a handy travel pouch. It’s available in either black or white, although the white model was hard to get at the time of writing.
The EcoFlow RAPID Pro Power Bank has an integrated USB-C cable that is convenient, especially if you are susceptible to forgetting to pack a cable on your travels.
Fastest charging
With a 140W USB-C port, the INIU Cougar P64 matches the speed of some of our other top-rated MacBook power banks, including the Anker Prime Power Bank (26K, 300W), EcoFlow RAPID Pro Power Bank 27K (300W), Ugreen 48000mAh Portable Power Bank (300W), Cuktech 15 Ultra Power Bank 20000mAh (165W) and others.
At top-speed it should take only 30 minutes to simultaneously charge a 16-inch MacBook Pro to 60% and an iPhone 15 Pro Max to 62%. It also supports Samsung Super Fast Charge 2.0.
25K capacity and performance
Its large 25,000mAh (92.5Wh) battery capacity is airline-approved, although it’s always worth checking before taking it to the airport as some airlines have their own rules.
In our recharging test, the INIU Cougar P64 got a Macworld score of 119%. That means that it recharged our test 14-inch MacBook Pro from 0% to 100% and then another 19% on the second recharge.
That compares favorably with the Anker Prime’s 125% and EcoFlow’s 120% scores.
Max output
Where it falls off in comparison to its rival 140W power banks—and therefore where you must compromise fir the lower cost—is its lower maximum power output. Using its two USB-C ports it can push out a total of 145W (100W+45W), where the Anker Prime, Ugreen 48000mAh and EcoFlow RAPID Pro each has a maximum 300W output.
If you are wanting to recharge a few MacBooks at the same time, the P64 will do it slower than the others as it has less power to simultaneously share around.
That said, when using all three at the same time, one laptop could be charged at 100W with the other two ports sharing 45W, which should be enough to fast-charge an iPhone (via the second USB-C) and a third device via the USB-A port.
Input
The P64 is no slouch when it comes to being recharging itself, with an 80W input speed. But the Anker Prime and EcoFlow Power Banks can use both their two 140W ports at the same time for far-higher input speeds of 250W and 280W respectively.
If time is on your side before you venture out, 80W should be fast enough for a gentle power bank recharge.
INIU
Display
The P64 has a large smart display, showing the remaining power in the power bank, the output power of each port, plus the remaining battery in terms of hours.
Price
How does the INIU Cougar P64 match up on price with its 140W rival power banks?
Priced at $89.99 / £89.99 it looks like a bargain compared to the $229/£179 Anker Prime and $189/£169 EcoFlow RAID Pro. Those products have higher total power output when using more than one port at a time and much faster power bank recharging, but for a fast-charging laptop power bank the P64 is hard to ignore at this price.
The Cuktech 15 Ultra is cheaper still at around $75 but has a lower 20K battery capacity and a larger body.
Should you buy the INIU Cougar P64 140W 25K Power Bank?
The Cougar P64 is a compellingly affordable power bank for MacBook owners with its speedy recharging and compact, lightweight form.