WARP connectivity issues in Bulgaria Apr 24, 14:34 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is investigating issues with Cloudflare WARP and Cloudflare Zero Trust. Cloudflare WARP and Zero Trust users in Bulgaria may experience connectivity issues or a degraded Internet experience.
[Feedback] AbSync – A Fluid, Zen, and Temp Tracker My watchOS app is scheduled to go live in 1 week! After many back-and-forths with Apple (requests on how it works, whether we're bypassing protocols, etc), the app has been approved! Here's how it works: The first 48 hours, the app learns about your body. It tracks your fluid levels, your baseline calm, and your […]
Get the 2026 MacBook Pro for New Record Low $1,999 Price Apple's new 14-inch M5 Pro MacBook Pro with 24GB RAM and 1TB SSD has hit a new all-time low price today. It's available for $1,999.00 on Amazon, down from $2,199.00.
Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner with Amazon. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running.
This beats the previous deal we tracked on this model by about $50, and as of writing it's only available in Space Black. Amazon provides a free delivery estimate by around April 29, with earlier delivery for Prime members.
$200 OFF14-inch M5 Pro MacBook Pro (24GB/1TB) for $1,999.00
You can also get $200 off every 16-inch MacBook Pro model right now on Amazon, with the 24GB RAM/1TB M5 Pro model hitting a new all-time low price of $2,499.00, down from $2,699.00.
If you're on the hunt for more discounts, be sure to visit our Apple Deals roundup where we recap the best Apple-related bargains of the past week.
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This light-powered Mac keyboard just dropped to its lowest price ever Macworld
Logitech Signature Slim Solar+ K980
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Don’t you just want to forget about batteries and charging cables for at least one device in your life? Because I know I do… If you’re in the same boat, this Logitech Signature Slim Solar+ keyboard won’t need any of that, and it’s only going to cost you $80 now that it’s 20 percent off at Amazon, the lowest price we’ve ever seen for this model.
This nifty keyboard was built for working professionals who love sleek profiles. With a super cool light-absorbing strip, this keyboard gathers energy from both natural and artificial light sources, so it won’t matter how close to the window your desk is. It doesn’t get more effortless than this! Since this is a Logitech keyboard, it’s been built for Macs, but you can hook it up to three devices at once, including an iPad and iPhone, as well as any ChromeOS, Linux, or Android devices you may have — as long as there’s a Bluetooth connection, you should be fine. The Logi+ app will make it super easy to customize a ton of keys, too.
We actually reviewed the Logitech Signature Slim Solar+ a few months back and gave it a 4-star rating, appreciating how comfortable it is to use, the innovative solar-power tech, and the fact that it’s actually a full-sized keyboard. We didn’t love that it had no backlight, though.
Stop wasting time plugging in your keyboard every few weeks and grab the Logitech Signature Slim Solar+ while it’s on sale for the best price yet.
Leaker details next year’s ‘iPhone 20’ display features This fall’s iPhone 18 lineup is less than half a year away, but next year is rumored to bring a radical new 20th anniversary iPhone model. Here’s what the latest leaks say about the ‘iPhone 20’ display.
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President Trump threatens Starmer with ‘big tariff’ over UK tech tax U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on the UK if Prime Minister Keir Starmer does not scrap the country’s…
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Chatbots take a back seat as new GPT-5.5 model focuses on getting work done OpenAI is pushing AI beyond chat with the recent release of GPT-5.5, a model designed to complete multi-step work instead of stopping at answers.OpenAI logoThe company introduced GPT-5.5 on April 23, a new flagship AI model designed to handle multi-step tasks across software, research, and everyday computer work. It moves toward agentic systems that plan, act, and complete jobs with minimal guidance.OpenAI claims that GPT-5.5 can handle loosely defined requests by breaking them into steps. It can use tools, verify results, and continue working until the task is complete. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Fantastical 4.1.12 and Cardhop 2.4.7 Maintenance updates for the calendar and contact management apps. ($56.99 annual subscription, free update, various sizes, macOS 12+)
Fantastical 4.1.12 and Cardhop 2.4.7 Maintenance updates for the calendar and contact management apps. ($56.99 annual subscription, free update, various sizes, macOS 12+)
Firefox 150 Brings a couple of handy improvements and bug fixes to the Web browser celebrating its sesquicentennial release. (Free, 151.4 MB, macOS 10.15+)
Firefox 150 Brings a couple of handy improvements and bug fixes to the Web browser celebrating its sesquicentennial release. (Free, 151.4 MB, macOS 10.15+)
Parallels Desktop 26.3.1 Fixes a bug that prevented Steam from launching in a Windows 11 virtual machine. ($99.99 Standard Edition, free update, 5.4 MB, macOS 13+)
∞ The Dalrymple Report: John Ternus The big news that shook the tech world this week is Tim Cook stepping down as CEO of Apple after over a decade at the helm of the company. Dave and I take a look at the things Tim did right and a few things he did wrong before exploring his successor, John Ternus and what he can bring to the table.
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Show Notes:
Mac mini availability
Tim Cook stepping down
Tim’s email to the company
Zero to One products
John Ternus’ internal email
Johny Srouji named Apple’s Chief Hardware Officer
Shows and movies we're watching
City of Shadows, Netflix
Project Hail Mary
The Pitt, Season 2, HBO
Prestigious Peabody Awards go to Apple TV for its most-viewed drama and a documentary When Pulitzer-adjacent Peabody Awards go to Apple TV -- for "Pluribus" and "Come See Me in the Good Light" -- people take notice.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Best minimalist Mac setups: More power, less stuff Many computer setups go for mission-control overkill. But sometimes the best setup is austere. Check out the best minimalist Mac setups.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Roast my Swift Package Hello all, I am looking for feedback on my swift package. It’s a particle emitter abstraction. I’m an iOS dev with 1YOE, trying to learn about more iOS topics. Please note, my next steps are to write unit tests and thorough documentation so please skip that for now if you can. https://github.com/samlupton/Plume Thank you in […]
Apple TV’s ‘Pluribus’ and ‘Come See Me in the Good Light’ land Peabody Awards Apple TV was recognized with two wins at the 86th Annual Peabody Awards, as Golden Globe Award-winning drama “Pluribus” landed…
The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.
The Safety Feature That Taught an LLM to Lie AI safeguards can backfire when models learn to mimic the signals meant to verify truth. In one system, memory design and tool markers led an LLM to fabricate completed actions. The post appeared first on TechNewsWorld.
Lykke Studios: In pursuit of puffy perfection DEVELOPER STORIESTHE POWER OF PUFFIES.The delightful game puffies. combines the satisfying snap of a jigsaw puzzle with the nostalgic delight of a sticker book.This 2025 Apple Design Award finalist for Inclusivity is brimming with virtual puffy stickers, the sort that ’80s kids would slap on their binders or trade at recess. Players tear open themed packs of vibrant, kitschy decals — maybe punk-rock capybaras, maybe sporty sushi rolls — and place them on a blank sheet so everything fits without overlapping.The stickers are rendered with such accuracy that players can almost feel the slight give of their glossy surfaces under their fingertips — and the gentle haptic “blop” that accompanies each placement is supremely satisfying. Those sensations are no accident: puffies. developer Lykke Studios spent months fine-tuning these small moments.puffies.
Available on: iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV
Team size: 8
Based in: Thailand and Cyprus
Download puffies. from Apple Arcade >“We always start with a material that we like,” says Lykke Studios founder Jakob Lykkegaard. For the company‘s 2023 Apple Design Award winner, stitch., that material was thread woven into whimsical embroidery puzzles. For their 2022 Apple Design Award finalist, tint., it was watercolor paint on thick, textured paper.When the team began brainstorming the project that would become puffies., they set their sights on a jigsaw-style experience that would feel natural on touchscreens. Their eureka moment was landing on puffy stickers as the puzzle pieces; they’re tactile, nostalgic, and far more interesting to look at than a lone jigsaw piece.And then it all blew up. “Because of the game physics, our first prototypes pretty much exploded,” laughs Lykkegaard.Sticker shockEvery one of the game’s 4,000 stickers is a 3D-modeled object that’s beholden to the game’s physics engine — and early tests proved they did not play well together. Once the team figured out how to stop pieces from ricocheting around the virtual tabletop, they turned to the problem of what should happen when a player tries to place one sticker on top of another. Is that something that comes up a lot during play? Not really. Did they spend months perfecting it anyway? Absolutely.Lykkegaard recalls discussing the optimal outcome of this sticker-on-sticker scenario with the team. “Does it stick where it’s at? Does it slide down? And if it slides down, in what direction, and at what speed?” he says. They ultimately decided to simply have the sticker zip back to the edge of the puzzle where it came from, but “it’s not inaccurate to say we spent three months on this,” says Lykkegaard. “We scrapped the entire code base and started over again until it felt right.”That pursuit of perfection is threaded throughout the game’s design. The cutouts around each sticker were drawn by hand because automated tracing looked too sterile. Tilting a device causes a subtle parallax effect on a sticker’s vinyl surface, as though it were catching the light in the room. And the team iterated endlessly on snap distances — how close a piece needs to be to its proper spot before it will gently click into place when released — down to the last pixel.“Players can feel it subconsciously,” says Tanin-Andre Hohmann, producer at Lykke Studios. “They may not know it, but they say, ‘Oh, I like this more.’ And then if you ask why, they’re like, ‘I don’t know, really. It just fits better.’”Cactuses and plungersThat best-it-can-possibly-be philosophy also extends to the game’s art. From cute cactus creatures to anthropomorphic toilet plungers, puffies. stickers are brought to life by talented illustrators around the world. “It’s literally the artist’s art,” says Hohmann. “We wanted it as unfiltered as possible.”The game also benefits from its home country. While the Denmark-born Lykkegaard and many of his teammates hail from Europe, Lykke Studios is based in Phuket, Thailand — far from stuffy boardrooms and packed conference halls, close to a slower pace of life and easygoing creativity. “I tend to like coming into the bubble of the Bay Area or Europe, exploring things, and leaving that bubble again,“ says Lykkegaard. “And then having an unlimited amount of time to think and come up with new ideas.”That unhurried mindset can be felt in the puzzles themselves. Each sticker-sheet level is painstakingly designed by hand — no algorithms, no automation. Timers and “game over“ screens aren’t a thing in puffies.; difficulty comes entirely from how many stickers are in the pack the player chooses. And to ensure larger puzzles don't overwhelm players on smaller devices, the camera gently zooms in to frame the area where the current handful of stickers belongs.Maximizing accessibilityAccessibility follows the same no-compromises logic. Players can enable more generous snap distances, toggle sticker-placement outlines, and use a finger-offset option that accommodates reduced motor function — or just very large hands. The guiding principle is simple: If a player comes up with a valid barrier the team hadn’t considered, and it’s feasible to fix, the team adds a solution.The cost of all this craft? Time. Thankfully, the team’s previous successes have given them the freedom to polish their games without rigid milestones. But even so, is it worth it? To obsess over squish and snap, to tune the “rip” of opening a sticker pack, to jettison heaps of code because a few interactions don’t feel perfect?“There are many things in the game that nobody will ever see, that we put energy into just because we know it’s there,” says Lykkegaard. “And that makes us proud.”Keep readingDeveloper stories explore best practices and philosophies from some of the most inventive developers in the Apple community. In each story, we go behind the screens with developers, designers, and engineers to find out how they brought their remarkable creations to life.Browse all developer stories >
Today in Apple history: It’s time for Apple Watch launch On April 24, 2015, the original Apple Watch launch meant fans could finally try the smartwatch dubbed the "next chapter in Apple history."
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Here’s the next Apple Watch face coming in watchOS 26.5 There’s a new Apple Watch face that will be included in the upcoming watchOS 26.5 software update.
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Tim Cook, John Ternus, the FBI, and 'Star Wars,' on the AppleInsider Podcast You didn't see that coming, at least not now, but Tim Cook's successor is John Ternus and there's so much news about both men. Plus what Apple had to update because of the FBI, how "Star Wars" benefits from the Apple Vision Pro, and more, on the AppleInsider Podcast.If John Ternus ever had to buy his iPhones at an Apple Store, he doesn't now - image credit: AppleThis week, Apple pulled off something special. It managed to totally surprise everyone, and yet at the same moment, surprise no one at all.It really was startling when it was announced that Tim Cook is stepping down as Apple CEO, but it wasn't remotely unexpected that his successor would be John Ternus. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
OpenAI Debuts GPT-5.5 Claiming Agentic Coding and Research Gains OpenAI has announced the release of GPT-5.5, the latest upgrade to the company's family of models powering its ChatGPT and Codex apps.
OpenAI describes GPT-5.5 as better at multi-step work, claiming it can plan, use tools, and verify its own output with less hand-holding. The model is said to offer gains in agentic coding, computer use, and early-stage scientific research.
GPT-5.5 Thinking offers "faster help for harder problems," according to OpenAI, while GPT-5.5 Pro is being pitched as a research partner for tougher questions where accuracy matters more than speed.
OpenAI argues that its latest model is more token-efficient, so Codex tasks should – in theory – finish with less overhead despite the bump.
ChatGPT Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise subscribers get GPT-5.5 Thinking, while the more powerful GPT-5.5 Pro model is limited to ChatGPT Pro, Business, and Enterprise. In Codex, GPT-5.5 spans Plus, Pro, Business, Enterprise, Edu, and Go plans. API access is said to be coming "very soon."Tags: ChatGPT, OpenAIThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Apple TV 4K might break a record no one wants to see happen It makes sense that Apple TV 4K customers are vocal about the lack of new hardware. The current set-top box, introduced in 2022, runs the risk of breaking a record no one wants to see happen.
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Repurposing Macs: How to get more out of your obsolete hardware If you've upgraded to a new Mac, don't throw away your old one. Here are some ideas of things you can do to get more out of your older Apple desktop.The 2018 Mac mini may be 'Obsolete' but it still has its uses. Buying a new Mac or MacBook can be a thrill. The bump of speed, the extra memory and storage that's free of clutter, and the unscratched, clean casing can make most Mac users instantly happy.However, after drinking in all the potential of your new digital workspace, you'll soon be reminded that you still have your old one. After you've migrated your software and files over to your new daily driver, it may seem that there's little point in keeping your old one around. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Apple taps Samsung for 20th-anniversary iPhone's quad-curved display Apple's 20th-anniversary iPhone is again rumored to have a new, curved display with Samsung now tipped to produce the "four-micro-curve" OLED panel.iPhone 20 is tipped to get a new, quad-curved OLED displayApple is expected to pull out all the stops for the iPhone 20 to celebrate 20 years of the iPhone. The iPhone X did something similar for its 10th anniversary, ditching the Home button and minimizing display bezels.With its 20th-anniversary iPhone, Apple is expected to go a step further and bend the display around all four sides of the device. Now, Weibo leaker Digital Chat Station reports that Apple has tapped Samsung to produce curved displays for the device. Rumor Score: 🤔 Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
9 Tim Cook bets that paid off and 2 big flops that didn’t Macworld
After 15 years leading one of the world’s largest companies, Tim Cook is heading towards the exit door. By the time he steps down as Apple’s CEO on September 1 and helps ease John Ternus into the hot seat, he’ll be able to look back on one of the most successful decade-and-a-half stints in corporate history.
But while everyone knows about the headline triumphs – the iPhone X, the Apple Watch, AirPods, MacBook Neo – Cook has had a hand in a vast array of more understated achievements. Here, we take a look at some of the most underrated Apple products that came to fruition during Tim Cook’s tenure – and a couple he’d probably rather forget.
Services
Under Steve Jobs, Apple was primarily a hardware company. Sure, it introduced a smattering of applications and Internet services—iTunes, iWork and MobileMe (ahem) being a few notable examples—but the focus was far and away on physical devices.
When Tim Cook ascended to the throne, however, he threw Apple headfirst into the digital era. But it wasn’t just about selling software to customers, as Cook made a specific pivot towards services – that is, apps and electronic products that often featured ongoing subscriptions and recurring payments.
That includes Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Arcade, AppleCare+, and more. Instead of hoping to sell a device to a user and collecting a one-time fee, Apple has expanded its sources of ongoing revenue to the tune of $109.16 billion for the 2025 fiscal year. That’s a whole heap of cash.
Health and fitness
One of the services offered under Cook’s guidance is Fitness+, but that’s just one small way the outgoing CEO has put health and wellbeing at the forefront of what Apple does. Indeed, thanks to Cook, Apple is now one of the world’s leading fitness companies.
For one thing, there’s the Apple Watch, first revealed in 2014 and initially framed largely as a fashion accessory. When that angle failed to take off, Cook quickly pivoted the device towards health and fitness, expanding activity tracking and health metrics, adding the specialized Apple Watch Ultra model for athletes and explorers, and linking up with Nike to offer exclusive bands, faces and training plans.
The Apple Watch has become one of the leading health and fitness devices under Tim Cook’s watch.Britta O’Boyle
On the wellbeing side, Apple has continually added features to its devices, particularly the Apple Watch. It can now alert you to potentially dangerous conditions and call emergency services on your behalf if you need assistance. There’s also Hearing Protection on AirPods that can turn them into hearing aids when not listening to music.
Thanks to Cook’s decision, the Apple Watch has become one of the best fitness wearables on the market, while services like Apple Fitness+ have helped to bring in additional revenue on a continuing basis. And without the health and wellbeing pivot, the Apple Watch might not have made it through its bumpy first year.
Apple Pay and Apple Card
The best Apple products are so simple and seamless to use that you quickly forget what life was like without them. For many people, that’s the case with Apple Pay. You no longer need to remember your credit cards or fumble with cash – just tap your iPhone on a payment terminal and you’re good to go.
Apple Pay is so good because it combines two things that have defined Apple under Tim Cook: simplicity and security. All it takes is two clicks of your iPhone’s side button and a quick Face ID or Touch ID verification. Your payment data is safely stored and protected without ever inconveniencing you or slowing you down. And that’s helped it become a much-loved feature that’s often overlooked.
A few years after Apple Pay, Apple introduced its own credit card designed for iPhone users with no fees and daily cash back. Oh, and the coolest physical card ever made.
The Apple Pencil has taken the iPad in a whole new direction.Mahmoud Itani / Foundry
Apple Pencil
If you’re a tablet user, Apple’s iPad obviously gets all the limelight. But it would be a travesty to pass over the impact of the Apple Pencil and the way it’s proven to be an enduring, if underappreciated, success story of the Tim Cook era.
There are many pens and styli out there, but none come close to the Apple Pencil. Its strength comes from the way it can adapt to exactly what you need to do: it’s incredibly easy to get started with but incorporates advanced, innovative features like the barrel roll gesture and hover functionality.
One of its best aspects is the way the Pro model magnetically snaps to your iPad, which not only keeps it safely stowed but charges it up, too. Interestingly, this feature was reportedly the brainchild of John Ternus, making the Apple Pencil a collaborative project of both the current and forthcoming Apple CEOs.
Pre-recorded events
It’s something of an understatement to say that the Covid-19 pandemic completely upended the world. One small effect it had on Apple was the way the company could no longer invite people to in-person events whenever it wanted to announce new products. Instead, Apple was forced to adapt and prepare pre-recorded shows when launch day rolled around. And in the end, I think that was a massive improvement.
No longer do we have to sit through slightly awkward presenters fumbling their lines or listen to that one overenthusiastic fan cheering Craig Federighi’s every utterance. Now, we get slickly produced videos that are gorgeously shot and get straight to the point. Freed from the constraints of a physical conference hall, Apple has been able to spread its wings and turn its launch events into the kind of polished presentations that its rivals can only dream of emulating.
Apple events went from simple stage presentations to slick, prerecorded videos.Apple
AirTag
One of Apple’s cheapest products is also one of its most useful, with AirTag proving that mini can often mean mighty. This little item tracker might appear to exist outside Apple’s core range of iPhones, iPads and Macs, but it sits alongside them as a device that improves users’ lives and ties in effortlessly with their existing Apple gear.
As with so many Apple products, the difference between AirTag and rival devices is the way it integrates into your iPhone. Go looking for an AirTag and its Precision Finding feature will guide you there using your iPhone, while it also provides a straightforward way to locate all your AirTags on a map. It’s an incredibly intuitive way to find what’s lost quickly and easily.
Continuity and Handoff
We’ve already covered how well Apple products work together, and one of the purest examples of this is Continuity and Handoff. This software system covers a range of features, all of which bring your Apple devices ever-closer together, and they’ve truly thrived under the watch of Tim Cook.
Take Universal Control, for example, which lets you use a single mouse and keyboard across multiple Macs and iPads. Or consider how Universal Clipboard allows you to copy a file on one Apple device and then paste it on another, winging the text or picture across the airwaves as if by magic. Or Continuity Camera, which lets you seamlessly use your iPhone as a webcam.
It’s that Continuity and Handoff magic that demonstrates Apple’s ethos in its purest form and it’s one reason why Apple insists on controlling the whole widget, as Steve Jobs would say.
Universal Control is just one of the ways Apple’s devices work seamlessly together thanks to Tim Cook’s vision.Willis Lai/IDG
Privacy
One of Tim Cook’s most underrated contributions to Apple is not a product at all, but instead a set of beliefs and principles. Namely, the commitment to privacy and security that he has instilled in the company and that guides every decision it makes.
This isn’t just some marketing spin either – Apple has taken real risks here, such as when it refused to build an iPhone backdoor for the FBI or pulled Advanced Data Protection from the U.K. rather than compromise the system for everyone. Sure, Apple could do better–its kowtowing to censorship laws in China and Russia is a privacy black eye–but Tim Cook has been far more committed than most to the ideals of privacy and security. If you care about these concepts, Apple’s work has been encouraging.
Environmental action
Another key principle that has flourished under Tim Cook is Apple’s dedication to environmental action. The company has led the way in minimizing its environmental impact and improving its record in this area. Given the size of Apple, that’s no meaningless feat.
Unlike some companies, this isn’t simple “virtue signaling” – Apple actually takes this stuff seriously. It’s insisting that not only should its own properties and products be entirely carbon neutral by 2030, but those of its suppliers must too. It’s significantly reduced the size of its packaging so more products can fit on every transit truck and thus fewer journeys are required, and has all-but eliminated toxic chemicals and compounds from its devices. There’s more to do, but Apple’s efforts are laudable.
Siri
Of course, not everything Tim Cook worked on was a success. In some cases, the opposite was true: Apple put out products that overpromised and underdelivered. And perhaps the most egregious example of that is the new version of Siri powered by Apple Intelligence.
Siri has long been the butt of tech jokes that claimed it was so underpowered that it couldn’t organize a booze up in a brewery, and comments like that were sadly often on the money. So when Apple demoed a next-gen revamp of the virtual assistant at WWDC 2024 that was powered by Apple Intelligence, the tech world’s collective ears pricked up.
Siri was supposed to get an upgrade in 2024 but we’re still waiting for it to arrive.Foundry
And yet here we are, two years later, with almost nothing to show for it. Siri has been tangled up in the broader mess that is Apple Intelligence, and in March 2025 Apple was forced to admit that things hadn’t gone well with the Siri overhaul. With the firm throwing up its hands and asking Google Gemini for help powering Siri’s upcoming features, it now looks like Apple’s 2024 Siri reveal was nothing more than a speculative tech demo – one that prompted prominent Apple loyalist and pundit John Gruber to post an expletive-laden rant claiming that “something is rotten in the state of Cupertino.”
Vision Pro
While Siri might be a software failure, over on the hardware side, perhaps the most egregious example of an overhyped product during Tim Cook’s tenure has been the Vision Pro headset. Far from revolutionizing the world in the way Apple promised, the Vision Pro has been a letdown from start to finish.
For one thing, there’s the $3,499 price tag, a sticker shock so profound that it prompted audible gasps from the WWDC crowd when it was revealed in 2023. Then there’s the weight, which has been significant enough to cause neck pain in many of the people who have used the device. Throw in a lackluster selection of apps and experiences, and there’s little reason to plump for the device.
While Apple didn’t overpromise in terms of the Vision Pro’s features – it’s undoubtedly one of the most high-end headsets on the market – those same features pushed its price tag well out of reach for most people. And because of that, it failed to take off in the way Apple had hoped, leading it to become an expensive and disappointing dud under Tim Cook’s stewardship.
20th Anniversary iPhone to Feature Custom 'Micro-Curved' OLED Panel For its 20th-anniversary iPhone, Apple is tapping Samsung to produce a custom micro-curved OLED display that is brighter and thinner than existing panels, according to new supply chain information out of China.
Apple is reportedly considering a radical redesign for the 20th-anniversary iPhone that could feature a completely bezel-less display that curves around all four edges of the device.
To that end, Apple is said to be seeking from Samsung an equal-depth quad-curved panel design that uses "micro-curves" to keep the curve very shallow, as opposed to the aggressively curved "waterfall" edges of some existing Samsung panels.
Apple's preference for slightly rounded edges may ensure that the device feels softer in the hand and that swipes from the edge of the display feel more natural. It could also prevent distortion of on-screen content around the edges.
The latest supply chain information comes from Weibo-based leaker Digital Chat Station, who also says that Apple wants a "pol-less" display from Samsung – in other words, a panel design that removes the polarizer layer that sits on top of most current OLED screens.
That claim lines up with a September 2025 report out of Korea that said Apple will adopt a Samsung-made OLED technology called COE (Color Filter on Encapsulation) to make the 20th-anniversary iPhone's display brighter and thinner than previous panels.
COE displays remove the polarizing film from an OLED panel, applying the color filter directly onto the encapsulation layer of the display.
The technique reduces the thickness of the overall display stack, and it lets more light through to improve brightness while reducing power draw. Reflections are harder to deal with when there's no polarizing film, but in its latest iPhones, Apple added a new anti-reflective coating that is expected to be improved for future versions of the iPhone.
Apple is also said to be employing a crater-shaped light diffusion layer in the display to even out the brightness so that the screen looks uniformly lit across all areas.
2027 will mark the 20th-anniversary of the iPhone, and Apple reportedly wants to create a high-end all-glass model that doesn't have cutouts in the display.
Display analyst Ross Young said that Apple won't have under-display Face ID ready to go for a 2027 iPhone, but other leakers think it's possible. If Apple can't get everything under the display, we may see under-display Face ID and then a small hole-punch cutout on the front for the front-facing camera.
The latest rumors suggest that Apple is still testing an under-display iPhone camera for 2027, so it remains a possibility.Tags: 20th-Anniversary iPhone, Digital Chat Station, OLEDThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
How AI is working to make your iPhone and Mac nearly impervious to attacks Macworld
Software security is a nightmare. You’ve probably noticed that every few weeks, there’s an update for your Apple devices that patches dozens of vulnerabilities, and it never seems to stop. Modern software is so complex and so interconnected with other software that it’s almost impossible to keep up with the threats.
The “attack surface” of any system is the total amount of potential areas of attack. It’s all the code a hacker could find a hole in to compromise your device, program, software, or service. And with the growing size and scope of code, together with expanded libraries, APIs, and middleware, the attack surface of modern code is vast.
It’s the job of security engineers at companies like Apple to find and fix all the potential security flaws, but it’s a job too big. Hackers only have to find a single unknown flaw, while the security engineers have to find and fix all of them.
This gives the attackers a major advantage. It has meant that software security has become less about an attempt to close every hole than it is about raising the bar for attackers–making exploits so difficult and expensive that they at least become rare.
But all that is about to change.
AI coding agents are changing the rules
AI coding agents have gotten really good. In fact, in many areas, they’re better than your average programmer, and in some areas better than all but the best experts. Anthropic’s AI model Opus and the Claude Code tool are considered among the best. The folks at Mozilla used Opus 4.6 to scan through the Firefox codebase and found 22 security-sensitive bugs.
Think about that. This is a browser company with a team of experts whose job is to find and fix vulnerabilities, and this AI agent was able to find problems that led to 22 more.
Anthropic has let some developers test an early version of Mythos.Anthropic
It goes further. Anthropic’s next model is Mythos. It’s not released yet, but the company says it’s much better at code analysis and generating the current Opus 4.7 model. So Anthropic put it to the test. Dubbed Project Glasswing, Anthropic gave security researchers at Apple, Google, Microsoft, Cisco, the Linux Foundation, Amazon Web Services, and a few others early access to the Mythos model, along with a fund to spend on finding and fixing security holes.
How good is Glasswing? That same team that used Opus 4.6 to find and fix 22 security bugs in Firefox then got access to the Mythos preview. Firefox version 150 has fixes for 271 vulnerabilities found by it. That’s right, after Opus found 22 security bugs, Mythos found 271 more!
Firefox says “just one such bug” would have been cause for serious alarm in 2025, and “so many at once make you stop to wonder whether it’s even possible to keep up.”
Leveling the playing field
The Mythos AI model is such a good coder that Anthropic is making sure critical companies get a chance to use it before it is released, specifically to test its ability to find and fix software security vulnerabilities.
It’s so good, in fact, that it could be dangerous. Bad actors can already use public tools on code repositories like GitHub to find vulnerabilities and exploit them, rather than fix them. Imagine them having access to a much, much better AI agent. You can see why Anthropic feels Mythos is too dangerous to release to the public right now, and why it’s working with a limited number of critical companies to provide access so they can shore up their software first.
Soon, iOS updates could patch hundreds of security vulnerabilities before hackers get a chance to exploit them.Foundry
Eventually, AI coding agents as good as Mythos, or better, will be widely available. That’s a security nightmare, right? Quite the opposite. It means security engineers at the world’s biggest companies are no longer at a massive disadvantage.
Currently, there is so much code and so much software interoperability in all our devices that it’s impossible to secure them all. Hackers have all the time in the world and only have to find one flaw. Security researchers are limited in number and have to fix problems before they’re exploited. But AI agents can operate at scale. They can give the world’s biggest software vendors the equivalent of thousands of expert security programmers with the capacity to scrutinize everything before it is released to the public.
Yes, advanced AI coding agents let the bad guys operate at a greater scale, but they also let the good guys find and fix problems just as efficiently. It’s an advantage they’ve never had before, and with the ability to work on code before it is released, the “defense” in the cybersecurity race may actually gain a big advantage over the “offense” for once.
Combine this with the ability for security researchers to work with the handful of companies capable of making AI coding agents this advanced, to build in safeguards that make their public versions less useful for bad actors, and we could be entering a golden age of cybersecurity.
AI could help Apple make the iPhone safer than ever.Britta O’Boyle
What’s next for Apple users
The last few major OS updates from Apple have been loaded with security updates. There were dozens of fixes in iOS 26.3 and dozens more in 26.4.
In the short term, we can expect the OS 27 updates this fall to close more security holes than ever before, and probably some OS 26 updates to bring these fixes to older devices. I wouldn’t be surprised to find that, sometime in the next six months, we get an OS update from Apple that has 100 or more security fixes.
We’re in a scary transition period where AI is helping the hackers as much as it’s helping the software creators. But this transition will be fleeting as old software libraries, the foundation for so much modern software, is shored up.
Within a year or two, our devices, software, and the services we use should be safer than ever, at least on a technical level. Now if we could just get people to stop using “123456” and “admin” as their passwords.
Bought a MacBook at the start of the year and I just shipped my first iOS app First time ever posting on Reddit. I’ve just finished building my first iOS app and wanted to share the experience. I don’t come from a coding background at all and I’ve basically been learning as I go over the past few months. At the start of the year I bought a MacBook and decided to […]
Working on a ‘sensory’ weather app Hi everyone 👋 I’m currently working on a small iOS project (built with Swift) and I’d really love to get some early feedback because it’s my first ever project. The app isn’t finished yet, but I think it’s at a point where outside opinions could really help shape it. The idea is a “sensory weather […]
Apple Invites App for iPhone Updated – Here's What's New Following the latest update of Apple's Invites app, hosts can now manually edit the guest list to update guest responses and adjust the number of additional guests.
This v1.8.0 update appears to have focused on delivering a more streamlined experience for managing and sharing events. Within Messages, a new Invites iMessage app allows users to quickly share an existing invite without needing to leave the conversation.
Elsewhere, the dashboard has been expanded with an All Events view, bringing both upcoming and past events into a single, unified interface. Sharing options have also been improved for hosts, who can now generate and download an image of their invite card.
Additionally, music integration has been enhanced through the Apple Music Shared Playlist feature, which now provides personalised playlist suggestions based on listening habits.
Finally, hosts can now specify a time zone for their event, and the update also contains bug fixes and performance improvements.
Apple Invites is available on the iPhone, and on the web at iCloud.com/invites. Guests can RSVP in the iPhone app, or on the web from any device.Tag: Apple InvitesThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Apple Watch Series 11 46mm GPS is $100 Off The Apple Watch is made to last, built with a superdurable glass display capable of 2x more scratch resistance, rated IP6X dust resistant, and has a water resistance rating of 50m. The smart watch is a versatile fitness partner providing you with metrics from your workout with features such as Heart Rate zones, training load, […]
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AirPods Pro with Infrared Camera Releasing as Early as This Year Apple is reportedly manufacturing a new version of the AirPods Pro, potentially releasing it as early as this year. It is anticipated to be a different version of the current AirPods Pro and will not be given the name AirPods Pro 4. Many reports suggest that Apple is creating an AirPods Pro with small infrared […]
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Revamped Siri Confirmed to be Released This Year By Google Google has made comments about its partnership with Apple, solidifying that Gemini will be powering the new, revamped version of Siri, releasing later this year. Thomas Kurian, chief of Google Cloud, talked about their partnership with Apple during this year’s Google Cloud Next. Apple said last year that Siri is receiving an update sometime this […]
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Miami Grand Prix 3D Experience on Apple Maps The guide for the 2026 Formula 1 Tracks around the world has been updated by Apple in Apple Maps, providing the user with an experience dedicated to the upcoming Miami Grand Prix streamed in the United States on Apple TV on May 3, after a long break that had both the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian […]
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JENNIE and Beats Collaborate to Release Beats Solo 4 Headphones in Onyx Black In September 2025, Beats and JENNIE, a singer from South Korea, collaborated and released a Ruby Red special edition of the Solo 4 headphones selling out in less than 24 hours. JENNIE and Beats are again collaborating, announcing an Onyx Black version of the Solo 4 headphones. It features attachable bows that come in black […]
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Tim Cook Moves to Executive Chairman Following his stepping down as Apple CEO, Tim Cook is looking to transition to executive chairman of the company, as he plans to stay with Apple for a long time. Cook said that he has high energy and he is healthy. Cook will be supporting John Ternus as needed, as he takes over the CEO […]
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Apple Unlikely to Have 200MP Telephoto Lens for iPhone before 2028 It is unlikely that Apple will be integrating a 200MP telephoto camera on iPhones before 2028, even as the company has already done tests on a sensor on prototypes. The company has evaluated a 200MP sensor for a camera of a periscope type. There is no reason why the timeframe won’t come before 2028, but […]
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14-inch M5 Pro MacBook Pro 24GB 1TB Is $151 Off The device is powered by the M5 Pro chip for strong and fast performances having a faster GPU and a Neural Accelerator built into each core of the device. Apple Silicon and significant components of the device allow you to handle AI workloads such as LLM training and inference. The device features a 14.2-inch Liquid […]
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Johny Srouji Takes a Larger Role At Apple As John Ternus transitions to Apple CEO with Tim Cook stepping down, Johny Srouji, Senior Vice President of Hardware Technologies at Apple, is going to take on a larger role as the Chief Hardware Officer at the company. Srouji has been fundamental in the company as it transitioned to Apple silicon. Johny Srouji is famous […]
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Cut Cost Result in the Downgrading of the iPhone 18 Apple is reportedly going to downgrade certain specs planned for the base iPhone 18 to reduce costs; these downgrades will make it similar to the iPhone 18e. New cost control strategies have been implemented with downgrades in memory, chips, manufacturing processes, and other things. The difference between the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17e is the […]
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Tim Cook Stepping Down As Apple CEO Apple has announced that Tim Cook will be stepping down as the Apple CEO, with the widely viewed prospect John Ternus taking over as the CEO of Apple. Tim will remain CEO until September 1 as he is looking to move to executive chairman, where he will help in specific aspects at Apple. Tim Cook […]
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Lowest price ever: Apple's 2026 14-inch MacBook Pro M5 Pro plunges to $1,949 A bonus in-cart coupon brings the M5 Pro 14-inch MacBook Pro down to a record low $1,949, but supply is limited at the reduced price.Save $250 on Apple's new 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Pro - Image credit: AppleApple Authorized Reseller B&H Photo is beating Amazon's price this Friday on the new 14-inch MacBook Pro that was released in March 2026.The standard model, which is on sale for $1,949 in Space Black after a $200 cash discount stacked with a $50 in-cart coupon, features Apple's M5 chip with a 15-core CPU and 16-core GPU. The laptop is also equipped with 24GB of unified memory and 1TB of storage (up from the standard 512GB found in the M4 Pro line). Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Network Performance Issues in Miami Apr 24, 03:48 UTCResolved - This incident has been resolved.Apr 24, 03:47 UTCMonitoring - A fix has been implemented and we are monitoring the results.Apr 24, 03:46 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is observing network performance issues in Miami. We are actively working to reduce or eliminate any impact to Internet users in this locations.
Cloudflare Health check issues Apr 24, 02:40 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is investigating issues with Healthchecks monitoring, alert notifications and analytics. We are working to understand the full impact and mitigate this problem. More updates to follow shortly.
Here’s how we flooded tiktok and instagram with our app content in 30 days We launched our app 6 weeks ago. two people, early stage, wanted to see how far organic could take us before spending anything. First two weeks we spent zero dollars, just posted constantly across our own accounts. Different hooks, different formats, different angles on the same product. most of it flopped: one video about the […]
Is it possible to take an IPA file and install it remotely without an enterprise account? Hi all, Without using some third party service, is it possible to take an IPA file from a standard developer account and remotely install it (like via MDM software) to a device? Or does that require an enterprise account? I already tried it and it failed but I wanted to just double check and see […]
Load Balancing Dashboard Issues Apr 24, 00:35 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare is investigating issues with Cloudflare Dashboard and related APIs where the dashboard is displaying an incorrect error message on the UI at the bottom banner. These issues do not affect the serving of cached files via the Cloudflare CDN or other security features at the Cloudflare Edge.
macOS Apprentice [SUBSCRIBER] macOS Apprentice is a series of multi-chapter tutorials where you’ll learn about developing native
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LincPlus LincStation E1 review: Compact, entry-level, and fast enough The LincPlus LincStation E1 is a compact NAS that promises speed, capacity, and some smart features. Prosumers and above should skip this one, but for everyday users, it's a pretty decent package.LincPlus LincStation E1A typical network-attached storage (NAS) device is, as the name implies, a bunch of drives in a purpose-made computer, optimized to serve files. There's a big range that falls under that umbrella though, with many models able to provide services that rival a rack-mounted server.When it comes to making a NAS for a typical computer user rather than those with greater needs, things tighten up a bit. We've been fond of LincStation's approach to that market. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
'Pluribus' & 'Come See Me In The Good Light' win Peabody awards for Apple TV Of the five nominations for the 86th Peabody Awards, Apple TV scored two wins. "Pluribus" won in the entertainment category, while "Come See Me In the Good Light" won in the documentary category.'Pluribus' brings home a Peabody award for Apple TVApple continues to rake in the awards with its original programming. At last count, Apple TV has 3,431 award nominations and 797 wins.The results from the Peabody Awards are in, and Apple TV can add two more wins to its list. Five of its shows were nominated. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Proposed mandatory clean energy guidelines could mean less participation, Apple argues Apple has come out against a new proposal that would impact how companies report emissions and clean energy use. The guidance could have the opposite of the intended effect.Apple leads the way in green energy implementation, but it fears mandatory participation could hurt implementationJust over a week after releasing its 2025 environmental report, Apple has signed a joint statement criticizing a proposed change to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol (GHGP). The GHGP, established in 1998, is effectively the global standard for managing, recording, and reporting greenhouse gas emissions.Apple, along with its supply chain partners Luxshare, BYD, and BOE, as well as companies the likes of General Motors, eBay, and others, opposes revisions to the GHGP's Scope 2 guidance. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
iOS 26.4 changed Apple’s on-device model enough that I had to rework my prompts. Anyone else? I had a benchmark baseline saved before updating to iOS 26.4, and I’m very glad I did. Same prompt, same fixed image set, same greedy decoding: 59.6% -> 51.4% Yeah, not “everything is broken,” but definitely enough to be annoying. What got me is that the outputs didn’t look obviously terrible. A lot of them […]
Apple Stops Weirdly Storing Data That Let Cops Spy On Signal Chats Apple has fixed a bug that could cause parts of Signal notifications to remain stored on iPhones even after messages disappeared and the app was deleted. "Affected users concerned about push notifications can update their devices to stop what Apple characterized as 'notifications marked for deletion' that 'could be unexpectedly retained on the device,'" reports Ars Technica. "According to Apple, the push notifications should never have been stored, but a 'logging issue' failed to redact data." From the report: Vulnerable users hoping to evade law enforcement surveillance often use encrypted apps like Signal to communicate sensitive information. That's why users felt blindsided when 404 Media reported that Apple was unexpectedly storing push notifications displaying parts of encrypted messages for up to a month. This occurred even after the message was set to disappear and the app itself was deleted from the device.
404 Media flagged the issue after speaking to multiple people who attended a hearing where the FBI testified that it "was able to forensically extract copies of incoming Signal messages from a defendant's iPhone, even after the app was deleted, because copies of the content were saved in the device's push notification database." The shocking revelation came in a case that 404 Media noted was "the first time authorities charged people for alleged 'Antifa' activities after President Trump designated the umbrella term a terrorist organization." "We're grateful to Apple for the quick action here, and for understanding and acting on the stakes of this kind of issue," Signal's post said. "It takes an ecosystem to preserve the fundamental human right to private communication."
In their post, Signal confirmed that after users update their devices, "no action is needed for this fix to protect Signal users on iOS. Once you install the patch, all inadvertently-preserved notifications will be deleted and no forthcoming notifications will be preserved for deleted applications."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Cut the cable from your CarPlay life with this tiny wireless adapter Plug in this Mini Wireless CarPlay/Android Auto Adapter and your phone wirelessly connects automatically, every time you start the car.
(via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)
Apple TV scores two wins at the 2026 Peabody Awards Apple TV picked up two wins at the Peabody Awards this year, out of five total nominations. Here are the details.
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SLC (Salt Lake City) on 2026-04-29 THIS IS A SCHEDULED EVENT Apr 29, 05:00 - 17:00 UTCApr 23, 22:06 UTCScheduled - We will be performing scheduled maintenance in SLC (Salt Lake City) datacenter on 2026-04-29 between 05:00 and 17:00 UTC.Traffic might be re-routed from this location, hence there is a possibility of a slight increase in latency during this maintenance window for end-users in the affected region. For PNI / CNI customers connecting with us in this location, please make sure you are expecting this traffic to fail over elsewhere during this maintenance window as network interfaces in this datacentre may become temporarily unavailable.You can now subscribe to these notifications via Cloudflare dashboard and receive these updates directly via email, PagerDuty and webhooks (based on your plan): https://developers.cloudflare.com/notifications/notification-available/#cloudflare-status.
9to5Mac Daily: April 23, 2026 – John Ternus’s journey to Apple CEO Listen to a recap of the top stories of the day from 9to5Mac. 9to5Mac Daily is available on iTunes and Apple’s Podcasts app, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.
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Apple among companies objecting to proposed clean energy reporting changes A group of 66 companies and industry organizations, which includes Apple, has issued a joint statement opposing proposed changes to how companies account for clean energy use. Here are the details.
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Discover ending support for two Apple Pay features in June 2026 The Connected Accounts and rewards features in Apple Wallet aren't widely used, but Discover is dropping support for both in June.Apple Wallet has many small features that are underutilizedWith iOS 17.1, the Apple Wallet app gained a new Connected Accounts feature, letting users of select UK and US banks view the balance of connected credit cards. While the capability is supported by major UK banks, in the United States, the feature was primarily available to Discover cardholders.That will soon change, however, as Discover has announced it will discontinue support for Connected Accounts and the Pay with Rewards feature on June 4. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Elizabeth Banks to star in Apple TV comedy about fresh starts and retirement community sex dates Apple TV on Thursday announced it will expand its Emmy Award-winning comedy slate with a new half-hour series led by Elizabeth Banks…
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Intermittent 5xx errors for Cloudflare Access authentication requests Apr 23, 21:05 UTCIdentified - Beginning April 21, a subset of Cloudflare Access customers experienced intermittent HTTP 500 errors on authentication requests. Impact is limited to a small percentage of requests in specific geographies. Service authentication requests are seeing the highest share of the errors.Cloudflare engineering is progressing a corrected rollout under tighter monitoring.
M6 MacBook Pro: Six new features coming later this year Apple has a new M6 MacBook Pro rumored to launch later this year with a total design overhaul. Here are six new features expected with the M6 MacBook Pro.
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Should I keep going sorry for the vague title but I’m not sure to phrase all of this. I was fullstack developer for a couple years and before that worked 1-2 years as software engineer with C++ and Javascript. it wasn’t until a year ago I discovered iOS programming and I like many of you have fallen in love. […]
Discover ending Pay with Rewards and Connected Account support in Apple Pay Discover is contacting cardholders about changes to how its cards work with Apple Pay, with two features set to go away starting June 4. Here are the details.
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How Apple Savings compares vs other high-yield savings accounts Apple Savings is now available for Apple Card users. Here's how it compares to other high-yield savings accounts in April.Apple Savings requires Apple CardThe finance sector isn't new to Apple, with Apple Wallet, Apple Pay, Apple Card, Apple Pay Later, and now Apple Savings. Customers have multiple avenues to entrust vital financial processes to Apple.Apple Savings is a high-yield savings account provided by Goldman Sachs. It requires users to have an Apple Card and be over 18 years old. Otherwise, there are no minimum balances or fees associated with the account. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Apple supplier STMicroelectronics’ shares surge after strong quarter Apple supplier STMicroelectronics shares surged after the European chipmaker reported strong first-quarter sales and forecast…
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Apple Invites for iPhone adds 7 new features, including an iMessage app Apple Invites has its second new version in as many months, adding seven new features. One key highlight is an iMessage app for sharing invitations without leaving the Messages app.
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Apple bug fix stops storing data that let FBI spy on Signal chats Apple has fixed a security bug that allowed law enforcement to access content from deleted Signal messages.Users who rely on encrypted…
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Here's What's Coming in the 2026 Apple TV There are a lot of folks waiting for a new version of the Apple TV because the set-top box hasn't been updated since 2022. There is an update coming this year, but people will need to wait a bit longer because Apple is holding the next Apple TV until the new version of Siri comes out this fall.
Design
Apple TV design updates don't happen often, and that's not changing in 2026. The next Apple TV is going to have the same squircle shape as the current model, and it'll continue to be made from a black plastic material.
We're expecting the 2026 Apple TV to be indistinguishable from the existing Apple TV on the exterior, with no changes to size or design.
New Chip
The Apple TV 4K is going to get a new A-series chip, and that'll be the biggest upgrade. Rumors suggest Apple is planning to use the A17 Pro that was first introduced in the iPhone 15 Pro models.
Compared to the A15 Bionic in the current Apple TV, the A17 Pro is a solid update, and it's a good reason to hold off on buying the current model. The A17 Pro is built on a 3-nanometer process for faster speeds and better efficiency, and it has hardware-accelerated ray tracing for higher-quality graphics in games.
The A17 Pro is the oldest chip Apple makes that supports Apple Intelligence, and it's also used in the iPad mini 7.
Given that Apple has held the Apple TV update for so long, it's possible it'll get an even newer chip like the A18 or A19. A RAM update is possible too, especially if the Apple TV has any kind of Apple Intelligence support.
Apple Intelligence and Siri
The next Apple TV is ready to launch, but new Siri features are the holdup. Apple wants to release the Apple TV with the smarter version of Siri that's in the works, and it's not ready to go.
Bloomberg's Mark Gurman says the Apple TV is linked to "new artificial intelligence features" that Apple has postponed until iOS 27, which is coming in September 2026. Apple intended to launch the Apple Intelligence Siri features in spring 2026, but the company was still experiencing issues with Siri. At this point, we're not going to see new Siri capabilities until iOS 27, which also means a delay for all the devices that Apple is holding.
Along with the Apple TV, the rumored home hub and a new version of the HomePod are waiting on Siri.
Updated Siri features may require more RAM and a faster chip, so if you want the smarter Siri on the Apple TV, that's another reason to wait before making a purchase.
Wi-Fi
The Apple TV could get Apple's N1 networking chip with Wi-Fi 7 support. Wi-Fi 7 works with the 6GHz band offered by newer routers.
6GHz connectivity is faster and less congested, which you want for a device designed for streaming content.
Bluetooth and Thread
The Apple TV 4K could get Bluetooth 6 for connecting devices like controllers and earbuds.
Apple's N1 chip also supports Thread, so the Apple TV will be able to continue to serve as a Thread border router and a Matter hub for smart home devices.
Pricing
There have been rumors of a price drop, so it's possible Apple has plans for a cheaper Apple TV.
Apple could release two models, one that's higher-end and one that has lower specs and a lower price tag, or it could keep the existing Apple TV around as a low-cost option.
Launch Date
Since the new version of Siri has been pushed to iOS 27 and the Apple TV is tied to that update, we're likely not going to see the Apple TV refreshed until September 2026 at the earliest.Related Roundup: Apple TVBuyer's Guide: Apple TV (Don't Buy)Related Forum: Apple TV and Home TheaterThis article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
Apple TV has two of its biggest hit shows returning this summer Apple TV has three top-tier shows all airing right now, but the streamer is assembling a strong summer lineup too, anchored by the return of two of its all-time biggest hit series.
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Apple Music VP: Most people can’t really hear the difference with lossless, but they can with Spatial Audio In a candid discussion on audio quality, Apple Music’s Oliver Schusser acknowledged that for the average listener, lossless audio often…
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Russia SMS Carrier Maintenance – MTS THIS IS A SCHEDULED EVENT Apr 28, 20:00 - 21:30 PDTApr 23, 10:48 PDTScheduled - The MTS network in Russia is conducting a planned maintenance from 28 April 2026 at 20:00 PDT until 28 April 2026 at 21:30 PDT. During the maintenance window, there could be intermittent delays delivering SMS to MTS Russia handsets.
OpenAI upgrades ChatGPT and Codex with GPT-5.5: ‘a new class of intelligence for real work’ OpenAI is capping off a busy week of announcements with the release of GPT-5.5, its latest model upgrade for ChatGPT and Codex. The company calls its new model “a new class of intelligence for real work.”
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New Apple Ad Sells the iPhone and Apple Watch Health Pairing Apple has published a new ad to appeal to customers in the market for an iPhone and Apple Watch pairing, highlighting the insights it can offer for your health.
Titled simply "Health with iPhone + Apple Watch," the half-minute ad focuses on a woman waiting in line at a cafe who begins receiving unsolicited health and fitness advice from other people in the queue, as well as local residents, drivers, and passersby – and even accompanying pets.
Amid the cacophony, she suddenly receives an Apple Watch notification about her new cardio fitness trend, and then looks into the Health app on iPhone to learn that her cardio fitness is above average. "Listen to your body. Not everybody," says the onscreen slogan, as she grabs her coffee and goes about her day. The YouTube blurb reads:With iPhone and Apple Watch, you get science-based insights about your health. You see data on things like your heart rate, cycle tracking, cardio fitness, and sleep quality. So you can be more aware of what your body is telling you.Apple Watch Cardio Fitness determines cardiorespiratory fitness as measured by VO2 max. VO2 max is the maximum amount of oxygen that the body is able to use during exercise, and it can be improved through physical activity. Apple introduced the feature in 2020.
Cardio Fitness is a category in the Health app on iPhone, and fitness level is classified as high, above average, below average, or low relative to people in your same age group and of the same sex. Users can also track how their cardio fitness levels have changed over the past week, month, six months, or year, and if fitness levels fall into the low range, they can get a notification on Apple Watch that includes guidance on improving it.Related Roundup: Apple Watch 11Tag: Apple AdsBuyer's Guide: Apple Watch (Neutral)This article, "" first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums
John Ternus is officially Apple’s next CEO, iPhone 18 colors, iOS 27 rumors Benjamin and Chance react to the biggest news of the week, and probably this year, with Tim Cook officially announcing his plans to hand over the CEO job to John Ternus. The calm and orchestrated transition falls directly into Cook’s playbook. Also, we have new leaks about iOS 27 and iPhone 18 Pro colors to discuss.
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Anyone know how you are supposed to run a sandbox ID on apple tv? I cant find ANYTHING on it other than some old random comment about signing in through the app. but that just takes me to store login which fails a sandbox login. there is no developer login on appletv? submitted by /u/0__O0–O0_0 [link] [comments]
The iPhone is ‘not getting disrupted’ at all by AI, says Perplexity CEO AI is shaking up plenty of industries around the world, but despite concern from some analysts, the iPhone appears stronger than ever despite Apple’s AI struggles. And that’s not a coincidence, according to Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas.
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Tim Cook Calls Apple Maps Launch His 'First Really Big Mistake' as CEO In a recent town hall meeting reported by Bloomberg (paywalled), Apple CEO Tim Cook named the troubled 2012 launch of Apple Maps as his "first really big mistake" in the role. "The product wasn't ready, and we thought it was because we were testing more of local kind of stuff," Cook told staff. MacRumors reports: Reflecting on the debacle, Cook said it was "valuable," noting that he expressed regret to users at the time and suggested they use competing navigation apps instead.
"We apologized for it, and we said, 'Go use these other apps. They're better than ours.' And that was some humble pie," Cook said. "But it was the right thing for our users. And so it's an example of keeping the user at the center of the decisions that we made." Cook added: "Now we've got the best map app on the planet. We learned about persistence, and we did exactly the right thing having made the mistake."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
YUL (Montréal) on 2026-04-24 THIS IS A SCHEDULED EVENT Apr 24, 08:30 - 12:00 UTCApr 23, 17:23 UTCScheduled - We will be performing scheduled maintenance in YUL (Montréal) datacenter on 2026-04-24 between 08:30 and 12:00 UTC.Traffic might be re-routed from this location, hence there is a possibility of a slight increase in latency during this maintenance window for end-users in the affected region. For PNI / CNI customers connecting with us in this location, please make sure you are expecting this traffic to fail over elsewhere during this maintenance window as network interfaces in this datacentre may become temporarily unavailable.You can now subscribe to these notifications via Cloudflare dashboard and receive these updates directly via email, PagerDuty and webhooks (based on your plan): https://developers.cloudflare.com/notifications/notification-available/#cloudflare-status.
iPhone 18 Pro and Ultra details revealed in leaker’s extensive Q&A Macworld
One of the traditional phases of an iPhone rumor cycle is the arrival of dummy units. These non-functional early prototypes are made for design illustration and size comparison purposes, often by manufacturing partners and accessory makers rather than Apple itself. They can’t be used to run apps or anything of that sort. But they can still tell us a lot about the design of an upcoming product.
This week, for example, the tech YouTuber Vadim Yuryev posted photos of three new dummy units. So far, so relatively standard. He’s obtained metal dummies of all three late-2026 iPhones: the 18 Pro, 18 Pro Max, and iPhone Fold (or iPhone Ultra, as I’ll call it for the rest of this article). They look largely the way previous rumors have suggested they will, and have the expected design and external features: two rear-facing camera lenses on the Ultra, three on the Pro models, and no MagSafe on the Ultra. But Yuryev decided not to leave it there. He invited questions.
The subsequent AMA (or Ask Me Anything, from the Reddit ritual) is required reading for anyone interested in this year’s new phones. Here are some of the questions, and Yuryev’s answers.
Q: Will the new phones have larger camera lenses than the 17 Pro?A: Yes.
Q: What’s the thickness of the Ultra when closed?A: Exactly 11mm.
Q: So the Fold [Ultra] won’t be a unibody? More like the design of the iPhone Air with polished titanium, I assume?A: Yes. What you said.
Q: Do we know [from the dummies] how much they will weigh?A: No. These are much heavier.
Q: Is the 18 Pro the same size as the 17 Pro? Do old cases fit?A: 0.36mm taller. 0.39mm wider. Same thickness. Loose-fitting or rubber cases might still fit, who knows?
Q: It will be in titanium, right?A: Yes.
Q: If the Ultra truly is not going to have MagSafe that is going to be the biggest fail.A: Yeah I don’t think they have room. Will have to rely on MagSafe cases.
Q: Any base [iPhone 18] dummy?A: It’s identical to the iPhone 17 as far as I know. Probably just a smaller Dynamic Island and buttons moved around a bit to ensure that you have to buy a new case.
It isn’t clear how Yuryev is so sure about his answers, which you’ll notice encompass some facts that cannot be deduced from the dummies alone: the design of the baseline iPhone 18, for example, or the materials used for the new phones. He doesn’t name a source for the dummies themselves, or for the other information. So it’s probably best to regard these claims as unproven for the time being.
In any case these aren’t the first dummies we’ve seen for the late-2026 iPhone launches. As early as December, in fact, we got one for the iPhone Ultra, although we should emphasise that it was created by a 3D printing hobbyist based on leaked CAD files rather than by a company. So maybe that one doesn’t count.
Then in April, the prolific leaker Sonny Dickson posted images of dummies of the iPhone Ultra, 18 Pro, and 18 Pro Max, insisting these illustrated the final sizes of those three products. But this latest leak is the first to engage with commenters’ questions in such depth. It therefore gives us our best insight yet into the design and features of the late-2026 iPhones, which we currently expect to launch in September.
For all the latest info and rumors leading up to the launch, bookmark our regularly updated news hubs: iPhone 18 and iPhone Ultra. If you can’t wait that long, pick up a bargain on the current range with our roundup of the best iPhone deals.
John Ternus explains what he thinks of Apple Vision Pro Last week, Tom’s Guide published an interview with Apple SVPs John Ternus and Greg Joswiak. We covered many of the quotes here, but Apple’s incoming CEO Ternus also shared his thoughts on the Vision Pro.
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Claude just gained Spotify music and podcast integration, here’s what it can do Spotify is celebrating its 20th birthday today, and one new gift for users is Claude integration. Spotify’s music and podcast streaming service now integrates with Anthropic’s AI. Here’s how it works.
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Apple's M4 Mac mini, including the $599 one, is gradually becoming impossible to buy Pending refresh? RAM shortage? AI agents? There are many possible explanations.
Web Analytics Delays Apr 23, 17:03 UTCInvestigating - Cloudflare Web Analytics processing is running behind. This affects timely delivery of customer data.These delays do not impact analytics for DNS and Rate Limiting.
Apple lowers savings account rate for Apple Card users to 3.50% Apple has reduced the interest rate on its high-yield savings account tied to the Apple Card, dropping the annual percentage yield (APY)…
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A Full Apple Ecosystem Now Costs Less Than a MacBook Pro Apple's entire entry-level product lineup now costs less than a single 16-inch MacBook Pro with the M5 Pro chip.
The ten products that now define Apple's lowest-cost tier are as follows:
iPhone 17e: $599
MacBook Neo: $599
iPad (11th generation): $349
Magic Keyboard Folio: $249
Apple Pencil (USB-C): $79
Apple Watch SE 3: $249
AirPods 4: $129
Apple TV 4K: $129
HomePod mini: $99
AirTag: $29
The total comes to $2,510, which is $189 less than the $2,699 starting price of the 16-inch MacBook Pro with the M5 Pro chip. AppleCare One, which can cover any three Apple devices of the buyer's choosing, costs an additional $19.99 per month.
The MacBook Neo, announced on March 4, is the linchpin of the shift. At $599, it is Apple's most affordable laptop ever and the first Mac to contain an A-series chip, using the A18 Pro that debuted in the iPhone 16 Pro. After its March 11 launch, Apple CEO Tim Cook said Apple saw its "best launch week ever for first-time Mac customers."
The iPhone 17e and MacBook Neo, both at $599, anchor the lineup at an identical price point that would have seemed implausible just two years ago, when the cheapest Mac laptop cost $999.
What is striking about today's lineup is how capable most of Apple's entry-level products have become relative to their more expensive siblings. The iPhone 17e uses the same A19 chip and 48-megapixel main camera as the $799 iPhone 17, differing meaningfully only in its slightly smaller 60Hz display, single rear camera, and notch design. The MacBook Neo's A18 Pro chip posts a single-core score of 3,461, within 6% of the M5 MacBook Air, and is highly capable for everyday tasks. The Apple Watch SE 3 shares the same S10 chip as the $399 Series 11 and, with its last refresh, gained an always-on display, sleep apnea detection, body temperature sensing, and fast charging. The notable exception in the lineup is the entry-level iPad, which is the only current Apple device that does not support Apple Intelligence.
It is also notable that three of the eleven products on the list are also due for imminent replacements. The 12th generation iPad with an A18 chip and Apple Intelligence support is said to be "
Apple is reportedly working on six new product categories Apple is reportedly working on bringing no fewer than six new product categories to market soon, in part as Tim Cook's swansong as CEO of the company.Apple Home Hub to arrive in 2026 with Apple IntelligenceFollowing the news that Apple CEO Tim Cook will be replaced by Ternus in late 2026, a new report has detailed the products his teams are working on. Speaking during an interview with TBPN, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports that Apple has products in six new product categories in the works. This is alongside its usual product refreshes, like new iPhones, iPads, and more.Apple's 2024 Apple Vision Pro release was the last time it entered a new category. The spatial computer has so far failed to capture the imagination of the larger market, but that hasn't deterred the company from entering new markets in the future. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
iPhone gets more important as every AI improves, Perplexity CEO says Artificial intelligence has been widely predicted to disrupt smartphones, and hurt Apple, but Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas argues that the iPhone will become more important as AI improveApple IntelligenceIn a segment from "This Week in AI" published on April 23, Aravind Srinivas, co-founder and CEO of AI search company Perplexity, lays out an outside view of Apple's position. Srinivas, who previously worked in AI research roles at OpenAI, Google, and DeepMind, argues that AI may reinforce Apple's core products instead of replacing them."The phone, the iPhone is actually not getting disrupted by AI at all," Srinivas says, arguing that better AI pushes the device in the opposite direction, turning it into "your digital passport." Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Apple Watch has a useful hidden feature for tracking a great healthy habit My new favorite Apple Watch and Apple Health metric is one that has been quietly working in the background for years. Specifically, it’s a bit of a hidden Apple Watch feature for tracking a great healthy habit: Time in Daylight.
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