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- Tuesday February 10
- 07:30 pm‘Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow Sea’ launches March 5th on Apple Arcade
"Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow Sea" is launching exclusively on Apple Arcade on March 5th. The new game… The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.07:17 pmCan Macs get viruses or are they really safe from malware?
Macworld For years it’s been generally accepted that Macs have been much safer than PCs when it comes to malware and virus attacks. So much so, that it’s commonplace for Apple users to have no cybersecurity protections running on their machines other than what’s already built-in to macOS. But, this vulnerability seems to have caught the attention of hackers, as malware attacks (especially those powered by new AI software) have begun to appear which target Macs and their users. So, how can you make sure you stay safe from the new threats? Are the protections in macOS strong enough to protect my data? Apple includes tools like Gatekeeper and XProtect to scan for potential threats and stop them getting onto your system. These can be effective, but they’re not foolproof. If you only use modern Macs and download everything from the App Store, then they are probably ok. But if you download things from websites, handle sensitive data, or use older Intel Macs, then a dedicated antivirus solution is recommended. In fact, with the landscape of cybersecurity now changing so fast, and our lives becoming increasingly digital, all Mac users would benefit from an extra layer of safety. Cybersecurity that’s simple and works with your Mac One of the things that can put people off using security software is the intimidating language and the feeling that you need to understand everything for it to work. Also, there’s the worry that it will clash with the built-in macOS tools and cause a headache for the user. MacPaw That’s why the developers at MacPaw (famous for its excellent CleanMyMac optimisation software) have developed Moonlock. This antivirus is designed from the ground-up to work only with Macs, search for macOS-specific malware, and integrate harmoniously with Apple’s own security software. Best of all, the interface is elegantly laid out and simplifies the whole process so you can easily understand what it’s doing and how to make use of its wide-ranging features. For example, if you notice that your Mac is slowing down or acting differently, just open Moonlock and click the Scan button to sweep for potential malware. There are real-time protection capabilities too, that scan files automatically whenever you interact with them. This can prevent phishing emails trying to get you to install malware, something that is a rising threat thanks to AI software that can create convincing copies of official documents and communiques to fool unsuspecting victims. MacPaw Moonlock has plenty of easy-to-understand tutorials and guides that help you set up your system to be as safe as possible. These include step-by-step instructions for Apple’s built-in cybersecurity tools, so no stone is left unturned. MacPaw There’s also a Virtual Private Network (VPN) included, which encrypts your data when you’re online. This helps prevent any data breaches that can occur with websites or networks being hijacked or faked by hackers. Moonlock also employs a network inspector to ensure that sites don’t send your data to servers in other countries that could put you at risk. When it detects this being attempted, it immediately shuts down access to those apps or sites to keep you safe. You don’t need to do anything, Moonlock is constantly working to keep you safe. A free trial and affordable plans to protect your data and bank balance To see how Moonlock works, as well as try out the various security advice it has to offer, you can sign up to a 7-day free trial. After that, there are a wide range of subscription models available. These include $4.50/£3.25 per month for 1 Mac, $7/£5.25 for 2 Macs or $14/£10.25 to protect up to 5 Macs. Try Moonlock Cybersecurity for Mac today! Cybersecurity always needs to be powerful and complex, but that doesn’t mean users should have to become experts to protect their data. Moonlock makes this possible, taking care of all the technical aspect so you can rest assured that your system is being kept safe.06:58 pmSupport for Old Apple Home Architecture Ends
If you’ve been putting off the Home architecture upgrade introduced several years ago, it’s time to act. Support for the previous version ends on 10 February 2026, and you may be automatically upgraded.06:31 pmRivian rolls out dedicated Apple Watch app: wrist-based controls and gen 1 digital key support incoming | Mac Daily NewsRivian rolls out dedicated Apple Watch app: wrist-based controls and gen 1 digital key support incoming
Rivian is gearing up to deliver a major convenience boost to R1T and R1S owners with the launch of its first official Apple Watch companion… The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.06:23 pmiPhone 18 Pro pricing rumors offer surprisingly good news
We’re still over half a year away from the iPhone 18 line being unveiled, but the latest analyst expectations for pricing are surprisingly good news. more…06:14 pmUnder-screen Touch ID may not just be for iPhone
Instead of a Home or a side-button, Apple is researching how best to implement under-screen fingerprint sensors, not just for mobile devices like iPhone Fold and iPad, but potentially also the Mac.Under-display Touch ID could come to future iPhones — or Macs.The expected iPhone Fold has been said to be too thin for Face ID, so it must use Touch ID. Despite some claims of it getting Touch ID sensor under the screen, most reports predict it will be part of the side button, as was introduced with the iPad Air 4 back in 2020.Now a newly-granted patent, however, appears to show that Apple is at least researching under-display Touch ID. The patent hides the fact a little, being called just "Display with localized brightness adjustment capabilities." Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums05:51 pmThis super-light Logitech mouse is just $50 today
Macworld Listen, we appreciate all Apple gear, but the Magic Mouse? Eh. Let’s just say it’s our favorite Apple product. So, if you’re looking for a good alternative, this Logitech G309 Lightspeed wireless gaming mouse is a fantastic option, especially since it’s only $50, a massive 44 percent discount off its $90 MSRP. This mouse was built with precision in mind, featuring a 25K HERO sensor that will track movement closely whether you’re browsing or gaming. The Lightforce hybrid optical-mechanical switches are also optimized for gaming, providing the speed modern times require and that mechanical feel we all love. One of the coolest things about this Logitech G309 mouse is that it’s versatile, coming with dual connectivity options. Basically, you can switch between regular Bluetooth and the low-latency Lightspeed wireless. When using the latter, the AA battery will keep the mouse going for over 300 hours, so it will be a while before you need to change it. Grab this mouse if you want fantastic gaming gear without breaking the bank. At $50, the Logitech G309 Lightspeed is a superb find. Buy now at Amazon05:43 pmFlash deal: Save $300 on Apple's 15-inch MacBook Air with 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD
B&H's Mega Deal Zone event is going on now, with a standout $300 discount on Apple's current 15-inch MacBook Air with 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage.Save $300 on Apple's M4 MacBook Air with 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD - Image credit: AppleThe flash Deal Zone at B&H offers savings on monitors, external storage, and Apple products — with a standout deal being this $300 discount on a loaded M4 15-inch MacBook Air in Sky Blue.Save $300 on 15" MacBook Air 32GB, 1TB Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums05:37 pmApple smart home users might need to upgrade their iPhone app today
Macworld Attention, Apple Home users: Today (February 10, 2026) is the last day that Apple will support its original HomeKit architecture. Starting on Wednesday, Apple will be rolling out a new version of Home for your smart home devices. According to Apple, “Any device connected to an updated home that doesn’t use iOS 16.2, iPadOS 16.2, macOS 13.1, tvOS 16.2, or watchOS 9.2 or later will lose access to the updated home until you update the device. This includes people that you invite to control your home.” A HomePod or Apple TV hardware needs to be set up as a home hub if you want to share control of your home or receive Home notifications. An iPad can no longer be used as a home hub. Apple switched to the new Home app architecture, which is visually identical but offers better performance and some new features, such as guest access, support for robot vacuum cleaners, and Activity History, way back in iOS 16.2, but rolled back the changes after initial issues. It has since been issuing warnings to users still using the old version of the app, but after today, it won’t work at all. How to update the Home app: Open the Home app. Tap/click the “…” button. Select Home Settings. If you have multiple homes, pick one. Select Software Update. Tap/click Update Now and follow the prompts. When finished, a message will say the Home app and accessories are up to date. About a year ago, reports indicated that Apple planned to force users to upgrade to the new Home architecture with the release of iOS 18.4, but that was delayed until this year.05:01 pmApple’s 2026 AirPods Pro said to feature tiny built-in cameras
Apple's upcoming next-generation AirPods Pro will include cameras enabling them to "see around" the wearer — likely via tiny sensors built… The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.05:00 pmNomad debuts Stellar Orange ChargeKey with iPhone-inspired color matching
Nomad is updating one of my favorite and most clutch tech accessories they make. They are expanding their ChargeKey lineup with a new Stellar Orange color to perfectly match the Cosmic Orange iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. ChargeKey has been one of Nomad’s longest-running products and is still one of the simplest solutions for carrying a reliable cable on your keychain that can do it all, from ultra-high speed charging to professional-level data transfer speeds. Here is what you should know. more…04:54 pm2026 iPad Air: Everything you need to know
Macworld Apple’s iPad Air was updated in March 2025, but other than a new M3 chip, not much changed about it. A year later, Apple is expected to update its mid-range tablet again with a performance-focused refresh rather than a redesign. Here’s everything you need to know about the new iPad Air for 2026. 2026 iPad Air: At a glance What’s New: M4 chip, N1 wireless chip, possible price increase What’s staying the same: Design, display, cameras, RAM 2026 iPad Air performance and specs: Will the 2026 iPad Air be faster? M4 chip 8GB RAM N1 chip for Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 6 C1X 5G modem Apple The main feature for the 2026 iPad Air will be a new processor. According to an internal Apple document, the M3 is expected to be replaced by an M4 chip. While we are familiar with the M4 chip, which has already featured in the 2024 iPad Pro, it’s not clear what the specification of the M4 in the iPad Air will be. The iPad Pro came with a 9-core or 10-core CPU, depending on the storage. We believe Apple will offer only the 9-core CPU with a 10-core GPU. The 2025 iPad Air had 8GB of RAM, the minimum required to run Apple Intelligence. We expect the new iPad Air will also have 8GB of RAM standard. With the iPhone 17, Apple released a new N1 chip for Wi-Fi 7, Bluetooth 6, and Thread networking technology. We expect the N1 to appear in the iPad Air, along with the iPhone Air’s C1X 5G modem for cellular models. 2026 iPad Air design and display: Will Apple redesign the iPad Air? 11-inch and 13-inch Liquid Retina displays Similar dimensions and thinness Britta O’Boyle Apple offers the iPad Air in 11- and 13-inch models, and the new iPad Air is expected to have the same design and screen options. What might change is the colors; Apple currently offers the M3 iPad Air in four colors (Blue, Purple, Starlight, Space Gray), the same options as the M2 model. Apple often changes the colors when introducing a new generation, so it would be unusual to have the same options for three generations. The iPad Air has used the same LED backlit Liquid Retina display for several generations, and we expect it to continue with the M4 update. Apple’s more expensive iPad Pro uses tandem OLED panels, but we don’t expect that technology to come to the iPad Air for several years. 2026 iPad Air cameras: Are the cameras changing? 12MP rear camera 12MP Center Stage front camera Eugen Wegmann Apple doesn’t upgrade its iPad cameras annually like the iPhone. The iPad Air has had the same two cameras since the M1: a 12MP front camera with Center Stage and a 12MP rear wide-angle camera. It’s unlikely the hardware will change, although Apple could introduce new software features. 2026 iPad Air price: Will the iPad Air cost more in 2026? Tariffs, rising RAM prices, and other supply-chain cost increases could drive prices up this year. Apple CEO Tim Cook said during the Q1 2026 financial results earnings call that the company is in “supply chase mode” and facing industry-wide constraints for components. However, any price increase would likely affect the higher-end configurations, and we expect the M4 iPad Air to still start at $599 for the 11-inch model.04:51 pmLondon's Apple Regent Street to reopen on Valentine's Day
Apple has announced that its central London store refurbishment will be completed and Apple Regent Street is to reopen on Valentine's Day.Apple Regent Street | Image Credit: AppleIn early January 2025, Apple announced that its Regent Street site was to be closed for unspecified refurbishment. It was part of Apple's plans to remodel or open around 50 stores worldwide by 2027.Apple did say that the closure, which began at 6:00 PM GMT on January 11, was temporary. It didn't give a reopening date at the time, but it has now revealed that the store will open again at 10:00 GMT on Saturday, February 14, 2026. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums04:45 pmDeals: iPhone 16 up to $420 off orig. price, 32GB M4 MacBook Air $300 off, M4 Pro $400 off, chargers, more | 9 to 5 MacDeals: iPhone 16 up to $420 off orig. price, 32GB M4 MacBook Air $300 off, M4 Pro $400 off, chargers, more
Today’s 9to5Toys Lunch Break deals are starting with some serious price drops on iPhone 16 and 16 Pro models – these Amazon offers are drastically undercutting the Apple refurb units that recently appeared with iPhone 16 models at up to $420 off and 16 Pro at $630 off the original prices. We also have a particularly notable offer on 32GB M4 MacBook Air models at up to $300 off and M4 Pro MacBook Pro configs at $400 off. Apple’s 11-inch 1TB M5 iPad Pro has hit the Amazon all-time low, you can land Powerbeats Pro 2 at up to $122 off, and Anker’s new orange model Smart Display Nano Charger now live on Amazon at $30. Head below for a closer look at everything. more…04:44 pmThe best RPG on Apple Arcade gets a sequel
"Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow Sea" invites players into a beautiful open-world RPG full of action. Plus more new Apple Arcade games. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)04:41 pmHow to stop an AirTag tracking you: Find & disable unknown AirTags
Macworld You may have heard reports of people using AirTags to track others, but what if it’s you who is being tracked? What if you are the one who sees the warning that an AirTag has been detected near you, and what should you do if that’s the case? The first thing is not to panic. It probably isn’t anything malicious. You might have found something someone had lost, or a pet with an AirTag in its collar might have taken a shine to you. You may also see an alert for other devices moving with you, such as AirPods and other Bluetooth trackers, so it could be an innocent case of having borrowed an item from someone with an AirTag attached or inside it. In this article, we will help you identify whether you are being tracked by an AirTag and explain what to do, including how to locate the AirTag and how to stop it from tracking you. We will also explain how to make sure you will receive alerts if an AirTag is tracking you. What to do if you think an AirTag is tracking you If you suspect an unknown AirTag is tracking you, the most important first step is to remain calm. Apple has built multiple safety features into the Find My network to help prevent unwanted tracking. These include on-screen alerts and audible sounds designed to notify you if an AirTag that doesn’t belong to you is nearby. If an AirTag is detected near you that is not associated with your iCloud account, your iPhone – or an Android phone using Apple’s tracker detection tools – will display an alert. These notifications typically appear after a period of time, or when you are moving and the AirTag appears to be moving with you. When you see an alert that an AirTag is following you, you can play a sound or use Precision Finding to help locate it. We explain how to do this below. Even if you don’t receive an alert, an AirTag that has been separated from its owner for a while (around three days) will eventually emit a chirping sound to draw attention to itself. This safeguard is effective as long as the AirTag’s owner is not frequently nearby. If you believe you are being intentionally tracked, do not confront a potential perpetrator. Instead, prioritise your safety and contact law enforcement for assistance. 1. Locate the AirTag by playing a sound You will see a notification if an AirTag is travelling with you.Foundry If an unknown AirTag is tracking you, you may see an alert on your iPhone stating: “AirTag Found Moving With You.” If you have received an alert about an AirTag that is traveling with you can make the AirTag produce a sound so you can locate it. To do so, follow these steps: Tap Apple’s Alert. Tap Continue. Tap Play Sound. You will have the option to play the sound again. Beware that the beep that’s made isn’t ongoing or particularly loud, and it can be muffled. You may also hear the AirTag beeping, or making a “chirruping” sound without needing to go through the steps above. AirTags are designed to play a sound automatically after being separated from their owner for a period of time (now as short as 30 minutes to a few hours depending on movement). However, the audio alert will only play if the person engaged in surveillance doesn’t come into contact with it in that time, so if a stalker can come within range of the AirTag at least every three days, the sound won’t play. What to do if you can’t play a sound on the AirTag You may find that there is no option to play a sound, in that case, the item may no longer be near you or it may be back in range of its owner. The AirTag needs to be within Bluetooth range to play a sound. Another possibility is that the AirTag speaker has been disabled. After reports of people disabling AirTag speakers, Apple started adding the notification to alert you to the presence of the AirTag. If you have been alerted that an AirTag has been found moving with you, the Find My app will display a map showing where the AirTag has ‘followed’ you. This way you can get an idea of where the AirTag has been detected, shown by red dashes and dots. It may put your mind at rest if you realise that the location is one you spent time at with a friend or colleagues who has an AirTag or other device (such as AirPods). 2. Locate the AirTag with Precision Finding/manual search Simon Jary If you were unable to find the AirTag by playing a sound there is another option. If you have an iPhone 11 or later, you can use Precision Finding to see the exact distance and direction to the unknown AirTag. Tap Apple’s Alert. Tap Continue. Tap Find Nearby. You will see instructions that should direct you to the location of the AirTag. Other ways to find an AirTag If you don’t hear the AirTag chirruping, can’t get the AirTag to play a sound, and can’t find the AirTag using Precision Finding, check common hiding spots such as: Check pockets: In clothing, not just pockets but also check inside the lining or anywhere it could have been sewn in. Check bags: Look inside purses, luggage, messenger bags, and other items, unzip and also feel for an AirTag that’s been placed or sewn in. Examine your car: A car may have a number of locations that are unreachable or hard to check. Because an AirTag has as long as a year’s worth of power, someone might wrap it in cotton (to stifle the beep it may make; see below), slit a fabric seam, slip it in, and sew it back up. Parking your car away from homes and businesses and using a Bluetooth scanner can help you pinpoint if one is in your car. Look under car seats and in vehicle wheel wells. Check belongings: Someone could have posted you an item with an AirTag in it. 3. Identify the AirTag Foundry Once you have the physical device, you can gather information about it without alerting the owner. Your iPhone will detect the AirTag and direct you to a URL on Apple’s website where you can identify the AirTag with its serial number. If you suspect that the AirTag is being used maliciously you should take a screenshot of this information, as the serial number can help law enforcement identify the owner through Apple’s records. If the owner has marked the device as lost, there may even be a phone number for the owner. And it may be that they had simply lost the AirTag. 4. Disable the AirTag by removing the battery Open up the AirTag to locate the battery.Foundry To stop the AirTag from sharing your location immediately, you must disable it physically. Software actions alone won’t stop tracking. To disable the AirTag you should remove the battery. Follow these steps to do so: Push down on the center of the stainless steel battery cover. Rotate it counterclockwise to open it. Remove the CR2032 battery. Disabling the AirTag will not notify the owner of who disabled it. Safety First: If you feel unsafe, do not go home. Instead, go to a public location or a police station. We recommend keeping the AirTag and battery if law enforcement involvement is possible. 5. What happens after you have disabled the AirTag What happens after you have found the AirTag and disabled it?Foundry The AirTag will stop updating its location immediately, but disabling the AirTag won’t erase the location data that it had sent. The owner will eventually see a “last seen” alert. What to do if you have an Android phone While Android does not natively support the Find My network, Google and Apple have collaborated on a joint standard for “Unknown tracker alerts”. Apple also has an Apple’s Tracker Detect app for this purpose. Automatic Alerts: Android 6.0 and later will automatically notify you if an unknown AirTag is traveling with you. If you have an Android phone, you can check for unknown AirTags moving with you using the Tracker Detect app. It’s far less robust than Apple’s Find My app and needs to be run manually. Manual Scanning: You can also manually scan for nearby trackers by going to Settings > Safety & emergency > Unknown tracker alerts and tapping Scan Now. How to make sure you are warned if an AirTag is tracking you You will need to be running iOS 17.5 or later. You also need Bluetooth to be turned on (Settings > Bluetooth). To make sure you will receive an alert if an AirTag is tracking you need to turn on Location Services. On your iPhone (or iPad) go to Settings. Swipe down to Privacy & Security. Tap on Location Services and make sure it is turned on. Swipe down to System Services and tap on it. Make sure that Significant Locations is switched on. Go back to Settings. Swipe to Notifications and tap to open. Swipe down to Tracking Notifications. Make sure that you have that turned on. How to report an AirTag tracking you It goes without saying that you should not confront the perpetrator. If you don’t feel safe you should consult the police. Here are a few things you could do: In addition to local law enforcement, the FBI, or police, if you’re in need of help, consult one of these U.S.-based services the National Domestic Violence Hotline or more specialized resources for victims of domestic abuse, stalking, and other violence listed by the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. In the U.K. victims of stalking and harassment can get support from the police and victim support and the Suzy Lamplugh Trust. Other ways to find an AirTag Because AirTag regularly emits Bluetooth signals that Apple devices can pick up, you can use a simple Bluetooth tracker for iOS or iPadOS to scan the area around you and see if an AirTag is nearby. While these tracking apps can’t identify AirTag as such—AirTag changes its Bluetooth ID regularly to avoid being trackable themselves—the apps give you the lay of the landscape. That includes the names of Bluetooth devices that do label themselves in their broadcasts. BLE Scanner is a limited but free app that provides a list of Bluetooth devices your iPhone or iPad can detect, and offers a mapping feature that roughly sorts them by signal strength into distance away. This is particularly useful if you’re checking out whether a car has a hidden AirTag; less so inside when there may be dozens of your own and neighbors’ devices close enough to register. Regular Bluetooth devices typically identify themselves generically (like my “HP OfficeJet Pro 9010 series” printer) or specifically, as with the sharing name of your Macs, iPhones, iPads, Apple TVs, FitBit trackers, and so on. Bluetooth BLE Device Finder (free to download, but $4.99 to unlock needed features) has the advantage of letting you drill down into Bluetooth technical details, which may give additional clues about which devices are legitimate and not. Bluetooth scanning apps can provide cues about unknown devices near you, which may include AirTags. If you can eliminate all known Bluetooth devices, including by powering down equipment that you’re unsure of, and what’s left has no associated name, it can be worth looking further by hand. How does an AirTag track you Apple’s AirTag is a compact tracking device that can be attached to personal items to make it easy to find them. Unlike a GPS tracker, which requires cell service and may drain a battery quickly, an AirTag relies on the distributed Find My network of iPhones, iPads, and Macs that hundreds of millions of people around the world carry with them, and uses Bluetooth LE to send a signal to other devices. While there are a thousand positive and legitimate ways to use an AirTag, unfortunately, AirTags have been used to track people without their knowledge. For example, back in December 2021, the York regional police department in Canada announced that AirTags were being placed in hidden areas of target cars parked in public, and then tracked to the driver’s residence, where the cars are stolen while parked in the driveway. In another incident, a woman claimed that she found an AirTag hidden in her wheel well after her iPhone alerted her to an AirTag moving with her. State governments in New York and Pennsylvania have issued warnings about the misuse of AirTags and similar tracking devices. Incidents like this are rare (at the time, York police said there had been five AirTag-involved thefts out of 2,000 in the region). Apple has put some safeguards in place so that an iPhone, iPad, and AirTag provide varying alerts and information if the owner who paired the AirTag with their iPhone or iPad isn’t nearby. There are tools built into the iPhone to find and disable AirTags as well as an Android app that will scan for AirTags nearby. This is why you may have seen a warning that an AirTag has been detected near you. These warnings aren’t restricted to Apple devices: in May 2023, Apple and Google announced a joint initiative to allow Bluetooth location-tracking devices to be compatible with unauthorized tracking detection and alerts across iOS and Android platforms. Read: How to identify unwanted tracking by a compact Bluetooth device. Because AirTags don’t register proximity except to the owner, the only way it can be used to gather information about you is if it travels with you. An AirTag in your home, office, or classroom won’t reveal anything to someone trying to keep tabs. That reduces the “surface area” of unwanted surveillance because the AirTag has to be in your clothes, wallet, or purse, something else you’re carrying, or in a vehicle you’re in and using exclusively or at least regularly. If you’re traveling regularly through urban and suburban areas or on public transportation, other people’s devices will still pick up and relay location information about any AirTag that’s with you. That can include something as innocuous as pulling over to a rest area on a highway, and someone 50 feet away has an iPhone, or even driving on a highway near other people who have iPhones or iPads connected to a cellular network. Bluetooth LE’s range is surprisingly long. I found that an AirTag I temporarily placed in my car, parked two flights of stairs down from our ground floor and about 50 feet from the house still provided regular updates about its location via devices I owned—not to mention those of neighbors walking or driving by. Everyone’s devices participate in relaying secured, privacy-protecting location information about their devices and AirTags unless they opt out of the Find My network. That makes everyone around you a potential participant in tracking you via an AirTag you don’t know about. Once the AirTag is in your possession it will relay its location to the owner via the Find My network and other Bluetooth devices.04:34 pmGoogle Photos brings ‘Create with AI’ templates to iPhone
Google Photos is bringing its new “Create with AI” templates over to iPhone and iPad, a few months after they arrived on Android. more…04:16 pm'Oceanhorn 3' leads March updates coming to Apple Arcade
Apple Arcade is adding a major new original in March, alongside several family-friendly releases and themed updates to existing games. Here's what's coming.Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow SeaApple confirmed that Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow Sea will debut on Apple Arcade on March 5, headlining a month that also includes new App Store greats and crossover updates. The additions continue Apple Arcade's push to pad out its catalog with platform-agnostic games that avoid ads and in-app purchases.Oceanhorn 3: Legend of the Shadow Sea launches exclusively on Apple Arcade on March 5. The new entry is set nearly 1,000 years after Oceanhorn 2: Knights of the Lost Realm and focuses on exploration, large-scale boss battles, and a world on the brink of rebirth. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums04:10 pmToday in Apple history: Mac Color Classic ditches monochrome
On February 10, 1993, Apple launched the Macintosh Color Classic, its first color compact Mac. It was the computer the world was waiting for. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)04:00 pmApple and Google Agree To Change App Stores After 'Effective Duopoly' Claim
Apple and Google have agreed to a set of commitments to the UK's Competition and Markets Authority that will prevent them from giving preferential treatment to their own apps and require greater transparency around how third-party apps are approved for sale. The CMA announced the measures on Tuesday, seven months after it declared that the two companies held an "effective duopoly" over the UK's mobile app ecosystem. Both companies also committed to not using data gathered from third-party developers in ways the regulator deems unfair. The CMA granted both app stores "strategic market status" in October 2025, a designation that gave it the authority to demand changes. CMA head Sarah Cardell called the commitments "important first steps" and said the regulator would "closely monitor" implementation. Technology analyst Paolo Pescatore described the announcement as a "pragmatic first step" but noted some may see it as "addressing the low-hanging fruit." The UK's app economy is the largest in Europe by revenue and number of developers, generating an estimated 1.5% of the country's GDP. Read more of this story at Slashdot.