Scanners
- Thursday June 04
- 02:00 pmWeather Channel’s Storm Radar lets you build your own forecast, now on Apple Watch
In April, The Weather Channel released a new version of its Storm Radar app, introducing a customizable AI weather presenter and much more. More recently, Storm Radar has arrived on Apple Watch. more…01:52 pmAffordable new open earbuds bring stamina, comfort — and a few problems [Review] ★★★☆☆ | Cult of MacAffordable new open earbuds bring stamina, comfort — and a few problems [Review] ★★★☆☆
Our hands-on Baseus Bowie MC2 Open-Ear Earbuds review finds good sound and value, but a few caveats with fit, call quality and the app. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:36 pmI still want an Apple Vision Air but would understand it being low priority
A report a year ago said that we could expect an Apple Vision Air product in the second half of 2027. This was expected to address both of the issues that have led to the Vision Pro being such a niche product. This week brought two reports suggesting that we may have to wait significantly longer for a Vision Air, if indeed we ever see one at all … more…01:33 pmThese photos are the best leak yet of iPhone 18 Pro colors
A new series of images claiming to be the iPhone 18 Pro chassis have been leaked, showing black, blue, and dark cherry red. We think they're genuine.Leaked image purporting to show three light-blue iPhone 18 Pro chassis - image credit: LanzkIt's always suspicious when a leaker has just a single image of a purported device, but now a series of shots have shown off most of the colors expected for the iPhone 18 Pro.On Yeux1122's blog, fellow leaker Lanzk claims to have samples of the aluminum frame for the iPhone 18 Pro. They comprise the back and sides of the phone, and appear to be stamped with "2026" plus some unclear Chinese-language markings. Rumor Score: 🤯 Likely Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums01:30 pmClean up duplicate photos, videos and files on your PC for just $20
DupFiles Cleaner Pro scans for duplicate files, similar photos and clutter to help your PC reclaim storage and feel fast again. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:21 pmApple published a new Press Release
Apple just published a new Press Release:App Store ecosystem reaches $1.4 trillion as developers thrive globally01:21 pmApp Store ecosystem generated $1.4 trillion in 2025, 90% commission-free
Apple has just published a new study from economists at Analysis Group that says $1.4 trillion in developer billings and sales was generated by the App Store ecosystem in 2025. Here are the details. more…01:18 pmApple again cuts the interest rate for Apple Card Savings accounts
Earlier this year, the Apple Card Savings account earned an interest rate of 3.65%. This was cut in April to 3.5%. The rate has just been cut for a second time, and there may be more significant reductions further ahead … more…01:00 pm3 exercise tips every Apple Watch wearer should know
You'll find exercise tracking less frustrating on your Apple Watch with these tips. Closing your Stand and Workout rings should get easier. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:00 pmTSMC CEO signals unwavering AI demand surge; what it means for Apple’s chip supply and roadmap | Mac Daily NewsTSMC CEO signals unwavering AI demand surge; what it means for Apple’s chip supply and roadmap
TSMC remains the foundational partner powering Apple's most advanced silicon, from A-series chips in iPhones to M-series processors in Macs… The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.12:16 pmRun Google's Gemini LLMs right on your Mac with the new AI Edge Gallery
Google has released its AI Edge Gallery app on the Mac for the first time, allowing AI fans to run its Gemini large language models (LLMs) locally, without the need for an internet connection.Google's AI Edge Gallery just launched on the MacWhile the AI Edge Gallery has been available for the iPhone for a while, the Mac has lagged behind. That changed today when Google made the AI Edge Gallery app available as a direct download from its website.Running an LLM locally has multiple benefits, not just the fact that it can work offline. There is an added privacy benefit, and a local LLM is often faster than sending requests to a cloud server and waiting for a response. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums12:12 pmiOS compatibility: What iOS version can your iPhone run – and is it still secure?
Macworld Unsure which version of iOS your iPhone can run? Here’s a quick guide so you can find out if your iPhone is compatible with the most recent iterations of the iPhone operating system, and, if it isn’t, which version you can install on your iPhone. We also answer the question: Which iPhones will run iOS 27. iPhone iOS Compatibility: At a Glance Find your iPhone in our iPhone iOS support table and see which version of iOS you can run. Which iPhone do you have?Which version of iOS can you run?iPhone 17e 2026iOS 26iPhone 17 Pro (Max) 2025iOS 26iPhone Air 2025iOS 26iPhone 17 2025iOS 26iPhone 16e 2025iOS 26iPhone 16 Pro (Max) 2024iOS 26iPhone 16 (Plus) 2024iOS 26iPhone 15 Pro (Max) 2023iOS 26iPhone 15 (Plus) 2023iOS 26iPhone 14 Pro (Max) 2022iOS 26iPhone 14 (Plus) 2022iOS 26iPhone SE (3rd gen) 2022iOS 26iPhone 13 Pro (Max) 2021iOS 26iPhone 13 (mini) 2021iOS 26iPhone 12 Pro (Max) 2020iOS 26iPhone 12 (mini) 2020iOS 26iPhone SE (2nd gen) 2020iOS 26iPhone 11 Pro (Max) 2019iOS 26iPhone 11 2019iOS 26iPhone XR 2018iOS 18iPhone XS (Max) 2018iOS 18iPhone X 2017iOS 16iPhone 8 (Plus) 2017iOS 16iPhone 7 (Plus) 2016iOS 15iPhone SE (1st gen) 2016iOS 15iPhone 6s (Plus) 2015iOS 15 Which iPhones will get iOS 27? Apple hasn’t yet confirmed which iPhones will run the upcoming iOS 27, but a leak suggested that phones newer than the iPhone 12 will. So that’s: iPhone 17 Pro & 17 Pro Max (2025) iPhone 17 (2025) iPhone Air (2025) iPhone 16 Pro & 16 Pro Max (2024) iPhone 16 & 16 Plus (2024) iPhone 15 Pro & 15 Pro Max (2023) iPhone 15 & 15 Plus (2023) iPhone 14 Pro & 14 Pro Max (2022) iPhone 14 & 14 Plus (2022) iPhone SE (3rd generation, 2022) iPhone 13 Pro & 13 Pro Max (2021) iPhone 13 mini (2021)11:55 amiPhone 18 Pro Max may not be thicker after all
Late last year a leaker suggested that the trend of the Pro model iPhones getting thicker would continue with the iPhone 18 Pro Max. However, a new report today gives the thickness as 8.75mm, which is exactly the same as the iPhone 17 Pro Max … more…11:45 amiPhone 18 Pro Max isn't getting any thinner as Apple focuses elsewhere
Apple's upcoming iPhone 18 Pro Max is said to be the same thickness as the iPhone 17 Pro Max, dashing hopes of a more svelte form factor this time around.The iPhone 18 Pro Max isn't getting any thinner this year.Just like its predecessor, a new report claims Apple's monster 2026 iPhone will measure 8.75mm. That's thicker than the iPhone 16 Pro Max's 8.25mm measurement, and a pocket-filler for fans of skinny jeans and the like.The measurement comes from Weibo leaker Ice Universe, and is notable given their previous claims of an increase in thickness. They said in March that the iPhone 18 Pro Max would be 8.8mm thick, a modest growth. Rumor Score: 🤯 Likely Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums11:37 amRevamped Siri will tap Nvidia chips for fast, private cloud computing
Despite initial claims that Apple Intelligence would run only on Apple Silicon, the company will now also use Google Cloud and Nvidia processors, raising questions about privacy.Apple is continuing to promote how Apple Intelligence can work on-device without needing an internet connection. But when a prompt requires more, Craig Federighi said in 2024 that it was essential for privacy and security that it uses only Apple servers.That was before the partnership with Google Gemini, however, which has previously been rumored to extend to Apple using Google Cloud. According to The Information, this partnership does include Google Cloud, and consequently Google's servers running Nvidia Blackwell B200 chips.Reportedly, Apple is to enable a confidential compute feature in these Nvidia chips, which encrypts data as it's being processed. That should mean that Apple continues to be able to secure Apple Intelligence requests.Currently when Apple Intelligence sends a request from a user's device to the company's cloud servers, it is protected by Apple's Private Cloud Compute. This is what means a user can access a full-size AI LLM, yet know that only their prompt is being passed to it. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums11:17 amPrivacy may still be Apple’s savior when it comes to delayed AI features
It’s more than 18 months since I wrote an opinion piece suggesting that while the wait for the new Siri is frustrating, the privacy payoff would be worth it. A lot of time has passed since then, and of course user frustration at the ongoing delay has grown significantly. While goodwill has undoubtedly been lost, a recent announcement does provide some hope that privacy may still rescue the company’s tarnished reputation in AI … more…10:45 amNvidia’s RTX Spark laptops are gunning for the MacBook Pro. Yawn
Macworld Nvidia just announced its new consumer laptop/desktop chip at Computex—RTX Spark—along with a host of partnerships from hardware manufacturers and Microsoft. It’s all anyone can talk about right now, and one of the most often-repeated lines is that Nvidia just put the MacBook Pro on notice. This is it… this is the superchip that will make Windows laptops put the nail in the MacBook Pro’s coffin. I find the RTX Spark chip extremely interesting, and it’s definitely aiming at a market segment that overlaps the MacBook Pro, but I’m not sure it’s time for Apple to start sweating. High-performance Windows PCs exist today, and a somewhat better spin on them isn’t going to spell the end for Apple. What is RTX Spark? In brief, RTX Spark is a new chip made for high-performance thin and light laptops or small-form-factor desktops. It’s up to 20 ARM cores made by MediaTek (10 Cortex-X925 and 10 Cortex-A725) and an Nvidia Blackwell GPU with up to 6,144 cores, joined together with an NVLink chip-to-chip interconnect.. It can be configured with up to 128GB of LPDDR5x unified memory. It’s literally the DGX Spark AI workstation chip that Nvidia announced last spring and shipped in the fall, only optimized for laptops and consumer PCs. In other words, it’s similar to an M5 Max, only with more GPU power. RTX Spark is DGX Spark from last year, but for Windows laptops.Nvidia It’s targeting a power draw in the 45W to 80W range, and is being launched in partnership with Microsoft, which means all the RTX Spark laptops and desktops run Windows. What’s the big deal? Well, it should deliver a lot of performance, especially for AI tasks, for laptops in this class. It’s also an ARM CPU, not x86, and Windows on ARM has had its share of issues over the years. But this partnership with Microsoft is supposed to mean that the two companies have been working together to really smooth out those problems and provide the compatibility and performance consumers expect. The Linux crowd is definitely not happy with this arrangement. Windows has earned a reputation for bloat, inefficiency, and instability lately, and has become bogged down with ads and data collection. The target market for these devices—creative professionals and AI enthusiasts—is fed up with Windows. Linux fans want the chip without having Windows forced on them. Beware the marketing hype The first products using RTX Spark aren’t expected until this fall, and we don’t have any idea what they will cost. Nvidia has a lot of “up to” in their marketing materials… “up to” 20 CPU cores, “up to” 6,144 GPU cores, “up to” 128GB of RAM. Power draw is represented as a sort of wide range, 45W is pretty low for this class of laptop and will result in good battery life, while 80W will run pretty hot and eat through battery pretty quickly. Benchmarks are nowhere to be seen, especially on the CPU side. Nvidia is using vague language in its marketing: “Up to 2x” performance in Photoshop and Premiere, but the fine print says it’s just for specific tasks that run local AI models. Gaming is said to be up to 100 frames per second at 1440p, but without mentioning what games and settings are used. There’s a lot of “up to” on there.Nvidia The performance of the best RTX Spark configurations isn’t really in doubt. It’s the price. A DGX Spark workstation starts at around $3,500 and goes up well over $4,000, and that’s without any sort of display or battery or speakers or all the other stuff you need to put in a premium, high-price laptop for professionals. The cheapest MacBook Pro you can buy with the full-core M5 Max chip in it is $4,099, and that’s with 48GB of RAM and a 2TB SSD. More RAM can cost up to $1,000 more. Given what’s happening in the world today with consumer tech prices, there’s little doubt that the cut-down versions of RTX Spark laptops, with fewer cores and less RAM, will cost what MacBook Pros cost, more or less. Windows laptops with RTX Spark are set up to compete with the MacBook Pro, in other words. And they’ll arrive on the market around the same time, or slightly before, the M6 generation of Apple laptops. Why Apple shouldn’t start sweating yet So Nvidia and Microsoft finally have a Windows-based hardware platform that combines a big ARM CPU and big GPU together with a bunch of unified RAM in a package meant for high-end professional laptops. That’s one piece of the puzzle, but Apple needn’t worry just yet, because that’s not why people are buying MacBook Pros. By and large, most people buy MacBooks because they want a MacBook, not because it has bigger numbers or longer benchmark bars than some Windows laptop. They want to run macOS because Windows is now an ad-laden, data-harvesting, buggy mess. They have other Apple products and want to stay in the ecosystem where everything works together seamlessly. They like the build quality, the trackpad, the keyboard. Nvidia RTX Spark may give Windows its very own M5 Max, but it doesn’t address any of those other things, and the jury is still very much out as to whether Microsoft and all its brand partners like Asus, Acer, Lenovo, and MSI will work it all out together over the next year or so. The real push with RTX Spark is to run AI agents. These are local-and-cloud AI models that perform tasks for you, interacting with the software and services you use to do stuff automatically or take care of boring and repetitive work. Nvidia talked about this a lot when revealing RTX Spark, and the chip does indeed seem very well suited to AI agents, especially if you pay for a lot of RAM. It’s the next big thing in AI, and both Nvidia and Microsoft are working hard to build the software frameworks and tools to totally transform your computers from a thing you run software on to a thing you tell your AI agent to run software on. It remains to be seen if regular people actually want AI agents as the next evolution of personal computing. It’s currently the rage among tinkerers and enthusiasts who don’t mind doing a lot of configuration, troubleshooting, and dealing with questionable results. The reliability, ease of use, utility, and cost that would make it everyday tech for your average person seem a long way off. The threat to Apple doesn’t come from a more competitive system-on-chip for Windows laptops, it comes from the prospect that Microsoft might get its act together with Windows. It comes from the possibility that personal computing really will evolve into a “AI first” ecosystem and that Macs won’t have the necessary hardware or software to provide that for consumers.10:00 amI hate taking iPhone photos. Apple, please help me
Macworld For years, Apple has sold the iPhone as one of the best smartphone cameras you can buy. And honestly, it’s not wrong. The image quality is excellent, video recording remains unmatched, and features like ProRAW prove just how capable modern iPhones have become. But despite all that progress, I’ve slowly started to hate actually taking photos with my iPhone. Not because the cameras are bad. Quite the opposite. My iPhone’s camera is so good it highlights the actual problem: the Camera app itself. Apple’s camera hardware keeps getting more advanced every year, yet the software experience still feels limited, cluttered, and sometimes even frustrating. Basic controls are hidden behind gestures, manual settings barely exist, and users who want more control are still pushed toward Halide and other third-party apps just to unlock the full potential of the hardware. Luckily, the latest rumors suggest that a fix for all of this is on the way. The Camera app is a mess Apple has always prioritized a “point-and-shoot” experience for the iPhone’s Camera app. Instead of offering complex controls, Apple’s Camera app has always focused on being simple and intuitive. For years, all users had to do was choose between taking a photo and recording a video. But the iPhone’s hardware has evolved considerably over the years, bringing with it many new camera-related features. These include features such as HDR, filters, ProRAW, Portrait Mode, Spatial Photos, and much more. The iOS Camera app is too confusing for casual users and not intuitive enough for high-end photographers.Foundry Some of the controls for these features are located on the top toolbar, while others are hidden behind swipe-up gestures that most users don’t even know exist. Switching between formats, resolutions, timers, and other settings often requires multiple taps, not to mention the ones buried in the Settings app. There are also duplicate buttons with different functions, which can confuse even seasoned photographers, let alone casual photo takers. For instance, the flash button at the top of the screen only toggles between automatic and off. If you want to keep the flash on all the time, you need to swipe up and tap the flash button from the controls menu. At the same time, the Camera app’s tab bar has become extremely cluttered. There are now eight different camera modes available on the latest iPhones, and they only become visible once you tap the tab bar and start swiping. If you’re a pro user, finding the right tools is harder than ever. And if you’re a regular user, you’ll probably never even know that certain iPhone camera features exist. Pro iPhone users deserve a Pro Camera app Every year, when Apple introduces a new iPhone, it showcases how professional photographers and videographers are using the iPhone for serious work. However, these users rely on third-party tools, which are often paid apps, to unlock the hardware’s full potential. The iPhone’s native Camera app still lacks many of the basic manual controls that photography enthusiasts now expect. If you want to control simple things such as shutter speed or ISO settings, you’ll have to download a different camera app (Halide, Kino, Blackmagic Camera, etc.). Third-party apps like Halide make taking photos much more powerful and fun.Foundry Of course, Apple isn’t expected to cover every single feature within its own Camera app, but even the basics are missing. This has become increasingly hard to ignore as Apple has promoted the iPhone as a professional camera. The company increasingly embraces customization across iOS, iPadOS, and macOS. Users can customize the Control Center, Lock Screen, Home Screen, widgets, Action buttons, and even app layouts. But the Camera app still behaves as if Apple thinks every user wants the exact same experience. A modular Camera app might be on the way Once again, it’s understandable that not every user needs access to certain settings or features, but the Camera app should at least give users the option to include or exclude these toggles from the main interface. Thankfully, it seems like Apple has been working on a redesigned Camera app for the iPhone with iOS 27, which could be announced as early as WWDC on June 8. iOS 27 will reportedly move some of the Camera’s app features out of the Settings app.Foundry According to a recent Bloomberg report, the Camera app will become much more modular. Users will be able to add or remove toggles from the Camera app, similar to how they can currently edit the toggles in Control Center. That alone would make the Camera app a lot better. Imagine opening the Camera app and only seeing the tools you actually use. A cleaner interface for casual users. A more advanced layout for enthusiasts. Fast access to manual exposure controls without needing a separate app. Coupled with the latest iPhone rumors, the timing of this long-awaited update makes perfect sense. The latest reports on the iPhone 18 Pro suggest that the handset will feature a variable-aperture lens for the first time, allowing the camera to physically adjust the amount of light entering the sensor. If true, the current Camera app may not be enough, or it could become even more cluttered with another new hardware feature to deal with. A redesign would be a timely move to accommodate this major change coming with the iPhone 18 Pro’s camera. The Camera will reportedly get a major upgrade in iOS 27.Bloomberg A simple but powerful upgrade To be clear, Apple doesn’t need to overwhelm casual users with dozens of professional controls the moment they open the Camera app. Part of the iPhone’s success comes from how easy it is to point, shoot, and get excellent results. But Apple also needs to please its pro users, many of whom rely on the iPhone’s camera for their livelihoods. It’s a tricky balance, but if the new Camera app in iOS 27 lets users customize the interface with the controls they need most, that might be enough to make everyone enjoy taking photos with the iPhone again. I love my iPhone’s camera, but whenever I snap a photo with the Camera app, it feels like I’m being hindered by Apple’s own tools. And I can’t wait to see how the next version of iOS will change that.09:35 amApple event live blog: Follow WWDC news before the keynote starts
Macworld Next week, Apple will kick off WWDC with a keynote presentation that outlines all of the new features across its family of devices: iOS, iPadOS, macOS. watchOS, tvOS, and visionOS. What will Apple have in store for this year’s show? Will there be any surprises? This will be your one-stop source for all things Apple this week and all through next week’s show, so stay tuned! Watch the WWDC keynote right here Apple has posted a placeholder page for its keynote livestream on YouTube, which you can watch right here. You can also check out the keynote on Apple.com and in the TV app on Apple TV. Catch up on the rumors For months, we’ve been collecting every rumor and tidbit about iOS/iPadOS and macOS leading up to Monday’s keynote. If you haven’t been following as closely as we’ve been, don’t worry. We’ve got you covered with superguides for iOS and macOS, as well as everything else expected to arrive this month. Apple WWDC 2026: Live blog8 mins ago, By Michael SimonYou might hate iOS 27 If there’s one thing we’re sure of next week, it’s that iOS 27 will feature a lot of AI. As AI skeptic Jason Cross explains, there’s a bit of a backlash against AI right now. There are hallucinations, confidently wrong answers, inappropriate images, bias—the list goes on. What kind of AI will iOS 27 bring? And more importantly, will iPhone users embrace the new Siri or turn against it? Link copied SHARE09:35 amApple event live blog: Follow WWDC news before the keynote starts
Macworld Next week on Monday June 8, Apple will kick off WWDC with a keynote presentation that outlines all of the new features across its family of devices: iOS, iPadOS, macOS. watchOS, tvOS, and visionOS. What will Apple have in store for this year’s show? Will there be any surprises? This will be your one-stop source for all things Apple this week and all through next week’s show, so stay tuned! Watch the WWDC keynote right here Apple has posted a placeholder page for its keynote livestream on YouTube, which you can watch right here. You can also check out the keynote on Apple.com and in the TV app on Apple TV. Catch up on the rumors For months, we’ve been collecting every rumor and tidbit about iOS/iPadOS and macOS leading up to Monday’s keynote. If you haven’t been following as closely as we’ve been, don’t worry. We’ve got you covered with superguides for iOS and macOS, as well as everything else expected to arrive this month. Apple WWDC 2026: Live blog21 mins ago, By Michael SimonYou might hate iOS 27 If there’s one thing we’re sure of next week, it’s that iOS 27 will feature a lot of AI. As AI skeptic Jason Cross explains, there’s a bit of a backlash against AI right now. There are hallucinations, confidently wrong answers, inappropriate images, bias—the list goes on. What kind of AI will iOS 27 bring? And more importantly, will iPhone users embrace the new Siri or turn against it? Link copied SHARE