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- Tuesday May 26
- 01:33 pmToday in Apple history: Apple becomes world’s most valuable tech company
On May 26, 2010, Apple passed Microsoft to become the world’s most valuable technology company. It was a significant milestone. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:17 pmKill clutter and slash $80 off Anker’s speedy and smart 3-in-1 charging station
Macworld Anker Prime 3-in-1 Charging Station View Deal (function () { document.querySelector("#sticky-promo-block a").addEventListener("click", function(e) { const debug = document.location.host.search(/lndo.site|go-vip.net/) !== -1; const text = this.closest("#sticky-promo-block").querySelector("p.promo-title").textContent; const data = { event: "stickyConversionUnitClick", eventCategory: "Sticky Conversion", eventAction: "Click", eventLabel: text }; if(debug)console.log("Sticky Conversion CLick - pushing to dataLayer: ", data); dataLayer.push(data); return true; }); })(); Cable clutter on your nightstand or desk is a massive annoyance that can be easily fixed. Anker’s Prime 3-in-1 charging station is definitely one of the most elegant solutions, and today it’s on sale for $150, down 35 percent from its MSRP, the best we’ve seen for this model. This charging station was built to simultaneously charge your iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods while keeping everything neat and tidy. The 25W Qi2.2 wireless charging magnetic pad is fast enough to get an iPhone 17 Pro to 50 percent battery in just 22 minutes. Then, there’s another lifted wireless pad for the Apple Watch, efficiently getting things off your desk. The base plate is actually another wireless charging pad where you can place your AirPods case. On the base is where you’ll also find a smart display that makes it possible to swipe between charging modes — Boost, Ice, and Sleep—as well as get info about charging status for your devices. Don’t worry, you won’t need any other extra devices to make this thing work because it comes with its own 65W USB-C power adapter and cable. For $150, this Anker 3-in-1 charging station is an absolute catch, so order one before the deal runs out.01:15 pmSoundcore Liberty 5 Pro earbuds offer brilliant call clarity [Review] ★★★★☆
Our hands-on Soundcore Liberty 5 Pro earbuds review finds AirPods Pro-level features without such a lofty price tag. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:00 pm5 tips for natural-looking, lo-fi pictures on your iPhone
If every picture you take looks boring and overprocessed, you can change your iPhone camera settings to take natural, lo-fi pictures. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)01:00 pmApple Watch at a crossroads: Time for a major shake-up as screenless rivals surge
After more than a decade on the market, the Apple Watch needs a significant reboot to stay relevant in an evolving health and fitness… The post appeared first on MacDailyNews.12:49 pmApple Event 2026: When is the next keynote and what to expect
Macworld Apple rarely confirms event dates far in advance, and there’s no guarantee an event will take place within its usual window. That leaves Apple fans – and anyone considering a new Apple device – wondering when the next Apple event will happen and what might be announced. Based on Apple’s long-established schedule, recent announcements, and reliable industry rumours, we can make informed estimates about when the next keynote is likely and which products could headline it. Read on for a closer look at all of the events Apple is expected to hold in 2026, and what could launch. When is Apple’s next event? The next Apple event is the WWDC keynote, starting at 10am PT on Monday June 8. Apple’s next major scheduled event will be the keynote presentation that kicks off the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC26). WWDC will run from June 8-12 and the keynote will take place on June 8, 2026. Apple will broadcast the event live so that fans can watch Apple executives reveal details of the new features and changes coming to macOS, iOS and other operating systems later in 2026. We expect the company to provide an update on its AI strategy. While WWDC is primarily a software-focused event, Apple may also unveil some new hardware products, such as the Mac mini and Mac Studio. Usually the WWDC Keynote is hosted by Apple CEO Tim Cook, but with Cook shifting to the role of Chairman and current Apple SVP of Hardware Engineering, John Ternus, stepping into the CEO role from September, it is likely we will see more of Ternus at WWDC. Apple event calendar 2026 TimescaleEvent themeDatesProductsMarch Special Experience2-4 MarchLaunched: iPhone 17e, MacBooks Neo, Pro & Air, iPad AirJuneWWDCJune 8Expected: iOS, macOS, other software, Mac updates, AI newsSeptember[iPhone event]TBCExpected: iPhone 18, new Apple WatchOctober or November[Late fall event]TBCPossible: Macs and iPads? Apple has already held one “event” in 2026, although not in the traditional sense. On March 4, the company invited select media to hands-on “experiences” in multiple locations. In the run-up to that date, Apple also launched several products via press release, including the iPhone 17e, M4 iPad Air, and MacBook Pro M5 Pro and M5 Max, M5 MacBook Air and the MacBook Neo. The next confirmed event is WWDC, which begins on June 8. This developer-focused conference opens with a keynote where Apple outlines upcoming changes to its operating systems – and occasionally introduces new hardware. Looking ahead to the fall, Apple is expected to unveil the iPhone 18 at Apple’s usual event in September. A second, late-fall event in October or November is possible, though less certain and typically focused on Macs or iPads. Here’s when the 2026 Apple events might take place.Foundry FAQ 1. What will Apple announce at the next event? WWDC is Apple’s big developer event at which it reveals plans for the operating systems that run on Apple hardware. At WWDC 2026 we expect Apple to unveil details of the iOS 27, iPadOS 27, the new macOS 27, updates to watchOS, tvOS, HomePod software, and an update to Apple’s realityOS. Apple sometimes announces new hardware at WWDC, usually the high end models targeted at power users, so we could see new Macs. This could include updates for the Mac Studio and Mac mini. You can about WWDC date, times and everything you need to know in a separate article. 2. What time does the next Apple event start in U.S., U.K and other global time zones The next Apple keynotes will start at 10 am PT. That translates to the following times in the countries where most of our readers live: U.S.: 10 am PDT, 11 am MDT, 12 pm CDT, 1 pm EDT Canada: as above, plus 2 pm ADT U.K.: 6 pm BST Europe: 7 pm CEST, 8 pm EEST India: 10:30 pm IST Australia: next day — 1 am AWST, 2:30 am ACST, 3 am AEST New Zealand: next day — 5 am NZST The timings are generally the same for all Apple Keynotes, but can be slightly different if Apple holds the event during the period of a couple of weeks when the clocks have changed in the U.S. but not elsewhere (in 2026 the clocks will change in the U.S. on March 8 and November 1, while in the U.K. they change on March 29 and October 25). Sometimes Apple holds events at different times, for example, in October 2023 the event was held in late afternoon in San Francisco, which meant it was midnight in the U.K. If Apple doesn’t hold an event and instead just issues a press release that usually happens around 8 am PT, 11 am ET and 4 pm U.K. time. 3. How long do Apple events usually last? Apple keynotes usually last between one and two hours and feature CEO Tim Cook along with various other Apple executives – with Apple’s John Ternus, stepping into the CEO role in September 2026, it is likely we will see more of Ternus in future keynotes. WWDC and the September event tend to be longer keynotes; the spring and late-fall events can be slightly shorter. The September 2024 event was 1 hour 38 minutes. 4. How often does Apple hold events? There can be as many as four Apple events in a year: Spring Event WWDC in June iPhone Event in September Late Fall Event in October This event calendar is by no means set in stone, though, with the spring and October events being less regular. Some years, Apple doesn’t hold a spring event at all. In 2025 Apple only held two events preferring instead to announce new products via press release. 5. Does Apple take part in other events? Apple doesn’t participate in big industry-wide events such as CES, IFA or E3. Instead Apple invites the press and industry professionals to Apple Park to hear all about its latest products and services. Apple calls these ‘events’ and it streams them live online to millions of viewers. 6. Does Apple ever announce products without an event? Apple frequently announces products without a keynote event, often opting for press releases or multi-day announcement windows. In recent years, the company has increasingly reserved its large-scale media events for major flagship launches, such as the primary iPhone lineup in September, while using press releases for iterative updates or “chip bumps” that may not warrant a full hour-long presentation. 7. How to watch an Apple event Apple events are typically broadcast across several digital platforms, allowing viewers to tune in from almost any device. While the company previously restricted access to its own hardware or the Safari browser, these barriers have been removed in recent years. You can access live Apple presentations through the following official channels: YouTube: This is often considered the easiest way to watch. Apple streams its keynotes live on its official YouTube channel, which can be accessed via any web browser or the YouTube app on smartphones, tablets, and smart TVs . Apple.com: The company hosts a dedicated “Events” page on its official website. For the best experience on a PC, it is recommended to use Microsoft Edge on Windows 10 or later . Apple TV App: The stream is available within the Apple TV app on iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV hardware. Keynotes are usually listed in the app’s lineup a day or two before the event begins . Apple Podcasts: Apple also showcases its events through the Podcasts app on Apple devices, where you can watch the video presentation You may also like to tune in to our Live Blog which will provide minute-by-minute text updates and analysis as products are announced. Following the end of the event, detailed breakdowns will also be available on the Macworld Podcast, which can be found on Spotify, Soundcloud, and Apple Podcasts. When is WWDC 2026, and what will Apple announce? Foundry When is the WWDC keynote? WWDC will open with a keynote on Monday June 8. WWDC will then run throughout the second week of June, from Monday, June 8 to Friday, June 12. What Apple could launch at WWDC WWDC is Apple’s big developer event at which it reveals plans for the operating systems that run on Apple hardware. In June 2026 we expect Apple to unveil details of the iOS 27, iPadOS 27, a new macOS, updates to watchOS, tvOS, HomePod software, and an update to Apple’s realityOS. Apple sometimes announces new hardware at WWDC, usually the high end models targeted at power users, so we could see new Macs. This could include a new Mac Pro (the current model still utilizing the generations-old M2 Ultra chip). The Mac Studio and Mac mini could also get an update. Following the keynote on the Monday, developer events and sessions will run throughout the week. You can about WWDC date, times and everything you need to know in a separate article.11:30 amHow a dead Galaxy tablet forced this Android user to switch to iPad
Macworld You’ve probably heard that the iPad dominates the tablet market, with some stats putting its share at about 50 percent worldwide, a huge number. Why is that? It could be because iPads are well-made, or that iPadOS benefits from being derived from iOS. It could be how well Apple’s ecosystem works. Those are all reasons, but there’s another major reason: Android tablets suck. Don’t take the word of this devoted Apple user, though. Take the word of my colleague, Hans-Christian Dirscherl, the managing editor of PCWelt in Germany. Hans recently wrote (in German; English translation available at Tech Advisor) about an experience years ago with an Android-based Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 (GT-P7500) that forced him to become a devoted iPad user. In 2011, Dirscherl bought the Galaxy Tab and was “impressed” enough to take it with him when out and about. But, being a tech-savvy kind of guy, Dirscherl wondered why Android updates weren’t regularly arriving on his tablet. Turns out it wasn’t a problem with the device, but rather that the Android 3.1 OS that was on the tablet received only one minor update during his time with it. That’s all, just one. If you don’t remember, Android Honeycomb was a big deal for Android tablets back in 2011, which were only just beginning to compete with Apple’s popular iPad. Version 3.1 smoothed a lot of Honeycomb’s rougher edges and made it stable for tablets. But while the first round of Honeycomb tablets, including the Galaxy Tab 10.1, were promised an upgrade path to Android Ice Cream Sandwich, they didn’t begin arriving until August 2012. So it was a long wait. That was a “disappointment,” Dirscherl says, but it gets way worse. Not long after the one-year warranty expired, the Galaxy Tab stopped working. He tried charging it. Nope. He let it sit for a while and then tried turning it on. Nothing. He attempted a hard reset/reset. “Keine weiteren,” Dirscherl concluded that his Galaxy Tab was dead. The letdown was enough to push Dirscherl’s “dark side of the Force” to the iPad, and he’s been a satisfied iPad user ever since. He never had any problems with that iPad or its successors, he wrote. Unfortunately, it took a serious device failure to cause Dirscherl to switch, but I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s the experience of many switchers. But hey, it’s good to hear that things are working out! Let’s hope other disgruntled Android tablet users learn the lesson. In the meantime, Hans-Christian, I’ve got a cool new laptop called MacBook Neo you should check out… Apple iPad (A16) Price When Reviewed: $349 Best Prices Today: $299 at Amazon$299 at Walmart$329 at B&H Read our full Apple iPad (A16) review10:30 amApple is doomed because Google AI doesn’t know when 2027 is
Macworld Look, the Macalope is sure WWDC will go off fine. He’s not really worried about it. It’s gonna be great. But let’s just say that, in general, the horny isn’t sure the tech companies are reading this moment right. At last week’s I/O event, for example, Google somehow managed to say “AI” infinity times. How?! That should be impossible! But somehow they did it. Possibly through the power of AI? Unclear. Talking about AI at I/O does make sense. It is a developers’ conference, after all (just like WWDC), and AI is a great boon to development. But both of these conferences are also used to announce new features for consumers, not just development tools. Google, for example, announced it was making its search field larger to accommodate longer queries designed for AI. Which is to say queries that are designed to keep you on their search page instead of sending you to those tedious websites. Why would you go to a website–many of which are poorly designed, smelly and possibly immoral–when you can have Google just tell you what it thinks it maybe read on that web site (accuracy not guaranteed, void where prohibited)? Funny story, as the Macalope was typing this column he saw this post on Bluesky which claims Google’s AI overview says, and he quotes: …next year is not 2027. Next year is 2028, and 2027 is the year after next. Buh? The Macalope tested it and it still says that. (Hilariously, it is getting this answer from a Reddit post about a previous Google AI year error. It’s AI errors all the way down.) Who would not want to use these valuable tools? More importantly, why would you go to some rando’s website and see an ad impression that Google is making no money from when you can see more ads on Google.com? It just makes sense. For Google. Google, the search company, is now becoming Google, the “I summarized the web for you without paying a single dime to any of these sites, please do not go to the web.” company. Yes, AI provides a great boon to developers and Apple should absolutely discuss that at WWDC. But maybe it shouldn’t lean into it as hard as Google did. Why? Because, as the Macalope explained last week, most people don’t like and don’t want AI. And, no surprise, it hasn’t gotten any better in the last seven days. “In desperate times, graduates find hope in humiliating tech CEOs” Hey, the kids are alright. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt is one of the CEOs who found himself on the receiving end of such a boo-valanche. To his credit, when met with the booing he… hang on, let the Macalope put on the ol’ readin’ glasses to see what it says here… uh, it says he stubbornly doubled down. Huh. Well, that’s one way to go. “When someone offers you a seat on a rocket ship, you don’t ask which seat. You just get on,” Schmidt told the room of angry graduates. Even if it’s owned by one of the guys destroying the Earth and is headed straight to an off-world labor camp run by killer robots. In fairness to Schmidt, he was also terrible at reading reality when he ran Google. Here he is back in 2011: One Android-toting audience member said he was frustrated to see iOS apps beating Android versions to market. But in part because of Ice Cream Sandwich, “my prediction is that six months from now you’ll say the opposite,” Schmidt said. It is now 15 years since that prediction and it still has not happened. (Disclosure: the Macalope was not in any way trying to be fair to Schmidt.) Of course, Apple is going to talk about AI at WWDC and it’s probably going to do it a lot. It did just register a genai subdomain and it is widely expected to show off some of the enhanced Siri it promised two years ago. Although, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, that feature is expected to ship as a beta when it does in iOS 27. If you’d like to receive regular news and updates to your inbox, sign up for our newsletters, including The Macalope and Apple Breakfast, David Price’s weekly, bite-sized roundup of all the latest Apple news and rumors.Foundry It would not be the first time a new Siri has been released as a beta. That’s exactly how Siri was first released and it stayed in beta for… wait, did it ever actually get out of beta? Maybe that’s been the problem the whole time. (It did finally come out of beta two years after it launched.) Here’s the Macalope’s word of warning to Apple, though: in a time when disdain for AI is on the rise and even developers are complaining that AI is rotting their brains, you might want to be careful with your messaging. For starters, don’t turn on the firehose of “AI” references that Google unleashed on I/O attendees and watchers. Also, it seems like it would be a good time to re-emphasize the creative aspects of your platforms, the aspects that people love, that make us human (or part human as the case may be), the aspects that AI seems bent on taking over. Just maybe do it in a better way than 2024’s “Crush” ad.10:03 amApple @ Work Podcast: The future of security training
Apple @ Work is exclusively brought to you by Mosyle, the only Apple Unified Platform. Mosyle is the only solution that integrates in a single professional-grade platform all the solutions necessary to seamlessly and automatically deploy, manage & protect Apple devices at work. Over 45,000 organizations trust Mosyle to make millions of Apple devices work-ready with no effort and at an affordable cost. Request your EXTENDED TRIAL today and understand why Mosyle is everything you need to work with Apple. In this episode of Apple @ Work, Frederic Rivain from Dashlane and Erich Kron from KnowBe4 join the show to talk about their new integration and the future of security training. more…09:00 amApple built the dream iPhone. Why didn’t anyone buy it?
Macworld The ultra-thin iPhone Air definitely caught everyone’s attention when it was unveiled last September. It’s the thinnest iPhone ever made, and it gave us a clear glimpse into the future of smartphones. When the new iPhones hit shelves on September 19, everyone was talking about the iPhone Air. Months later, the reality is that very few people seem to have chosen the iPhone Air over its siblings. People who own it sing its praises, it’s one of the few iPhones to get a no-strings discount, and its design has been hailed as one of Apple’s best. So why hasn’t it been as successful as the other models? Perception vs perspective There’s no denying that the iPhone Air is a truly impressive device. Although my daily driver is an iPhone 17 Pro Max, I’ve had the chance to spend some time with the iPhone Air on a few occasions (most recently at an Apple event), and every time I hold it in my hands, I’m amazed by how thin and light it is. We’re talking about a phone that’s just 5.64 millimeters thick and weighs only 165 grams. By comparison, the 17 Pro Max is 3 millimeters thicker and weighs 233 grams. It’s impossible not to feel the difference. The design of the iPhone Air is undeniably impressive.Foundry The Air is also stunning. The combination of its ultra-slim design and shiny titanium frame screams luxury. Yet, sales of the iPhone Air are far from being a huge success. Apple itself doesn’t provide details on sales figures for each iPhone model. But during a call with investors last month, both Apple CEO Tim Cook and Apple CFO Kevan Parekh revealed that the iPhone 17 lineup is the most popular in history. A Chinese leaker known as “Digital Chat Station” recently shared a report providing some insight into iPhone Air sales, and the numbers aren’t encouraging. According to the report, Apple has been struggling to surpass the 1 million mark for iPhone Air units shipped. So far, the company has reportedly sold around 700,000 units of its thinnest iPhone yet, a shockingly low number for a company that moves some 250 million handsets each year. Dreams vs reality I’ve always dreamed of an ultra-thin phone. To me, a phone of the future would be a device with an edge-to-edge display that’s thinner than the iPhone 6. The iPhone Air is, in a way, the closest Apple has ever gotten to that vision. Many people I know want the same thing: thinner, lighter phones. After all, as smartphones have become more powerful, they’ve also become larger, thicker, and heavier. But the overall failure of the iPhone Air has posed a question: Do people prioritize design over functionality, or the other way around? Once again, the iPhone Air is impressive. But once you actually start spending time with it, you realize its limitations. The iPhone Air’s single camera is one of its biggest hurdles.Britta O’Boyle / Foundry Because it’s so thin, Apple was only able to fit a single rear camera on the iPhone Air. You can’t take ultra-wide or long-range zoom photos with it. That’s not a problem for people who are not into taking photos, but chances are you’ll eventually miss having extra angles for your shots. The battery is also an issue. After all, there’s no way to fit a huge battery inside an ultra-thin phone. Although Apple claims that the iPhone Air lasts a full day on a single charge, the reality is that this only applies when you’re using your phone for basic tasks. People who work more intensively with their phones end up having to recharge the iPhone Air twice a day. Also, there are a few other minor limitations, such as the Air having a mono speaker and lacking the vapor chamber found in the iPhone 17 Pro models, which allows the phone to run cooler for longer. Given the poor sales of the iPhone Air and other thin phones, such as the Galaxy Edge, it seems that people still prefer functionality over design, or at least a balance between the two. Buyers aren’t willing to give up features for a fancy form factor in 2026. Want vs need These limitations aren’t a problem for everyone. There are people who really just want a smartphone to do basic things like send messages or browse the web. For those people, an iPhone Air works just fine. But things get tricky when you start comparing the iPhone Air to the rest of the lineup. Despite all its hardware limitations, the Air starts at $999. That’s only $100 less than the iPhone 17 Pro, which has two extra cameras and a much larger battery. The iPhone Air’s design makes it significantly more expensive than the base iPhone 17.Eugen Wegmann Or, if you’re looking for something a bit more affordable, you can get the base iPhone 17 for just $799. For that price, you’re getting a phone with a 120Hz display, two rear cameras, and longer battery life. Plus, the iPhone 17 weighs just 12 grams more than the iPhone Air. This makes the iPhone Air seem out of place in the lineup. It’s priced similarly to a Pro model, but offers fewer features than the base iPhone. Giving up certain features is to be expected when you’re buying an entry-level phone like the iPhone 17e, which also has a single rear camera but costs $599 (and still has a larger battery than the iPhone Air). But with the Air, you’re essentially paying more just to get a thinner phone. When you weigh the price against everything you’ll be missing out on, the iPhone Air becomes hard to justify. Is there a future for the iPhone Air? While the iPhone Air represents the future of smartphone design, the future of the iPhone Air itself is now unclear. If the latest reports are accurate, Apple may be rethinking the Air strategy, and it’s easy to see why. For years, people said they wanted thinner, lighter phones. Apple delivered exactly that. But in doing so, it also exposed an uncomfortable truth: thinness alone isn’t enough anymore. The fate of the iPhone Air is uncertain due to its underwhelming sales.Eugen Wegmann Many people now rely on smartphones as more than just communication tools, so compromising on things such as battery life or camera quality is simply out of the question. The iPhone Air asks users to prioritize form over function. And while that sounds appealing in theory, it’s a much harder sell in practice, especially at this price point. Could Apple fix this in the future? Maybe. More advanced technologies could help Apple fit a larger battery or better cameras into its ultra-thin iPhone, or the company could simply make the Air slightly thicker so that it can pack more technology inside. The iPhone Air is the dream phone. It’s the kind of device that gets people excited, that reminds us of how far technology has come. But when it comes time to actually spend $999, most people wake up from that dream and choose something more practical.08:00 amThis AI shortcut combines GPT, Claude, and Gemini for 5 years at less than $2 per month
Macworld TL;DR: Get 5 years of ChatOn AI Assistant Premium with GPT, Claude, Gemini, and more for $90.99 using code CHAT35 until May 31 (MSRP $199.99) and consolidate your AI tools into one app. Managing multiple AI subscriptions can get chaotic and expensive fast — especially when different tools handle writing, research, image generation, and planning separately. ChatOn AI Assistant Premium brings everything into one place so you don’t have to jump between platforms. Through May 31, get 5 years of access for $90.99 with promo code CHAT35. Instead of subscribing to individual AI tools, ChatOn gives you access to leading models like GPT, Claude, Gemini, and Sonar in a single interface. That means you can switch between models depending on the task, whether you’re writing, brainstorming, or doing deeper research. It also includes built-in tools for real-time web search with sources, AI image and video generation, OCR for extracting text from images, and document processing for PDFs, Word files, and more. A prompt library with 100+ templates helps speed up everyday tasks without starting from scratch. This 5-year ChatOn AI Assistant Premium Plan is available for $90.99 with code CHAT35 until May 31 (MSRP $199.99), giving you long-term access to a full AI toolkit in one app for under $2 per month. ChatOn AI Assistant Premium Plan (5 Year Subscription)See Deal StackSocial prices subject to change.Monday May 2511:20 pmTim Cook marks Memorial Day with annual tribute post
Apple CEO Tim Cook has published his annual Memorial Day tribute on X, continuing a long-running tradition of recognizing U.S. service members on national remembrance holidays. Read his message below. more…11:00 pmPrice drop: If your AI prompts aren’t working, try this
Prompting Systems turns plain-text directions into focused prompts for popular AI models. Get the AI prompts generator for just $24 for life. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)10:48 pmApple vs US antitrust case sees government attempting to escape discovery process
The DOJ spent years threatening to bring antitrust charges against Apple, and now that it finally has, the US government seems incapable of participating in its own case.Apple wants the DOJ to play ball in its own courtThe United States Department of Justice brought antitrust claims against Apple in June 2024. After a year of appeals, the case was pushed into going forward.In the months since, things have been at a standstill as no one seems ready to budge on discovery requests. The DOJ complained of Apple refusing document requests in September, then Apple complained similarly about Samsung in April, and now a joint filing viewed by AppleInsider shows more pointing fingers. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums10:48 pmApple vs US antitrust case sees government attempting to escape discovery process
The DOJ spent years threatening to bring antitrust charges against Apple, and now that it finally has, the US government seems incapable of participating in its own case.Apple wants the DOJ to play ball in its own courtThe United States Department of Justice brought antitrust claims against Apple in June 2024. After a year of appeals, the case was pushed into going forward.In the months since, things have been at a standstill as no one seems ready to budge on discovery requests. The DOJ complained of Apple refusing document requests in September, then Apple complained similarly about Samsung in April, and now a joint filing viewed by AppleInsider shows more pointing fingers. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums10:44 pmThe Virtual OS Museum is a fantastic project that lets you run Mac OS, A/UX, NeXTSTEP, more | 9 to 5 MacThe Virtual OS Museum is a fantastic project that lets you run Mac OS, A/UX, NeXTSTEP, more
If you’ve ever wondered what it felt like to use the many operating systems Apple (and NeXT) released over the past 40-plus years, The Virtual OS Museum has got you covered, and then some. Here are the details. more…10:37 pmFCC filing reveals new Apple over-ear headphones coming soon
Unreleased headphones with model number A3577 appear in an FCC filing, though Apple is keeping details of Beats Studio Pro 2 under wraps. (via Cult of Mac - Your source for the latest Apple news, rumors, analysis, reviews, how-tos and deals.)10:28 pmFormer Apple designer's take on Ferrari will upset fans of the vehicle brand
Jony Ive left Apple to start a design company, and one of his most high-profile jobs so far is designing an EV Ferrari inside and out. Needless to say, it'll be a controversial vehicle.LoveFrom was formed by Jony Ive and Marc Newson in 2019 shortly after Ive's Apple departure. The two were fairly quickly contacted by Ferrari, with a deal being formalized in 2021.Five years later, the results of this partnership have finally been unveiled in the form of the Ferrari Luce. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums10:28 pmFormer Apple designer's take on Ferrari will upset fans of the vehicle brand
Jony Ive left Apple to start a design company, and one of his most high-profile jobs so far is designing an EV Ferrari inside and out. Needless to say, it'll be a controversial vehicle.LoveFrom was formed by Jony Ive and Marc Newson in 2019 shortly after Ive's Apple departure. The two were fairly quickly contacted by Ferrari, with a deal being formalized in 2021.Five years later, the results of this partnership have finally been unveiled in the form of the Ferrari Luce. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums10:28 pmFormer Apple designer's take on Ferrari will upset fans of the vehicle brand
Jony Ive left Apple to start a design company, and one of his most high-profile jobs so far is designing an EV Ferrari inside and out. Needless to say, it'll be a controversial vehicle.LoveFrom was formed by Jony Ive and Marc Newson in 2019 shortly after Ive's Apple departure. The two were fairly quickly contacted by Ferrari, with a deal being formalized in 2021.Five years later, the results of this partnership have finally been unveiled in the form of the Ferrari Luce. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums