Apple Vision Pro Launches In First Countries Outside the US
According to CNBC, the device starts at $4,128 (29,999 yuan) in China, compared to $3,500 in the U.S. Meanwhile, Apple is already hard at work on a more budget-friendly model. In Bloomberg’s “Power On” newsletter, Apple news-breaker Mark Gurman reports today that the tech giant is “working on a cheaper headset, a second Vision Pro model and augmented-reality glasses to better compete with Meta.”
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Apple ID Lock-Out Affects Macs, iPhones, iPads, and iCloud Services
Several Apple customers were inexplicably locked out of their Apple ID accounts Friday evening in a major service disruption, forcing them to reset their passwords across all devices and services. According to user reports on social media, the widespread outage began around 8 p.m. ET. People complained that they were abruptly signed out of their Apple IDs on Macs, iPhones, iPads, and other Apple devices.
When attempting to sign back in with their existing passwords, they received an error message preventing access… To regain access, users had to go through Apple’s account recovery process to reset their Apple ID passwords. However, many reported difficulties even completing the reset process initially due to high demand…
The outage affected iCloud services like iCloud Drive, iMessage, FaceTime, and the App Store. Third-party apps and services that integrate with Apple ID sign-in were also disrupted for those impacted.
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Jon Stewart Claims Apple Wouldn’t Let Him Interview FTC Chair On His Podcast
Stewart returned to “The Daily Show” in February after leaving in 2015 as its executive producer and host on Monday evenings through the 2024 election cycle. Stewart’s Apple TV+ show ended late last year after Stewart and Apple executives parted ways over creative differences, including the comedian’s desire to cover topics such as China and AI, the New York Times reported.
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Apple Launches All-In-One ‘Manuals, Specs, and Downloads’ Website
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Apple Vision Pro Review Roundup
“You’re in there, having experiences all by yourself that no one else can take part it,” concludes Nilay Patel in his review for The Verge. “I don’t want to get work done in the Vision Pro. I get my work done with other people, and I’d rather be out here with them.”
These are some of our favorite reviews of the Apple Vision Pro:
– The Verge: Apple Vision Pro review: magic, until it’s not
– The Wall Street Journal: Apple Vision Pro Review: The Best Headset Yet Is Just a Glimpse of the Future
– Washington Post: Apple’s Vision Pro is nearly here. But what can you do with it?
– Tom’s Guide: Apple Vision Pro review: A revolution in progress
– CNET: Apple Vision Pro Review: A Mind-Blowing Look at an Unfinished Future
– CNBC: Apple Vision Pro review: This is the future of computing and entertainment
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Apple Again Banned From Selling Watches In US With Blood Oxygen Sensor
“The court order Wednesday did not rule on Apple’s effort to overturn a U.S. International Trade Commission ban on the company selling the affected watches in the United States,” notes CNBC. “But it lifted an injunction that had blocked the ban from taking effect while that appeal is pending.” From the report: In December, Apple chose to briefly remove the affected watches from its online and retail stores, though retailers with those devices in stock may still sell them. Earlier this week, court filings suggested that Apple had received approval from U.S. Customs for a modified version of its Apple Watches that lack the blood oxygen feature and therefore no longer infringe on Masimo’s intellectual property. It could open a path for a modified Apple Watch to return to U.S. store shelves.
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Apple Vision Pro Will Launch With 3D Movies From Disney Plus
Among the four screening environments for Disney Plus subscribers, one is called the Disney Plus Theater, which the company says takes inspiration from Hollywood’s El Capitan Theatre, as well as others based on Pixar’s Monsters, Inc., the fictional Avengers Tower from Marvel Avengers films, and one set in the cockpit of a landspeeder sitting in Star Wars’ Tatooine desert. Besides Disney content, Apple mentioned the Apple TV app will have some free “immersive entertainment” that includes Alicia Keys: Rehearsal Room and a film from Planet Earth producers called Prehistoric Planet Immersive. The $3,499 Vision Pro headset will start shipping on February 2nd. Pre-orders begin January 19th at 8AM ET.
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Apple Begins Testing Speedy M3 Chips That Could Feature 12 CPU Cores
Apple is testing an M3 chipset with a 12-core processor and 18-core GPU, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. In his latest Power On newsletter, Gurman reports a source sent him App Store developer logs that show the chip running on an unannounced MacBook Pro with macOS 14. He speculates the M3 variant Apple is testing is the base-level M3 Pro the company plans to release sometime next year…
[T]he M3 Pro reportedly features 50 percent more CPU cores than its first-generation predecessor.
From Gurman’s original article:
I’m sure you’re wondering: How can Apple possibly fit that many cores on a chip? The answer is the 3-nanometer manufacturing process, which the company will be switching to with its M3 line. That approach allows for higher-density chips, meaning a designer can fit more cores into an already small processor.
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Apple’s VR Headset Might Run Tweaked Versions of iPad Apps
– Apple is working on “optimized” versions of apps like Safari and many of the core apps you might already be familiar with from an iPhone, including “Apple’s services for calendars, contacts, files, home control, mail, maps, messaging, notes, photos and reminders, as well as its music, news, stocks and weather apps.”
– There will be headset versions of FaceTime and Apple TV with features that “will look similar to their iPad counterparts.”
– Apple is apparently testing a camera app, which could let you take pictures using its many rumored cameras.
– You’ll be able to read books in VR with Apple Books and meditate with an app.
– A headset-compatible version of its new Freeform app could let you collaborate with others in mixed reality.
– Freeform won’t be the only productivity app: the headset will also apparently support Pages, Numbers, Keynote, iMovie, and GarageBand.
– Apple wants to make watching sports a “richer experience,” which could utilize technology it acquired when it bought NextVR.
– Gaming will “be a central piece of the device’s appeal.” (That feels like a smart decision.)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Apple Is the One Big Tech Company Without a Clear ChatGPT Strategy
AI in Apple products today is like irrigation for its walled garden, essential and helpful for an increasing number of functions, but ultimately it’s the hardware fruit that Apple sells. Generative AI could come in like a tidal wave. Apple, by all appearances, squandered the lead it established since becoming the first big tech company to make an AI-powered voice assistant. Siri was clearly flawed from the start, but it looks ancient by the standards of ChatGPT. To compete in this new AI race, companies need massive, bespoke computational clusters that cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Cloud services are not Apple’s strongest suit right now, as its chief for that division is leaving, and iCloud has been the subject of lament in this very newsletter. The company is investing significant resources in the augmented-reality headset we expect to debut in June and the long-mooted, capital-intensive automotive initiative.
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