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Jon Stewart became a problem for Apple TV+
The cancellation was probably a number of things combined.
Honestly, if Stewart wants a "place to unload thoughts as we get into this election season," his AppleTV platform wouldn't have been terribly useful for that, anyway. Topical elections commentary doesn't work well without access to rapid production and a regular frequency of episodes throughout the year. The Problem with... produced eight episodes one season and twelve the next.
The Daily Show is produced daily (sort of) and Stewart will be able to appear almost-live every Monday until November. Odds are that he'll probably opt for taking some additional days in the week once he gets rolling. -
Apple is working on at least two folding iPhone prototypes
avon b7 said:Some random observations.
No one has to buy a folding phone so I find it hard to understand why some people are against Apple making one. It would only be for those who actually want one and I'm sure some Apple users would want one. That's why Apple is probably working on one.
No phone needs to be waterproof. Splashproof is more than enough. I've only ever met two people in my life who have suffered immersion damage and one of those was a feature phone. The other accidentally ended up in the washing machine.
Some folding phones are already on par with regular iPhone.
There are more mechanical parts. There is more bend stress on the screen. It's a tradeoff on being able to fold the phone.
Is that a problem? Millions of folding phones have shipped but the sky hasn't fallen in under problems of durability.
And with every generation, they are getting better than they already were.
Yes, prices can be higher but they are coming down as sales increase.
The 'problem waiting for a solution' makes no sense. Large screen. Small screen. Main camera for selfies. Portrait subjects can see themselves on the screen. Multitasking multiple apps with real screen space.
It's all about preference. An Apple folding phone would be a great option for those who want one. The alternative is an Android folding phone.
One reason you haven't met many people who have "suffered immersion damage" is because, for the last several years, an iPhone dropped in water don't get damaged. Apple isn't likely to trade that feature in for a novelty phone that folds.
Your trade-off for foldability comes with higher warranty claim rates. Apple doesn't want that.
The "millions of folding phones" that have shipped weren't made by Apple. Quality failures for other brands don't make news like they would if it were Apple.
Every generation of device is getting better, so why would Apple want to reverse that trend by making a novelty phone that breaks easily?
You've reversed the concept. A folding-screen phone is a solution looking for a problem, not a problem looking for a solution.
There are lots of features and devices that other companies make that Apple won't be making, because Apple doesn't chase after every bell and whistle just in case somebody wants one. -
Why drivers in Scotland are crashing because of bad Apple Maps data
Click-bait headline. The story says local authorities failed to submit road closure data, and that (at least) Apple and Google both are still creating routes based on that missing data.The headline intentionally misleads by creating the impression that the issue is a failure of Apple Maps. A headline that the City of Edinburgh failed to update GIS data, affecting multiple GPS mapping programs, would be more accurate, but lead to little interest here. Disappointing. -
'Strong action' is coming if the EU doesn't like Apple's App Store concessions
sirdir said:red oak said:rax_mark said:The EU, unlike the US, believes in the spirit of the law, instead of the word of the law, Apple should have realised that.Apple cannot win this one by using legal loopholes. I suspect if this continues we may see one of two possibilities:-I) Apple exits the EU.II) The EU bans Apple within its borders.I suspect Apple doesn't want to give up the European market to Samsung and Google, so the first one is highly dependent on whether Apple can still get a profit with side loading existing.Also, it is possible that other countries implement a DMA equivalent law (Japan is already in the process of doing so) so exiting markets will be shooting themselves in the foot.One thing is sure, the next decade will be different for Apple than the previous one.
Spoken like a true socialist
Apple opened up the browser, NFC, and allows game streaming apps. And, allows distributions of apps outside of the App Store - do you think Apple should get zero compensation for that?
Laws are written. Apple followed every letter of the law
The iPhone was the first major computing platform developed after popular use of the internet became a thing. Platforms designed to allow open installation of third-party applications is a legacy from an era when individual computing devices were not connected to a network. There were already huge vulnerabilities to that paradigm, but those were at least limited by the fact that most computing devices were not connected to or were only infrequently connected to any sort of network. As the internet was thrown on top of those existing systems, security vulnerabilities increased exponentially.
The iPhone was designed from the ground up as an always-connected device. Initially, this meant that third-party applications simply were not an option, period. As they later developed the App Store, they created it with the question how do we keep an always-connected internet device secure in mind. That's why there's been no side-loading of apps in iOS, and why that's different from even MacOS, which is also a legacy from the pre-internet era. In fact, MacOS has continually tightened up and moved toward the closed iOS model, not the other way around.
It's fairly inexplicable why the geniuses at Google went with the legacy model of the olden days, rather than using the forethought to realize that starting from scratch on a new platform gives the opportunity to think about what it is and should be, rather than un-creatively carrying forward the vulnerabilities inherent in applying how things used to work to a new reality. But they did it the old-school way, so for people who think those security holes equal "freedom," they have that option to choose. This is why those who actually want the always-connected device designed with that reality in mind should be able to continue to choose Apple, without the EU sending everyone back to 1986. -
Apple has new App Store rules, business terms, and sideloading conditions for EU developer...
Looks to me like Apple is essentially itemizing the costs and qualitative requirements for what they do with their own App Store (and maintaining a stable iOS/hardware platform), and requiring something approximating that be maintained by developers seeking to go outside of that system. The Metas and Epics of the world have been lobbying for this because they want the benefits of iOS/iPhone without the costs, and they want to circumvent quality, security and privacy requirements while gaining access to the customers who pay more for Apple gear because they do want quality, security and privacy. So Apple seems to have found a path to comply with the ill-advised EU mandate while still insisting that others aren't going to be able to turn iOS into the Wild West.
So most legitimate developers will likely end up acknowledging that there actually is (and always has been) significant value to going through Apple's App Store, and will simply just stay there. For those who still insist on going around it, they're not going to get the freebie free-for-all they had planned on. This strategy makes it harder and certainly less lucrative to implement the worst-case scenario that I feared would emerge, which is big companies with apps that a lot of people want circumventing the Apple App store specifically for the purpose of freely scraping user data, skirting quality and implementing other predatory practices that are disallowed by the App Store. The new side-loading requirements will make it much harder to do that, and the costs will diminish or eliminate the financial incentive to try.
This will ultimately help iPhone customers hold the line on the consumer choice they have now, which is to buy a phone that uses a closed system for its OS and App distribution specifically in order to maintain an expected standard for a high level of quality, privacy and security. Diminishing the financial incentives to circumvent the App Store will reduce the number of developers that will bother, and that will in turn make it less likely that large numbers of iPhone users will be willing or resigned to use alternative app stores to get Apps they no longer can get in the Apple App Store.