Apple has seeded the second public betas of both macOS Catalina and tvOS 13 to public testers.
Apple seeds second public betas of macOS Catalina, tvOS 13 to public testers
Apple has seeded the second public betas of both macOS Catalina and tvOS 13 to public testers.
In June, Apple launched a voluntary battery replacement and recall for specific 15-inch MacBook Pro models, with units manufactured between September 2015 and February 2017 caught in the dragnet. And now images share just how important that recall is.
With the iOS 13 beta now available to both developers and public beta testers, we thought it prudent to put a spotlight on some of the smaller yet essential improvements that Apple didn't talk about at WWDC 2019 but we think deserve a quick mention, from auto-naming your scans to iPhone mouse support to Family Sharing in Personal Hotspot and beyond.
"Hey Siri" is a worthwhile feature, but sometimes it can also be activated by accident in certain situations.
Apple appears to be working on a wired data transfer method between devices.
iOS 13 will make it appear as if you're starring directly at the front-facing camera on a FaceTime video call even when you're really looking away at the person on your screen.
Earlier today, Apple seeded the third beta of watchOS 6 to developers. And while it didn't add a variety of new features to the mix, it did at least add one more.
There are a variety of different case designs for Apple's iPad lineup, fitting the majority of needs that most customers are looking for. One category is the folio case, which typically keeps things pretty light, but offers a degree of protection and, typically, a few different viewing angles.
The rumor mill has been talking about a new MacBook Pro coming down the line for quite some time. And while the Federal Communications Commission has just approved a new MacBook Pro, this may not be that model.
Apple on Tuesday officially seeded the latest beta of iOS 13, iPadOS, macOS Catalina, watchOS 6, and tvOS 13 to developers.
Apple has had Memoji, its own brand of 3D avatars, for quite some time already. Long enough that Xiaomi has apparently decided it's about time to copy Apple's effort.
First announced in August 2018, Back to my Mac, Apple's remote access service that used to be a built-in feature, has now been disabled for Mac users across all macOS editions.