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By John Moltz

This Week in Apple: The robots are coming

John Moltz and his conspiracy board. Art by Shafer Brown.

Phil Schiller’s schedule changes yet again, Apple sells a lot of Macs, and I, for one, welcome our robot overlords.

Or not

Remember a long time ago (last week) when Phil Schiller was set to join the board of OpenAI? Yeah, forget that. Not happening.

“Apple Drops OpenAI Board Observer Role Amid Regulatory Scrutiny”

Well, you’re not going to sit around this house doing nothing all summer, mister!

Lest you think that Schiller now has a free day again every quarter, he will instead attend regular “key strategic partner” meetings with OpenAI. So, essentially it’s the same thing, he just doesn’t get to update his LinkedIn profile.

Not only has Apple given up its “observer” seat (I think it would have worked like the Watcher in “What If…?”; Schiller could only have watched but not interfered) but Microsoft has as well. Considering Apple paid nothing for the seat at the table it’s not taking and Microsoft paid $13 billion, it seems like one company got the better deal.…

This is a post limited to Six Colors members.


By Joe Rosensteel

My prescription for Apple: Hire some ombudspeople

Apple touts a lot of things—vertical integration, interface design, the longevity of its hardware, the direct-to-consumer retail experience, and more—as part of the reason for its success. But there’s a fractured, bureaucratic, resource-constrained version of Apple, and it’s one we’ve been seeing more and more often. One Apple-designed app will do things their way, another app or piece of hardware will be stranded for years, bug reports disappear into an uncaring void, settings and warning dialogs get out of hand, notification spam goes out of control… the list goes on.

The people with the power to move mountains and get things done are at the top, but if a matter doesn’t arise to their attention—either by being something they’ve personally experienced, or were told about by a similarly influential person—then the matter is more likely than not to remain unresolved.

We need some people who can manage from the bottom up. Who can talk to developers directly about App Store issues. Whose responsibilities are the interrelated aspects of customer experience, not just the UX of a single product.

Decades ago, Apple changed its relationship with the community with Apple Evangelists. Maybe it’s time to do so again with a team of Apple Ombudspeople?

Ombudsdev

Apple’s behavior is frequently all over the place, contradictory and confused. It needs someone to smooth all this stuff out before it becomes a problem.

Take Apple’s recent back and forth with Epic Games in the EU: Epic applied to have a developer account and create an app marketplace in the EU, and were granted that. Then an executive found out about it and killed it. But then, after some saber rattling by European regulators, Apple had to reverse course. (Chapter two, ongoing: Some ridiculous stuff about button design.) Sure, Tim Sweeney and Epic have had a contentious relationship with Apple and some Apple pundits feel like it’s worth punishing them, but it really isn’t. Apple risks further regulatory action because of poor decision-making that is going unchallenged inside the company.

AltStore developer Riley Testut—who I think we can all agree has been a peach during the entire process of setting up his marketplace in the EU—faced a protracted review process. Meanwhile, Apple cooked up new App Store policies to permit “retro game console emulators,” presumably to diminish the launch of Testut’s Delta emulator on AltStore. Resilient Riley launched it in the App Store and AltStore. Then Apple just rejected an update to his emulator in the App Store because of the whims of App Review. This will surely be reversed, eventually, but why did it happen to begin with?

Where is the person inside of Apple who can look out for someone like Riley Testut and institute policies that prevent it from happening? Will anyone inside Apple ever define why a retro game console emulator is different from a retro computer emulator, and communicate it? Who can push inside Apple to keep the notarization system from being abused, and prevent Apple from coming across as a whimsical tyrant?

It’s called self-regulation, which is the best and safest kind of regulation, because it reduces the number of times Apple must spar with governments, the press, and its own developers.

Cross-device cross-purposes

Apple famously isn’t aligned around product lines, which is part of the whole “secret sauce” of Apple product development. Except it sometimes seems that nobody is asking the big questions about how Apple’s products interoperate. Do Apple products need their own internal ombudspeople?

Take Siri, which is due for big changes later this year, or maybe sometime next year. In some devices, anyway. What happens when you ask Siri to do something on this device? That one? What improvements will be made to the current Siri that’s going to still be in use for years and years to come?

This question can go to the heart of the user experience, and reflect Apple design decisions in unexpected ways. Sometimes there are dramatic issues with syncing data between Apple devices, and then other times there are the everyday inconveniences. Apple Intelligence relies on personal information compiled in the new semantic index, but (for example) Spotlight can’t index files that aren’t stored locally. Apple recommends people let macOS manage what files are on their Mac, but the potential side effect is that your Mac’s AI features will be cursed with swiss cheese memory if you follow Apple’s instructions.

Who is clearing their throat in the conference room and making sure everyone’s on the same page? And are they able to convey these decisions to the side of Apple that’s determining the base amount of storage space available on next year’s laptops?

Who supplies the balance?

It’s easy to look at some of Apple’s interface decisions on the Mac in the last few years and imagine that the teams that focus on security and privacy have run roughshod over everyone who cares about providing good user experience.

It’s not the job of the security boffins to worry about balancing security with user experience. They’re thinking about making sure the user is safe, and that’s a fine role. But it has to be counterbalanced by larger considerations, and it’s hard to imagine that anyone is empowered to do that right now. If nobody’s got that kind of clout, maybe there’s room for an ombusperson who is empowered to pushing back on onerous features that train people to thoughtlessly approve or dismiss security warnings, thereby making things less secure.

Theoretically, executives should be concerned with these things—but I suspect they lack the bottom-up perspective required.

This ‘buds for you

Everything is complicated, which is why it helps to have people inside Apple who are empowered to think critically1 about the overall Apple product experience. High overall Customer Satisfaction scores are great, but they don’t exactly find the pain points—nor does an iPhone survey root out a frustration with something on the Apple TV. And it’s easy to miss larger trends over time.

It’s a bitter pill to swallow to have an employee of your company point out all the ways something falls short when they don’t put in the time to work on it. But if that bitter pill is good medicine and it makes you better, you swallow the pill.

I guess I’m the doctor in this metaphor. Here’s my prescription, Apple: You need more people on the inside who can see the big picture and intervene before critical mistakes are made. The more the better.


  1. The actual definition of critical, not the common usage of it as a negative. 

[Joe Rosensteel is a VFX artist, writer, and co-host of the Defocused and Unhelpful Suggestions podcasts.]


Vulture’s Josef Adalian returns to discuss the ramifications of the sale of Paramount, and where the company might go next. We also once again consider that classic streaming question—to binge or not to binge?


Apple to enable third party NFC payments in the EU

European Commission Executive Vice-President Margrethe Vestager has announced that Apple has committed to allowing third-party payment apps use the same NFC features as Apple Pay in Europe. This is the end result of an investigation launched by the body back in 2020, and, according to the release, has been the result of a back and forth between the EC, Apple, and interested third parties. The decision also has implications under the Digital Markets Act; the EC describes the solution as “more than what is required by the DMA.”

There are three major implications to this change: first, a secure payment method called “host card emulation mode.” This doesn’t seem to use the iPhone’s Secure Enclave, but the EC has accepted it as an equivalent solution. Second, the ability launch any payment app with a double-click of the iPhone’s side button, which currently launches the Wallet app. And third, the ability to set a default payment option.

This strikes me as a solid compromise. The EC did not, notably, mandate that Apple open the Secure Enclave aspect of Apple Pay to third parties, which might have been not only technically difficult (if not impossible), but could have potentially created other security risks. Perhaps most importantly, it illustrates that it is indeed possible for these two entities to come to a decision that is acceptable to both parties.

More to the point, the end result is ultimately good for users. If they want to stick with Apple’s Wallet app, nothing changes for them. If they prefer an alternative, they now have the option to use that seamlessly—just as, for example, iOS 18 will allow users to replace the Camera shortcut on the iPhone’s lock screen with a third-party camera app, if they prefer.

The changes will kick in as of July 25th and are to remain in place for ten years, which will be monitored by a trustee along with a mechanism for resolving disputes and independent review.

—Linked by Dan Moren

Accessing inflight Wi-Fi for free via your air miles account’s “name” field

I don’t know what to say about this other than that it is technological insanity in the absolute best way.

This meant that on my next flight I could technically have full access to the internet, via my airmiles account. Depending on network conditions on the plane I might be able to hit speeds of several bytes per second.

DISCLAIMER: you obviously shouldn’t actually do any of this

Software engineer Robert Heaton essentially built a way to access the internet by updating the “name” field on his air miles account, which could be done without actually paying for the Wi-Fi. A home computer reads the updated “name”, fetches the relevant request, and returns it…also via the name field. It’s unquestionably the least efficient way to have internet access in flight, or, as he puts it “You will now almost certainly pay for wi-fi, because your curiosity has been satisfied and your time on this earth is very short.”

—Linked by Dan Moren


Our interest in the new Amazon Echo Spot, our current charging setup and thoughts on Nomad’s new 65W GaN charger, thoughts on a HomePod with a display, and which dead property we’d like to see AI revive from any medium.


By Dan Moren for Macworld

Apple’s next-gen HomePod could change everything we know about Siri

At this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple gave a little bit of time to its major platforms: iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS—even tvOS got some love. But one device was conspicuously absent: the HomePod.

Given that Apple spent a lot of time during its keynote talking about the future of Siri, one might be mistaken for thinking that the HomePod, with its reliance on Siri, would be at the center of such as strategy. But instead, it’s looking increasingly like Apple’s smart speakers will be left on the periphery as those developments roll out, or at the very least will be forced to find a workaround in order to stay relevant.

And yet, it seems like there might be something else brewing in the HomePod arena, something that moves the category forward instead of merely consigning it to an also-ran position. Something to keep your eyes on.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


Apple no longer taking OpenAI board seat

Camilla Hodgson and George Hammond, writing at the Financial Times (paywalled):

Apple had also been expected to take an observer role on OpenAI’s board as part of a deal to integrate ChatGPT into the iPhone maker’s devices, but would not do so, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. Apple declined to comment.

Microsoft, which has held a non-voting board seat since the Sam Altman fiasco last year, has also given up its position. Instead, both companies will be part of “regular meetings with partners”, along with some of OpenAI’s major investors. This seems to be, at least in some part, due to increased scrutiny related to antitrust concerns in both the European Union and U.S. Given that Apple and Microsoft have been subject to plenty of antitrust attention, especially in the EU, it’s reasonable they wouldn’t want to open themselves to more.

But this does make for a wild ride for Apple. It was just a few days ago that it was reported that Apple Fellow Phil Schiller would be taking the observer role as part of the company’s deal with OpenAI, but I guess Phil can go back to sparring with Epic in Europe full time.

—Linked by Dan Moren

by Jason Snell

TUAW returns as a gross, zombie AI-generated garbage site

Via Christina Warren, some jokers called Web Orange Limited have acquired The Unofficial Apple Weblog—a classic player in Apple blogging—and have turned it into a gross AI-generated garbage blog posting as a real one:

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) has been a cornerstone of Apple-related journalism since its establishment on December 5, 2004. Acquired by Web Orange Limited from Yahoo IP Holdings LLC in 2024 without its original content, our mission has been rejuvenated to continue providing Apple enthusiasts and tech professionals with authoritative and engaging content. We strive to serve as a comprehensive resource for news, credible rumors, and instructional content that spans the Apple ecosystem and beyond.

The tell? They’ve re-used the names of key historic contributors, but generated new bios and photos(!) and claim that new stories are written by these historic contributors.

I looked up my friend Scott McNulty, a laughable 360-word “deep dive” that references Mac OS X Jaguar and Tiger. It’s dated July 1, 2024. The bio bears no resemblance to reality, and the dude in the photo is not Scott McNulty. The very least these crooks could’ve done is give Scott a hot author photo, but no.

Anyway: Don’t go to TUAW.com. It’s a scam.

(Update: After coverage here and elsewhere, the site has changed all the names of real people to fake people. Same bios, same photos, but now fake names. This doesn’t stop the new TUAW from being an AI-generated garbage farm, but at least my friends’ names aren’t attached to the garbage anymore.)

—Linked by Jason Snell

by Jason Snell

Apple outpaces global PC growth

Analyst Canalys has updated its worldwide PC market share stats, and while the PC industry actually showed 3.4% growth year-on-year, Apple’s sales grew 6% during that period:

Apple secured the fourth position, shipping 5.5 million units and capturing a 9% market share, marking a 6% increase compared to the same period last year.

Mac market share is now 9% (okay, 8.8%, but who’s counting?) which seems small but historically is a pretty healthy number for Apple. And of course it doesn’t factor in revenue or profit, two areas where Apple generally out does the competition.

Apple has been outpacing the PC market for years now, but with the overall market now growing and the possibility of a sales spurt due to the introduction of Copilot Plus PCs, it’ll be interesting to see how Apple fares overall.

Speaking of figures (since Canalys’s are unofficial, of course), one other Apple-related note: Apple will announce its official results for its most recent quarter on August 1, so get ready for some colorful charts to kick off August.

[Via Ben Lovejoy at 9to5Mac.]

—Linked by Jason Snell

There’s more news about Apple’s battles with Epic and the EU, and Apple tightens its ties with OpenAI, but all of the controversy gets us thinking about what makes us stay excited about technology during difficult times.


By Jason Snell

I’ll have my AI email your AI

There’s a joke in one of my favorite movies, “Real Genius,” which feels directly applicable to a lot of AI discussions we’re having today. (It’s an ’80s movie, so it’s not a scene—it’s a montage, set to “I’m Falling” by The Comsat Angels.)

In it, our protagonist Mitch attends a normal math lecture, but over the course of the montage most of the class is replaced by tape recorders of various sizes.1 In the final shot, Mitch enters the lecture hall to discover that a large reel-to-reel tape player has replaced the professor himself. It’s just one tape recording being played into all the other tape recorders.

One of the announced features for Apple Intelligence, Smart Reply, will offer quick ways to respond to direct queries in email, asking you simple questions (“Do you like me? Check yes or no.”) and drafting a reply for you.

Apple is hardly the first company to suggest that in the future, your phone will write your emails for you. Gmail’s Smart Compose has been doing it for several years, and Apple’s been offering its own version of multi-word autocomplete for almost a year.

But with this latest round of AI announcements, once again, I’ve heard a lot of people making jokes about how, pretty soon, your AI will email my AI, and humans will never need to be involved anymore! It’s usually meant as absurdity, but I think there might be more to it than that.

Suppose our AIs end up emailing each other endlessly, striking up meaningless conversations and having their own inner lives. In that case, that might make for an interesting science fiction story, but I’m not sure it would really matter to us as humans. Think of it this way: email is just a communication pathway. It was built for humans to talk to each other, but for years now, we’ve received automated emails, newsletters, spam, and the rest.

If you know much about tech, you’ve heard of APIs, or Application Programming Interfaces. APIs are, at their most abstract level, an agreed-upon method for software to use or communicate with other software. APIs are in the cloud, on the web, on our devices, everywhere. So why not in our email messages, too?

I realize that it’s absurd to consider that a free-form email message would ever be better than a programmed API, but email has a flexibility that other APIs don’t. Emails can be about literally anything. And a lot of times, APIs are just not well used because the people who would use them are lazy, busy, uninterested, or don’t know they exist.

Let’s say you need to find a common meeting time for you and four other people. Are there internet calendar APIs for this? Yes! Are there calendar apps that feature built-in support this sort of scheduling? Yes! Are there literally web apps that will do this work for you? Yes! (I use StrawPoll, myself.) And yet, I’d bet that most people just… send an email to everyone asking them if they can make a certain time and try again until they get it right. It’s not efficient, but it is convenient.

Now imagine that same scenario, but everyone is using an AI system that’s reading email and has access to each user’s calendar. The end result might be the same as using an existing API or web app, but instead email messages among AIs are sorting it out. Maybe some AIs know exactly when their person is available; others might need to ask. But instead of the onus being on the users to interface with other systems and bring it all together, the AIs handle most of it and the user just chimes in when it’s necessary.

I don’t think that’s an absurd scenario. (And yeah, if the AIs are particularly intelligent, maybe they’ll use an existing calendar service to solve the problem up front.) It’s the equivalent of each of those people having their own human assistant setting up the meeting—except none of them likely have the budget to hire a personal assistant.

In fact, where AI assistants really run into trouble is not when they’re talking to other AIs, but when they’re talking to human beings. Remember when Google showed off its service that pretended to be a human and called real people to verify Google Maps data or make reservations? That’s what I really dread: being battered by emails and texts and phone calls from AIs operating for people and organizations who want my attention but aren’t willing to give me any of their own.

As long as I, a human, don’t have to read a pile of AI-to-AI email communications, I don’t mind if they have them. The protocol doesn’t really matter—use iMessage or RCS, for all I care—so long as the job gets done and I’m not left to clean up the mess. Keep me out of it, other than answering questions or making my own requests.

Email and text messages may be a stupid way to build an interconnected web of AI software systems, but history has frequently shown us that sometimes the easiest solution is the one that’s available, not the one that’s the most elegant.2


  1. The scene is meant to satirize the apparent mid-80s proclivity of college students to tape their lectures, or to skip their lectures and have a friend tape them? I dunno. Three years after “Real Genius” came out, I went to college and discovered that there was an official student organization that would sell you the complete lecture notes of any major class. 
  2. My university’s Lecture Notes service was eventually replaced by—you guessed it—AI

By John Moltz

This Week in Apple: More like bored meetings, amirite?

John Moltz and his conspiracy board. Art by Shafer Brown.

Phil Schiller has a new role, we get a glimpse into Apple’s fall releases, and why don’t Epic and Apple just kiss already?

Ben Stein: “Schiller? Schiller?”

Congrats to Apple fine fresh Fellow Phil Schiller for landing a cushy gig on the board of OpenAI. Even better for Schiller, he’s just auditing this class.

“Apple Poised to Get OpenAI Board Observer Role as Part of AI Pact”

As an “observer” all he has to do is show up to some Zoom meetings! He doesn’t even have to read the board books! He probably has to put a shirt on, but no one’s gonna know if he’s not wearing pants. Sweet gig.

It’s also sweet for Apple. As Dare Obasanjo notes, Microsoft had to invest $13 billion in OpenAI for the same privilege. Apple paid nothing, it just happens to have the platform OpenAI really wants to be on.

While Schiller is only supposed to only be an observer, maybe he can ask them about this:

“OpenAI’s ChatGPT Mac app was storing conversations in plain text”

Oops.…

This is a post limited to Six Colors members.


Our app routines, how we feel about smart rings, the smartest other tech gadgets in our homes, and how we stay informed without spiraling into doom.



By Jason Snell for Macworld

Hey Siri? No, I didn’t mean you.

We’re about to enter the Apple Intelligence era, and it promises to dramatically change how we use our Apple devices. Most importantly, adding Apple Intelligence to Siri promises to resolve many frustrating problems with Apple’s “intelligent” assistant. A smarter, more conversational Siri is probably worth the price of admission all on its own.

But there’s a problem.

The new, intelligent Siri will only work (at least for a while) on a select number of Apple devices: iPhone 15 Pro and later, Apple silicon Macs, and M1 or better iPads. Your older devices will not be able to provide you with a smarter Siri. Some of Apple’s products that rely on Siri the most—the Apple TV, HomePods, and Apple Watch—are unlikely to have the hardware to support Apple Intelligence for a long, long time. They’ll all be stuck using the older, dumber Siri.

This means that we’re about to enter an age of Siri fragmentation, where saying that magic activation word may yield dramatically different results depending on what device answers the call.

Fortunately, there are some ways that Apple might mitigate things so that it’s not so bad.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


by Jason Snell

MacStories calls for restraints on AI training

Federico Viticci and John Voorhees of MacStories have published an open letter to EU and U.S. officials calling for stricter regulation of how AI models are trained that honors the intellectual property rights of creators:

The danger to the Internet as a cultural institution is real and evolving as rapidly as AI technology itself. However, while the threat to the web is new and novel, what these AI companies are doing is not. Quite simply, it’s theft, which is something as old as AI is new. The thieves may be well-funded, and their misdeeds wrapped in a cloak of clever technology, but it’s still theft and must be stopped.

It’s a good read and a solid argument. I hope someone, somewhere is paying attention.

—Linked by Jason Snell


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