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By Dan Moren for Macworld

There may be no company more patient than Apple

Apple, it’s often been pointed out, generally isn’t the first to enter a specific product category.

Take, most recently, the reports that Apple’s working on a version of Siri backed by large language models that’s not expected to be announced until next year before rolling out to users sometime in 2026.

Does that feel a little late when other rivals are showing off products like these now? A bit, but the truth is Apple is a bit like a wizard, arriving neither early nor late but precisely when it means to.

It’s not the first time, either. The personal computer, the digital music player, the smartphone…these are all markets that the company arguably defined, even though its entrants often came years after its competitors.

That philosophy has been baked in since the company’s earliest days, and yet it’s one that has only gotten more entrenched over time because the company’s large balance sheet allows it to take these kinds of risks.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


Apple’s movie mistakes, Comcast pushes cable channels onto the ice floe, Diamond exits bankruptcy, Netflix goes live, the holiday season as a streaming opportunity, and our TV picks!


Apple might recommit to the smart home, Smart Siri feels a long way off, Apple’s movie movies anger Hollywood creatives, and Jason’s done with the era of App Store exclusivity.


By John Moltz

This Week in Apple: There’s nothing good on

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

Apple reportedly considers going where it never went before as it gains the attention of yet another government watchdog. And then, are you ready for a smarter Siri? Well, don’t worry if you’re not, it’s still years away.

Gene Munster’s revenge

Time is a flat circle much in the way an Apple television would be a flat screen.

“It’s 2009 Again: Apple is Apparently Reconsidering Making a TV”

Definitely put this in the “I’ll believe it when I see it” category but I think I’m slightly more amenable to the idea now than I was 15 years ago because of stuff like this:

“An ad giant wants to run your next TV’s operating system”

So, I’m paying $16 and up a month each to Disney, Max, Apple, Netflix, Hulu and whoever else happens to have a show that someone in the house wants to watch… and my TV wants to see what I’m watching and show me ads on top of that.

Well, joke’s on them because I never connect my TVs to the internet! You can’t catch me, advertising companies, I’m like the wind!

Even if Apple made a privacy forward television with the Apple TV part baked into it, would it have enough HDMI ports? Could anyone afford it? And what would it be called? You already used “Apple TV”!

Television hasn’t always been a big winner for Apple. Bloomberg reports that Apple will start licensing some of its movies to other services in order to defray costs. That might help but it’s a beginner move, Apple. Everyone knows the big money is in making movies and then never showing them anywhere ever. Get with the program. Which is, oddly, deprogramming things.

The Bank of Apple

There are a lot of things that a younger me would find surprising were I able to time-travel back 20 years.

A tragically high number, really.

Right in the middle there — somewhere between the horrible state of national affairs and the amazing state of 3D home printing — would be “Oh, yeah, by the way, Apple’s a bank now.”

“Apple will now be treated like a bank, says US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau”

Younger me: “Do… do they still make computers?”

The company mostly has Apple Pay to thank for its newfound ability to pull off wearing a top hat and a monocle while reading a copy of The Wall Street Journal, chewing on the stub of a cigar, and murmuring “Hrmm. Ahhh. Mmm-hmm. Yes, quite. Pork bellies.

The CFPB recently took on looking over technology firms that handle more than 50 million transactions per year using digital payments, which means both Apple Pay and Google Pay.

50 million sounds like a lot but I bet at least 500,000 of them are mine.

Siri 2: Electric Boogaloo.

If you’ve been holding your breath until Apple ships a much-improved Siri… well, you’re probably dead. Still, don’t start now because it’s still two years away.

“Apple Working on ‘LLM Siri’ for 2026 Launch”

2026? No, no, that’s cool. Take your time.

Apple is working on a smarter version of Siri…

[turns to camera, raises one eyebrow]

Huge, if true.

The new system will take a two-tiered approach to satisfying you needy customers.

…Apple will use a first-generation Apple LLM to evaluate requests to determine whether the existing ‌Siri‌ infrastructure should be used, or if a second LLM that’s able to handle more complex requests should be queried.

This is great. Now when you have a problem with Siri, you can ask to speak with its manager.

While ‌Siri‌ will be previewed early, Apple does not intend to launch the update until several months after it is unveiled.

AI is always six months away from being really awesome.

[John Moltz is a Six Colors contributor. You can find him on Mastodon at Mastodon.social/@moltz and he sells items with references you might get on Cotton Bureau.]


Time for Apple to take the Smart Home seriously

Jennifer Pattison Tuohy, writing at The Verge:

Next year, [Apple] will reportedly launch an “AI wall tablet for home control,” and it’s said to be developing more devices for the home (including cameras, a tabletop robot, and maybe even a TV). Among other features, such as video calling, this new smart display will reportedly be a hub for Apple’s home automation platform, Apple Home, providing a communal household interface for controlling smart devices like lights, locks, security systems, and cameras.

It’s about damn time Apple took the smart home seriously, having let Apple Home / HomeKit largely languish in the decade since its launch. All signs point to a renewed interest here, kick-started by the company’s involvement in Matter (a new smart home connectivity standard it helped develop) and spurred by a need to find its next big thing.

This is a piece I was planning on writing, but I guess I don’t have to, because Pattison Tuohy makes every point I was going to make. All I can add is that if you look at Apple’s annual financial trends, you’ll see that after several years of major growth, the Wearables, Home & Accessories category has stalled out.

The Apple Watch and AirPods can only do so much. Maybe Apple has finally realized that for this category to grow, the company will need more of a home strategy than “benign neglect.”


Sill gives a Nuzzel vibe to Mastodon and Bluesky links

Journalist and developer Tyler Fisher, on his personal blog:

Today I’m excited to launch the public beta of Sill, my new social media tool. Sill connects to your Bluesky and Mastodon accounts and aggregates the most popular links in your network. (Yes, a little like Nuzzel.)

Nuzzel was an all-time great service, and I still miss it. Sill is meant to be an open-source replacement of a sort, trawling your social-media feeds (it currently supports Mastodon and Bluesky) for popular links and aggregating them in a single place.

I’ve been using Sill for a few days, receiving a daily email with highlights from my social feeds at a time of my choosing (sent to my Feedbin account), and it’s extremely promising. Even better, some of the things it’s obviously missing—like support for lists, which are really popping off on my Bluesky feed these days—are in the plan for the future.


The Mac is the model

The limits of the iOS App Store model. (More Colors and Backstage members get 14 more minutes about Jason’s Desktop-Laptop conundrum.)

[We’re taking next week off for Thanksgiving, back Dec. 6!]



By Dan Moren

Wish List: More head gestures

Apple’s spent a lot of time investigating alternative ways of interacting with its devices, but one of my favorite is one of the newest: head gestures with AirPods.

Head Gestures screen in Settings

If you’re not familiar with this feature, introduced in iOS 18, it allows to you use a head nod (up and down) or a shake (side to side) as substitutions for OK and Cancel. For example, you can answer or decline a phone call, reply to or dismiss a notification or message.1 It works with both the AirPods Pro 2 and the AirPods 4 line.

I love this feature. Is it a little silly at times? Sure. But there are plenty of occasions where I can’t easily get to my phone or Apple Watch—say I’m carrying things in both hands, or wearing gloves—and I don’t necessarily want to talk to Siri. Nodding and shaking my head is second nature, and I like the audio feedback the AirPods provide to encourage the gesture.2 Could it be a little better? Sure; at times I feel that I have to move my head somewhat too vigorously, which probably looks a bit comical. (More so than talking to Siri? Probably not.) But I also have faith that the machine learning algorithm Apple is no doubt using to detect these movements will be refined with time.

What I wish, though, is that there were more options for gestures. For example, I’d love the ability to change volume or move back and forth through music tracks using a head gesture—say tilting my head to the right to increase, tilt my head to the left to decrease. I appreciate that the AirPods Pro 2 have the ability to slide your fingers up and down to adjust volume, but I find those controls finicky at times, especially while wearing gloves in the cold of winter. The same goes for using the Digital Crown on my Apple Watch—if it’s even on the right screen for it. More often than not, I just try to hit my phone’s volume button while it’s inside my pocket, which isn’t much better.

As an Apple Watch Series 7 user, I haven’t gotten to really try out the gestures there, but I have briefly used the hand gestures Apple added in visionOS 2 and found those to be winners. As Apple continues to develop these platforms and add more sensors to its devices, I expect these kind of alternative interactions to only increase, and I, for one, am here for it.


  1. You can also swap those if you prefer, which would do my head in, but is a handy accessibility feature. 
  2. It has a kind of sonar ping sound. 

[Dan Moren is the East Coast Bureau Chief of Six Colors, as well as an author, podcaster, and two-time Jeopardy! champion. You can find him on Mastodon at @dmoren@zeppelin.flights or reach him by email at dan@sixcolors.com. His next novel, the sci-fi adventure Eternity's Tomb, will be released in November 2026.]


By Jason Snell

Indecision at the intersection of Mac Studio and Mac mini

My current desktop Mac, the one I work on day in and day out in my garage/office, is an M1 Mac Studio. I’ve had it for almost three years, and it’s still great.

I know it’s great because from time to time, I end up using a M2 MacBook Air to encode a video or demux a Zoom recording or transcribe a podcast and find myself wondering exactly what is taking so long. Oh, right. It’s a base M2. The M1 Max blows it away, as it should.

But with the arrival of the M4 Macs, I’m tempted like never before. There’s now a M4 Pro-based Mac mini, and the M4 is just so much faster than the M1 that I could replace my Mac Studio with a tiny Mac mini and actually see a noticeable speed boost. One of my M4 MacBook Pro review units is an M4 Pro, and I can see just how fast it is. What’s more, I can run a bunch of benchmark tests to make myself uneasy:

a chart that shows how fast the M4 Pro really is

There it is, in black and white. The same chip in the $1599 M4 Pro Mac mini generates a single-core CPU score that’s 73% faster than my Mac Studio and a multi-core score that’s 92% faster! Less than three years on, the pace of Apple silicon has turned my Mac Studio into something that even generates lower CPU scores than the base M4 Mac mini.

So it’s settled, then?

A GPU problem

Not quite. The 20-GPU-core M4 Pro MacBook Pro is only 8.7% faster than my 24-core M1 Max Mac Studio. One of the big benefits of the Max-class chips is that they’ve just got more GPU cores. And while I’m not much of a gamer or a 3-D graphics pro, there are several machine-learning-based tasks I frequently perform that hammer the GPU. The M4 Max in the MacBook Pro starts at 32 GPU cores and is configurable up to 40.

If I traded in my Mac Studio for a Mac mini, I’d get a big CPU boost, but only a meager 8.7% improvement on GPU. Meanwhile, if I wait until next year, I can probably get a base-model M4 Max Mac Studio that’s firmly in crossover territory with the Mac mini.

(A strange feature of the Apple silicon Mac era is that you can configure a Mac mini so that it costs more than a Mac studio. Yes, that model has more RAM and storage than the comparable Mac Studio, but it’s really close. And for a couple hundred bucks more, wouldn’t I want to hold out for a dramatic increase in GPU speed to go with those improved CPU cores?)

So it’s settled, then?

The desktop laptop

“Join us, Jason.”

This is when I made the mistake of talking to a couple of my computer nerd friends. They suggested that since I spend a lot of time in the winter working in my house’s back bedroom (which has central heating), instead of trying to get my garage up to a workable temperature via a space heater, I might actually be better off buying an M4 Max MacBook Pro and toting it back and forth between the two spaces.

Oh, I do not want to contemplate the laptop-as-a-desktop lifestyle, mostly because I did that for years during the Intel Mac era and it wasn’t great. Using Apple silicon laptops attached to external displays and peripherals is a much, much better experience, but… do I really want to do that to myself?

Advantages: I wouldn’t have to keep making sure settings are synced properly between devices. Using the computer in the back of the house has reminded me that despite all the ways that I can now keep documents in sync across computers via cloud services, some stuff on my Mac still doesn’t sync. It wasn’t so bad when nothing at all synced because I had zero expectations. Now, I want it all to Just Work, and it doesn’t. A laptop would solve this problem—and solve it on the road, too.

But… this also means I would need to travel with a 14-inch MacBook Pro. They are great, don’t get me wrong, but I’m a refugee 11-inch MacBook Air user now accepting life with a 13-inch MacBook Air. Do I want to travel with a larger laptop? (Or, if I mostly use the iPad when I travel, does it not matter?)

I don’t have a good answer. It feels like every week for the next six or eight, I’m going to have a moment of weakness where I click around on Apple’s website, configuring stuff and looking at the final price and realizing it’s a bit high and then closing that browser window. Until the next moment of weakness.

This is what they call the tyranny of choice, right?


How we deal with physical media, the most tech heavy restaurants we’ve patronized, tech that ended up disappointing us, and the social media networks of yesteryear that we’d bring back.



By Jason Snell for Macworld

The App Store era must end, and the Mac is the model

Personal computers started out simple. So simple that you could just type in programs and run them, save them, and even give them to your friends. But over time, things got more complicated. A lot more complicated.

To a kid growing up in the 1980s, the idea that the maker of your computer would actively stop you from using software it didn’t approve of would have seemed beyond the pale. It certainly would’ve been a deal-breaker. And yet so many of today’s computing devices are locked down—for some good reasons, but also a lot of bad ones.

What do we want the world to look like in the future? Is the destiny of the most important invention of the last half-century, the computer, to become a series of locked-down devices controlled by the giant companies that designed them? Should the iPhone be the model for all future devices?

If Apple’s locked-down approach in the App Store era is our future, it’s a bleak one indeed. But there’s good news: Apple has also built a system that provides security, flexibility, and responsibility while letting device owners run the software they want to run.

It’s called the Mac. When we consider the future of computing devices, the Mac is the model we should aspire to, not the iPhone.

Continue reading on Macworld ↦


By Joe Rosensteel

How Does Clean Up Measure Up?

In my previous post for Six Colors, I wrote about why Apple’s Clean Up (and photo retouching tools in general) were a fine tool for people to have in their photo editing toolkits.

Now that Clean Up has been released in iOS 18.1 and macOS 15.1, I’d like to go over some technical things I’ve noticed while using it, and seeing the ways it is similar and different from some other photo retouching tools—like the ones I used in the previous post.

Those apps include the iOS version of Photomator which was recently acquired by Apple, TouchRetouch by ADVAsoft, and Adobe’s Lightroom mobile app.

Enjoy watching me scribble with my finger!

[Joe Rosensteel is a VFX artist and writer based in Los Angeles.]


Is Apple trying to boost revenue by truly embracing smart home products, or is it too late? Also, Jason reviews Kindles while lamenting the current state of e-readers, and the Vision Pro gets new accessories and a music video by The Weeknd!


By John Moltz

This Week in Apple: The good ship AI runs aground

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

Rumors have Apple prepping a home hub, the company continues to be a target for regulations abroad, and AI runs into some diminishing returns.

Camera obscura

Sure, you’ve used Apple products in your home before, but have you ever used one on your home? Come next March, girl, you just might.

“Apple targeting March release for new wall-mounted smart display product: report”

The product will take the form of “a wall-mounted display” that resembles a traditional home security panel.

The device will run Apple Intelligence, be priced “far less than” $1,000, and will show a grid of icons for a number of status indicators such as the temperature, stocks (eye roll), and appointments.

It will feature a square display that Bloomberg says is roughly 6 inches and “about the size of two iPhones side by side, with a thick edge around the display.”

Sources indicate Apple already hates the thick edge with a fiery passion and will stop at nothing to get rid of it.

The device will also feature a camera, so it’s unclear if it’s the same product as this:

“Kuo: Apple Planning Smart Home Camera and New AirPods With More Health Features”

Kuo said mass production of Apple’s smart home camera is scheduled to begin in 2026, and the company apparently aims to sell tens of millions of them over the long term.

Bigger than a Vision Pro but smaller than an iPhone. Got it.

More regulatory fun

Apple is facing more regulatory scrutiny as the EU is back at it again.

“Apple gets EU warning for prohibited ‘geo-blocking practices’ on the App Store and other services”

But if people in the EU watch our shows, what are we going to watch?! Univision?!

The legislation Apple is charged with violating has been on the books since 2018, so this shouldn’t exactly come as a surprise to the company.

What might come as a surprise is that even China now appears to be getting in on the game.

“Apple Faces Epic Games-Style China Lawsuit Over App Store Practices”

In this case, the company filing the complaint says Apple’s App Store rules are “inconsistent”.

Shocking charge. First I’m hearing of this. Very surprising, if true.

The developer notes that after their original app was removed, they successfully published an identical app under a different name…

“We put glasses and a mustache on our app and you accepted it!” I hope someone translates the proceedings of this one.

Fashionably late

Aaaaaand… TIME!

OK, who had Friday, November 15th 2024 for when the AI bubble would pop?

“AI Companies Reportedly Struggling to Improve Latest Models”

There is a whole slew of “Be honest” memes you could make based on the AI industry but the most salient one would be about none of this “AI” being “AI”. And it turns out you can only squeeze the large language model stone so much before you notice all the blood you’re getting is coming out of your hands, not the stone.

Leading artificial intelligence companies including OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic are facing “diminishing returns” from their costly efforts to build newer AI models…

Try throwing some more money at it, see if that works.

“The AGI bubble is bursting a little bit,” said Margaret Mitchell, chief ethics scientist at AI startup Hugging Face

Still cannot get over that name.

Founder 1: “AI can be scary to people. What should we name our startup?”

Founder 2: “What if… hear me out… it implied we were smothering people?”

Founder 1: “I like where you’re going with this.”

Apple rolling out AI as the wheels are coming off isn’t exactly like Troy returning to the party with pizzas but it’s also not not like that.

[John Moltz is a Six Colors contributor. You can find him on Mastodon at Mastodon.social/@moltz and he sells items with references you might get on Cotton Bureau.]


Cables, charts, and e-readers

The problems with the two-Mac lifestyle, Jason finally gets his Kindle review finished, and we take the long view via Apple’s financial charts.



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