• The iPhone 17 Pro will be the MVP of Friday Night Baseball

    The iPhone 17 Pro will be the MVP of Friday Night Baseball
    Macworld
    As the MLB season is draws to a close, so does Apple’s season of Friday Night Baseball. And to mark the final games of the year, Apple will be showcasing the tremendous videographic abilities of the iPhone 17 Pro.Apple and Major League Baseball have announced that parts of Friday’s broadcast of the game between the Boston Red Sox and Detroit Tigers at Fenway Park in Boston will be filmed on an iPhone 17 Pro and broadcast live.In addition to the usual camera rigs, there will
  • Apple TV+ this week: ‘Slow Horses’ season 5 and ‘All of You’ are now streaming

    Apple TV+ this week: ‘Slow Horses’ season 5 and ‘All of You’ are now streaming
    Macworld
    Apple has planted its own flag in the streaming wars with Apple TV+, its in-house streaming service that focuses almost entirely on original programming rather than an extensive library of existing TV shows or movies.This guide lists all the Apple TV+ content you can watch today, divided into episodic shows or series and movies. There’s also a ton of new content in the works for Apple’s $12.99-a-month service. If you want to know what’s on the way, check out our list o
  • Apple’s tiniest Mac is on sale for one of its lowest prices ever

    Apple’s tiniest Mac is on sale for one of its lowest prices ever
    Macworld
    The M4 Mac mini is just five inches and barely takes up any space on your desk, but it’s as powerful as PCs three times its size. And today its price is just as small as its footprint: Amazon is selling the M4 Mac mini for $499 right now, a savings of $100 and one of the lowest prices we’ve ever seen.This compact powerhouse features the super-powerful M4 chip, alongside 16GB of memory and a 256GB SSD, giving you the speed and storage you need to tackle any task. Even though
  • 5 Mac antivirus apps that beat Apple’s built-in security

    5 Mac antivirus apps that beat Apple’s built-in security
    Macworld
    It wasn’t so long ago that many users believed Macs didn’t need security software. Not only was the platform thought to be inherently secure by design, but the vast majority of computer users were running Windows, so that was where the money was for malware writers. Several high-profile attacks and a surge in popularity later, and now even Apple acknowledges macOS is a target, building in security tools like XProtect and Gatekeeper for basic protection from known Mac malware
  • Advertisement

Follow @Apple_Newsl on Twitter!