Business

Apple has €13 billion Irish tax bill overturned

BBC:

Apple has been told it will not have to pay Ireland €13bn (£11.6bn) in back taxes after winning an appeal at the European Union’s second highest court.

And:

“This case was not about how much tax we pay, but where we are required to pay it,” Apple said in a statement. “We’re proud to be the largest taxpayer in the world as we know the important role tax payments play in society.”

That’s about US$14.9 billion, at today’s trade rate. And the Irish government has appealed the decision.

My bad. Hopped in the car for the last leg of a road trip, realized the error, but took me til this afternoon to correct. Clearly, the Irish government is on side here.

iOS 14: Here are 7 ways iPhone is improving as a camera

Great read from Filipe Espósito, 9to5Mac. For me, the Camera app is one of the most important apps on my iPhone. Improvements to the camera are important distinguishing features between iPhone generations and between models of the same generation. A big camera improvement can trigger iPhone users to upgrade to a newer model.

This particular iOS 14 change jumped out at me:

With iOS 14, Apple says opening the Camera app and taking the first picture is up to 25% faster, while taking two or more pictures is 90% faster. For iPhones with Portrait Mode, photos are taken up to 15% faster.

These changes are automatically enabled to all devices running iOS 14, so you don’t need to change anything to benefit from these enhancements.

Huge gain in both of these paragraphs. How many pictures have you lost because you were just a hair too slow getting your iPhone out and getting that picture snapped?

And, maybe more importantly, the faster speed is enabled across all models, not just the higher end of the range.

Grant Imahara, host of ‘MythBusters’ and ‘White Rabbit Project,’ dies at 49

Hollywood Reporter:

Imahara died suddenly following a brain aneurysm, The Hollywood Reporter has learned. “We are heartbroken to hear this sad news about Grant. He was an important part of our Discovery family and a really wonderful man. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family,” a representative for Discovery said in a statement on Monday.

And:

While part of the Mythbusters team, he sky-dived and drove stunt cars, on film sets he came into contact with some of the most iconic characters in screen history, installing lights onto Star Wars’ R2-D2, creating the robot Geoff Peterson for The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson and working on the Energizer Bunny.

Adam Savage:

https://twitter.com/donttrythis/status/1282885559816347648

Damn.

Gruber: A moment of clarity regarding the raison d’etre for the App Store

Two good reads for the weekend. First, be sure to dig into Jim Dalrymple’s iOS 14 favorite features piece.

Then follow the headline link and read John Gruber’s powerful App Store essay. I’ll quote a few bits, but worth heading over to read the whole thing:

Feel free to file Google’s release this week of an update to their iPad Gmail app with support for split-screen multitasking under “better late than never”, but this is so late it borders on the absurd.

and:

Five years to add support for a foundational element of the iPad user experience. And an email client is near the top of the list of the type of apps where someone would want to use split-screen. Five years.

and:

I worry that it’s not tenable in the long run to expect Apple to continue striving to create well-crafted — let alone insanely great — software when so many of its users not only settle for, but perhaps even prefer, software that is, to put it kindly, garbage.

And:

I’d like to see all the vim, vigor, and vigilance Apple applies to making sure no app on the App Store is making a dime without Apple getting three cents applied instead to making sure there aren’t any scams or ripoffs, and that popular apps support good-citizen-of-the-platform features within a reasonable amount of time after those features are introduced in the OS. I don’t know exactly how long “reasonable” is, but five fucking years for split-screen support ain’t it.

And:

Imagine a world where the biggest fear developers had when submitting an app for review wasn’t whether they were offering Apple a sufficient cut of their revenue, but whether they were offering users a good enough native-to-the-platform experience.

And, finally:

Rather than watch Apple face antitrust regulators in the U.S. and Europe with a sense of dread, I’d watch with a sense of glee. “This company is abusing its market dominance to take an unfair share of our money” is an age-old complaint to government regulators. “This company is abusing its market dominance to force us to make our apps better for users” would be delightful new territory. Only Apple could do that.

Go read the whole post. There’s a lot more. It’s clearly born of epiphany.

At the core of the issue is a basic problem with being a public traded company. Once you put your company up for sale to the public, take public money to use as you will, you are beholden to those shareholders. You can’t help but treat the bottom line as a fiduciary responsibility. And there’s the rub.

Apple, and shareholders, made a ton of money on the iPhone and its wondrous ecosystem. But it’s a hard treadmill to escape. So as the smartphone market matured, Apple shifted to services. And the App Store is one of the more important pieces of that strategy.

No argument with Gruber’s idealism. And I do think it’s possible Apple’s hand will be forced by Antitrust investigation/regulation. But the financial forces, the pressure from shareholders for year-over-year growth, will not change. Some balancing force needs to come to bear here, pressure to make Apple value a world where, as John says, their most used apps are best-in-class.

Great food for thought from Gruber. Go read the whole thing.

Intel’s Lyle Warnke walks through the new Thunderbolt 4 features

[VIDEO] Follow the headline link for all the details, watch the video (embedded in the main Loop post) for more of a guided tour.

To me, these highlights stick out:

  • Thunderbolt 4 implemented as a USB-C port (no change there)
  • Daisy chain up to 4 Thunderbolt 4 devices
  • Video: Support for two 4K displays or one 8K display.
  • Data: PCIe at 32 Gbps for storage speeds up to 3,000 MBps.

And this from Apple:

“Over a decade ago, Apple partnered with Intel to design and develop Thunderbolt, and today our customers enjoy the speed and flexibility it brings to every Mac. We remain committed to the future of Thunderbolt and will support it in Macs with Apple silicon.”

Good stuff.

Another appreciative Apple TV+ “Little Voice” review

While yesterday’s Variety review was safe reading, this Rolling Stone review digs into plot points, has some spoilers.

But suffice it to say, while neither review is effusive, both are thoughtful and appreciative, both make me want to binge Little Voice when it drops tomorrow, July 10th. Or, at least, binge the first three episodes. The remaining six drop weekly, on Friday.

Nvidia is now worth more than Intel

TechSpot:

Thanks to a recent surge in its stock price, Nvidia has overtaken Intel to become the most valuable chipmaker in the US. Following a 2.3 percent jump yesterday afternoon, team green’s shares have now reached $408, putting its market cap at $251.3 billion, ahead of Intel’s $248.1 billion.

Interesting, granted, but I do take exception to the phrase “most valuable chipmaker in the US”.

By that logic, the most valuable chipmaker in the US would be Apple. By far. After all, TSMC makes Nvidia’s chips, and they make Apple’s Arm SoC’s as well. But Intel makes their own chips. Let’s let them keep the crown.

Apple Stores now offer reservations to shop, one-on-one, with a Specialist

Michael Steeber, 9to5Mac:

Starting today, Apple Store visitors can head online before visiting the store in person and schedule a Shop with a Specialist appointment. Booking an appointment guarantees you a time to comfortably browse inside the store and shop without the hassle of waiting or potentially being turned away at the door.

And if you know what you want, this makes the entire shopping experience more efficient, shorter, safer, minimizing the time spent in a public space.

Great way to ease people back into the Apple Store.

Variety reviews Apple TV+ “Little Voice”

If you care about the show, read the review. It’s spoiler free.

Bottom line, this smells like a surprisingly, refreshing winner of a show. It drops Friday. I will definitely be watching it.

AirPods versus AirPods Pro: Apple’s earbuds go head-to-head

Adam Engst, TidBITS:

When it comes to general usage, I haven’t noticed any real difference between the AirPods and the AirPods Pro.

In an attempt to qualify that better, I connected both to my Mac and played my go-to test music—the “Brothers in Arms” album by Dire Straits from Apple Music—through one and then the other. Even with the same song and switching back and forth, I couldn’t really pick a winner.

I’d have to agree with this. As far as audio subtlety goes, they both sound very good, though a pair of top over-ear headphones wins that battle. But convenience reigns. The best earbuds are the ones you have with you, and that you can easily slip into your pocket.

Back to the review:

The noise cancellation in the AirPods Pro, on the other hand, can be near magical. The first time I used them, I was vacuuming the house. They were a revelation. The noise cancellation dampened the vacuum noise so significantly that I can’t imagine vacuuming without them again.

And there’s the value. Again, you can get better noise cancellation, but AirPods Pro noise cancellation is very good, and fit in your pocket.

The AirPods Pro also have shorter stems, which means I can just fit them inside the earmuffs that I wear when mowing the lawn.

I wear a knit cap (I’ve long shaved my head, and the knit cap keeps my head warm) and I find that, especially with the shorter stems, the cap keeps my AirPods Pro in place and, if I pull the cap over my ears, makes the noise cancellation even better.

I love my AirPods Pro, consider them worth every penny and then some.

HomePod Beta 2 lets you select alternative providers for Music, Podcasts and Audiobooks

Juli Clover, MacRumors:

At the current time, third-party music services like Spotify can only be streamed on the ‌‌HomePod‌‌ using AirPlay and an iPhone, iPad, or Mac. The new feature will presumably allow Spotify and other music services to be set as the default music service, letting users ask Siri to stream music from Spotify.

It’d be interesting to know if this new feature was directly driven as a legal strategy.

Apple expands its Independent Repair Provider Program, adding hundreds of new locations

Apple:

Apple is expanding its Independent Repair Provider Program with additional options for customers to access repair services. The industry-leading program enables businesses of all sizes to offer repairs on iPhone using genuine Apple parts, which ensures safety and quality. Following the launch of the program in the US last fall, over 140 independent repair companies have joined with over 700 new US locations now available to customers, and businesses in Europe and Canada can now sign up.

And:

Since the launch of the Independent Repair Provider Program last fall, there are now over 700 Independent Repair Provider locations across the US providing out-of-warranty service for iPhone.

Genuine Apple parts is key here, especially where screen replacement is concerned.

You can verify that your local shop has access to genuine parts and repair resources on this official Apple page.

Steve Jobs, back in 2007, quips about newly minted relationship with Intel

[VIDEO] This bit of video (embedded in the main Loop post) surfaced on Reddit this morning. In it, Steve Jobs, Tim Cook, and Phil Schiller took some questions about Apple’s adoption of Intel chips.

Fascinating to see younger versions of Tim and Phil, and always great to see Steve Jobs in action, this time in an ad hoc forum.

How to hide home screen app pages on iPhone in iOS 14

This is worth making your way through, just to get the mechanics down. You can tell this is non-obvious when the first instruction is:

  • Long press on a blank area of the Home Screen or any additional page of apps.

Nice job by Tim Hardwick, MacRumors.

iOS 14: Everything new in Messages

Juli Clover digs through the iOS 14 beta and lays out all that’s new with Messages, including pinned chats, inline replies, and emoji search.

Interesting to see if the ability to do a deep, efficient search emerges, as appears to be the case with macOS 11.

Apple. Where the wild things are now.

Apple:

In a move that will add more globally beloved children’s stories and characters exclusively to Apple TV+, Apple today announced a first-of-its-kind, multi-year deal with The Maurice Sendak Foundation. Through the deal, Apple and The Maurice Sendak Foundation will reimagine new children’s series and specials based on the books and illustrations by Maurice Sendak, which will premiere all over the world exclusively on Apple TV+.

Talk about a treasure trove of rich source material. Just like Goodnight Moon, Corduroy, and Charlotte’s Web, generations of kids grew up with Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are. This is seminal stuff.

Side note: There have been some great, animated treatments of Sendak material over the years. One of the best was called Really Rosie, a collection of shorts with music by Carole King. If that rings a bell, fire up the album on Apple Music

Is anyone watching Quibi? The $1.75 billion question

Vulture:

“I can honestly say I’ve never been in such a cocky pitch environment,” Gairdner recalls. “I would describe the atmosphere as almost Wolf of Wall Street, not in terms of actual debauchery, but it’s an incredibly nice office that just goes and goes. They had two lobbies; you went in and checked in at a nice, big lobby, then you were moved to another lobby. There’s massive jars of expensive, nice-seeming candy everywhere. It’s sleek and modern, and you see hundreds of people passing by. And there’s this energy of people who really believe they’ve got the next big thing.”

And:

Drawing on his deep well of relationships earned after more than four decades in Hollywood, Katzenberg recruited an amazing array of talent: Sam Raimi would produce a horror anthology; Idris Elba would star in a car-stunts show; Chrissy Teigen would put on judge’s robes and comically preside over a courtroom; Lena Waithe would make a show about sneakerheads; Anna Kendrick would anchor a comedy in which her character befriends her boyfriend’s sex doll; and the Kardashians would do a mock reality show featuring a mythical fraternal twin brother named Kirby Jenner.

And:

Most subscribers have signed on with a 90-day free trial. This month, as that period expires, Quibi will learn how many of those people will stick around once they’re asked to pay. If they don’t, Quibi will be left to reckon with how it miscalculated so badly, and for Katzenberg and Whitman, it could be a deflating capstone to two storied careers.

This is an amazing read. An almost infinite well of money to throw at the problem, some great talent, and solid design chops. What went wrong here? And is the story over? Is there enough money left to pivot, to correct mistakes?

I think part of the issue here is the content itself. Having a star attached is never enough. The content needs to be compelling. And it’s hard to compete with free, crowd-sourced content (YouTube, TikTok, etc.)

Another hurdle for Quibi is the lack of an existing ecosystem or tentpole content. Disney has that deep back catalog. Apple has the ecosystem. Quibi does have a partnership with T-Mobile, but that’s mostly an advertising partnership.

And, of course, there’s the pandemic. Will Quibi survive? Or will it be a lesson in hubris?

macOS Big Sur: 85+ Top Features/Changes!

[VIDEO] Jeff Benjamin, 9to5Mac, returns with another massive video (embedded in the main Loop post), this time focusing on the changes from macOS Catalina and the first beta of Big Sur.

Settle in, grab a snack, enjoy.

iPadOS 14, Apple Pencil, and Scribble in action

[VIDEO] I’ve been playing with Apple Pencil and Scribble since the first iPadOS 14 beta dropped. One thing I’d love to find is an exhaustive list of Scribble gestures.

The video (embedded in the main Loop post), from iDownloadBlog is an excellent starting point. But I’m convinced there are more gestures than this.

At the very least, there are subtleties, like double-tap and triple-tap (to select a word and paragraph), as well as machine learning elements at work to detect addresses, phone numbers, etc. that we’ve always seen in typed text.

I find Scribble fun and fascinating. If you’ve got a non-critical iPad and an Apple Pencil (even first gen), consider diving in to the public beta when it drops, purely to play with this amazing tech.

macOS Catalina and Big Sur screenshots, side-by-side

Great way to get a sense of the visual change coming with macOS Big Sur. Scroll through the images, keep in mind that’s Catalina on the left, Big Sur on the right (mostly).

Also keep in mind that Big Sur is a first beta. Some details may (and likely will) change.

Apple’s amazing privacy animations

Follow the headline link, then drink in that subtle padlock animation on the load page. Reload the page if you missed it.

Now start scrolling. Every panel has its own detailed animation. Amazing how much effort Apple put into this page. Curious what tool they used.

On the iPhone 12 with no charger/cable/earPods in the box

[VIDEO] Great video by MKBHD on the rumor (grain of salt) that the next gen iPhones will ship without a charger, charging cable, and earPods in the box. Video embedded in main Loop post.

True, it’s just a rumor, and we typically avoid those on The Loop, but this isn’t simple mongering. Instead, it’s an interesting take on the pros and cons of including stuff in the box that we already likely have, the potential massive savings in packaging waste, and the question of how such a move might impact price.

Side note: I found this Reddit post to be an interesting detailed breakdown of that potential packaging impact.

The comeback of fun in visual design

Michael Flarup:

With the redesign of macOS 11 Big Sur, Apple has made many interface changes and updated the appearance of apps. Materials and dimensionality has made its way back into the interface —and every single app icon for every application and utility that Apple ships with macOS has been redesigned with depth, textures and lighting. This is a big deal. Probably bigger than what most people realise.

Scroll through the post, check out the images. You can’t help but see the emergence of realism in the design, as well as elements that bring macOS a bit closer to iOS (check out the squircles in the Big Sur icon image, about halfway down).

I do agree it’s a pendulum swing, from the full on felt, metal, and torn paper of skeuomorphism, to lossy flat design, to a gentle mix of the two. I’m enjoying the reemergence of fun.

Apple, the rise of services, and paying to keep your BMW seat warmers working

Road Show:

BMW is raising the ante by making many car options into software services enabled whenever you want them. The disconcerting part? They can be disabled, too.

And:

In a VR presentation streamed from Germany today, BMW ran through a series of digital updates to its cars, including more details on the new BMW digital key service announced with Apple at last week’s WWDC and confirming that current model cars will be fully software upgradeable over the air, a la Tesla.

And:

The most notable part of the day’s presentation was the new plan to turn many options into software services. BMW mentioned everything from advanced safety systems like adaptive cruise and automatic high-beams to other, more discrete options like heated seats.

It’s a services world. Pay up.

Zuckerberg said to say of Facebook ad boycott: ‘All these advertisers will be back’ soon enough

MarketWatch:

Zuckerberg said the boycott is more of a PR issue than one that will hurt the social-media giant’s bottom line, according to a report Wednesday by The Information, which cited a transcript of remarks Zuckerberg gave at an employees-only virtual town hall Friday.

“We’re not gonna change our policies or approach on anything because of a threat to a small percent of our revenue, or to any percent of our revenue,” he said, according to The Information.

Here’s a link to The Information article [paywall].

More from Zuckerberg’s town hall remarks:

“You know, we don’t technically set our policies because of any pressure that people apply to us,” he said, according to The Information. “And, in fact, usually I tend to think that if someone goes out there and threatens you to do something, that actually kind of puts you in a box where in some ways it’s even harder to do what they want because now it looks like you’re capitulating, and that sets up bad long-term incentives for others to do that [to you] as well.”

Two things: First, no. If you are wrong, get called on being wrong, then turn around and do what’s right, fixing what’s wrong is a double-win. You are doing the right thing, and you get your advertisers back.

And second, this provides even more incentive for advertisers to boycott Facebook and more incentive for people to delete their Facebook account.

Side note, I’d love to know of a Facebook alternative that is privacy respecting, truth valuing, easy for folks to use, and that provides an easy way for families to keep in touch. If you know of such a beast, please do share.

YouTube TV sharply increases monthly subscription to $64.99

The Verge:

…the company starts to offer eight of ViacomCBS’s channels, which are available today: BET, CMT, Comedy Central, MTV, Nickelodeon, Paramount Network, TV Land, and VH1.

And:

For comparison, Hulu’s Live TV plan costs $54.99 (a price that includes access to Hulu’s library of content, but lacks the unlimited DVR storage that YouTube TV offers), AT&T TV starts at $55 per month (with hefty increases after 12 months), and Sling TV’s full plan costs $45 per month. While there may be some concerns that YouTube TV is edging closer to the cost of actual cable, there are some advantages to Google’s over-the-top service, including easy access from nearly any device with an internet connection, a lower barrier to entry when it comes to additional hardware, and a much better UI than nearly any cable set-top box.

The cord cutter marketplace is still in flux, and likely will be for some time. Hard to see a clear winner in these piecemeal bundles. Seems like a disruption (to cable bundles) is coming, but still way over the horizon. I think things would move way faster if internet access and content delivery were two separate and untethered businesses.