Apple

Apple’s Chief Security Officer, others, indicted in iPads for concealed-carry license bribery schemes

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Palo Alto Online:

A grand jury issued two indictments ​on Thursday, Nov. 19, against Undersheriff Rick Sung, 48, and Capt. James Jensen, 43, who are accused of requesting bribes for concealed firearms licenses, also known as CCW licenses. Insurance broker Harpreet Chadha, 49, and Apple’s Chief Security Officer Thomas Moyer, 50, are accused of offering bribes to receive the permits, District Attorney Jeff Rosen said during a press conference on Monday morning.

And:

The two-year investigation by the district attorney’s office found that Sung, who was allegedly aided by Jensen in one instance, held up the distribution of CCW licenses and refused to release them until the applicants gave something of value.

And:

Sung and Jensen allegedly held up four gun licenses from Apple employees and extracted from Moyer a promise that Apple would donate iPads to the sheriff’s office. A donation of 200 iPads worth nearly $70,000 was ended at the last minute after Aug. 2, 2019, when Sung and Moyer learned that the district attorney’s office had issued a search warrant seizing all of the sheriff’s office’s CCW license records.

Apple’s response:

“We expect all of our employees to conduct themselves with integrity. After learning of the allegations, we conducted a thorough internal investigation and found no wrongdoing.”

That last bit is important. Apple publicly stated they found no wrongdoing. Would they do that if Moyer was guilty? Or would they distance themselves from the scandal and quietly start negotiating Moyer’s exit? Obviously, we’ll see how this plays out.

Woz, Steve Jobs, and Dylan

First things first, this from CNN on the sale of a treasure trove of Bob Dylan memorabilia:

A collection of Bob Dylan memorabilia including letters, unpublished lyrics and handwritten lyrics to “Blowin’ in the wind” have sold for nearly half a million dollars, auctioneers say.

The items belonged to the estate of Dylan’s friend and fellow musician Tony Glover, who died last year. They were put up for sale in a week-long auction run by RR Auction Company.

Glover’s collection of Dylan memorabilia included personal letters and the transcripts from an interview carried out by Glover and hand-annotated by Dylan.

The collection sold for $495,000 to an unnamed seller.

Steve Jobs was, famously, a big Dylan fan. Woz weighed in with this thought on the auction and purchase:

In my opinion, someone got a bargain. These are the sort of rambling words that filled the Dylan liner notes and lyrics and brought me heavily into his world. The day I met Steve Jobs I brought him down to my house to see all the Dylan albums with strange liner notes and lyrics, since Jobs didn’t have albums. Thus Dylan became an important part of our friendship. We pursued Dylan memorabilia and trivia and concerts back then. I kept wondering how such words could come into any mortal mind.

A nice, if tiny, little look back at a friendship that launched Apple.

New 3rd party Apple TV remote with buttons, Siri access, coming soon

Universal Electronics:

Introducing a remote control for Apple TV specifically developed and designed to meet the needs of cable, satellite, IPTV and other Multichannel Video Program Distributors (MVPDs). Available starting next year, this new remote offers controls to specifically enhance the live TV experience with Apple TV 4K available through MVPDs, including instant EPG access and channel buttons.

Not clear if this remote will ever be offered directly to consumers, but I suspect a channel will open up somewhere to allow non-subscribers to get their hands on one.

One key feature from the press release:

Customers can ask Siri to find and access content across live TV and streaming apps

This is a huge difference from previous 3rd party Apple TV button remotes and intimates, at least to me, that this project is blessed by Apple.

“We are giddy”—interviewing Apple about its Mac silicon revolution

I’ve now spent a few days living with one of Apple’s new M1 laptops. I have to say, the experience has been glorious, every bit as good as the hype hinted at.

I’ve run power hungry apps side-by-side, on both my M1 MacBook Air and a 2018 Intel MacBook Pro, and it’s not even close. As an example, I ran an audio-processing app that analyzes and modifies audio files, byte-by-byte. Lots of disk access, lots of multi-thread processing. Chewing through an hour long audio file on the Intel machine took about 10 seconds. On the M1? It was done before I could even switch windows. Ridiculous performance. And this was in Rosetta.

Part of this is the double-speed SSD, part of this the M1 itself. But I feel comfortable saying, this machine screams, and Rosetta is an amazing piece of technology. Add in the crazy good battery life, and this feels like one of the best Apple purchases I’ve ever made.

With that in mind, click the headline link and follow along as Craig Federighi, Johny Srouji, and Greg Joswiak tell us the Apple Silicon story. A wonderful read, worth setting aside a few minutes to make your way through the whole thing.

Joanna Stern and John Gruber on CNBC’s Squawk Alley: Whose webcam is better?

[VIDEO] Joanna Stern and John Gruber appeared on Squawk Alley to talk M1. The interview was interesting enough, but part of the discussion was the quality of the new M1 Mac webcam. Without sound on, can you tell which video feed looks the best? The video is embedded in the main Loop post.

With your answer locked in, turn on the sound. I found this interesting. All the complaints about the 720p FaceTime camera seem overblown. Judge for yourself.

Details on installing and forcing apps to use Rosetta

Nothing complex here, but worth a look if you’ve got an M1 Mac coming.

The Info window for universal apps includes the setting “Open using Rosetta.” It enables email apps, web browsers, and other apps to use add-ons that haven’t been updated to support Apple silicon. If an app doesn’t recognize a plug-in, extension, or other add-on, quit the app, select this setting, and try again.

Key is that “Open using Rosetta” checkbox in the app’s Get Info window and the “Kind” field which tells you if the app is a Universal Binary or Intel or Apple Silicon native.

Which to buy? M1 MacBook Air or M1 MacBook Pro?

[VIDEO] This video (embedded in the main Loop post) is a nice, detailed look at the differences you can expect if you plunk down the extra bucks for an M1 MacBook Pro.

Lots of detail here. Bottom line, it’ll be worth it if you need to squeeze more performance out of your machine. But watch the video, see if these differences matter to you.

Halide’s Sebastiaan de With digs deep on the iPhone 12 Pro Max camera

If your iPhone purchases are driven by the camera, this is an excellent read. Sebastiaan lends his expertise here and shows the difference in the iPhone 12 Pro Max sensor, both in comparison to the older sensor, and in terms of what that bigger sensor means in practical terms.

In a nutshell:

Giving these sensor sites more room and making them larger makes them more sensitive to light. More light means more signal, less noise, and sharper results.

This point is backed up with images. As you scroll through, make sure you get all the way to the low light images as the sun starts setting. The lower the light, the more value the sensor brings to the table.

Apple and PBS team up for special broadcast airings of “A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving” and “A Charlie Brown Christmas”

Nostalgia is a powerful force. Who knew that Snoopy and the Peanuts gang had such a strong following? When Apple TV+ gobbled up all the Peanuts specials, people without access were not happy. This had the potential to paint Apple as Grinch.

Making a deal to share the broadcast exclusivity with PBS was a great move on Apple’s part. A good look for Apple, and folks without Apple TV+ can still watch. Nice.

The over-performing M1 Mac mini — Be sure you have a wired keyboard and mouse

If you’re thinking about a new M1 Mac mini, definitely spend some time with Chris Welch’s review for The Verge.

Most importantly:

Getting up and running with the Mac mini can be a hassle. For initial setup, you need a wired keyboard and mouse; my Logitech ergonomic keyboard and MX Master 3, which both connect over Bluetooth, were useless. They work fine after setting up the machine, but just be aware so you don’t run into this initial headache like I did.

This is so important, I think Apple should put a note up on the order page so folks have time to grab these items if they need them.

UPDATE: Interestingly, it seems as if Apple’s wireless gear uses clever USB-protocol tricks so THEY work with the Mac mini setup. Not so for third party gear. Good to know.

Apple’s M1 MacBook Air vs. MacBook Pro: Goodbye, fan noise!

[VIDEO] To some folks, fan noise really matters. If you do a podcast, you’ve no doubt spent some time finding and reducing as much noise as possible from your studio setup. And fans are subtle culprits.

In the video embedded in the main Loop post, The Wall Street Journal’s Joanna Stern does a fun job talking about the gift of silence we’ve all gotten with the powerful, fanless M1 MacBook Air.

But in this review, John Gruber makes the case that the new M1 MacBook Pro’s active cooling system is no slouch at silence:

Apple, in its keynote last week, emphasized that the M1 MacBook Air has no fan. (Intel-based MacBook Airs most definitely do. The defunct 12-inch no-adjective MacBook was Apple’s only fanless Intel Mac.) Apple’s point there was to brag that the M1 runs so cool that a high-performance MacBook could be designed without one. Some Mac users, I think, mistakenly took this to mean that the Air had an advantage over the M1 MacBook Pro, in that the fanless Air would always run silently, if sometimes slower. I think this assumption was wrong: the M1 MacBook Pro is, to my ears, always silent as well. Whatever its active cooling system is doing, it isn’t making even a whisper of noise.

This is a point worth noting. The lack of a fan definitely pushed me towards the MacBook Air. The lower cost and smaller size also brought value, so no regrets, but I think Gruber’s point is well taken. The MacBook Pro can run silent, even if you push it.

AnandTech:Technical deep dive into the M1 Mac mini

Andrei Frumusanu, AnandTech:

During the launch event, one thing that was in Apple fashion typically missing from the presentation were actual details on the clock frequencies of the design, as well as its TDP which it can sustain at maximum performance.

Apple got a lot of press on the low detail on its M1 charts. To me, this turned out to be an amazing job of underpromising and overdelivering. Everywhere you look, people are amazed at the low heat, high performance, and great battery life of all three M1 Macs.

But if it’s details you want, AnandTech has them, at least for the M1 Mac mini.

One example:

We can confirm that in single-threaded workloads, Apple’s Firestorm cores now clock in at 3.2GHz, a 6.66% increase over the 3GHz frequency of the Apple A14. As long as there’s thermal headroom, this clock also applies to all-core loads, with in addition to 4x 3.2GHz performance cores also seeing 4x Thunder efficiency cores at 2064MHz, also quite a lot higher than 1823MHz on the A14.

If this floats your boat, there’s a lot more detail, well presented in graphs, in the linked article. But if you just want the bottom line:

The performance of the new M1 in this “maximum performance” design with a small fan is outstandingly good. The M1 undisputedly outperforms the core performance of everything Intel has to offer, and battles it with AMD’s new Zen3, winning some, losing some. And in the mobile space in particular, there doesn’t seem to be an equivalent in either ST or MT performance – at least within the same power budgets.

What’s really important for the general public and Apple’s success is the fact that the performance of the M1 doesn’t feel any different than if you were using a very high-end Intel or AMD CPU. Apple achieving this in-house with their own design is a paradigm shift, and in the future will allow them to achieve a certain level of software-hardware vertical integration that just hasn’t been seen before and isn’t achieved yet by anybody else.

Amazing achievement on Apple’s part.

Apple cuts App Store commissions in half. And what happens if I make $1,000,001?

Apple:

Apple today announced an industry-leading new developer program to accelerate innovation and help small businesses and independent developers propel their businesses forward with the next generation of groundbreaking apps on the App Store. The new App Store Small Business Program will benefit the vast majority of developers who sell digital goods and services on the store, providing them with a reduced commission on paid apps and in-app purchases. Developers can qualify for the program and a reduced, 15 percent commission if they earned up to $1 million in proceeds during the previous calendar year.

This is major news for indie developers. Game changing.

The way I read it, if Apple pays you up to $999,999, across all your apps, in a single year, you pay 15% commission instead of the current 30%. You’ve just moved from 70% to 85% take (21% increase). That’s huge.

Specifics on the program, which launches January 1st:

  • Existing developers who made up to $1 million in 2020 for all of their apps, as well as developers new to the App Store, can qualify for the program and the reduced commission.

  • If a participating developer surpasses the $1 million threshold, the standard commission rate will apply for the remainder of the year.

  • If a developer’s business falls below the $1 million threshold in a future calendar year, they can requalify for the 15 percent commission the year after.

So what happens if you hit the magic $1 million threshold?

My understanding is that you’ll pay 15% on the first $1 million, then 30% on everything above that first $1 million.

Remember, this is across all apps, so if you have 10 apps, add all the revenue together to figure out where you are, commission-wise.

Great move on Apple’s part. Long time coming.

Apple M1: which apps are ready and which are not yet

Thinking about ordering an M1 Mac? Got one on order?

Follow the headline link and check the status of a bunch of apps. The list shows whether they are:

  • ✅: Intel and Apple Silicon compatible universal binary is available;
  • 🆙: the Apple Silicon version is almost ready and should be released before the end of the year;
  • 🔶: the Apple Silicon version is under development, but it will not be released immediately;
  • 🛑: no Apple Silicon version known for the moment.

Good resource.

UPDATE: This list on the MacRumors Forum is worth scanning, more comprehensive [H/T Maxim].

M1 MacBook Air SSD really is twice as fast as previous model

Arnold Kim, MacRumors:

The benchmarks confirm that the new ‌MacBook Air‌ SSD is approximately twice as fast as the previous model with 2190 MB/s writes and 2675 MB/s reads.

As promised by Apple, here:

The M1 chip’s storage controller and latest flash technology deliver up to 2x faster SSD performance

Apple promised a lot with these M1 chips, but everything I’ve read shows they’ve delivered on those promises. This is a major step forward.

Comparing M1 vs Intel MacBook Air temps under heavy load

[VIDEO] Does your Intel MacBook tend to run hot under heavy load? Like really hot? Well watch the video embedded in the main Loop post, and remember that the M1 MacBook Air does not have a fan.

To help folks who measure temps in Fahrenheit:

  • 26°C is about 79°F
  • 34°C is about 93°F

That’s a pretty big difference, especially for something sitting on your lap.

Two Apple crime stories

First up, from Malcolm Owen, AppleInsider:

A group of five Amazon employees has been arrested for allegedly stealing iPhones from a logistics center in Madrid, Spain, in an operation that is believed to have involved the theft of 500,000 euro ($592,000) in goods.

And:

It was determined a group of workers was slipping new iPhones like the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro into orders secretly, replacing the actually ordered contents of a package at the last moment. iPadizate reports it is believed the orders were placed by an accomplice.

Follow the headline link to read about this scam. Amazing they thought they’d get away with this.

Next up is this story from BBC News (H/T Nick Harvey):

Apple products worth £5m have been stolen from a lorry in a robbery on the M1 in which the driver and security guard were “tied up”.

Apple products stolen on the M1. Headline just writes itself.

Apple. Details.

Watch the video embedded below. It shows the iOS MagSafe animation when an iPhone is placed on different color MagSafe cases. Note the color of the case and the color of the animation.

Is this real? If so, that’s a great little detail. One of those things I love about Apple design.

HomePod mini now available for in-store pickup

I’ve checked this on my local Apple Stores and they do, indeed, have stock available for in-store pickup.

If you are thinking about a HomePod mini or two as a Christmas gift, consider going this route. Shipping dates, at least for me, are pushed out to just before or just after Christmas, a bit chancy for my tastes.

M1 Rosetta emulation is still faster than every other Intel Mac in single core benchmark

Speaking of M1 benchmarks, follow the headline link to check out the Rosetta benchmarks. The Rosetta translates Intel apps so they can run on the M1. Though the translation takes time, I believe once the translation is done, the app runs at native M1 speeds.

My question (posted here if you happen to know the details): Is the translation saved in the app bundle so it only needs to be performed the first time the app is run? Also, is the translation redone each time the app is updated? Is this redo automated, or triggered when the user runs the app?

Apple’s Joz, Craig Federighi, and John Ternus dish on the M1

The Independent:

The company’s representatives kept stressing that fact throughout the announcement of the M1 and the three new computers that have it inside: they love the Mac, and they love these Macs. Soon after that event finished, some of Apple’s most senior executives – marketing chief Greg ‘Joz’ Joswiak, software boss Craig Federighi, hardware engineering leader John Ternus – spoke with The Independent to explain exactly why.

And:

Usually, a major advance in computing performance might add 20 or 30 per cent faster processing speed – but the new computers multiply that number by 10, with numbers showing that the computers as much as three times more powerful generally and up to 11 times faster at some tasks.

Apple is getting a lot of pushback on their claims, but see for yourself. Here’s my rollup of the single and multi-core Geekbench scores. The single core benchmark hovers at around 1700 (higher number is more powerful). For comparison, the latest Intel MacBook Pro lands a single core benchmark at about 1100.

Multicore score for the 2020 Intel-i5-based MacBook Air lands at around 2500. The M1 multicore around 7000. Jump over to the Geekbench browser and see for yourself. Look at the VirtualApple scores to see emulation scores, check out the GPU scores, too. Don’t take Apple’s word for it.

Even when he got his hands on the new computers, Joz says he “couldn’t believe it”.

“We overshot,” says Federighi. “You have these projects where, sometimes you have a goal and you’re like, ‘well, we got close, that was fine’.

“This one, part of what has us all just bouncing off the walls here – just smiling – is that as we brought the pieces together, we’re like, ‘this is working better than we even thought it would’.

“We started getting back our battery life numbers, and we’re like, ‘You’re kidding. I thought we had people that knew how to estimate these things’.”

This is a fun read. Nice to really love your job.

Why is Apple paying me $4.99 in store credit for Apple TV+ this month?

Benjamin Mayo, 9to5Mac:

Apple TV+ is Apple’s streaming service and priced at $4.99 per month in the US, or $49.99 per year. A lot of current subscribers are on promotional free trials. However, if you are currently paying for TV+ on a monthly or yearly basis, you should have received an email that Apple is refunding that amount as store credit.

I did get one of those emails. It told me I’d be getting a $4.99 credit through January that I can use on whatever I like. What I didn’t quite get from the email is the specifics on what I did to qualify for it.

More from Benjamin:

All free year trials of TV+ have been extended so they last until February 2021, giving people up to an extra 3 months free. So, to make it fair for people that are paying real money for the service, Apple is comping the paid subscriptions too. That means if you sign up for Apple TV+ over Christmas, and pay the $4.99 subscription fee, Apple will return that money to you as store credit. This will last until the February renewals.

Thanks, Benjamin. Makes sense.

Dear Linus…You’re wrong about the Apple M1

[VIDEO] Jonathan Morrison fires up a reasonably high end Intel Mac and starts up a render. He then casually picks up an iPhone 12 mini and talks about the fact that the mini has Apple Silicon inside, much like the M1.

He then proceeds to thumb his way through doing the exact same render on the iPhone 12 mini. I’d be amazed if the mini (thin, tiny, no fan) could do this render at nearly the same speed.

Watch. Just watch. Video embedded in main Loop post.

Apple’s M1 showing up on Geekbench, outperforms high-end 16-inch MacBook Pro

First things first, here’s a link to the Geekbench browser, with search set to “MacBookAir10,1”.

This will let you do the search yourself, see the MacBook Air results as they come in. As of this writing:

  • Single-core scores range from 1656 to 1732
  • Multi-core scores range from 6519 to 7545

Bigger numbers mean faster performance.

Next, I did a search for the “MacBook Pro (16-inch Late 2019)”. The fastest single-core score I could find was 1243, with most scores much lower than that. Fastest multi-core was 7191, again with most scores well below that.

Draw your own conclusions here, but I am excited about the possibilities here. I’m going to spend some time looking for GPU scores. Guessing the M1 will not perform as well as machines with discrete GPUs, but I may well be surprised.

Oprah interviews President Obama on Apple TV+

Apple:

The 44th president of the United States, Barack Obama, will be Oprah Winfrey’s guest on a new episode of “The Oprah Conversation,” premiering globally on Apple TV+ on Tuesday, November 17 at 9 AM ET / 6 AM PT. The episode will be available to watch for free through Tuesday, December 1.

Will watch.