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23 votes
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Apple, Elon Musk, Kanye West, and other accounts are tweeting a bitcoin scam in giant Twitter hack
49 votes -
Possible sale of ARM incoming, Apple is rumoured to be one of those interested
10 votes -
Sharptooth - Transitional Forms (2020)
Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/transitional-forms/1502187566 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/6pHXuiWvMSPTyBb0hHe8Yv?si=gPRk-8hoRD2qoFZI91LSfg YouTube:...
Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/transitional-forms/1502187566
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/6pHXuiWvMSPTyBb0hHe8Yv?si=gPRk-8hoRD2qoFZI91LSfg
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYQhPJrQIlgNxrODF9mS-wAC5BS6jET0cBaltimore hardcore outfit Sharptooth is back with their sophomore effort and it's no slump. The riffs are crunchy as hell and the vocals are more brutal than ever. Remaining is Sharptooth's political edge, which is as sharp as ever. Stand out lyrics include "You're not a feminist just because you fucked one" and the album opener "This is a song about nothing/Oh no, not a single thing/'Cause in the absence of content/I hope that you'll forget/That all this shit never meant a thing."
Lauren Kashan's vocals are vastly improved. Her unclean vox are much more guttural while her cleans include more harmonies and layered work. Fellow song writer of the group Lance Donati employs a lot of inverted power chords to keep the sound aggressive and explosive.
For fans of political hardcore punk like Stray From the Path, seeyouspacecowboy, Knocked Loose and Every Time I Die.
3 votes -
The comeback of fun in the visual design of macOS
13 votes -
Dark Sky delays shutdown of Android app until August 1st
12 votes -
Developers leak Geekbench benchmarks from the Apple silicon-Mac Developer Transition Kit, running the 2020 iPad's A12Z Bionic processor
8 votes -
Apple and Facebook—a contrast of corporate strategies
3 votes -
How the Apple Watch tracks sleep—and why
9 votes -
Make Them Suffer - How To Survive A Funeral (2020)
Rise Records multi-link, has Spotify, Apple Music, iTunes, Bandcamp, and more links. Youtube Playlist. Some of the Make Them Suffer members also did an AMA on /r/metalcore a few days ago.
3 votes -
The Talk Show remote from WWDC 2020, by John Gruber. Featuring Apple SVP of Software Engineering Craig Federighi and VP of Product & Marketing Greg Joswiak
4 votes -
Intel insider claims it finally lost Apple because Skylake QA 'was abnormally bad'
15 votes -
Apple will extend the lifespan of your AirPods by choosing when they charge
16 votes -
The end of OS X
15 votes -
Apple switches to its own chips for Mac computers as it adds features, privacy controls
25 votes -
Foundation | Teaser
21 votes -
Apple, Hey, and the path forward
11 votes -
Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2020 Livestream & Discussion (starts 10AM June 22 PT / 5PM June 23 UTC)
15 votes -
The art of the possible
3 votes -
#YouDownloadTheAppAndItDoesntWork — Highlighting hypocrisy and double standards on Apple's App Store
9 votes -
Apple doubles down on its right to profit from other businesses
11 votes -
The Apple ARM Mac transition: Re-engine, not re-imagine
6 votes -
Apple announces Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2020 keynote timeline, week-long conference schedule
3 votes -
On Apple announcing the ARM Mac transition at WWDC this month
4 votes -
Apple plans to announce move to its own Mac chips at WWDC
22 votes -
Hands-on review: Why Apple’s newest iPad Pro packs a powerful punch
8 votes -
Seven years later, I bought a new Macbook. For the first time, I don't love it
26 votes -
macOS 10.15.5 has a trivial bug or a ‘reprehensible’ security decision
7 votes -
Apple reportedly weighing shifting some production from China to India
3 votes -
Suck on your AirPod to fix the volume
16 votes -
Apple and Google launch exposure notification API, enabling public health authorities to release apps
8 votes -
Opportunities for watchOS 7
3 votes -
Apple releases two new Pride Edition Sport Bands for Apple Watch
5 votes -
How Prince of Persia defeated Apple II's memory limitations | War Stories
7 votes -
A spectacularly bad Washington Post story on Apple and Google’s exposure notification project
3 votes -
The secrets behind the runaway success of Apple’s AirPods
14 votes -
Apple Store's temperature checks may violate EU privacy rules, says German data protection office
5 votes -
Review of new Apple and Google contact tracing protocol
5 votes -
1998: Apple's iMac is full of flash, dash, but has a few big holes
6 votes -
MacBook Pro 13-inch (2020) first look from Dieter Bohn at The Verge
6 votes -
How Apple reinvented the cursor for iPad
6 votes -
Playing devil's advocate: Is there any possible reason Apple is gluing parts in instead of using screws in newer devices other than "greed"?
Inspired by the news of the new 13" MacBook Pro and Surface Book 3, I was thinking about just how much I hate not being able to replace the RAM, SSD or even battery in newer MacBook models. It...
Inspired by the news of the new 13" MacBook Pro and Surface Book 3, I was thinking about just how much I hate not being able to replace the RAM, SSD or even battery in newer MacBook models. It seems like such an extreme decision and I wonder why.
The obvious answer is to make the devices less repairable thus forcing people to upgrade sooner.
But Apple isn't really dependent on devices breaking. Hardware is vastly improving every year and their customer base happily upgrades just for that. Also it could be argued that their most profitable product line – iPhones – have, despite all of that, some of the healthiest life cycles in the smartphone marketed with people happily using 5+ year old devices which still are supported in the latest releases of iOS. Few other devices hold their value in resale like Apple products, their sturdiness is quite remarkable and clearly factored into pricing and consumer decisions. They pride themselves with a reliable repair program and I have to imagine their repair geniuses (their term, not my sarcasm) don't like messing with glue.
So, all things considered, is there an argument for fucking gluing in batteries other than petty greed? Like, is it cheaper? That doesn't seem a motivation behind any other major design decision on their part. Is it it lighter? Easier to cool? Does it make for a slimmer chassis?
I tried searching the question but couldn't find anything (in fact, I wouldn't even know what terms to search for). Is there any good analysis or reasoned speculation? It somehow makes less sense the more I think of it and it would give me some head peace to at least know of some arguments for it other than Apple being assholes.
17 votes -
The saga of Apple’s bad butterfly MacBook keyboards is finally over
13 votes -
Apple, Google ban use of location tracking in contact tracing apps
8 votes -
Apple updates 13-inch MacBook Pro with Magic Keyboard, double the storage, and faster performance
15 votes -
Face ID doesn’t work when you’re wearing a mask—Apple’s about to address that
12 votes -
Apple and Google’s COVID-19 exposure notification API: Questions and answers
4 votes -
Apple COVID-19 mobility trends reports
6 votes -
Germany flips to Apple-Google approach on smartphone contact tracing
7 votes -
What has your experience been like buying digital music?
I've been wanting to buy some music recently from some artists that are only available through places like Amazon, iTunes, Google Play... However, I have specifically stayed away from most of...
I've been wanting to buy some music recently from some artists that are only available through places like Amazon, iTunes, Google Play... However, I have specifically stayed away from most of these platforms for various reasons, the primary one being that I prefer Bandcamp over all of them (and up to now I never had the need to go anywhere else anyway).
So my question is, have you bought any music from these types of platforms online and what was the experience like?
Some specifics for what I'm personally looking to get out of this topic (you don't have to answer these if you don't want to, general experiences are fine too):
- Can I buy music through my browser alone? This one's primarily aimed at iTunes, because when I go to Apple Music and click on the "Also available in the iTunes Store" button for a particular song or album, nothing happens. So I'm assuming it's trying to launch iTunes which I don't have installed.
- Is the music available in multiple audio formats and can I pick whichever one I want after purchase? This is what I like a lot about Bandcamp, you buy the music once and it gives you a bunch of different audio formats to choose from.
- Did the audio files come with metadata and cover art attached (and were they accurate)? This one's not a big deal overall since stuff like Picard exists, but it's just a nice thing to not need to worry about.
12 votes