November 15, 2024

Year: 2024

Wired hands on with Apple Vision Pro

The Apple Vision Pro spatial computer “shows the future of computing is bulky and weird,” Wired’s Julian Chokkattu writes after a 30-minute heads-on session with Apple reps.

I spent a little more than 30 minutes wearing the Apple Vision Pro today, and I saw the future of computing. The impressive technology in Apple’s upcoming mixed-reality headset lays the groundwork for what’s to come, but I am at a crossroads. I’m not sold on the bulky headset…

I wore the Solo Knit Band and surprisingly felt fine with the weight even after 30 minutes. I initially felt some pressure on my forehead, but I adjusted the headband to sit a little higher, and it balanced the weight between my forehead and cheekbones, which made the headset more comfortable to wear…

The elephant in the room is the battery pack. There’s a wire protruding out the left side of the headset and it leads to a rectangular battery, which lasts for around two hours on a single charge. You can plug in the battery to an outlet to keep the Vision Pro running for hours, but if you want to move around—say, if you’re running an interactive experience or playing a spatial game—you’ll have to stow the battery in a pocket. It’s an inelegant solution and showcases the limitations with the technology that even Apple couldn’t get around (and this is likely why Apple has tried so hard to hide the battery’s presence from its marketing and press images). Thankfully, after 30 minutes of Vision Pro-ing, the battery was still cool to the touch…

The technology is impressive, and as it progresses it will inevitably shrink so that one day, you’ll just be wearing normal-looking glasses. I hope. God, I really do hope that’s the direction we’re going.

Via: Wired.com

 Apple Hongdae to welcome its first customers this Saturday, January 20, 2024 in South Korea

Apple Hongdae to welcome its first customers this Saturday, January 20, in South Korea

The seventh store in the country welcomes the community with a special Today at Apple session featuring hip-hop artist Beenzino

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA Apple today previewed Apple Hongdae, the seventh retail store in South Korea and the 100th Apple Store location in the Asia-Pacific region. Located in the center of a bustling university neighborhood in Seoul, Apple Hongdae will offer an exciting space for students, their families, and the local community to discover and shop Apple’s incredible lineup of products and services, receive exceptional support from highly knowledgeable team members, and participate in free Today at Apple sessions to learn how to get the most out of their products.

“We couldn’t be more excited to bring our customers in Korea something special at the start of the year with the opening of the all-new Apple Hongdae,” said Deirdre O’Brien, Apple’s senior vice president of Retail. “Combining the latest in Apple technology with the creative passion of the local community, this new store will build on the extraordinary connection we have with our customers in Korea. Our team members are excited to welcome in customers and help them discover the latest in our products and services, including the iPhone 15 lineup.”

Apple Hongdae has nearly 100 expert retail team members ready to help customers explore and get their hands on the latest Apple products, including the latest iPhone 15 lineup; the new Mac lineup with the M3 family of chips; the Apple Watch lineup, featuring Apple’s first-ever carbon neutral products; as well as the Lunar New Year special-edition AirPods Pro debuting in South Korea and celebrating the Year of the Blue Dragon.

Just in time for back to school, students and families can save on a Mac or iPad with Apple Education Pricing available exclusively through Apple Retail. Additionally, eligible customers can take advantage of the college student offer running through March 13 and receive AirPods when they buy an eligible Mac, or an Apple Pencil when they buy an eligible iPad.

Apple Hongdae will be an exciting hub for the next generation of creators to learn how to get the most out of their devices and unlock their potential through Today at Apple. To create a space for learning and a more personalized customer experience, the store offers a roundtable setting where attendees can find out how to get started on their new devices, discover features on the latest Apple products, or join sessions focused on a wide range of topics.

From January to March, Apple is hosting a series of free Today at Apple sessions for students to try Mac and iPad and learn new skills that enhance their creativity and help them excel in their studies. As part of the Bring on College with Apple series, students can sign up for four workshops led by Apple Creatives, available at Apple Hongdae and all other Apple Store locations across Korea:

  • Create Powerful Presentations in Keynote with Mac
  • Create Personalized Documents in Pages with Mac
  • Create Impactful Spreadsheets in Numbers with Mac
  • Transform Your Lecture Notes with iPad

Participants can register now for Today at Apple sessions.

Beginning January 20, every day at 5 p.m., customers can also drop into a brand-new Today at Apple Pop-Up Studio featuring iconic hip-hop artist and entrepreneur Beenzino. Through the session, Explore Freeform on iPad, customers can collect ideas, art, photos, and more for their own 2024 vision boards using Freeform. Additionally, the session will tease inspiration behind the artist’s single “Train,” newly released in Spatial Audio and only available on Apple Music. This session is exclusively available at Apple Hongdae and will run through the month. Starting February 9, the session will be available across stores in all of South Korea, Japan, and Australia as part of the Bring on College with Apple campaign.

As part of Apple’s environmental commitment, Apple Hongdae is designed with bio-terrazzo flooring that utilizes plant-based materials, along with an acoustic fabric wall and ceiling panels. Like all Apple facilities, the location runs on 100 percent renewable energy and is carbon neutral. Apple Hongdae features a dedicated Apple Pickup station, making it easy for customers to collect purchases they’ve made online at a time that’s convenient for them.

Apple opened its first store in South Korea, Apple Garosugil, in 2018. Since then, Apple has expanded its presence in the country by opening stores in Yeouido, Myeongdong, Jamsil, Gangnam, and Hanam. Apple also launched the Apple Developer Academy in Korea — already producing its second class of graduates — and the Apple Manufacturing R&D Accelerator to provide free tools and training programs for small- and medium-sized businesses across the country. Apple is also actively partnering with a number of Korean artists in diverse industries: Last year, the company launched a Shot on iPhone music video for the song “ETA” by popular K-pop group New Jeans, following a 2022 Made on iPad music video for hip-hop artist Jay Park’s song “Bite.”

The team at Apple Hongdae will welcome its first customers on Saturday, January 20, at 10 a.m.

About Apple Apple revolutionized personal technology with the introduction of the Macintosh in 1984. Today, Apple leads the world in innovation with iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. Apple’s five software platforms — iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS — provide seamless experiences across all Apple devices and empower people with breakthrough services including the App Store, Apple Music, Apple Pay, and iCloud. Apple’s more than 100,000 employees are dedicated to making the best products on earth, and to leaving the world better than we found it.

 Apple unveils 2024 Black Unity Collection supporting grantees that inspire resilience and creativity

Apple unveils 2024 Black Unity Collection supporting grantees that inspire resilience and creativity

REJI grantee Shout Mouse Press elevates underrepresented voices in children’s literature

In Washington, D.C.’s historic Dupont Circle neighborhood, the office of children’s literature nonprofit Shout Mouse Press is abuzz with the voices of passionate young people sitting before countless stacks of books on tall white shelves. Last year, Apple awarded Shout Mouse a grant through its Racial Equity and Justice Initiative (REJI) in recognition of the nonprofit’s commitment to amplifying diverse youth voices.

With the launch of the 2024 Black Unity Collection, Apple is awarding grants to the Boys & Girls Clubs of America, Studio Museum in Harlem, Battersea Arts Centre, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Ghetto Film School, and the National Museum of African American Music. Apple’s support for these organizations is a continuation of REJI grants that resource organizations committed to providing economic, educational, and creative opportunities in communities of color around the world.

Founded in 2014, Shout Mouse was established to address the lack of diversity in children’s literature by engaging young people in communities underrepresented in publishing.

“The name ‘Shout Mouse’ started with the idea of how can we make visible and concrete something that was not being heard, and give it a megaphone,” says Kathy Crutcher, the nonprofit’s founder. “Apple’s support has allowed us to deepen our investment in young people — to provide technology, professional development, and most importantly, affirmation and amplification of their essential perspectives.”

On this brisk afternoon in late December, Shout Mouse has convened three alumni authors — Sasa Aakil, 20; Andy Pina, 19; and Sholachauntel Shoda, 25 — and one of its illustrators, Ian L. Springer, 25, for a brainstorm on character development. The topic of discussion: Who is missing from today’s youth literary canon of Black history?

“A lot of times we see Black History Month just from one lens, or from three or four different historical figures,” Springer says to the group.

“Even the stories of Black women in Black history specifically — they were so pivotal but so often not talked about, besides Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks,” adds Aakil, a poet and the coauthor of Shout Mouse’s award-winning I Am the Night Sky, who writes about the intersectionality of living as a Black Muslim American woman.

Through its writing workshops, the books it publishes, and speaking opportunities held in partnership with youth-centered organizations in the D.C. area, Shout Mouse is harnessing the creativity and resilience of young people, and equipping them with the skills needed to navigate the publishing industry and beyond.

“Oftentimes young people are told that they’re not the experts of their own experience, or that they aren’t yet equipped to comment on or impact the world around them,” explains Alexa Patrick, Shout Mouse’s programs director, who is leading the afternoon’s brainstorm. “So what we seek to do is invite young people into a space where they’re able to be the experts of their own experience and to share their stories.”

Sasa Aakil, who was awarded Youth Poet Laureate of Montgomery County in Maryland and is a current college student at Howard University, participated in Shout Mouse’s writing workshop with Muslim American youth. For 10 days, she and nine peers gathered to brainstorm, write, and create content about their lived experiences.

“Me and my fellow artists really felt like we had to make a statement of who we are,” Aakil says. “I really wanted to highlight that being Black American and Muslim was okay, and not only okay, but that it was a thing, because a lot of people like to erase my people. So the mission statement that we came up with was really just taking up space.”

I Am the Night Sky, the anthology that resulted from the workshop, is just one example of Shout Mouse’s ambitious intention to amplify stories by and for members of the communities the nonprofit reaches.

Since its launch, Shout Mouse has published 59 books, all produced in collaboration with young people and local community-based partners. There are currently more than 125,000 Shout Mouse books in circulation, which can be found in D.C.-area schools and nonprofits, as well as in schools, libraries, bookstores, and homes in every state in the country. The nonprofit also helps put the books in the hands of immigrant children separated from their families.

Many of Shout Mouse’s books were conceived, written, and illustrated by youth in response to the cultural moments of their time. Thanks in part to the work of Shout Mouse, these moments have been captured in literature that all children can read and enjoy as part of modern American history.

“When we don’t have diverse stories and diverse voices, we miss things,” Aakil says. “There are so many experiences that we’ve just never gotten to experience because we are stuck to our own bodies. So it’s so important to have stories, because that’s one of the easiest ways to empathize with each other. And when we can empathize, we can make space for one another.”

Apple Celebrates Black Resilience with New Black Unity Collection

The new Black Unity Collection introduces new expressions inspired by the resilience and beauty of the Black community. Blooming flowers and vibrant colors represent Pan-Africanism and symbolize generations working together to address injustice and dismantle systemic barriers.

The Apple Watch Black Unity Sport Band features an arrangement of flowers molded abstractly across the band utilizing red, green, and yellow colors. Inspired by the rich cultural diversity of Black communities around the world, Apple used a unique layering process for the flowers to create tiny variations in each band’s design, ensuring no two bands are exactly alike. The pin of the band is coated with a durable diamond-like carbon finish that features an etching of the words “Truth, Power, Solidarity” alongside one of four symbolic flower emblems.

The Unity Bloom Apple Watch face showcases a beautiful floral design that signifies a lasting commitment to the pursuit of a more equitable world. Users can choose between a full-bloom or single-bloom arrangement, and when they raise their wrist, the flowers begin to bloom and fill with vibrant hues. iPhone and iPad users can also show their support with the new Unity Bloom wallpaper for their Lock Screen, which presents an outline of flowers that fill with color when the display is active.

Pricing and Availability

  • The Black Unity Sport Band is available for order on apple.com and in the Apple Store app starting today, and will be available in select Apple Store locations beginning January 23 for $49 (U.S.).
  • The Black Unity Sport Band is available in 41mm or 45mm, and S/M or M/L, worldwide.
  • The Unity Bloom watch face will be available next week, and requires Apple Watch Series 4 or later running watchOS 10.3.
  • The new Unity Bloom iPhone and iPad wallpaper for the Lock Screen will be also be available next week, and requires iPhone Xs or later running iOS 17.3 and iPad (6th generation and later), iPad mini (5th generation and later), iPad Air (3rd generation and later), 12.9-inch iPad Pro (2nd generation and later), 10.5-inch iPad Pro, and 11-inch iPad Pro (1st generation and later) running iPadOS 17.3.

About Apple’s 2024 REJI Grantees

Boys & Girls Clubs of America Boys & Girls Clubs of America is developing the next generation of innovators and community leaders by designing opportunities for members to code, create, and connect with community. The Boys & Girls Clubs of America know the power of offering opportunities to young people by helping them build technical and real-life skills to successfully enter and shape the workforce of tomorrow. Boys & Girls Clubs of America is based in Atlanta, with locations across the U.S., on Native lands, and on military bases around the world.

Studio Museum in Harlem The Studio Museum in Harlem is the nexus for artists of African descent locally, nationally, and internationally, and for work that has been inspired and influenced by Black culture. It is a site for the dynamic exchange of ideas about art and society. The museum is equally engaged as a cultural anchor in Harlem, and as a presiding influence and thought leader for the international art world.

Battersea Arts Centre Based in London, Battersea Arts Centre creates welcoming and inclusive spaces where communities, artists, and audiences can connect and be creative.

Art Gallery of New South Wales The Djamu Youth Justice Program at the Art Gallery of New South Wales supports Indigenous people in the youth justice system by creating meaningful connections to art and culture. Forging positive relationships between these young people and members of the Aboriginal and Great Oceans arts community, the Sydney-based program provides mentorship and vocational pathways post-release.

Ghetto Film School Ghetto Film School educates, develops, and celebrates the next generation of great storytellers through film and media, with locations in New York City, Los Angeles, and London.

The National Museum of African American Music Located in Nashville, Tennessee, the National Museum of African American Music is the only museum of its kind dedicated to educating the world through preserving and celebrating the central role African Americans play in creating the American soundtrack.

Press Contacts

Eric Hollister Williams

Apple

e_hollisterwillia@apple.com

Aushawna Collins

Apple

aushawna@apple.com

Apple Media Helpline

media.help@apple.com

Apple’s U.S. App Store now allows developers link to outside payment methods

After the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear its appeal, Apple is changing its U.S. App Store guidelines. App developers are now able to direct customers to an outside purchasing option for digital goods via a single link to a developer website that leads to the purchase alternative. Apple will continue to collect a commission ranging from 12%-27% on content purchased this way.

[T]he U.S. storefront will soon feature a link to their website where subscriptions and other content can be purchased outside of the ‌App Store‌ in-app purchase system, likely with a discounted price.

Developers who want to offer this option will need to apply for a StoreKit External Purchase Link Entitlement, as Apple has outlined in both updated ‌App Store‌ Review Guidelines and the statement of compliance submitted to the Northern California U.S. District Court. With a Link Entitlement, a developer is able to direct a user to an out-of-app purchasing mechanism using an external purchase link.

Via; MacRumors.com

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