Clark Reid, back with today’s tech headlines. Please give us a ‘like’ if you enjoy the reports, by mashing the ‘like’ button. You can also subscribe, so you’ll know when a new report is posted. The hat is in support of our SAG-AFTRA colleagues who are negotiating with the big movie, TV, and streaming companies right now for a fair deal.
The ‘one more thing’ at the opening of Apple’s WWDC yesterday completely overshadowed everything else, so here’s a quick recap of some of the other updates that were announced.
MacBook Air…new 15.3 inch display and Apple M2 chip. It has a claimed 18 hours of battery life, is thinner and lighter than a 16 inch MacBook Pro…less powerful and less ports, too of course….and starts at $1299. It’s on sale now, and ships next week.
Mac Studio and Mac Pro get powerful new Apple Silicon. The Mac Pro gets a crazy double M2 Ultra chip and supports 192 gigs of memory. You get 6 PCIe slots, and you can still get it as either a tower or rack mount version. It starts at $6999. The studio gets the Blazing M2 Ultra chip and is $1999.
iOS 17 Custom Lock Screens and interactive widgets are new. New call, FaceTime, and Messages features have been added Namedrop lets you share your number and email seamlessly. Siri is allegedly better. Oh, and there is a new Sensitive Content feature that helps adults avoid unsolicited nude photos and videos. You can either decline or reveal the pics. No, it’s not all guys sending pics of their equipment, surprisingly. I’ve even gotten a couple…and from women I know. Ya looked just fine, ladies!
MacOS will now have Floating widgets, and Safari improvements including to private browsing, A new Profiles feature is baked in to separate work and home accounts.
Watch OS 10 You can have a picture for watch face, but then by scrolling the crown, you see widgets that show you info you want to see. New watch faces, including one with an animated Snoopy and Woodstock.
The SEC has sued Binance, citing its evasion of US laws with what they call ‘an extensive web of deception.’ According to arstechnica.com, the SEC alleges that Binance and its CEO have “blatant disregard” of federal law “enriched themselves by billions of US dollars while placing investors’ assets at significant risk.” The SEC is seeking fines, disgorgement of ill-gotten gains with interest, and injunctions. The lawsuit alleged that under Zhao’s control, Binance and affiliated entities “have unlawfully offered three essential securities market functions—exchange, broker-dealer, and clearing agency—on the Binance Platforms without registering with the SEC. Stay tuned…this ought to be a protracted battle.
An entrepreneur from Bulgaria through her company, Plan A, has developed an algorithm that gathers up to 20 million data points each month and automatically prescribes a list of actions a company must take to reduce its footprint. These actions include improving energy efficiency, sourcing goods from more sustainable suppliers, and, particularly for financial institutions, making climate-friendly investments. Thenextweb.com says that Lubomila Jordanova’s Plan A is focused on battling corporate greenwashing. Thus far, Plan A has been adapted by BMW, Deutsche Bank, and the European Commission. So far, they haven’t been able to bring on board any coal or oil and gas firms. Plan A notes that besides corporate greenwashing, their system helps companies that want to decarbonize accurately calculate their carbon footprint. Just another step in trying to save the world from…and for…humanity.
Microsoft has previewed a new data and analytics platform that looks to give it an edge over Amazon and Google in the cloud market. Venturebeat.com reports that the platform is called Microsoft Fabric, and it is ‘a comprehensive suite of tools that allows enterprise customers to store, manage and analyze the data that drives their most important applications. It also integrates products that cater to all of a company’s data users, from engineers who handle the technical aspects of data processing to analysts who want to derive insights and make decisions from the data.’ It is in public preview mode right now. Some analysts think it may let Microsoft surpass Google and Amazon when it comes to serving large enterprise companies. That would depend on them sitting still, however…which seems unlikely.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.
