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The New iPhone 17s |
Apple announced the new iPhone 17 family last week and here is our quick take on what's new, what's good, and what to consider if you are in the market for a new iPhone. iPhone 17 The new phone is a slight bump in performance compared to the iPhone 16. It has a slightly larger screen, better cameras, but what is most significant is the big increase in battery performance. Apple is now claiming up to 30 hours of video playback compared to 22 on the old 16. That is significant. Of course there is a faster processor, and all those sort of things that we would expect in a new model. It is the workhorse of the new lineup and the one to consider if you just need a good, solid iPhone with great battery life and excellent performance. iPhone 17 Pros Both the regular and Max versions of the iPhone Pros are now made of aluminum instead of titanium. That is because they did a few things. One, the new A19 Pro chip is fast -- very fast and that means it generates heat. In fact, they had to develop a vapor cooling system just to keep it happy. Aluminum transfers heat much better than titanium. Second, the camera bump is not just a bump anymore. Apple calls it a Plateau. They were able to stuff all the phone components into that small portion of the phone, allowing for a huge battery. And as Pro models the cameras have been upgraded, as you would expect. This is the phone to get if you want maximum performance and the absolute best camera system short of a full DSLR. iPhone Air This is the odd duck in the lineup. It is thin -- very thin, but this is at the expense of battery life. In fact, Apple presented an external battery pack along with this phone in its keynote. That doesn't bode well for all day use, as they claim. They stuff all the phone bits into the Plateau so what's left is battery, but it's not enough considering how much we all use our iPhones. We think it is a prelude to a foldable, but at $1000 with the lack of a potent battery it just doesn't have much of a use case in our opinion. Still, if you want a super-thin iPhone and stay close to a charger... No, I just don't understand this one. Go for a regular 17 or one of the Pros instead. To learn more about the iPhone 17s visit: https://www.apple.com/iphone/ |
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Passkeys: Are They Worth Using? |
In the world of usernames, passwords, multi-factor authentication, biometrics, and all the rest that makes up the bitter stew of account logins comes the new kid on the block: Passkeys. Passkeys have been sold as the solution to the complexities of usernames and passwords, but I am here to tell you right now that they do none of that, but only add to the confusion and mess of it all. What are Passkeys? In the olden days, or before Passkeys... or right now, actually... websites, apps, and the like required a username and password combination for access. This combo was kept at the company that runs the website/app, and if and when their database was breached, both were stolen. The hackers then had full access to those accounts, since they had the two pieces to get in. With Passkeys there is a Public Key and a Private Key. The Public Key is held at the website/app and the Private Key is held by you. The Private Key is secured by biometrics (FaceID or TouchID) or your device/computer password. It is incredibly complex and near impossible to recreate. The Public Key has no information in it that could be used to re-create your Private Key. This means that if the Public Key is hacked, it's worthless. But Passwords are Still Here It sounds good, secure, and a whole lot easier than passwords, and in a world where Passkeys replaced passwords, that would be true, but they do not. You still need a username/password to create any account, and this combo is just as vulnerable as before. Passkeys do not resolve you of good password management. They are just another way to log in, and this adds complexity, which is always bad. Plus, many Passkeys still require you to go through multi-factor authentication. Should You Use Passkeys? Since Passkeys do not replace the old username/password combo, it just adds something else for you to manage. We have also seen where a broken Passkey can lock a user out of an account, even though they still have the old password way of logging in. Implementation has been poor. If you want to play around with Passkeys, use them in non-critical accounts and create the key in the Apple Passwords app. At the end of the day, Passkeys do more to protect the tech companies than they do to add much for the consumer at this point. If they are able to deploy Passkeys in the future to replace usernames and passwords, then they would be worth it. But right now it is all just additional noise in the increasingly cluttered world of technology. |
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macOS 26 Tahoe: Can Your Mac Run It? |
macOS 26 Tahoe is on the horizon and as expected a whole host of old Intel machines will not support the new operating system. Anything newer than 2020 should run it without issue, but it's important to know that only two 2019 models will be able to handle Tahoe: the 2019 16-Inch MacBook Pro and the 2019 Mac Pro Desktop, also known as the cheese grater. Apple is being very aggressive about pushing off the old Intel machines. At this rate with macOS 27 we wouldn't be surprised if only Apple Silicon Macs will be supported. Here is the official list of Macs that will support macOS 26 Tahoe:
To learn more about macOS Tahoe visit Apple here: https://www.apple.com/os/macos/ |
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WWDC 2025: Should You Wait to Upgrade? |
The 2025 Apple World Wide Developers Conference has come and gone. Every year there is a lot of anticipation about new products, enhancements, and upcoming hardware changes that have many of us waiting until the Fall to purchase new Macs or devices. Last year the headline was Apple Intelligence that has yet to be fully released, and in this year's conference they just hung a new "Coming Soon" sign on it, promising more to come later this year. Well, we have heard that before. So, what did they announce? There were a whole host of minor enhancements, tweaks, and the rename of all of their operating systems, but for the most part there was no ground-breaking app or that one new thing that would make us wait until the Fall to purchase a new device. I don't think the lack of a big announcement is a bad thing for Apple. They need to finish Apple Intelligence and have it work as promised. In fact, with AI being the biggest thing across all tech in 2025 it should be their main focus. So, taking a year to just tweak and tinker with the base operating systems is probably a good move so they can concentrate on the big stuff and not get left behind. Bottom line: If you were waiting to get a new iPhone, iPad, or Mac in anticipation of a big reveal in the Fall, it looks like that isn't going to happen. According to what was presented at WWDC the full line of Apple products should meet the needs of most every user. If you want a brief rundown on what was announced from Liquid Glass to macOS Tahoe 26, MacRumors has an article by item breakdown: https://www.macrumors.com/2025/06/09/everything-apple-announced-wwdc-2025/ |
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Apple to Raise iPhone Prices |
According to the Wall Street Journal, Tim Cook is considering making iPhones even more expensive. And this has little to do with the tariffs. Supposedly all the new features are raising manufacturing costs and it's time to pass those along to the Apple faithful. But isn't the iPhone expensive enough? An iPhone 16 Pro can easily reach $1500 with AppleCare+ and accessories. That is a lot of money when even comparing the costs to full-powered Mac computers that can be had for hundreds less. So what to do? The one silver lining is that Apple offers an array of different iPhones and every single one is powerful, capable, and can run all those apps that most of us use every day. They will work with iCloud. They will work with your email. They will support a calendar full of those Zoom meetings you love. Every iPhone is good, so there is no reason to spend huge stacks of cash on a phone with capabilities you don't need. When it comes down to the differences between the iPhone 16e, for example, and the iPhone 16 Pro, the biggest difference is the camera. The cameras on the iPhone 16 Pro are excellent for the photography enthusiast, but the iPhone 16e is great, too. In fact if you look at a comparison of the camera output over the past several years you will be surprised on just how small the differences in quality are even from an iPhone 12 or earlier. Yes there will be feature differences like the Dynamic Island versus The Notch, or the camera button, and even the design of the case, but a cheaper iPhone is not a cheap iPhone. Bottom line: Just get as much iPhone as you need. There is no reason to pay for more that you won't notice or won't use. It puts you back in control so you won't be forced by Apple to pony up all those extra dollars for the expensive-to-develop features that won't make a difference to your user experience. To read more about this, check out CNET: https://www.cnet.com/tech/mobile/tariffs-or-no-apple-may-raise-iphone-prices-this-year/ |
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