
David Price
Editor at Macworld UK
Editor for @Macworld. King of Apple Arcade. Cricket liker. 12 Muller corners in 22 mins 45 secs
Articles
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5 days ago |
flipboard.com | David Price
NowiOS 26: All the new iPhone features we’re expecting next weekWe’re just days away from iOS 26, the freshly branded iPhone update, being fully unveiled during Apple’s WWDC keynote. Here is a roundup of all the rumored new iOS 26 features we’re expecting to see debut. Major new OS redesign This is the big one.
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1 week ago |
flipboard.com | David Price
1 hour agoApple's most affordable phone has a cluster of premium tools and features, but in order to hit a sub-$600 price, Apple had to omit a number of things. When I reviewed the iPhone 16E I was charmed by its simplicity and frustrated by its $599 price. The phone is $200 less than the iPhone 16 but $100 …
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1 month ago |
macworld.com | David Price
It’s been a while since we got a new Apple Watch SE: after the first version of Apple’s budget smartwatch came out in 2020 and the second in 2022 with few changes, the company has kept quiet about further releases. But new reports suggest we’re finally going to see the 3rd-gen SE later in 2025, and that it will come in two new sizes. On Tuesday, Ross Young, a remarkably reliable leaker and analyst who covers the screen supply chain, tweeted that two Apple Watch SE displays have entered production.
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1 month ago |
macworld.com | David Price
This September’s iPhone launches just got a tiny bit less interesting, with reports that the previously rumored anti-reflective, anti-scratch screen is no longer likely to appear on the iPhone 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max. Last spring, a Weibo account named Instant Digital claimed that Apple had bought equipment for making the outer glass of the iPhone out of a new “super-hard” anti-reflective material, suggesting that Ceramic Shield would be replaced by something better in the fall of 2025.
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1 month ago |
davidprice-26453.medium.com | David Price
*The body has to be spiritualized and the spirit has to be incarnated, both things must take place. ~ Marie-Louise von Franz*According to the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, the Persians had an unusual but deliberate method of decision-making that involved both alcohol and sobriety. When confronted with major political or strategic issues, Persian nobles would first debate the matter while intoxicated, believing that wine freed the mind from restraint and exposed true intentions.
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