Apple's decision to contest a legal order that tries to force it to provide a backdoor into the iPhone for the FBI has dramatically divided public and professional opinion over the last few weeks. A federal order has requested Apple to work in conjunction with the FBI in order to build what Tim Cook has referred to as "the software equivalent of cancer" in San Bernardino shooting case. Apple has made a formal appeal against that order, which will be heard on March 22nd. While most tech companies, both in and out of Silicon Valley, are in full support of Apple on the issue, and have now also filed amicus brief in support of Apple, one rival company Samsung has decided to take a neutral stance, of sorts, on it.
Apple is now said to be planning switch to OLED display with the iPhone 7s in 2017 instead of iPhone 8 release in 2018 as previously rumored. Here are the details.
With the ongoing beta releases of the upcoming iOS 9.3, Apple has been tweaking various aspects of the update, not least the highly anticipated Night Shift feature. Here's what has changed in beta 5.
Here's an easier way to export a webpage, email or document as a PDF on iOS, which uses 3D Touch instead of having the messy world of iBooks involved.
Apple today has officially filed a formal objection to the court order that effectively tried to force the company into assisting the FBI with unlocking an iPhone 5c that belonged to one of the San Bernardino shooters. Apple's General Counsel, Bruce Sewell, had previously filed a statement prior to the congressional hearing yesterday that outlined the reasons why the company believes the original court order should never have been granted.
The latest discovery in iOS 9.3 points to a feature that will enable IT administrators in companies to have greater control over the iPhones and iPads that the company lend to its employees for work.
Apple has just dropped a number of new developer and public test seeds, with beta 5 of iOS 9.3, OS X 10.11.4, watchOS 2.2 and tvOS 9.2 all now available to download.
Rumor has it that Apple's iPhone 7 will be as slim as the iPod touch, and that the Plus version of the phone will be called 'iPhone Pro'. Here are all the details.
In a separate iPhone unlocking case, a New York judge has ruled in favor of Apple, concluding that the U.S. Justice Department/FBI can't force Apple to hack its own iPhones to provide data based on All Writs Act.
Apple plans to put forth an argument before Congress tomorrow afternoon that if it were to comply with court order to crack open a smartphone for FBI used in the San Bernardino shooting, it would set an extremely "dangerous precedent" for the future. Apple's statement prepared by Bruce Sewell has already been submitted to the panel ahead of the appearance, and can now be read below.
















