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      Of Course Regulation Can Work

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · 2 days ago - 19:47 · 1 minute

    Dan Moren, writing last week at Six Colors:

    Lately you can’t throw a digital camera without hitting a story on the various regulatory and legal challenges Apple’s been facing. While some have decried these actions as interference in the internal operations of a company, there’s one salient detail that I think those opinions often overlook.

    Regulation works.

    Here are just a handful of examples from the past few months of Apple changing its policies due to regulations — or, in some cases, the mere threat of regulation.

    I’d change “regulation works” to “regulation can work” or “regulation sometimes works”. But there’s no question we’re seeing results. Moren cites three recent examples:

    These changes are all wins. But they’re also all low-hanging fruit. Apple has no self-interested reasons to fight against any of them, and regulatory scrutiny forced the company to stop ignoring them. It’s the same with how the Japan Fair Trade Commission’s investigation led to Apple loosening its anti-steering rules for “reader” apps worldwide in 2021 . That might not have happened at all without the regulatory scrutiny, and certainly wouldn’t have otherwise happened when it did. But it was the lowest of low-hanging fruit: Apple, to my eyes, lost nothing by loosening those anti-steering provisions.

    The real regulatory rubber hits the road on the issues that are against Apple’s own interests, or detrimental to the experience of users (which is, effectively, against Apple’s interests — Apple is in the business of making its users happy).

    * The parts-pairing stuff is complex. Right-to-repair advocates often wrongly assume that Apple’s repair policies are geared toward making money — either turning a profit on the repairs and replacement parts directly, or by implicitly encouraging users to buy brand-new devices to replace broken ones rather than fix them. That’s just not the case. Repairs are not a profit center for Apple. The complexity Apple is trying to manage is guaranteeing that supposedly genuine replacement components are in fact genuine, and that stolen devices can’t be mined for black-market components. Last week’s changes seem to manage a good balance of all these factors.

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      Delta Game Emulator Now Available From the App Store

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · 2 days ago - 19:04 · 1 minute

    Everything is coming up Milhouse this week for Riley Testut. Juli Clover for MacRumors:

    Game emulator apps have come and gone since Apple announced App Store support for them on April 5, but now popular game emulator Delta from developer Riley Testut is available for download. [...]

    Delta is an all-in-one emulator that supports game systems including NES, SNES, N64, Nintendo DS, Game Boy, and Game Boy Advance. It works with popular game controllers, and supports cheats, save states, backups, syncing, and more. As this is Testut’s longtime project, it is more polished and feature rich than other emulators that have popped up. [...]

    Delta can be downloaded from the App Store for free, and it does not collect information or include ads. The app is available in the United States and other countries, but it is not available in the European Union where it is instead being offered through an alternative app marketplace.

    An incredibly polished, high-performance game emulator, available free of charge with no ads. That’s some old-school internet awesomeness. ( App Store link .)

    Now the questions is: Does Nintendo care? Nintendo recently shut down Yuzu , a popular open source Switch emulator. (David Pierce and Sean Hollister made a great episode of Decoder about this whole saga.) There’s a big difference between emulating the Switch — which is still current — and emulating classic consoles, but Nintendo still monetizes those classic consoles via emulation on the Switch .

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      AltStore PAL Launches in the EU

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · 2 days ago - 17:57 · 1 minute

    Riley Testut:

    I’m thrilled to announce a brand new version of AltStore — AltStore PAL — is launching TODAY as an Apple-approved alternative app marketplace in the EU. AltStore PAL is an open-source app store made specifically for independent developers, designed to address the problems I and so many others have had with the App Store over the years. Basically, if you’ve ever experienced issues with App Review, this is for you!

    We’re launching with 2 apps initially: my all-in-one Nintendo emulator Delta — a.k.a. the reason I built AltStore in the first place — and my clipboard manager Clip , a real clipboard manager that can actually run in the background. Delta will be FREE (with no ads!), whereas Clip will require a small donation of €1 or more . Once we’re sure everything is running smoothly we’ll then open the doors to third-party apps — so if you’d like to distribute your app with AltStore, please get in touch.

    Exciting times for iOS users in the EU. Both of these things can be true:

    • The DMA is a bad law that will result in more harm than good for most users.
    • For iOS power users and enthusiasts, alternative app marketplaces are going to be fun and useful. Right now there’s no better place to be an iPhone user than the EU.
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      Donald Trump Writes and Narrates Documentary Short Film on the Battle of Gettysburg

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · 2 days ago - 16:32

    Amazing he found time for this amidst his campaigning and legal travails. But like many former presidents, he has a serious interest in history.

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      From the DF Archive: Mobile Phone Keyboards, Circa 2009

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · Friday, 5 January - 02:41

    Yours truly, back when the iPhone 3GS was new:

    I think the question boils down to whether Apple is making a mistake by not making an iPhone with a hardware keyboard. I’m convinced the answer is no — that (a) there will never be an iPhone with a built-in hardware keyboard; and (b) Apple will not suffer for it. [...]

    Are software touchscreen keyboards good for everyone? Certainly not. But this is another aspect of the Apple Way. Apple tries to make things that many people love, not things that all people like. The key is that they’re not afraid of the staunch criticism, and often outright derision, that comes with breaking conventions.

    Holds up.

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      Ryan Seacrest Tried Making an iPhone Hardware Keyboard Case 10 Years Ago

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · Friday, 5 January - 01:50 · 1 minute

    If the aforelinked new Clicks keyboard case for iPhones rings a bell, here’s Jon Fingas reporting for Engadget 10 years ago:

    The market for keyboard-equipped phones may be on the wane, but don’t tell that to Ryan Seacrest — the American Idol host is convinced that messaging mavens need real buttons. To that end, he’s jumping into hardware and launching the Typo Keyboard for the iPhone 5 and 5S. The Bluetooth case turns an Apple handset into a makeshift BlackBerry Q10, complete with backlit, sculpted keys that cover up the iPhone’s home button (there’s a small substitute key); we hope you don’t need multitasking, folks. The Typo Keyboard will make its formal debut at CES in early January, and it should ship that month for $99.

    The Typo keyboard was doomed in more ways than one: it used unreliable battery-draining Bluetooth, not a wired connection; iOS didn’t have good hardware keyboard support at the time; and, as Fingas alludes in his description above, the Typo keyboard’s design covered the iPhone’s home button. That was pretty much a dealbreaker for the iPhone 5S, which introduced Touch ID.

    Even worse, the shell of the company that was once the mighty BlackBerry sued Typo for patent infringement , won, and eventually drove Typo out of business . (Kudos to NBC News for that “Seacrest Out” headline.)

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      Clicks: New Hardware Keyboard for iPhone

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · Friday, 5 January - 00:49

    I never even owned a smartphone with a hardware keyboard, but as soon as I saw this I wanted one: Clicks is a new $139 hardware keyboard case for the iPhone 14 Pro, 15 Pro, and 15 Pro Max (that one will cost $159 — Max phones have max prices). One of the creators of the project is Michael “MrMobile” Fisher, who, of course, created a YouTube video for the project . (One of his co-creators is CrackBerry Kevin — so there are some serious “hardware phone keyboard aficionado” bona fides on the team.)

    I don’t know how much I’ll wind up using it but it looks fun, useful, and clever — and I’m just a sucker for upstart indie hardware projects. Clicks is even a great name. There’s no Bluetooth involved — it connects via Lightning or USB-C, just like any hardware keyboard can via a cable. If you’ve never connected a hardware keyboard to an iPhone before, you might be surprised how many keyboard shortcuts there are (Command-Space for Spotlight, Space and Shift-Space for paging down and up in Safari, Command-H to go to the Home screen, and more.)

    You’ll never guess which color I pre-ordered.

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      The Talk Show: ‘Halos and Harps’

      news.movim.eu / DaringFireball · Thursday, 4 January - 23:52

    Apple’s 2023 year in review, with Callsheet developer Casey Liss.

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