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      M2 iPad Air review: The everything iPad

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 13 May - 21:00 · 1 minute

    The iPad Air has been a lot of things in the last decade-plus. In 2013 and 2014, the first iPad Airs were just The iPad , and the “Air” label simply denoted how much lighter and more streamlined they were than the initial 2010 iPad and 2011’s long-lived iPad 2 . After that, the iPad Air 2 survived for years as an entry-level model, as Apple focused on introducing and building out the iPad Pro .

    The Air disappeared for a while after that, but it returned in 2019 as an in-betweener model to bridge the gap between the $329 iPad (no longer called “Air,” despite reusing the first-gen Air design) and more-expensive and increasingly powerful iPad Pros. It definitely made sense to have a hardware offering to span the gap between the basic no-frills iPad and the iPad Pro, but pricing and specs could make things complicated. The main issue for the last couple of years has been the base Air's 64GB of storage—scanty enough that memory swapping doesn't even work on it — and the fact that stepping up to 256GB brought the Air too close to the price of the 11-inch iPad Pro.

    Which brings us to the 2024 M2 iPad Air , now available in 11-inch and 13-inch models for $599 and $799, respectively. Apple solved the overlap problem this year partly by bumping the Air's base storage to a more usable 128GB and partly by making the 11-inch iPad Pro so much more expensive that it almost entirely eliminates any pricing overlap (only the 1TB 11-inch Air, at $1,099, is more expensive than the cheapest 11-inch iPad Pro).

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      Apple’s next product event happens on May 7, and it’s probably iPads

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 23 April - 15:24

    Apple’s next product event happens on May 7, and it’s probably iPads

    Enlarge (credit: Apple)

    Apple is going to announce some new things on Tuesday, May 7, at 10 am Eastern, according to an invitation the company sent out to members of the press ( and posted to its website ) this morning.

    The name Apple has given the event (“Let Loose”) doesn’t tell us much about what the company might announce, but the art does: It’s a hand holding an Apple Pencil, which almost certainly means the event will be iPad-focused.

    Apple has reportedly been on the cusp of releasing new iPads since late March, and the rumor mill has already delivered most of the key details . The headliner is likely to be a pair of new iPad Pros with M3 chips, OLED displays, slightly larger screens, and refined designs. Riding shotgun will be a refreshed 10.9-inch iPad Air with an M2 chip, plus a brand-new 12.9-inch Air meant to give large-screened iPad fans an option that doesn’t cost as much as the iPad Pro.

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      USB hubs, printers, Java, and more seemingly broken by macOS 14.4 update

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 18 March - 20:06

    USB hubs, printers, Java, and more seemingly broken by macOS 14.4 update

    Enlarge

    A couple of weeks ago, Apple released macOS Sonoma 14.4 with the usual list of bug fixes, security patches, and a couple of minor new features. Since then, users and companies have been complaining of a long list of incompatibilities, mostly concerning broken external accessories like USB hubs and printers but also extending to software like Java.

    MacRumors has a good rundown of the list of issues, which has been steadily getting longer as people have run into more problems. It started with reports of malfunctioning USB hubs, sourced from users on Reddit , the Apple Support Communities forums , and elsewhere —USB hubs built into various displays stopped functioning for Mac users after the 14.4 update.

    Other issues surfaced in the days after people started reporting problems with their USB hubs, including some instances of broken printer drivers, unexpected app crashes for some Java users, and problems launching apps that rely on the PACE anti-piracy software ( and iLok hardware dongles ) to authenticate.

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      M3 MacBook Air refresh boosts storage speeds for 256GB models

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 11 March - 16:00 · 1 minute

    The 13- and 15-inch M3 MacBook Air.

    Enlarge / The 13- and 15-inch M3 MacBook Air. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    When Apple upgraded its Macs with the M2 chip, some users noticed that storage speeds were actually quite a bit lower than they were in the M1 versions. Both the 256GB M2 MacBook Air and the 512GB M2 MacBook Pro had their storage speeds roughly halved compared to M1 Macs with the same storage capacities.

    Teardowns revealed that this was because Apple was using fewer physical flash memory chips to provide the same amount of storage. Modern SSDs achieve their high speeds partly by reading from and writing to multiple NAND flash chips simultaneously, a process called "interleaving." When there's only one flash chip to access, speeds go down.

    Early teardowns of the M3 MacBook Air suggest that Apple may have reversed course here, at least for some Airs. The Max Tech YouTube channel took a 256GB M3 Air apart, showing a pair of 128GB NAND flash chips rather than the single 256GB chip that the M2 Air used. BlackMagic Disk Speed Test performance increases accordingly; read and write speeds for the 256GB M2 Air come in at around 1,600 MB/s, while the M3 Air has read speeds of roughly 2,900 MB/s and write speeds of about 2,100 MB/s. That's roughly in line with the M1 Air's performance.

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      Asahi Linux project’s OpenGL support on Apple Silicon officially surpasses Apple’s

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 14 February - 22:00 · 1 minute

    Slowly but surely, the Asahi Linux team is getting Linux up and running on Apple Silicon Macs.

    Enlarge / Slowly but surely, the Asahi Linux team is getting Linux up and running on Apple Silicon Macs. (credit: Apple/Asahi Linux)

    For around three years now, the team of independent developers behind the Asahi Linux project has worked to support Linux on Apple Silicon Macs, despite Apple's total lack of involvement. Over the years, the project has gone from a "highly unstable experiment" to a "surprisingly functional and usable desktop operating system." Even Linus Torvalds has used it to run Linux on Apple's hardware.

    The team has been steadily improving its open source, standards-conformant GPU driver for the M1 and M2 since releasing them in December 2022 , and today, the team crossed an important symbolic milestone: The Asahi driver's support for the OpenGL and OpenGL ES graphics have officially passed what Apple offers in macOS. The team's latest graphics driver fully conforms with OpenGL version 4.6 and OpenGL ES version 3.2, the most recent version of either API. Apple's support in macOS tops out at OpenGL 4.1, announced in July 2010.

    Developer Alyssa Rosenzweig wrote a detailed blog post that announced the new driver, which had to pass "over 100,000 tests" to be deemed officially conformant. The team achieved this milestone despite the fact that Apple's GPUs don't support some features that would have made implementing these APIs more straightforward.

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      Everything we learned today about Vision Pro configurations, specs, and accessories

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 19 January, 2024 - 21:31

    Apple's Vision Pro headset.

    Enlarge / Apple's Vision Pro headset. (credit: Samuel Axon)

    Apple's Vision Pro went up for preorder this morning at 8 am ET. As expected, shipment dates for preorders quickly backed up to March as initial supply was accounted for. Regardless of whether you're in for the start or taking a wait-and-see approach with Apple's ultra-pricey new device, though, we have access to a little more information about the device than we did before thanks to updates to the Apple Store website.

    The product page for Vision Pro reveals configurations and pricing, and a new specs page clarifies answers to some questions we've had for a while now.

    You'll find all the relevant new information below. We've also updated our " What to expect from Apple Vision Pro " roundup with new information from the specs page.

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      Asahi Linux’s new “flagship” distro for M-series Macs is a Fedora Remix

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 4 August, 2023 - 19:36

    Asahi Linux’s new “flagship” distro for M-series Macs is a Fedora Remix

    Enlarge (credit: Asahi Linux/Fedora)

    Asahi Linux, the project aiming to bring a fully functional Linux system to Apple computers running on that company's own M-series chips, has announced that its new "flagship distro" is Fedora Asahi Remix.

    As announced at Fedora's Flock conference this week in Cork, Ireland, (and on Asahi Linux's blog ), the Fedora Asahi Remix should be officially released by the end of August 2023. You can try it out now , but you should "expect rough spots (or even complete breakage)."

    The new distro will be "upstream-first," sending as many of its bespoke M-series tools back to Fedora's mainline offerings as possible. Hector Martin, writing on Asahi Linux's blog, notes that the existing project based on Arch Linux was "fully downstream." Asahi added its own package repository with scripts, forked kernel and Mesa packages, bootloader parts, and userspace support, but with "no significant involvement with upstream Arch Linux ARM or Arch Linux." Neal Gompa from Fedora reached out to talk about integrating Asahi with Fedora after the project's debut, and work began in late 2021. Now it's ready to spread a bit further.

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      M2 Ultra : les premiers tests confirment la puissance de la puce Apple

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Monday, 12 June, 2023 - 10:00

    apple-wwdc23-m2-ultra-chip-158x105.jpg Apple M2 Ultra

    Présentée lors de la WWDC 2023, la M2 Ultra s’annonce comme la nouvelle puce phare d’Apple. Les premiers benchmarks tendent à le confirmer.

    M2 Ultra : les premiers tests confirment la puissance de la puce Apple

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      Windows 11 fonctionne sur les Mac M1 et M2, mais il y a des hics

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Saturday, 18 February, 2023 - 08:00

    windows-machine-virtuelle-parallels-desktop-18-mac-158x105.jpg Windows 11 Mac M1 et M2

    Microsoft s’associe à Parallels pour proposer la prise en charge de Windows 11 sur les Mac équipés de puces M1 et M2. La virtualisation rend l’exécution possible, mais les limitations sont nombreuses.

    Windows 11 fonctionne sur les Mac M1 et M2, mais il y a des hics