The iPhone 17 Event
This time I actually forgot to watch the live event.
Oh boy. I’m betting this wasn’t on AMD’s bingo card for 2025, especially now that their Ryzen AI Max APUs are making a splash with things like the Framework Desktop and because the “Intel x86 RTX SoCs” really sound like a direct challenge to AMD’s APU line.
If you had any doubts about where the PC market is going, this should put them to rest. Apple’s M-series chips may have changed the game, but the rest of the industry is clearly doubling down on catching up, even if they have to do chiplet/SoC-style integration (even if via NVLink) instead of entirely new unified memory designs.
Of course the AI datacenter angle is interesting as well, but I am much more invested in seeing how edge and client devices evolve in the next few years than in watching people burn money on massive server farms because of something that still doesn’t really work that well outside of very specific use cases.
These are probably Meta’s worst kept secret, since everyone was expecting them to put something like this together for a while now.
The glasses are prohibitively expensive (let alone with prescription lenses), but I would love to try these out as I think the myoelectric band is a genius input method.
I’ve also been looking at the Even Realities models and they are both hackable and actually available where I live, so these are exciting times…
Following my little saga with the iPad OS beta, I upgraded a few of my Apple devices, including one of my Macs, to the final release versions of all the “26” operating systems, and… It’s even worse than I thought.
First of all, the good bits:
Now for the downsides:
Fn
key for window management was a mistake because it tends to switch keyboard layouts on me, so I guess people at Apple are neither bilingual nor good testers.Like I wrote several times over the past few months, I am really happy I have been using GNOME on Fedora for a couple of years, because it currenly looks so much better than the Mac (and I use so much cross-platform software these days) that if there were better business software support (like an official Windows Virtual Desktop client able to do corporate MFA) I would probably have switched by now.
If only I worked at a software company that… Nah, I don’t know anything.
I’m now fully back to work, so there hasn’t been any free time for anything but finishing overdue posts. I have, however, managed to sneak in a few leisurely half-hours in the mornings reading work e-mail from my balcony before my calls start, which has been a great way to enjoy the lingering summertime.
I am, however, pretty certain someone will spoil that for me with more project management calls any day now.
Nevertheless, I’ve spent a few hours this weekend trying to get DaVinci Resolve and KDEnlive to work via RDP inside my Proxmox cluster (for science!) with… dramatic results.
Resolve (which has a reputation of being fiddly in Linux overall) crashed the NVIDIA drivers and the Proxmox host several times, but KDEnlive actually ran surprisingly well with just VAAPI and Intel QuickSync—and it was able to do so directly on my NAS, which saves me time and energy managing video clips and assets.
I have a vested interest in doing video editing “remotely” because my Macs (especially my desktop Mini) don’t have enough storage for handling videos, so this was an interesting experiment. But I suspect I will eventually fire up Final Cut Pro and investigate how good the UX is with network-mounted media (the workarounds I knew about used to require setting up sparse bundle images in the NAS, which is just stupid).
I can always revisit the notion of paying for it again on the iPad and get a Thunderbolt SSD, but… why?
Update: I just remembered that Blender can do video editing as well, and I have it installed everywhere, so I am going to give it a try since it ticks an important box: it’s fully cross-platform. And it isn’t picky about GPUs, drivers or file locations, although there is no hardware video encoding. And guess what, I can even use it on my tiny N150 laptop with… well, relative ease:
Lack of free time to do my projects is one thing, but my evenings are still manageable, so I was somewhat surprised that Foundation ended the season in such a weird way (fine, we all know it’s not canon Asimov, but still… some plot twists just don’t make sense) and pleasantly amused with the end of this season of Strange New Worlds, which is well on its way to be the best modern Trek (although that isn’t hard given recent history).
I’d watch a full original series reboot if this trend keeps up.
As I’ve been writing about once or twice, I’ve recently upgraded my Wi-Fi after an attempt to use ISP-provided equipment to replace my remarkably long-lasting (and extremely reliable) Airport Extreme base stations.
A great visual walkthrough that reminds me I still don’t get how Apple can ship it looking like this. Like I said earlier:
If “design is how it works”, then Apple hasn’t really tested any of their upcoming releases.
I want the improved Quicksilver-like Spotlight, but I don’t want my desktop to look this bad—-even if they’ve toned down Liquid Glass to be a set of incoherent visual sprinkles, the overall design is just bad.
It’s also worth noting that Tahoe is the last version to support Intel Macs. Not that I’ve dabbled in hackintoshes in the past few years, but it’s still remarkable they supported Intel this long.
The way Apple has pretty much set the Watch Series apart from the SE is by shipping more health features, and this is a nice one for them to target, especially considering they bothered to make it available to older devices as well and are targeting to ship it pretty much worldwide.
I think a lot of people are going to be interested in this (I’m lucky enough to be reasonably sure I don’t have hypertension, but most people my age have some sort of concern around it).
Of course, like all things in this space, a lot of the actual measuements need to be taken with a grain of salt (HR and Afib have been spot on over the years, but sleep tracking and other things that, like this feature, rely on indirect inference from sensors designed to do other things naturally have difference confidence intervals).
I trust Apple more than anyone else to handle the data for this (given that processing will happen on-device), but I wonder how far we are from the dystopia where insurance companies are going to start asking for access to this kind of data when negotiating policies…
(I don’t like linking to The Verge ever since they went full-on paywall+subscriptions, but the gist of the matter is still readable and it was the first place I saw this.)
As regular readers will know, I am quite fond of the various Ryzen APUs that have hit the market over the past couple of years, and I take a look at them whenever I can, since they have proven to be quite popular options—partially because of the high core counts and partly because of their increasingly powerful iGPUs.
This time I actually forgot to watch the live event.
Summer break is now completely over, so I did my usual Summer “cleansing”—disabling notifications from annoying apps, unsubscribing from a few more online services, ditching a half dozen YouTube channels, and (surprisingly) keeping my Twitter/X account afloat. I also poked at BlueSky with a metaphorical stick, only to find it very much alive.
It’s been a pretty crowded couple of weeks—the most intense part of summer break: a few days at the beach, some in the countryside, plus plenty of walking and reading.
The 3D printing world has been abuzz over the past couple of weeks with this, and after watching pretty much all the (p)reviews I could find on YouTube, I’m very curious to see what the final product will perform like, and how reliable it’s going to be.
Their Kickstarter has pretty much gone through the roof (I find it quite tempting myself), and multi-material printing without the piles of waste associated with single-nozzle devices is clearly something people want–plus the price point is way more accessible than, say, Prusa (ok, fine, that’s a low ball).
I’m going to be watching this carefully over the next few months. The U1 isn’t a perfect fit for me as is since I’ve started using “harder” materials, but I do need something that can handle at least two materials for some of my projects, and on paper, this would be almost perfect with a top lid.
Late to the party on this, but still…
The new Android security measures are an interesting piece of revisionist thinking—“developer verification” is now set as the gatekeeper for sideloaded apps in Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand by September 2026, with what looks like full side-loading lockdown coming 2027.
Regardless of the malware angle, this seems to effectively kill side-loading on Android in the near future, making it as hobbyist-hostile as iOS and very likely spelling doom for open ecosystems like F-Droid (which I rely upon to customize every Android device I get my hands on).
As someone who’s been doing Android development on the side for decades because Apple still doesn’t allow you to run your own software on the devices you own without stupid restrictions, this is very annoying, and a good reminder that regulators like the EU have been focusing on entirely the wrong things.
I wasn’t going to go anywhere near this because it is too close to actual politics for my taste, but Ben Thompson’s take on the U.S. government’s 10% stake in Intel is a great read.
A heady mix of long-term manufacturing woes and geopolitics, it still manages to raise a few skeptical eyebrows as it lays out how decades of strategic missteps have left Intel trailing behind rivals like TSMC, while also highlighting how chip production isn’t something you can fix overnight.
Nor, should I add, the actual success of their products—their top consumer CPUs have been plagued with issues over the last couple of years, and, rather ironically, their most successful products (by volume) are the new low-end Alder Lake chips that have been quietly flooding the Mini-PC market, even as AMD take the most profitable niches.
There’s a dry wit to Ben’s critique—government intervention might be the “least bad” option, but it’s hardly a cure, especially when national security and commercial realities clash and government itself is going through a credibility crisis.
I don’t think Apple understands how badly they’re messing up in regards to visual design in their latest crop of operating systems.
There’s a degree of nostalgia, sure, but nobody on the planet can disagree that Apple’s current design team seems to have completely lost the plot where it regards both respecting the history of their operating systems and… well, just doing something that doesn’t look like it was phoned in.
I just don’t feel like Apple actually cares about the quality of their software experience any more, and am happier and happier that I’ve been running GNOME alongside as my possible future desktop. And let me tell you, a world where Linux is at least as good as polished as macOS is not science fiction anymore.
I’ve spent most of the past couple of weeks using my M1 iPad Pro, and have some follow-up on the iPadOS 26 beta that might be interesting.
I always loved Pez, and this seems like a wonderfully well crafted game. There’s a resurgence of interest in retro computing, yes, but what I like the most are “backports” and entirely original software created for 80s hardware…
Most of the week was spent rummaging through storage to get rid of obsolete hardware and troubleshooting ISP and Wi‑Fi issues, so there isn’t a lot of interesting stuff to report.
Josef Prusa dissects the current state of open hardware in desktop 3D printing in blunt terms (and yes, the headline really tells you everything). As someone who got into it back in the early, heady days of Maker Faires, this was a sobering read.
He walks through how a once-vibrant scene has been stifled by a flood of patent filings since 2020, and it’s rather ironic (even if you have been in the tech game long enough) that an industry built on sharing ideas is now toothlessly battling a patent minefield.
Pragmatically, and although there will likely always be a post-market or DIY angle, I think the mainstream of 3D printing is now squarely about selling semi-closed appliances–and I might be getting one myself.
Even though my current preferences in the “Intel” space actually lean towards AMD, I’ve been keeping an eye on industrial x86-64 for a while. But not too closely, so I was pretty surprised to get my hands on a LattePanda Mu, and it feels like a fresh take on the entire compute module concept.