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+23 +1
Researchers Create First Firmware Worm That Attacks Macs
The common wisdom is that Apple computers are more secure than PCs. It turns out this isn't true.
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+3 +1
Mac Users How-to: Use Preview to put signatures on PDF's, Pages Documents, and Mail messages
You can use Preview to capture your signature using the iSight camera on a Mac, then use it in Pages documents, to sign PDF documents, and as an image in your signature in the Mail app.
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+43 +1
Apple users targeted in first known Mac ransomware campaign
Apple Inc customers were targeted by hackers over the weekend in the first campaign against Macintosh computers using a pernicious type of software known as ransomware, researchers with Palo Alto Networks Inc (PANW.N) told Reuters on Sunday. Ransomware, one of the fastest-growing types of cyber threats, encrypts data on infected machines, then typically asks users to pay ransoms in hard-to-trace digital currencies to...
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+15 +1
macOS is becoming legacy software
Everything that Apple did, and didn’t do, with its Mac lineup this year tells me the company would rather be selling more iPads and iPhones. The departures from the 2016 MacBook Pro — MagSafe...
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+32 +1
Why I left Mac for Windows: Apple has given up
I’m a die-hard Apple user, but after years of watching the Mac slowly die, I’ve switched back to Windows. Here’s the story of why I moved back to Windows, and what I’ve found so far.
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+20 +1
Apple CEO Tim Cook: Mac Mini Will Be 'Important Part' of Future Product Lineup
Apple's Mac mini celebrated its third birthday this week, marking three years since the device was last updated. The lack of attention Apple has given to the Mac mini has left many Mac users wondering about the future of the machine and whether there are updates to come. MacRumors reader Krar decided to email Apple CEO Tim Cook to get an update on the Mac mini and he received a response. Cook said it was "not time to share any details," but he confirmed that the Mac mini will be an important part of the company's product lineup in the future.
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+13 +1
The Mac mini isn’t dead yet, says Tim Cook
More than 1,000 days have passed since Apple updated its Mac mini hardware. Since then, Apple has launched the Apple Watch, AirPods, the retina MacBook, and the Touch Bar MacBook Pro. Meanwhile, the Mac mini has existed in a state of arrested development. You'd be forgiven for considering the possibility that the product has been living its last days. But in an e-mail to an Apple customer today, Apple CEO Tim Cook said the Mac mini isn't going anywhere.
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+35 +1
Stupid, stupid MacOS security flaw grants admin access to anyone
The latest version of macOS includes a mindlessly simple, one-step way to take over any Mac.
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+17 +1
Apple's recent software problems are bad, but shouldn't lead to knee-jerk personnel decisions
By any account, Apple had a rough end of November and start of December from a software perspective -- but there are lessons to be learned and corrective measures to execute that can only be fully undertaken with the Apple leadership staying in place.
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+2 +1
How to Analyze Wi-Fi Coverage
When trying to create a Wi-Fi network with the most complete coverage a solid research is needed and thorough understanding of the radio frequency behavior in specific spots. A Wi-Fi analysis will help you get the data you need by showing you the areas of channel interference and low signal areas, including dead zones
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+14 +1
Google Chromecast and Apple TV resurface on Amazon as tech giants continue to thaw icy relationships
Google’s Chromecast and the Apple TV are back on Amazon, two years after the retail giant removed the streaming products from its online store. As noted by CNET, Apple TV and Apple TV 4K models have…
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+19 +1
The T2 chip makes the iMac Pro the start of a Mac revolution
I’ve spent the last week with Apple’s new iMac Pro, and in most ways it’s just a faster Mac. It's the first pro Mac desktop in over three years and the fastest Mac yet made, granted, but still entirely familiar. And yet in many ways—some noticeable, some entirely invisible—this new Mac is completely different from all past Mac models. The iMac Pro may be an outlier today, but in the future we’ll probably look back on it as the start of a new era for the Mac, all because of the Apple-built T2 chip it carries inside. Here’s how the T2 makes this iMac Pro unlike all other Macs.
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+10 +1
iPad Pro With Face ID Will 'Likely' Debut at WWDC 2018 in Early June
If accurate, the timeframe suggests Apple will unveil the new iPad Pro models at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference, which will likely take place June 4-8 at the McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, California. Apple similarly unveiled its current iPad Pro lineup at WWDC last year. Zhang expects the revamped iPad Pro to have slimmer bezels and no home button, in line with the iPhone X. The revamped design will likely be featured on both the 10.5-inch and 12.9-inch iPad Pro, although his research note didn't specify.
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+42 +1
Apple Plans to Use Its Own Chips in Macs From 2020, Replacing Intel
Apple Inc. is planning to use its own chips in Mac computers beginning as early as 2020, replacing processors from Intel Corp., according to people familiar with the plans.
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+2 +1
2016 MacBook Pro butterfly keyboards failing twice as frequently as older models
Apple launched its new butterfly key-switch keyboard with the MacBook, with some usability complaints starting nearly immediately, but it wasn't until its adoption in the MacBook Pro in 2016 that reliability concerns started popping up —and AppleInsider has the hard data on failure rates. Following anecdotal reports of a keyboard more prone to failure than in previous years, AppleInsider has collected service data for the first year of release of the 2014, 2015, and 2016 MacBook Pros, with an additional slightly shorter data set for the 2017 model year given that it hasn't been available for a year yet.
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+10 +1
Today in Apple history: Steve Jobs shows off the colorful iMac G3
On May 6, 1998, Steve Jobs unveiled the iMac G3, the brightly colored translucent computer which helped to save Apple. Ten months after Jobs’ new management team takes over, the iMac loudly announces that the days of Apple quietly fading into the background are over.
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+12 +1
Today in Apple history: Steve Jobs shows off the colorful iMac G3
On May 6, 1998, Steve Jobs unveiled the iMac G3, the brightly colored translucent computer which helped to save Apple.
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+1 +1
Apple will make it easier for developers to port iOS apps to the Mac - Sam News
At WWDC 2018, Apple announced it would bring UIKit support to the Mac, making it easier to port iOS apps to a desktop environment.
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+32 +1
RIP Macintosh: 1984–2018
You may still love your Mac, but Apple doesn’t share your passion.
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+1 +1
Download Local chat messenger for Office
Output Messenger is a best internal team chat software, It's available for Windows, Mac, Android, Linux & iOS
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