Welcome to our weekly Apple Breakfast column, which includes all the Apple news you missed last week in a handy bite-sized roundup. We call it Apple Breakfast because we think it goes great with a Monday morning cup of coffee or tea, but it’s cool if you want to give it a read during lunch or dinner hours too.
The fine art of knowing when to admit defeat
I always think it’s funny when people passionately claim to think one thing, then are forced by circumstances to admit they actually think the opposite. Like a cricketer complaining bitterly about an umpiring decision going against him, then quietly declining to waste one of his team’s reviews challenging that decision. Or a multinational corporation claiming to have won a thumping legal victory, and then filing an appeal.
Similarly, based on Apple’s public pronouncements over the past few years, you’d have thought the company was fully prepared to play hardball with the EU over various regulatory disputes and confident of ultimate victory. Never apologize, never explain, and never admit defeat–until you have to. And then act like it was your idea all along and hope your customers have short memories.
The USB-C war may be over, but Apple has further beef with those meddling Eurocrats. Last year the EU voted through its Digital Markets Act, which is designed to foster competition in the tech sector; this could force Apple to open up the App Store and allow sideloading on the iPhone. Yet Apple has consistently maintained that sideloading is one of the worst things a smartphone owner could do. Surely the company won’t give way on such an important principle?
In fact, it now looks almost certain that it will, based on Apple’s own assessment of the situation. In an advert or a conference chat, there’s room for a certain amount of editorializing. But in the cold hard light of a Form 10-K SEC filing, you have to tell it like it is. And the way it is, right now, is that Apple “expects to make further business changes in the future, including as a result of legislative initiatives impacting the App Store.” As rallying cries it’s not exactly “You shall not pass!”
Of course, the writing has been on the wall for some time (see this story from more than two years ago) and this isn’t exactly a surprise. The main novelty of this latest statement, really, is the fact that Apple is saying publicly what it previously would have kept to internal discussions. But now the cat is out of the bag, and everyone is openly admitting what’s going to happen, wouldn’t it be nice for the company to tell it straight for once?
The fact is that sideloading does bring some dangers, but the idea that it’s “a cybercriminal’s best friend” is overblown. The truth lies somewhere in the middle, and Apple now has the opportunity to educate the public on the pros and cons of a procedure that brings both benefits and costs and the precautions users would be wise to take. In admitting defeat, the company gets to be honest: it can say, we’re not doing this entirely willingly, but since the regulatory framework requires it we can help you make your own decision. After all, an iPhone you can use for sideloading is more valuable than one that’s locked down to a single (easily accessible) store. Just as it suddenly recognized the advantages of USB-C when it had no choice but to use it on the iPhone, I suspect Apple may be able to find some positives in the arrival of sideloading and downplay some of the fears it has stoked over the past few years.
Or maybe it won’t—after all, Apple still has every incentive to keep as many eyeballs as possible on the official App Store, funneling revenue share into the Cupertino coffers. It may not need to persuade the EU anymore, that ship having sailed some time ago, but it can still scare users away from rival stores. It will be tiresome for the fearmongering to continue, but perhaps I just need to be honest with myself and admit defeat.
Foundry
Trending: Top stories
Apple has a memory problem and we’re all paying for it.
The M3 MacBook Pro is yet another redundant and unnecessary Apple device.
Apple defends 8GB of RAM in the MacBook Pro as ‘analogous to 16GB’ in a PC.
No matter how Apple spins it, people have stopped buying Macs.
Michael Simon explains why he switched his MacBook Pro preorder from an M3 Pro to an M3 Max.
Podcast of the week
We have the new M3 iMac and the M3 Max MacBook Pro. Are they worth your hard-earned money? Find out in this episode of the Macworld Podcast!
You can catch every episode of the Macworld Podcast on Spotify, Soundcloud, the Podcasts app, or our own site.
Reviews corner
- iMac M3 review: Apple’s iconic all-in-one gets a shot in the arm.
- 16-inch MacBook Pro (M3 Max) review: An elegant monster dressed in black.
- iPhone 15 Pro vs iPhone 14 Pro: Which one should you buy?
The rumor mill
Apple’s next iPhone breakthrough? Next-gen batteries that last ‘significantly’ longer.
The iPhone 16 could be Apple’s first AI device.
Apple is set to go an entire calendar year with no iPad updates for the first time since the product launched.
Software updates, bugs, and problems
New ‘ObjCShellz’ malware allows hackers to remotely control a Mac.
Linux developers stumble on macOS bug that makes MacBooks ‘unbootable’.
Apple pauses work on iOS 18, macOS 15 to address ‘glitches in the code’.
Apple releases macOS Sonoma 14.1.1 and Ventura 13.6.2 updates.
iOS 17.1.1 is out with wireless car charging, and Weather widget fixes.
And with that, we’re done for this week’s Apple Breakfast. If you’d like to get regular roundups, sign up for our newsletters. You can also follow us on Facebook, Threads, or Twitter for discussion of breaking Apple news stories. See you next Monday, and stay Appley.