In fact, Apple says the 13-incher is the thinnest product it has ever created – yes, it's even thinner than the iPod Nano.
If Apple makes the ‌iPad mini‌ available in the same colors as the ‌iPad Air‌, it could come in space gray, purple, blue, and starlight ... and the ‌iPad mini‌ could lose its nano-SIM slot, with Apple ...
The 6th Generation iPod Nano was something of a revelation on launch. Packing a color screen, audio hardware, and a rechargable battery into a package no bigger than a large postage stamp remains ...
If colors matter to you, the iPad Air has more room for choice, with space gray, starlight, purple and blue. The iPad Pro ... you can also choose the Nano-texture glass option from Apple’s ...
Only the new colors differentiate the products: Starlight, space gray, pink, blue, and purple ... and getting into the details of the nano texture iPad Pro, in this week's AppleInsider podcast.
According to a new report, Apple‘s years of work developing in-house 5G and Wi-Fi chips will finally get a public launch in 2025.
PCMag PCMag.com and PC Magazine are among the federally registered trademarks of Ziff Davis, LLC and may not be used by third parties without explicit permission. The ...
[Steven Troughton-Smith] figured out how to push signed firmware through to the iPod Nano 6g. This is accomplished by modifying iRecovery to recognize the device on the USB after forcing a ...
“1,000 songs in your pocket … impossibly small” was used to introduce the iPod nano, as Steve Jobs pulled it out of the small hip pocket of his jeans: The new player included a color display and ...
The last version of the Apple iPod Touch is now available 'while stocks last.' This draws to a close the iPod range that first launched in 2001. Back then, this little device promised to put 1,000 ...
That’s what makes the Bluesound Node Nano so enticing. At $299, it’s far more affordable than the company’s $549 Node — which until now was its most affordable streamer — and yet it ...
Neural focuses on guitar amp and drive pedal capturing with its second piece of hardware – but does it get the recipe right?