There was a wait. Apple Intelligence will start it rolls according to October 28 BloombergMark Gurman. Last month, Apple said it was targeting October for iOS 18.1, iPadOS 18.1 and macOS Sequoia 15.1 — which will bring the first Apple Intelligence features to the iPhone 16 and the rest of the Apple family.
The first wave of features powered by Apple Intelligence include its summary tool, Writing Tools, and intelligent audio recording and transcription for Mail, Notes, Pages and other apps. I’m testing the beta, and by far the most useful feature has been the summary tool, which wrangles my forest of notifications and messages and breaks them down into theoretical summaries.
– Matt Smith
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The company said no user accounts were stolen.
Fraudsters took over the toy brick maker’s website last week. They changed its banner and used it for crypto scam. A banner depicting gold coins with the company’s logo claimed that “The Lego Coin is now officially available for sale.” He even promised hidden rewards to those who bought some. The incident happened at Lego’s headquarters one night. The company responded relatively quickly by removing the unauthorized banner and links. Lego told Engadget that no user accounts were compromised.
These were the problems with the iPhone 16 series.
More urgent update from Apple: released two new patches including iOS 18.0.1 for iPhone and iPadOS 18.0.1. The patch fixes logging issues in the Messages app on all iPhone 16 models. The iPhone’s microphone randomly starts recording for a few seconds before turning on with the orange microphone icon.
It was an attempt by the company to avoid paying a $400,000 fine.
X tried to avoid a $400,000 fine by claiming that Twitter (its old name) no longer existed. This is… creative The legal dispute comes amid a more than year-long dispute with the Australian e-Security Commission. The commission asked the company last February to provide details on child sexual exploitation on the platform. X failed to answer several questions and faced $415,000 plus fines for noncompliance. The argument isn’t entirely new: CEO Linda Yaccarino has also repeatedly claimed that X is a “new company” to avoid scrutiny. He repeated that line repeatedly during testimony earlier this year at a Senate hearing on child safety issues. Australian federal judge Michael Wheelahan wasn’t having it.