Mobile menu toggle

Search results for: Apple One

GameBaby controller/case brings retro fun to iPhone [Review] ★★★★

By

GameBaby review★★★★
GameBaby can be your key to retro gaming fun.
Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

GameBaby from Bitmo Lab is both an iPhone case and a game controller. Combined with the Delta retro game emulator, the accessory’s clever design allows you to play classic games on your phone with real buttons. And there’s nothing wrong with a new way to have fun.

For my GameBaby review, I tested it with my iPhone 16 Pro Max, and it’s the closest thing to a Game Boy I’ve played in much too long.

Plus, it’s available at a huge discount right now — 38% off. But the deal only lasts a few more days.

Today in Apple history: Apple pays $15 million to promote Mission: Impossible

By

Sadly, Apple's Mission: Impossible deal doesn't quite work out as planned.
Sadly, it doesn't quite work out as planned.
Photo: Paramount

April 18: Today in Apple history: Apple pays $15 million for Mission: Impossible movie tie-in April 18, 1996: Apple unveils a massive $15 million promotional tie-in for the Mission: Impossible movie starring Tom Cruise.

Designed to promote the PowerBook, which Cruise uses in the spy flick, the marketing campaign comes at a particularly bad time. Attempting to climb back into the black after reporting its largest quarterly loss ever, Apple is in the middle of trying to perform its very own impossible mission. And that’s just the start of the problems.

iPhone demand dips in China despite market growth

By

iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16e laying side by side, showing the difference in rear camera size.
iPhones sales are faltering in China.
Photo: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Apple’s struggles in China continue. In Q1 2025, the company fell to fifth place, despite the overall smartphone market growing by 3.3%.

Huawei and Oppo made the most of Apple’s fall, registering double-digit growth.

9 reasons you should ditch Spotify for Apple Music

By

Apple Music better than Spotify?
Could it be? Sure, I think so.
Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac

Apple Music vs. Spotify: While Apple Music still lags behind Spotify when it comes to paying subscribers, in my opinion, Apple Music is the better service. It offers more advanced features like live lyrics, karaoke, lossless and spatial audio.

And for music aficionados, you can upload your own ripped recordings and MP3s. You have full control over your music library. Plus the Apple Music Classical app gives you a first-class experience learning and discovering classical music.

Here are the nine things keeping me on Apple Music — and why you should switch away from Spotify. You can also watch the video right here.

Take a whiff of these scented iPhone cases if you dare

By

Sodi Aroma Scent Phone Case
It's a normal, protective iPhone case, but with odors.
Photo: Sodi

Into a market filled with standard iPhone cases, Apple accessories designer Sodi brings a sensory innovation — or maybe overload — that promises to transform how iPhone users interact with their devices. The Sodi Aroma Scent Phone Case, designed exclusively for iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max models, launched Thursday on Kickstarter. It infuses fragrance technology with everyday smartphone use.

In other words, the cases make your iPhone smell … in a nice way, and very much on purpose.

Today in Apple history: Apple II brings color computing to the masses

By

Apple II
The Apple II was groundbreaking for its day.
Photo: Computer History Museum

April 17: Today in Apple history: Apple II debuts at West Coast Computer Faire with color graphics April 17, 1977: The Apple II launch at the West Coast Computer Faire positions Apple at the forefront of the looming personal computer revolution.

The company’s first mass-market computer, the Apple II boasts an attractively machined case designed by Jerry Manock (who will later design the first Macintosh). It also packs a keyboard, BASIC compatibility and, most importantly, color graphics.

Fueled by some marketing savvy from Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, the Apple II launch makes quite a splash at the San Francisco Bay Area’s first personal computer convention.

How to use DeepL, the first alternative default translation app for iPhone

By

iPhone translation app
DeepL can replace the iPhone default translation app with a better alternative.
Photo: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac

You can now set DeepL Translate as the default translation application on iPhones and iPads, replacing Apple’s own app. Powered by artificial neural networks, the machine-translation service supports a wider range of languages than Apple’s Translate app. And in our testing, it delivered slightly better translation as well.

DeepL Translate is the first third-party app that can serve as the iPhone’s default translation app … it beat Google Translate to the punch. The option works for iPhone users in the United States and the European Union.

Here’s how to set DeepL as the default on your iPhone or iPad.

Meta keeps Apple’s AI out of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp

By

You cannot use Writing Tools in Meta apps on iPhone and Mac.
Another petty move from Meta.
Logo/Graphics: Apple/Meta/Rajesh Pandey/CultOfMac

Despite its flaws, Apple Intelligence packs some useful features. Among them, Writing Tools lets you rewrite, summarize, and proofread text using AI.

Sadly, you cannot use Writing Tools to draft your Facebook posts or WhatsApp chats, as Meta blocks the use of this feature in its apps.

Surrealist comedy Government Cheese melts onto Apple TV+ [Now streaming]

By

David Oyelowo stars in Government Cheese on Apple TV+ in 2025.
David Oyelowo stars in Government Cheese on Apple TV+.
Photo: Apple TV+

British actor David Oyelowo stars in the new “surrealist family comedy” Government Cheese, coming to Apple TV+ in spring 2025.

Oyelowo is always good — he also features in Apple’s very popular sci-fi series Silo — so it may be worth checking this one out.

Update: The comedy series is now streaming on Apple TV+. The review-aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes says, “Peculiar and peppy, Government Cheese has some holes but gets by on the strength of its nutty writing and a collection of tangy performances.”

Apple touts massive emissions cuts and in-store recycling deal

By

Apple in-store recycling deal
Apple passed a 60 percent reduction in its global greenhouse gas emissions. That's part of its Apple 2030 goal to become carbon neutral in the next five years.
Photo: Apple

Apple reduced its global greenhouse gas emissions by more than 60% compared to 2015 levels, the company said Wednesday. It marks substantial progress toward the company’s Apple 2030 initiative goal of carbon neutrality.

And, as part of its Earth Day run-up, the company also confirmed rumors of an Apple in-store recycling deal that offers 10% off accessories when you turn in an Apple device through May 16.

“We’re incredibly proud of the progress we’re making toward Apple 2030, which touches every part of our business,” said Lisa Jackson, Apple’s vice president of environment, policy and social initiatives, in a press release. “Today, we’re using more clean energy and recycled materials to make our products than ever before, we’re preserving water and preventing waste around the world, and we’re investing big in nature.”