What you need to know
The developers behind the popular camera app Halide have discovered unannounced iPad Pro capabilities.
The new front-facing ultrawide camera can take some hugely impressive macro shots.
Apple s new M1 iPad Pro has been on sale for a week or so now and that s been plenty of time for the Halide developers to get their teeth into it. The group is normally known for diving into new iPhones to see what their fancy new cameras are capable of. But this was iPad Pro s time. And it turns out there s a pretty huge superpower hiding inside that M1-powered beast.
see my final pretrial Twitter thread ). I m not like those New Year s resolutioners starting to smoke again a week later. This post is not about the trial itself or the antitrust matters involved, but about suspicious social media activity of the astroturfing kind.
It s publicly discoverable that Epic Games founder and CEO Tim Sweeney and I follow each other on Twitter, and sometimes retweet or like each other s tweets. Other than that, I don t know him and I m 100% independent from Epic. I have my own app store issues.
In recent weeks there s been quite some suspicious activity on Twitter. I was not the only one to notice various recently-created or mostly inactive Twitter accounts (no or few followers, hardly any tweets) that chimed in on App Store antitrust discussions with typical Apple talking points. To be clear, there are legit fanbois and there may also be cases in which, for example, an open standards fanatic ignores web app shortcomings (like Richard Stallman s attitud