Author

Avatar for Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy

benlovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer who started his career on PC World and has written for dozens of computer and technology magazines, as well as numerous national newspapers, business and in-flight magazines. He has also written several books, and creates occasional videos.

He is old enough to have owned the original Macintosh. He currently owns an M1 Max 16-inch MacBook Pro, an M1 13-inch MacBook Air, an iPad mini, an iPhone 16 Pro Max, and multiple HomePods. He suspects it might be cheaper to have a cocaine habit than his addiction to all things anodised aluminum.

He’s known for his op-ed and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review:

He speaks fluent English but only broken American, so please forgive any Anglicised spelling in his posts.

He gets a lot of emails and can’t possibly reply to them all. If you would like to comment on one of his pieces, please do so in the comments – he does read them all.

Connect with Ben Lovejoy

Vision Pro games developers can now apply for access to PolySpatial

PolySpatial Vision Pro games development platform | Vision Pro headset on desk with Mac Studio

It’s as yet unclear how many Vision Pro games we can expect. Apple very much positioned its spatial computer as a productivity and communications device – and the price certainly makes it an expensive proposition for gaming use – but the company did mention during the keynote that Unity would be providing a visionOS games development platform, PolySpatial.

Unity is now inviting visionOS developers to apply for access to a beta, making it easy to port existing Unity-based games to the headset …

Expand Expanding Close

Apple-Amazon deal sees companies fined $218M by antitrust regulator in Spain

Apple-Amazon deal breaks Spanish law | Amazon app on iPhone 12

The controversial AppleAmazon deal struck back in 2018 has been found to be illegal by Spanish antitrust regulators, who have fined the company a total of $218M.

The investigation into alleged price-fixing took two years to complete, and follows similar ones in Germany and Italy – with concerns also expressed in the US …

Expand Expanding Close

US Cyber Trust Mark will boost smart home security, says White House

Will Apple support US Cyber Trust Mark | Apple product range with Home app

The White House has announced a plan intended to improve the security of smart home tech. The government will test everything from smart speakers to Wi-Fi routers, awarding a US Cyber Trust Mark logo to products which pass the tests.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) will set the standards to be met, and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will manage the program …

Expand Expanding Close

Face recognition powered by iPad lets international travellers skip checkpoints

Face recognition powered by iPad | Shown recognizing two Eurostar travellers

A face recognition system powered by iPads lets international business travellers skip two of the three checkpoints at Eurostar’s London terminus.

Usually, when you board an international train from London to Paris, or any of the four other European cities served by Eurostar, you have to go through three separate checkpoints. But a new iPad-powered system lets people walk straight past two of them …

Expand Expanding Close

iPhone Diary: StandBy is a great way to reduce distractions (and screen time)

I’ve been using the iOS 17 developer beta for a few weeks now, and been meaning to write a roundup of the features I’ve found most useful. I will get around to that, but there’s one which stands out to me – and that’s StandBy.

Apple’s primary intention with this right now is to turn the iPhone into a handy nightstand clock, but this isn’t the only way to use it …

Expand Expanding Close

Russian security service bans all Apple devices, repeats nonsensical spying claims

Russian security service bans all Apple devices | Abstract surveillance image

The Russian security service, the FSB, has extended its earlier ban on the use of iPhones. The latest ban applies to thousands more government workers, and now includes iPads and Macs.

The FSB has repeated its earlier claims that Apple has provided the NSA with a backdoor into its devices, allowing US security services to spy on Russian officials …

Expand Expanding Close

iPhone battery replacement process won’t change anytime soon (if ever)

iPhone 14 Pro Max battery shown

Today has seen fresh reporting that upcoming EU legislation will either definitely or probably force Apple to change the iPhone battery replacement process.

We’ve noted before that this is far from certain, and anyone expecting DIY battery replacements to get easier is definitely going to be disappointed in the short-term, and very possibly the long-term too…

Expand Expanding Close

I’d like to blame Apple for my annual iPhone upgrade cycle, but I can’t

Annual iPhone upgrade cycle | iPhone on tripod with aftermarket lens

Sure, I’m a gadget guy who likes shiny new toys as much as the next geek, but I do try to refrain from upgrades for their own sake – admittedly with mixed success.

My biggest challenge is with the iPhone. I’ve historically described this as my least-important Apple gadget, and therefore one that I ought to upgrade least frequently. For years now, however, I’ve fallen victim to the annual camera upgrades …

Expand Expanding Close

Tap to Pay on iPhone comes to the UK today, Revolut and Tyl first to support

Tap to Pay on iPhone UK | Photos show card and Apple Pay transactions

Apple has announced that Tap to Pay on iPhone has now rolled out to the UK, enabling small businesses to accept Apple Pay and contactless card payments using nothing more than their iPhone. It follows earlier international expansion to Taiwan and Australia.

The feature, which allows iPhone owners to accept payment without a separate card-reader, was first announced in February of last year, with a gradual rollout in the US through a growing range of payment processors

Expand Expanding Close

Apple union negotiators acted illegally, claim Maryland store reps

Apple union negotiators acted illegally | Stock image of an Apple Store

Apple has once again been accused of breaking the law in its attempts to fight unionization by retail store employees. Staff at the Maryland store say that Apple union negotiators acted in bad faith by stalling for as long as possible, and broke the law by engaging in what’s known as “surface bargaining” and “regressive bargaining.”

The Coalition of Organized Retail Employees (CORE) says that Apple has once again violated the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) …

Expand Expanding Close

Vision Pro performance doubled by R1 chip with custom RAM

Vision Pro performance | F1 car AR display showing airflow

Minimizing video lag is crucial to mixed-reality headsets which blend virtual content with live video overlays of the real world, and we’re today learning more about how Apple ensures that Vision Pro performance is up to the task.

A supply-chain report says that the new R1 chip, which processes all the cameras and sensor inputs, is being packaged with custom-designed low-latency memory. This setup is said to double the performance over what would otherwise be possible …

Expand Expanding Close