Welcome to our weekend Apple Breakfast column, which includes all of the Apple news you missed this week in a handy bite-sized roundup. We call it Apple Breakfast because we think it goes great with a morning cup of coffee or tea, but it’s cool if you want to give it a read during lunch or dinner hours too.
Home work
This week I’ve been working on the Macworld review of Apple’s new HomePod and spoiler alert: It’s an attractive and well-made device with great sound. But it’s also quite confusing to evaluate. The question I keep coming back to is this: Who is this for?
Famously and somewhat mysteriously, Apple discontinued the original HomePod in 2021 a few months after releasing the $99 HomePod mini. At the time, most pundits assumed this was an admission that the full-size model simply didn’t sell: It was on the costly side, after all, and didn’t play nicely with Android phones, or streaming services other than Apple Music. It also had an annoying non-detachable power cord and a reported tendency to leave white circular marks on people’s furniture. The HomePod mini didn’t solve all of those problems, but it’s much easier to forgive flaws when you’re paying $99 rather than $299.
If sales numbers were the problem, it’s a little confusing that Apple has chosen to launch another full-size HomePod that looks almost identical to the original. There are some changes, of course, and if you bought the first HomePod and returned it in disgust, it’s possible that your annoyances have been addressed: the power cord is now detachable, while the base (like that of the HomePod mini) is a flat circle rather than a ring, and far less prone to leave marks. But broader issues still remain.
Despite a slightly lower price than the first HomePod had at launch, this remains an expensive smart speaker that isn’t terribly smart (thanks to Siri’s continuing imperfections) and doesn’t play nicely with most products and services from outside Apple’s ecosystem. And it’s hard to see this changing the minds of those who weren’t impressed by the original model.
Those like me, meanwhile–people who owned the first HomePod and rather liked it for all its faults–are unlikely to be pushed into an upgrade. The new model is better in some ways, with a larger screen and more balanced audio output, but not by enough to justify a replacement. And it can’t be set up as a stereo pair with its 2018 counterpart. The upgrade path simply isn’t very compelling.
There are possibilities we may not have considered. It’s possible, for example, that the original HomePod sold fine and was discontinued for other reasons; problems with manufacturing during the pandemic, perhaps. It’s also possible that the new HomePod is part of a wider strategy to tackle the smart home, and isn’t intended or expected to make a lot of money in its own right. Maybe Apple thinks the HomePod mini is more appealing when set alongside a prestige product at a higher price point, or just thinks it’s silly to sell a mini product when there isn’t something else that’s bigger.
Whatever the reasoning—and Apple generally knows what it’s doing—I’m not sure I follow it. But at the same time, I do like the HomePod, which may give an insight into how difficult this review has been to write. If you’d like to read it in full, tune into Macworld next week.
Foundry
Trending: Top stories of the week
Apple at the Super Bowl: Huge hype, big flops, and the greatest ad of all time.
Apple’s war against leakers is really a battle against the people that matter most.
The HomePod 2 beats the original HomePod in blind tests… except when heavy bass is a key factor.
ChatGPT, Midjourney, and more: Is Apple letting another AI opportunity slip away?
Apple has admitted that Mac gaming ‘will take some time,’ while teasing the possibility of iPhone-like annual updates for the Mac.
What if… Apple’s next big thing never comes? We walk through four scenarios that could spell Apple’s doom.
Oh dear. Samsung’s S23 bloatware takes up more space than two entire macOS Ventura installs.
Talking of which, the Galaxy S23 Ultra still struggles to beat the iPhone—from 2020.
Apple’s culture is what makes the Mac a bad gaming platform.
The rumor mill
The iPhone 15 Ultra might be Apple’s biggest and priciest iPhone ever.
Apple is still working on a charging feature that should have been in the iPhone 14 Pro.
Apple may let the Mac Studio languish for years so more people buy the Mac Pro.
We look at Apple’s plans for February. Will there be more surprises before the big March event?
Podcast of the week
The Mac has a long and storied history, but video games play a very small role. In this episode of the Macworld Podcast, we discuss the state of Mac gaming.
You can catch every episode of the Macworld Podcast on Spotify, Soundcloud, the Podcasts app, or our own site.
Software updates, bugs & problems
iOS 16.3 appears to be forcing some users to protect their accounts with 2FA.
The pulled Home revamp is set to return in iOS 16.4.
And with that, we’re done for this week. If you’d like to get regular roundups, sign up for our newsletters. You can also follow us on Twitter or on Facebook for discussion of breaking Apple news stories. See you next Saturday, enjoy the rest of your weekend, and stay Appley.