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使用ChatGPT来改善关系和解决争论
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Jeff: 2024年伊始,欧盟App Store政策变化,允许第三方应用商店和Safari浏览器选择屏幕,但实际影响有限,可能与Apple预期相符。Apple Vision Pro在美国发布,市场反响平平,缺乏后续支持。Apple Sports应用发布,评价正面。Apple发布搭载M3芯片的MacBook Air,性能提升显著。Apple Podcasts增加转录功能,提升用户体验,对播客制作人意义重大。Apple发布M4芯片,首先应用于iPad Pro,引发讨论。Apple发布“史上最佳100张专辑”榜单,引发争议。WWDC24发布了Xcode 16、Swift 6等开发者工具更新。Apple Vision Pro在更多国家和地区发布。Apple Maps上线网页版,方便跨平台共享地图链接。Apple Watch Series 10和iPhone 16系列发布,iPhone 16系列评价正面。Apple发布iOS 18.1等系统更新,包含第一批Apple Intelligence功能,但实际体验褒贬不一。Apple发布搭载M4芯片的新款iMac和Mac mini,Mac mini反响尤其热烈。Apple发布搭载M4 Pro和M4 Max芯片的新款MacBook Pro,但关注度不及Mac mini。Apple公布2024年度最受欢迎播客榜单,Compile Swift播客未上榜。Apple发布第二批Apple Intelligence功能,包括图像生成工具和改进的写作工具。英王查尔斯三世访问Apple英国总部,引发评论。 总的来说,2024年是苹果公司转型的一年,新产品和新功能的发布备受关注,但实际影响和用户反馈褒贬不一。 Geoff: Geoff的Vision Pro应用Kineo发布反响不佳,他因此放缓了该项目的开发。Endless Hurdles 1.3版本发布,加入Game Center排行榜功能,取得一定成功。Endless Hurdles游戏更新,加入永久体育场赛事,取得小幅成功。Geoff发布新应用Bark,YouTube宣传视频获得意外的高点击量。Geoff发布Job Finder Tracker 1.2版本,加入简历支持功能,主要目的是提升开发者的成就感。 Geoff在2024年积极参与应用开发,取得了一些成功,但也面临一些挑战。他积极尝试新的平台和功能,并从用户的反馈中学习和改进。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What were Apple's major changes to iOS, Safari, and the App Store in the European Union announced in January 2024?

Apple announced the introduction of alternative app marketplaces, a core technology fee of 50 cents euro per install annually, and a browser choice screen in Safari, allowing users to choose third-party browsers.

Why did the Apple Vision Pro launch underwhelm in February 2024?

The Vision Pro lacked a clear use case and post-release support from Apple, leading many users to put it in a drawer after initial excitement.

What was the primary purpose of the new Apple Sports app introduced in February 2024?

The Apple Sports app helps sports fans find upcoming games, track scores, and view league standings, providing a straightforward and clean user experience without gambling statistics.

Why did Apple introduce the M3 chip in the MacBook Airs in March 2024?

The M3 chip was a nice upgrade for the MacBook Airs, offering significant power and performance for a wide range of users, though it was not as advanced as the M4 chip announced later in the year.

What significant feature did Apple add to the Apple Podcast app in March 2024?

Apple introduced transcripts for Apple Podcasts, enhancing accessibility and engagement for listeners.

Why did Apple introduce the M4 chip in the iPad Pro in May 2024?

The M4 chip was introduced to boost performance in the iPad Pro, but it felt like an odd choice given that the iPad's software was not fully optimized to take advantage of its power.

What were the main developer-focused announcements at WWDC 2024 in June?

Apple unveiled Xcode 16 with automated code completion, Swift 6 featuring strict concurrency and type throws, and a new feature called Swift Assist, though Swift Assist has not been released yet.

Why did Apple expand the availability of the Vision Pro to more countries in June 2024?

Apple expanded the Vision Pro to China, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore, but the device saw a similar lukewarm reception as in the U.S., with users generally placing it in a drawer after initial use.

What was the purpose of Apple Maps on the web, launched in July 2024?

Apple Maps on the web allows users to share and view maps across platforms, including Android, and includes features like dark mode.

Why did the Compile Swift podcast add a new host in August 2024?

The new host was added to provide fresh perspectives and content, especially during a slow period of Apple news post-WWDC.

What were the key features of the Apple Watch Series 10 and iPhone 16 series released in September 2024?

The Apple Watch Series 10 and iPhone 16 series included updates like a titanium option for the Watch and improved camera controls for the iPhone, though both were overshadowed by the upcoming Apple Intelligence features.

Why did the first wave of Apple Intelligence features, released in October 2024, receive mixed reviews?

The first wave included features like notification summaries, writing tools, photo cleanup, and call transcription. Notification summaries were entertaining but often confusing, while photo cleanup was generally well-received for simpler tasks.

What were the significant updates to the iMac and Mac Mini in October 2024?

Apple introduced new iMacs and Mac Minis powered by the M4 chip, with the iMac available in new colors including a redesigned pink option. The Mac Mini received significant performance upgrades over earlier M-series devices.

Why were the new MacBook Pros with M4 Pro and M4 Max chips overshadowed in October 2024?

The MacBook Pros were overshadowed by the highly praised Mac Minis, which received a big leap in performance and features.

What were the most popular Apple podcasts of 2024, according to Apple's November press release?

Apple shared the most popular podcasts of 2024, though the Compile Swift podcast narrowly missed the list despite reaching 100,000 lifetime downloads.

What new features did Apple Intelligence introduce in the second wave in December 2024?

The second wave included image generation features like Image Playground and Genmoji, enhanced writing tools, and the ability to interact with ChatGPT through Siri.

Why was King Charles III's visit to Apple's UK headquarters in December 2024 considered a non-event?

The visit was met with little public interest, and it was more of a formality rather than a significant news story.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

What's up everybody, welcome to another episode of the Compulsory Podcast. This is a special one. We have wrapped up a gift for you at the end of the year, which will be some unwrapping. I know. Tell us more about it, Jeff. How you doing, buddy? Hey, I'm doing pretty good. Yeah, it's the end of the year. Like everybody else, we thought we'd do a kind of wrap-up of the year. So we're going to take kind of a developer-focused, some personal-focused...

look back at 2024 and see what did Apple do this year? What did the two of us do this year? What did we as the podcast do this year? And just cover everything that happened and

And, you know, go back over some of the things we might have forgotten. Yeah, I mean, clearly people are tuning in because they care mostly about what we did. But we'll cover some other stuff. We're going to cover everything in the Apple ecosystem. Probably not too many things outside of the Apple ecosystem, but some of how it affected us as well. Yeah, we won't. Spoiler alert, though. We won't be breaking down each of the beta releases this year.

Definitely not. All right. So let's get started where the year got started in January. We only had one big news story in January, and that was Apple's changes to iOS, Safari, the App Store, all of those things in the European Union. They announced that they were going to have alternative app marketplaces so you could have custom app stores.

In doing that, they were going to charge the core technology fee that was 50 cents euro per install every year, basically, for your app. They were also adding the Safari choice screen. So when you first launch Safari, it would go, hang on, are you really sure you want to use Safari? Would you rather use...

Chrome or Firefox or some other third-party browser out there. They added a couple things to the OS to support that as well so that different browsers could do things similar to what Safari is able to do. And yeah, so definitely saw a couple of these things hit later in the year.

But really, it seems like the big changes from that haven't really hit yet. What are your opinions? Yeah, well, you know, it's funny because I guess it doesn't seem like it was all the way back in January that the idea of alternative app stores became a reality to think about. I guess it just didn't seem that long ago. But I think you sum it up at the end there, which is,

Well, yeah, it's typical Apple thing, right? Announced in January and still waiting for some. Yeah, it all came out with 17.4 later in the year. So it did take a while for it to actually happen. But as far as I understand, everything that they announced in January is now available. We just haven't seen a lot of uptick from it. I know we saw Alt Store from the people who do Delta. That did get released eventually. Yeah.

and i believe i would need to go back and double check this i believe epic also did launch an alternative app store yep and i want to say the set app one is in place for macpaw i think that's interesting live yeah i'm not sure actually i'll have to double check that real-time tracking um but i think i'm looking up i think it went live in europe

Yeah, no, I did. Yeah, you're right. Yeah, so a couple different alternative app stores. I know we also saw at the time that there were several browsers that did end up in this browser choice screen. So Apple definitely allowed a lot of people to get into that.

And so we have seen them. Neither of us are in the EU, so no firsthand experience with any of these. But it does seem like it's been kind of a slow burn so far. Yeah. Yeah, I think it's one of those that was – actually, it's probably going the way Apple hoped it would, right? A lot of hoorah at the beginning and then like, oh, let's just let everybody get it off their chest and then we'll stop talking about it. Definitely that kind of thing.

On to the next month of the year. We had February. We had a couple different things. On February 2nd, we had the Apple Vision Pro arriving in the U.S., the first place that it launched. And it definitely had people that bought it. That was about it.

I also at this point launched my app Kineo for Vision Pro and definitely was not the success that I was hoping that it was going to be. I enjoyed making it, but it has definitely not been a big win for people using it. And so I've kind of slowed working on that project because of how underwhelming of a launch it was. It does seem like the Vision Pro is still kind of waiting for a reason to exist, if

If it were.

What are your thoughts? Yeah, I'm right there with you on this. I mean, I was not expecting it to be all of the hoopla that perhaps everybody else thought it was going to be, including Apple. I thought, oh, we'll get it. It'll be a solid piece of engineering that is meant for tomorrow, not for today. And I still feel that way about it. I would say, though, I am disappointed that it really did, like, here it is, and then...

There wasn't a lot of post-release support from Apple for it yet, and we're still kind of waiting on that. Vision OS 2.0, we'll talk about that later, but it wasn't a big deal, really. We've gotten a couple new things with later versions of that. It definitely seems like a lot of people are really excited about the ultra-wide in Vision OS 2.2, but it still feels like Apple's a little bit behind, even on their own, in supporting this.

Yeah. You know, it's funny. I was, you know, obviously I was watching you build in public on Kineo for Vision Pro. And I actually found that fascinating because, you know, we got to discover way more from watching you build that version of the app than arguably just about anything else you could go look at because you hit some interesting issues with

that you arguably wouldn't have thought were going to be issues, right? We'll see. We'll see where it goes. It's hard, right? It's a brand new product category, still in the first year. Okay, I will say that I think it was less impressive than the first year of the watch, which I think is saying something.

I don't know. The watch, there was a lot more developer engagement with that. And I think that's definitely, that kind of goes back to the January thing. Sure. Like Apple not necessarily having the greatest relationship with developers at this point. But how many of those first year watch apps are still around? Almost zero of them. Yeah, good point. And so I think that, yeah, we had a lot more engagement that first year.

But they all kind of weren't good. And so it definitely took the watch a little while to find its footing in the market. And that may be true with the Vision Pro as well. But I think we're still kind of waiting for Apple to decide what it is as well. Yeah, the Vision Pro needs its...

magic moment of some yet to be determined, probably created app that really makes everybody go, Oh wait, I get it now. Right? Yeah. I agree. All right. And then on February 21st, Apple introduced a brand new app for iPhone, Apple sports, which lets you as a sports fan, find upcoming games for your favorite teams, your favorite leagues, uh,

It keeps track of scores for the day, allows you to look at that. I actually use this app a lot for the games that I'm interested in and I see them and I enjoy them. Honestly, a pretty, pretty solid app. I thought, do you use this app at all? I don't use it much. I'm not a, not a huge sports person, but I have used it. And funny enough, I was going to say, you probably have used it a lot more than I ever will. Um,

So I was curious to see what you think of it. But I do, I feel like it was a solid release, right? It was the right thing. If anything, this is one of those apps that's like, okay, now I feel like everybody's got a really good reason to go to the App Store on the Apple TV, you know? Yeah.

No, really, really, really solid app in my mind. You know, it doesn't do a lot, but I kind of think that that's fine. It's really just, hey, when's the next game? What was the score of the last game? Show me the standings for the league, that kind of thing. Like it doesn't need to do a lot and...

It does what it does pretty well and for free. Well, I think that's exactly why it's good, though, right? It is what the sports fan wants. Give me easy access to find my teams, my sports, and

And give me a way to find easy data for whatever the conversation is, the argument that I'm having with the person next to me where I can look up the stats. I think it's definitely what the casual sports fan wants. Oh, for sure. Honestly, I consider that myself. Like, it is not super in-depth. And the other thing that it does not have, that I consider it a feature that it does not have this compared to every other sports app out there right now, no gambling statistics. Ha ha ha.

Every other app is just filled with sports betting. And I don't want that. I don't want that in my app. And I praise Apple for not having that in their app. Yeah, I agree, right? I mean, okay, you know, plenty of people want that. There's plenty of apps out there for it. But I think it's a good example of Apple. Apple being what I call the classic Apple and doing something right. I was going to say for once, but doing something right from beginning to end, right? Yeah.

And then on that exact same day,

February 21st, we had a release of Endless Hurdles 1.3, including Game Center Leaderboards. Yeah. How did that go? Yeah, so no gambling in that app either. But, you know, I felt it was nice that Apple released their sports app to bring attention to my game. Thank you, Apple, for that. That was a good release. In fact, I would say, for me, that was perhaps even better than the 1.0 release because it had...

Game Center integration with leaderboard. And that was something I thought was going to make, I don't want to say make all the difference, but yeah, it was a key part that I thought would, you know, get that friendly competition in there would get people playing. And it did for a very short while.

So I guess I would call it a success. It was certainly a success from a technical standpoint. For those of you who make games and you use Apple's technologies and Swift and so on, Game Center is a great, very easy way to get a lot of useful services in there.

Hey folks, if you like what you're hearing in this podcast and you want to help this podcast to continue going forward and having great guests and great conversations, I invite you to become a Patreon supporter. You can go to patreon.com forward slash compile swift where you will get ad-free versions of the podcast along with other content.

Moving on to March, on March 4th, we had Apple unveiling the new 13 and 15 inch MacBook Airs using the M3 chip that they introduced at the end of 2023. Not a whole lot to say here. Basically just a nice rev to the MacBook Airs, putting the new chip in them. That is still the chip that they use to this day. I know we'll get later into them announcing some new chips, but...

MacBook Air, they're still using the M3s. Yeah. And, you know, I mean, the MacBook Air, I think, still continues to be...

one of their best machines. Absolutely. You know, yes, the MacBook Pro, of course, is, you could argue that, you know, the big one for most people. There's just no beating the MacBook Air in so many ways from portability, usability, being able to carry it around, and frankly, the way overpowered chip that's in there. And I don't mean that in a negative way. I mean, it's,

You could get one of these things now, and it'd still be more than most people ever need. I do think it's a bummer that it doesn't have the M4 chip yet, but the M3's no slouch. It definitely...

Of the M series chips, it is kind of the black sheep, but I do think that, you know, the M3 is a solid addition. I hope that they will eventually bump that to the M4, but we'll see what they have in plans for March of next year. The very next day on March 5th, Apple introduced transcripts for Apple podcasts, which you might be reading right now. Yeah, please be reading them right now. Right. They put a lot of work into this. Listen to our actual voice. Yeah.

Well, I think I sound better on paper, you know. Yeah, no, this actually is perhaps more important than it seems on the surface because there has always been a lot of criticism from podcast listeners in particular about the quality of Apple's podcast app, right? And so anytime they give it some attention or an ability to improve something,

podcasting in any way. For us podcasters, it's a big deal. Simple as that. On April 1st, I celebrated five years of live Twitch streaming by building a Playdate version of some silly Infinite Runner game that I found. I don't know. I stole some audio from it and put it on the Playdate in Swift because I could. And I did all that while, I don't know, eating hot chicken and having people scream at me. That was...

It's always a good time on April 1st. Yeah, so congratulations on the five years. But I don't think it's stealing when the author actually gives you the content. But congratulations on five years. My goodness. Moving on to May, we had Apple introducing the M4 chip that we were just kind of talking about. Oddly enough, and I forgot that this was the case, the very first device that they put it in, and for a while, the only device they put it in was the iPad Pro.

I know you got an M4 iPad Pro eventually after saying you weren't going to. What's your opinion on the M4 there? Yeah. So skipping the idea that you also have another M4 device that we'll get to later. Right. Right. So yeah, it is a weird choice. I'd love to know the story one day why the M4 made it to the iPad Pro first. I wouldn't.

I will say, you know, I love my iPad. And I don't think that the... Well, I was going to say the hardware, but definitely the software. If you're not a big games player, I mean, it's just way too much power for what I think you can do with it. Meaning the, you know, the limitations...

Yeah, Games Player or maybe using Final Cut Pro or Logic, the kind of pro apps that they have on there. I do know – I hear a lot from people that are like, oh, iPad is too powerful for what's out there.

I do think that, yeah, there is a software limitation, but I think that in our sphere, especially there's a lot of people that are like, well, I can't run Xcode on it. Therefore there's no professional tools on it. Sure. And I think people do forget some of the stuff like logic and final cut, but you know, I agree in some extent that, yeah, I mean, if you're saying these two first party apps are the only thing that can really take advantage of this full power, you are still at least a little bit on point there.

Now, let me ask you, though, because we both got the new Pro Pencil.

And so, you know, how do you feel about that? Do you think that was a good choice? Let's go back into those announcements. Yeah, Apple also introduced the Apple Pencil Pro at that point, which was compatible not only with the M4 iPad Pro that you got, but also the new M2 iPad Air, which is what I got. And so, yeah, I've definitely been very happy with the M2 iPad Air. It was replacing for me a 2019...

era okay ipad pro this was before the m style devices on the ipad pro um it was the first ipad pro that was compatible with the keyboard the magic keyboard with the trackpad um i bought that because the ipad air was still also compatible with that same keyboard didn't have to buy a new keyboard did have to buy the new pencil pro but that was also a major part of

what I wanted. And yeah, I, I love that pencil pro. I ended up building support for it into black highlighter. Kenny O kind of just got it for free because Kenny O is using pencil kit. Uh, but yeah, no, definitely, definitely some fun new stuff with the pencil pro. And I've been more than happy with the iPad air M two iPad air. It's a great little machine. I actually think the, the M two is probably about the right level of hardware for the,

um, where the iPad, I was going to say should be meaning that the M4, I just don't think it's again there to take advantage of it. But I think the M2 sits nicely with it. You know, if you're looking at it from a, how much did I pay perspective, right? Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I, the M2 very nicely priced for what it is and, and, you know,

Still compatible with that keyboard and trackpad. Still compatible with the Pencil Pro. It's a very nice iPad if you're into the iPad ecosystem. So we talked about the fact that the M4 launched with the iPad Pro was a very bizarre kind of unexplainable choice. Later that month, Apple made more bizarre unexplainable choices with their 100 best albums of all time list. And definitely, yeah, you look at that list of 100 best albums and

I'm not a huge music expert. I don't think you're a huge music expert, but even us is not the world's strongest music experts went, what are these albums? Why are they in this order? Well, who picked this? Yeah. Right. And, uh, yeah, it definitely later in the year, uh, I didn't write this one down for, for covering later, later in the year, they decided to release a coffee table book about this 100 best albums. And, uh,

Yeah, we got another whole series of people talking about, like, who picked these? Yeah. Yeah. This very much feels like one of those kind of Apple saying, hey, don't forget we're a music thing, too. Music company as well. Right? You know. Because it was an odd, like, okay. Yeah.

You know. Okay. What were you basing this on? I don't know. Yeah, it's like... But anyway... I was going to say, it's like, Apple, did you just feel like there was something you had to say in late May? And you're like, let's make up a list. But congratulations to the miseducation of Lauryn Hill, the greatest album ever created. Okay. Moving on to June. Yeah. June is, you know...

Apple Developers Christmas. Yeah. And we had WWDC on June 10th, kicking off on June 10th. And definitely had a lot of great announcements. We had a lot of announcements for all of the various OSs. We're going to skip those for now because we will get back to them when they actually launch later in the year. For now, let's talk about the kind of developer-focused announcements. We had Xcode 16 with automated code completion, which we have now. They also announced a...

other developer feature called Swift Assist that is not actually out yet, so we can't really talk about that much. We got Swift 6 with strict concurrency, type throws, all of those kinds of things that we have in Swift 6, and we got the first release that allowed us to use Swift testing. Thoughts on any of those or anything else that got announced at WWDC that we were super excited about? Yeah, so, you know, the new releases when they announce them now of Swift,

It's kind of an okay thing when we get to June because by the time we get there, those paying attention because of the open source nature on that, we already know what's coming, right? It's more like just a seal of like, okay, and it's out there. So it doesn't feel as special as it used to. And I don't necessarily mean that as a bad thing. I like...

That it's open for discussion. Right. Yeah, definitely. That people can be paying attention to it beforehand. Exactly. I do think there are a lot of people who, you know, just, I mean, they're probably not the people listening to this podcast, but a lot of people who do kind of not really follow the

Day to day of the Swift ecosystem where it is still they get to WWDC and they go, oh, this is a cool new feature. Yeah. And and so it is something to them that they're very much like, oh, this is this is this is a very cool, very big announcement. You know, yeah, all of all of those things, except for the automated code completion. We all kind of knew about. Yeah. Yeah.

People who've paid attention to the thing knew about, but it is still very much a case where Apple does get to have this announcement to a lot of people who are not living and breathing Swift announcements. Yeah, I can identify those people. They're the people that are still arguing about the 100 best albums on the previous item on the list. Yeah.

They were too busy arguing about the list to notice. But I will say, so Xcode 16, right? I mean, hey, we get a new one every year whether we want it or not. Automated code completion is really more automated code confusion, I think. You know? Yeah. I have had it be amazing and I have had it be...

amazingly bad. And I, I'm still on the fence of should I leave it on or should I not leave it on? I know a lot of people who have turned it off, but the times that it works, it's fantastic.

It's great to just hit tab a bunch of times and it's like, yep, you did exactly what I wanted. And then there are other times where it's like, it can't realize that it needs to name the struct that I just created the same as the file name. And it just makes stuff up. Yeah. And I'm like, I, when it's great, it's great. When it's bad, it's bad. And I, I don't understand why.

how to make it lean more towards the former than the latter. I agree, right? When I first started using it, I was like, wow, this is actually really helpful and cool. And then it seemed like the longer I use it, the stupider it got is the only way I can describe it.

And that was before I wrote my code. So I know it wasn't me, right? Fair enough, yeah. No, I'm looking forward to the one where the Swift Assist where we can kind of ask it open questions about stuff. But compared to, you know, stuff that's out there now like Cursor or whatever, you know, I'm kind of curious to see if Apple is going to even be able to compete with things out there that are not first party products.

I'll go on the record now and say, I wonder if they're actually just going to throw in the towel and not bother. I don't know. Yeah. Who knows? We'll see if and when they announce or they actually release Swift Assist. Well, part of the reason I'm thinking that too is, look how much they are talking up chat GPT in Apple Intelligence and so on.

I wonder if they might not just hand it off to them and say, can you solve this problem for us? I mean, yeah, I don't know. It very much could be a case where they do that, but I think they would still want to integrate that with Xcode in some way. And even then, I think that there's going to be that Apple piece that they have to do it. Even if the model on the backend is ChatGPT or Quad or whatever, I think that you're going to...

have to deal with the fact that it has to know things about xcode yeah oh yeah and and and so i'm i'm curious to see what apple does with that even if they aren't the ones running the model themselves yeah because they are they are the very least are going to have to open up not necessarily the plug-in architecture that i still think is funny they'll never do that yeah but

what I was going to say was they're going to have to open up something internally to have anything work with Xcode at this point. Later in June, on June 27th, we got the Apple Vision Pro in a couple more countries. In China, in Hong Kong, in Japan, in Singapore.

I don't know that we have too much to say about this. I didn't see any major spike in users after this happened, but it is now available to more people. I feel like we had kind of a similar reaction to it everywhere else in the world that we did in the U.S., which everybody kind of went it and they got it and they said, well, this is cool. This is neat. This is great hardware. Yeah. And then they put it in a drawer.

I wonder if internally in Apple somewhere, someone quietly joked, hey, we shipped four more units this month. And each of those were the demo one for the shop. Yeah.

Time for a break. Hey, everybody. It's Peter Whittem here from the CompileSuite podcast. I want to tell you about Setapp. Setapp is a service that provides a subscription fee of just $10 a month, and you get access to over 200 Mac applications, and it's also available now on iOS as part of that deal.

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If you're interested in checking this out, go to peterwhitam.com, P-E-T-E-R-W-I-T-H-A-M.com forward slash set app, S-E-T-A-P-P. And you can see the details there. And it's got a link that you can go over and start using the service and see how it works out for you. I strongly recommend this to every Mac user. Break time over.

Moving on to July on July 18th, we had another new release of endless hurdles that added the new permanent stadium event, uh,

Because, I don't know, there weren't any real world events that were going on at that point that were relevant. No. No, of course, this was a release to coincide with the Olympics going on over in France. And how did that go for you? Yeah, it's funny. I felt the pressure. Because this was one of those, like, well, if you don't ship this event now, don't bother for four years. So, it was...

It was actually turned out very well. And actually, I would say the stadium event in the game is personally my favorite right now as far as visuals because I went for a slightly kind of like 2.5D view that I think makes it better. I did see...

it's unfair to call it a spike when the numbers are so low. A pimple? I saw a pimple in the numbers. Yeah, there you go. I know there's at least two players. I've got the gold medal going right now. Well done. But yes, this did actually have a new mechanic. Yeah, no, there was a new mechanic of obviously a gold, a silver and a bronze medal.

that just happened to be like a major sports event from that year uh with its own board that the reset weekly it did help push some units i guess i would say you know but it's it is the one that i feel it continued to prove that i planned it right from day one as far as adding events easily let's put it that way makes sense yeah definitely having the ability to do

different things based on, you know, uh, outside culture. Yeah. Right. Exactly. And, and being able to respond to things pretty quickly. Yeah. Definitely. Definitely a cool feature. If only I had done more after that one. Yeah. No, I, I, I telling you, I still want my groundhog day. Yeah. Oh, I know. I know. Maybe in the 3d version seconds coming up. Come on. Yeah. Yeah. 3d version is in production. Well, no, no, no. It's in production being made. It's not out in production. Let's be clear.

It's not in production. No. It is being produced. Yeah. On July 24th, we had Apple Maps launching on the web, which was a thing that I completely forgot existed. Yeah, me too. Didn't even... Yeah. I looked at it today. Looks great. It's very cool. I'm glad that this exists. Yeah. But why? I totally forgot that it did. Yeah. Yeah.

I mean, it's like, I'm sorry, are we going back to like the MapQuest days? I'm going to print maps out now from Apple Maps and take them with me? No, I mean, I think it's useful for people that, you know, if I'm linking to a map, you know, something like if I'm looking up a thing on Maps and I go, I need to go here and then I send it to a friend and they've got an Android phone, then previously they couldn't do anything with it. Bumpkiss.

And now they actually get directed to something that they can look at because I know I have – I get annoyed with the inverse. It's like somebody on Android sends me a Google Maps link and it's like, now I got this stupid app that it's not dark mode and it looks awful and it's whatever. And now at least like, hey, I can annoy them back. Yeah. Yeah.

That's good to see. They can deal with the thing. And guess what? Apple Maps on the web, you know what it has? Dark mode. I think the easier answer is just not to have Android friends.

Yeah. Sometimes you gotta. Yeah, well, you gotta have that one, right? Makes you feel better about yourself. Sorry, Android people. Not sorry. Going on to August, we have kind of a slowdown in Apple news as we, you know, kind of come out of WWDC. We wait for the announcements that are coming later. So the only news event that I have in August is something called the Compile Swift podcast added another host. I'm sure that went just...

Fantastic for them. Well, we'll see how it works out. I appreciate Apple not doing anything that month to help give me space to make that announcement. That was very kind of them. Give you some reason to add a co-host just so that the podcast had something to talk about. Exactly. Right? So really the headline is August 30th, compile Swift on topic. First time this year. Yeah.

In September, of course, we have all of the releases of everything that got announced in June. And so that kicked off on September 9th with the release of the Apple Watch Series 10 and the iPhone 16 series of devices. I don't think either of us got anything that was announced that day. No, we didn't. No, we were like, oh, look, you put another button. We definitely talked about the camera control. Oh, we did. We definitely discussed it. We had a whole podcast episode about it. But yeah, neither of us have used it.

You know, they also had a release. I didn't list this down, but they did release the new AirPods Max, which is the same as the old AirPods Max, but it's got a USB-C port now. Yep.

I didn't get that either, but it's the thing that existed. No, I mean, the 16 being very similar to the 16 Pro, I think was the big major news story this year. And so if you are somebody that doesn't use the Pro devices and you haven't upgraded for a while, the iPhone 16 is a fantastic update for you. You just get the base model 16, and it's basically the same as the 16 Pro, but with the slightly worse camera.

yeah i mean uh definitely a nice release yeah that that seemed to be the opinion of most people which was hey this might be the first year to actually just get a plus just get it just get a regular yeah yeah so or the plus size yeah definitely definitely a nice update i already had a 15 pro so i didn't feel the need to update but uh definitely definitely seemed like a nice update for people that haven't updated in a while yep yeah agreed yeah series 10 also seemed pretty cool uh

I honestly don't know why I didn't get a Series 10. There was a point where I was like, oh, I should get a Series 10, and then I think I just forgot about it. I was the same, actually. I was thinking about, you know, it's like, oh, you know, I've got the whatever it is. And it felt like maybe it was time, but then that thing in my head that said, well, but wait and see what sensors they add next year. I mostly wanted it because I spent forever with the...

titanium apple watch and i really got used to how lightweight the titanium apple watch was and then the last time that i needed to upgrade they did not have a titanium option and so i got the stainless steel version which feels like a tide of brick around my wrist in comparison and so when they came out with the series 10 and they had a titanium version again i was like oh man i need to get that and then somehow just never actually did it

I feel like that's a lot of the watch right there, which is, don't really know why I got one, was going to upgrade, forgot, didn't notice. No, I love my watch. I think it's great. Honestly, I think that the extent to...

Why I forgot about it is just like the watch is great at just kind of getting out of your way and not bothering you. And the version that I have, it just works just great for everything that I need to do. And I've not... It's not fussed me enough to...

say, oh man, I definitely need to get rid of this. I made the joke about it feeling like a brick around my hand. It's not that heavy. I just, man, titanium would be nice. See, I mean, mine is literally my notification machine. So that's it. Oh man, I use mine for a lot. And then of course on September 16th, we had the release of all of Apple's operating systems. You had iPad OS 18, iOS 18, watch OS 11, TV OS 18, and

Vision OS 2. Somebody should make a website that lists all of these numbers. And yeah, no, I think that we definitely had a lot that came out that was kind of mostly overshadowed by a lot of things that did not come out, namely all of the Apple intelligence stuff that was still coming later.

But we definitely got a couple nice things out there. With iOS 18, we had the customizable home screens where you could now put your icons anywhere that you wanted. You could have dark mode icons. You could have the tinted icons. With WatchOS 11, you had several new live activity stuff, new widget stuff.

I don't remember for the life of me what was new in tvOS 18, but that's tvOS 18 for you. New number. Vision OS 2 didn't have a whole lot of new things, but it definitely felt like it cleaned up a lot of what 1.0 was and kind of made it, oh, hey, this is the nice polished version that they probably should have launched with.

But, you know, several solid updates that were kind of, like I said, just overshadowed by the fact that they didn't have the big headline features that were announced at WWDC. Yeah. So...

It's not been a good year for these releases, right? I don't know. I thought they were all pretty solid releases. Oh, yeah. No, no, no. I mean, they were solid, but it was like, hey, all that stuff we told you earlier in the year that you're going to buy this new phone for and stuff. Yeah, about that. Right?

Right? You know, coming on the, it's almost like you got the iPhone 16 this year, but when you buy the iPhone 17 next year, you'll get all the software that we said you were going to get on the 16th.

And then on one day later from that, I released my new app Bark, posted a launch video to YouTube because I was doing this all for the Revenue Cat Ship-a-Ton hackathon, trying to enter in and win a prize there and posted the video to YouTube because that was a requirement of it.

And my launch video got 66,000 views for reasons I still don't quite understand. And definitely was a nice, fun bump to the end of September. Had a whole lot of people that were excited about the app. Had a whole lot of people that were very not excited about the app and let me know about that as well. But yeah.

Overall, I think the number of people that were pretty excited about the app, I thought it was a fun experience to get to see the reaction to that. Yeah, I thought this was great, actually, because it seemed like every time I looked at my phone, there was a new note from you that's like, oh my god, it's this much, oh my god, it's this much, oh my god. And it was just great. So yeah, this was great, actually, because...

Not only did I watch you sort of, you know, from the beginning create this app in a very short period of time. Three weeks. Yeah. But it also goes to show... Idea to creation was like four years, but starting to work on it to creation was like three weeks. Well, but it goes to show that having that pressure helps your ship, right? Absolutely. And then having the payoff of this crazy amount on YouTube...

And it was great because, you know, we all got to celebrate that with you in the Discord and enjoy it. And it's not often that you're in with a group of people like all the fantastic folks on our Discord where something like this happens and you all get to share in the fun of seeing it happen to someone, right? And also trying to figure out how and then realizing we never figured it out. But it doesn't matter. We never figured it out. Yeah.

No, no. Yeah. It was definitely a great experience to have, especially with everybody in the Discord kind of being there and celebrating alongside it. It was quite a lot of fun, especially compared to the other big launch I had in the year earlier that we discussed. Yeah, definitely a significantly...

different outcome. Yeah, because it does. It leaves you scratching your head like, but wait, I sweated bullets on every detail of the other one. It's that typical YouTube thing. Yeah, I spent six months on Kineo for Vision Pro and I spent three weeks on Bark and the level of outcomes above and beyond just the fact that the iPhone is obviously a much more popular platform than Vision Pro.

You know, above and beyond that, like, the amount of response to Bark versus the amount of response to Kenio was...

Yeah. Yeah. But, you know, but it's kind of like that. It's like that stand up comedian thing. Right. Where the audience laughs their butt off at the joke that you didn't think was going to be a big deal. And afterwards, you're like, really, that's the one you laughed at. I wanted this one to be the one that you laughed at. Right. You know, but hey, take what you can get. Right. One is still better than none, you know.

Yeah, absolutely. In October, we kicked it off with Apple kind of continuing to update as many of their devices as they could to be Apple intelligence compatible. And they did that by shipping the weirdestly named iPad ever, the iPad mini parentheses, a 17 pro close parentheses. Uh, it's just a new iPad. Many, uh, seemed like a relatively minor upgrade over the last iPad. Many really just kind of,

getting it up to that bare minimum amount of RAM that they needed for Apple intelligence. But it's nice to see Apple rev the iPad mini when they do, because occasionally we go years and years and years without them doing that. Yeah. You know, the iPad mini, I think, is still a great machine, sits in a nice spot. But dang it, Apple, you don't have to, like, make it hard to remember the names and have an iPad for every $50 or whatever at this point, right? Yeah.

It's okay to just call it the iPad Mini.

We all know what it is. On October 28th, we got the first wave of Apple intelligence features that actually got launched on all of the dot one updates to all of Apple's OSs. We got notification summaries. We got writing tools. We got cleanup in photos and call transcription, a couple, you know, mishmash of fairly simple things, but it was the first set of Apple intelligence features that

Are you using any of those particular features that came out in 18.1? So, yeah, interestingly, actually, the only Apple Intelligence features I've

used intentionally at this point, I would say, is on the Mac and the text features, right? Which are not bad. I mean, they're as good as anything else I'm going with. However, the most entertaining award definitely goes to Summery's

on my iPhone because it... You never know what you're going to get. Exactly. And it has made some of my drives home so entertaining to hear some of these summaries and then trying to figure out what the hell it's talking about. What were you saying? Yeah. My favorite is all of the...

My favorite is all of the messaging apps that don't really break out individual speakers. And then what you get is a notification of like one person said all of these things. And it's just like, well, yeah, I don't get it. Yeah, exactly. And then you go back and you look and it's actually like three people talking and, and it's been kind of mangled. Uh, I hope that this encourages more developers to actually implement that, uh, person by person, uh,

notification stuff but i am not holding my breath yeah we use um unfortunately we use microsoft teams at work and uh on more than one occasion i've been driving home and i i you know i've got my airpod pro twos and and i will say i you know i like this that it reads the messages to those

as you're going along. But on a couple occasions now, it's come up and it said, you know, I'm not going to mention names. Person X sounds confused. Like, no, no, I think it might be you, Apple Intelligence. Yeah.

Personally, yeah, I have not really used the writing tools that you said you do. I do use the notification summaries. They're, yeah, very much a mixed bag. The one that I've used more than anything that I've been surprised by is the photo cleanup feature to just kind of like, you know, take a picture and then there's some bit of trash on the floor or something like that that, you know, I want to send this picture and it's like, I don't want, you know, whoever to be like, why haven't you cleaned up your living room in a week? Yeah.

shut up uh but yeah no cleanup is is actually pretty good if you are doing something big and complex you can definitely see uh weirdness to it but if you're really just like hey you know like this is just a tiled floor or whatever or wood floor and i just you know get rid of this thing no it's it's been pretty good at it and so yeah no i'm i'm actually pretty happy with the the cleanup feature interesting uh

Yeah, that's been my main use of this first wave of Apple Intelligence features. The very next day after launching the Apple Intelligence features, Apple released a new iMac with the M4 chip and a new Mac Mini also with the M4 chip.

I know you got a Mac Mini and we did a whole podcast on Patreon about that and very excited about that. I have kind of for a long time wanted one of the new M series iMacs, but I have no reason to actually get one. So I haven't.

And I'm even more bummed out by the fact that in this case they got rid of the red one and decided to say, no, it actually is pink. Even though the last one, the red one, it was clearly a pink one, but they kept saying it was red. And now this time they're just like, nah, it's pink. It's pink. You know, I totally would buy a product red iMac.

Oh, yeah, that'd be sick. Yeah. Yeah. No, my Mac Mini, absolutely zero regrets there. You know, like you said, we'll put a link in the show notes for the Patreon episode, so I'm not going to spoil it. But going from an M1 MacBook Pro, M1 Pro Max, to the M4 Pro, night and day difference, which honestly...

Honestly surprised me just how much better. It's shocking. Yeah. How much that the, even the max chips of the early M one series devices are blown away by the M four. Yeah, I believe. And then the next day after that. So those keeping along, this is three days in a row, October 28th, 29th. And now the 30th, we got the new Mac book pro with the M four and M pro max chips. This is the first release of the M four pro and M four max. They came out in a new Mac book pro and,

And I kind of feel like these have been completely overshadowed by the Mac minis. Everybody's been blown away by the Mac minis and nobody that I know has really covered the MacBook pros at all. Yeah. The, the Mac minis are just such a great machine that nobody's really like super focused on the, the pro and max machines. I feel like, you know, I feel bad for them because yeah, I have no doubt that these MacBook pros are every bit as good, but the problem is,

Yeah, when you have a big leap like you did in the Mac minis, yeah, you totally overshadowed it. It's almost like a wasted announcement from Apple at that point, right? Almost, yeah. Yeah.

Hey folks, if you like what you're hearing in this podcast and you want to help this podcast to continue going forward and having great guests and great conversations, I invite you to become a Patreon supporter. You can go to patreon.com forward slash compile swift where you will get ad-free versions of the podcast along with other content. Month after that, November 19th,

Apple shared the most popular podcast of 2024. I don't know why we weren't on that. We must have just barely missed that cut. You know, we were probably just outside on the list, right?

Come on, Apple, show us some love. We got a milestone that we're going to cover in just a little bit. But yeah, we should have been right there. Yeah. Yeah, I feel like we're trying to help Apple out here by promoting Swift and Apple development and everything else. The least they could do is just put us in the top 10, right? Figure it out a little bit. You know, a little bit of quid pro quo. Come on. Yeah. Moving on to the last month of the year, December 3rd.

We had a release of Job Finder Tracker 1.2 with resume support. Yeah. How's that been going? Talking about overdue releases. Yes, finally shifted. So the bad news, I have not seen, nobody's bought it since the update, but that's okay. That's fine.

The commitment to this feature was a feature that the one and only user, thank you, one and only user, who you may know, asked for. So it was important to get it in there. And actually, I would say it's an important feature for sparking some ideas for the next series of things to do. And perhaps more importantly, you know, as a developer, sometimes you need to ship something online.

So badly. Just to feel better. Exactly. Remind yourself, look, I am a developer and I did ship, right? And so, you know, the rash of development and that and shipping these things at the end of the year and still having a full-time day job and the podcast and the streams was important to me. So I'm actually, Phil, whilst I'd like to have seen some units ship by now, that's okay if they don't.

It was an important morale boost for me. Definitely. Definitely understand that case, especially when you haven't shipped for a while. Really just getting that first one out again, it's just like, man, it feels good. Yeah. Yeah. Speaking of things that feel good, two days after that, we had the Compile Swift podcast reaching 100,000 lifetime downloads, which...

Again, do not understand how we didn't make it into that top podcast of 2024. Yeah. But yeah, no, definitely a nice big round number. And don't we love celebrating big round numbers? Oh, yeah. You know, and especially...

When you consider, well, this would be episode 177, I think, in total. So, you know, when you break that down, that's a nice ratio right there. And, you know, I do want to take a moment to say thank you. Seriously, thank you to every single listener, all the guests, the co-host. I never in a million years would have dared dream to do this.

have 100,000 downloads when I started this crazy idea. So it wouldn't happen. It would not have happened if it wasn't for all of you because, just as importantly, the support that I get over the years from emails and messages from folks to say, hey, keep going. It's tough. So...

thank you to all of you, and that's going to help kick us into, you know. Especially the patrons. Especially the patrons, absolutely. You know, funny enough, that was another thing this year. It's always been there, but this was the first year that it actually saw some traction, which, again, you know, anytime you get like that first sale or subscription or whatever, it's a massive morale boost for anybody that makes anything.

And the first person to subscribe to your patron got a special bonus prize of being a co-host. Yeah. See, that's what happens, folks. So that one's gone. Sorry, you can't have that one.

But no, seriously, never thought it would happen. This was just a pipe dream of an idea, and that was total justification for it right there. On December 11th, we got – now we're getting into like less than a week ago. We had the second wave of Apple intelligence features.

We had some of the image generation stuff. So you got image playground, Genmoji, image wand, all of the various abilities to kind of create images from either prompts or from other images, that kind of thing. You had the ability to...

Dig into writing tools. You can now tell it what you want changed rather than just kind of the presets that you had in the first release of writing tools. And you now have the ability to talk to chat GPT through Siri. Mm-hmm. Have you... I actually have not used any of these new features yet. I...

I'm pretty sure I upgraded in the last week. I have not used any of these. None of them have been anything where I've felt the need to check them out. How about you? Yeah, so I did try the Image Playground in the beta. And in fact, if I remember rightly, I did it on at least one stream.

And hey, friend of the show, Adam Wolfe, has also been using it as well. Now, I'd be curious to see, shout out to the audience here, tell us if you've been using it and what you think. Because I'll be honest, I've been greatly under-impressed. It seems like every description I put in has really not worked and not even been close.

And then when I start to re-describe it, and I tried like four or five attempts in flow conversation, it just seemed like it was doing whatever the hell it wanted, basically. So, you know, again, expect it more from Apple. Let's put it that way. Now, I will say what is nice, though. What does work better is when you provided a photo of yourself and ask it to turn it into an illustration or something. That's actually pretty good.

But they all do that, you know. And I mean, it's not like we haven't seen image generation like this from every AI provider for years. Right, right. I think for me, same story through and through for this Apple intelligence stuff. You know, we waited...

than Apple said we would have to. And then when it got here, it was like, oh, really? Okay. And then lastly, the most important news story of the year. This was definitely in Apple's newsroom press release. And I knew you would have just the hottest of takes about this. On December 12th, His Majesty King Charles III visited Apple's UK headquarters. Yeah, I bet whatever he bought, the British taxpayer paid for it.

And I'll leave it at that. It says he visited the office, not the Apple store. Ah, well, see, it's even worse. Oh, my God. All right. So that is our year in. Oh, God. So I'll put the subtitle on this one. The subtitle on this one for me being an ex-UK patriot would be, and nobody cared. Yeah.

So that is our 2024 year in review. Definitely a lot of things happened this year. And then in the same breath, kind of not a lot of things happened this year. So definitely an interesting year and kind of

Feels a little bit like a transitional year for Apple. Yeah. And definitely excited to see what we get next year. And stick with us here on the Compile Swift podcast, and we'll be there to talk about it when it happens. Yeah. So, Peter, how can people find you online? You can find me at peterwhedon.com and, of course, compileswift.com for this podcast and all the networks. Yeah.

What about you? I am at coca type.com. Coca type basically everywhere. Yeah. You can find me. I'll be around. Yeah. He'll be around, uh, folks, depending on when you're listening to this, we know when we plan to release it, but depending on when you listen to this, uh, we, we hope you are either enjoying your holiday season or did enjoy it. Uh,

I was going to say, this is going to be our last podcast of 2024. Yep. So, yeah, we hope you all have a great end of the year. Have a great new year. And we'll see you all in the next year. See you later, folks.