News

In response to this issue, Apple has added a new setting for the camera app that allows you to revert the scroll direction to how it was in iOS 18. This is only accessible in the latest developer beta ...
We might finally see the first iPhone browsers built on top of third-party engines now that Japanese regulators have taken up ...
You can build your own YouTube queue and watch your videos in peace, with no algorithmic suggestions and no distractions.
Apple has until December to comply with new Japanese regulations requiring it to allow alternative browser engines on iPhones and iPads, in a significant shift that could reshape the mobile web ...
A new Japanese law could force Apple to drop its WebKit-only rule, letting browsers on iPhone finally use their own engines.
The second public beta of iOS 26 is out but it's still prerelease software. It's good to be cautious.
Beyond just requiring Apple to allow third-party app stores, Japan's new anti-trust regulations will also force Apple to allow third-party browsers on iPhone starting in December.
Apple today released a new update for Safari Technology Preview, the experimental browser that was first introduced in March ...
Apple currently only allows browsers that use the WebKit engine to function on iOS, forcing Chrome, Firefox, and others to rely on Safari’s engine.