It's time to sleep the f**k in.
Apple execs didn't have a super satisfying answer about what went wrong with AI Siri, but they also don't really need one.
Blood was spilled, and Intel Macs (among others) paid the price.
Follow along with the Gizmodo crew as we unpack everything Apple announces at its annual developer conference in Cupertino, Calif.
It's still too expensive to buy a headset to make one, though.
Apple's Liquid Glass look is clearly a major visual vibe shift for iOS.
Visual Intelligence brings Apple's AI features a little bit closer to competitors with the ability to see what you're looking at on your phone.
Gaming on iPhone and Mac will now go through a new 'Apple Games' app. Now it just needs games and features players actually want.
The iPad is finally becoming the laptop replacement it should have been years ago.
Would you pay $3,500 for an Apple Vision Pro with better Personas or controller support?
Apple's tvOS might not get the same attention as iOS or macOS, but there's one feature I can't wait to try.
Apple's macOS 26 is the latest software to descend into 'glassmorphism' at WWDC25.
Apple’s new gesture lets you dismiss notifications with the flick of a wrist.
The new interface borrows heavily from the Vision Pro's glassy and translucent visionOS.
Apple's iOS 26 (yes, you read that right) may feature the same see-through bubble UI as the rest of Apple's ecosystem.
If Apple is going to address its stumbles with AI, now would be the time, but my hopes aren't super high.