Listly by techshare
Some pieces of news about Apple and its products
Recently a new kind of phishing email targets on Apple users. Apple posted a support document detailing a few tips to help customers identify legitimate emails from App Store, iTunes Store, iBooks Store, or Apple Music.
Apple announced that its 29th annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) will take place in San Jose at the McEnery Convention Center from June 4th to June 8th, 2018. Registration is now open for folks who want to attend the event. What do you expect most in the upcoming WWDC 2018? Share your idea with us.
Don’t upgrade your Mac to macOS 10.13.4, at least for now, if you are heavily relying on screen sharing apps like Duet Display, Air Display or hardware like DisplayLink. Many Mac users have reported on Apple Communities forum that their screen sharing apps had problems after they installed the macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 update.
Recently Autodesk Inc. announced that the fully featured version of SketchBook, its digital drawing software, is totally free to use on all supporting platforms, including iOS, Android, Mac and Windows. Previously this app is only free to educators and students, and users still need to pay $2.99 via in-app purchases to unlock Pro tools. As…
Most of us may choose to send emails in an unencrypted way, as after all we don’t contain much valuable information in emails. But when dealing with sensitive data, some will encrypt the email before sending it to the receivers through email clients.
Sebastian Schinzel, the lead of the IT security lab at the Münster University of Applied Sciences, posted a paper on this Monday explaining critical vulnerabilities in PGP/GPG and S/MIME email encryption. In his findings, HTML rendering flaws discovered in Apple Mail for iOS and macOS allow attackers to reveal the plaintext of someone’s encrypted emails without needing the sender’s private encryption keys.
In the WWDC 2018 held on June 4, Apple introduces the next generation (10.14) of macOS system named after Mojave. The macOS Mojave adds a new Dark Mode, the desktop version of several iOS apps, and redesigns an all-new Mac App Store. A public beta is likely to debut this summer, and the final release will come in the fall.