Apple takes on Adobe with a creative app pack
Apple’s apps cover image, video, and audio, and can be paid for monthly or yearly. Or you can just skip the middleman and buy them outright, too.
Sometimes distinct from apps on our phones and tablets, software covers the apps on our computers, which are typically bigger and more fleshed out (but not always).
Pickr's software coverage details news and reviews of software for PC and Mac that anyone can find and play with, and may even include how-to assistance to help you use what's out there.
Apple’s apps cover image, video, and audio, and can be paid for monthly or yearly. Or you can just skip the middleman and buy them outright, too.
Don’t like paying for Photoshop or Illustrator? You may not need to, as Australia’s Canva says its apps that do much the same are now free. Yep, you read that right.
Those videos shot on your phone don’t have to stay as short grabs of your life, and if you’re used to Adobe’s video editing app, you can now take it to go.
If you rely on AI to assist you and want it inside your web browser, Microsoft’s Edge might have a reason for you to try it again on Windows and Mac.
An iPhone or iPad you may already own is about to get more control for phone calls and a sleek new look. What’s coming to iPhones and iPads this year?
A new look, a unified approach to naming, and more AI via Apple Intelligence is coming to all Apple operating systems.
Logic’s latest update means those random musings are potentially a new take, and there’s even a way to break up recordings, too.
How much of what you listen to was created without the aid of artificial intelligence? Depending on what you listen to, the answer might surprise you.
Creating is typically a solo endeavour, but a new feature coming to Photoshop means creation can be done in a co-op kind of way.
The rise of viruses led to antivirus, and the rise of malware to internet security. The next extra app and service you get to look forward to could come from identity theft.