Apple Mac Mini M4 review: a tiny wonder Apple provided me with two very different Mac Mini units. This first review is focused on the standard M4 model, which includes a 10-core CPU, 10-core GPU, and the default 16GB of memory. My machine ... 11/7/2024 - 4:59 am | View Link
M4 iMac review: This might be the best iMac ever The results are more impressive if you look at how the M4 does against Intel chips. The M4 iMac is a speedy 53 percent faster than an iMac Pro, and 137 percent faster than an Intel Core i7 iMac. If ... 11/7/2024 - 1:37 am | View Link
Apple iMac M4 Review: The Best All-in-One Gets a Bit Better The design remains the same, but you get a new processor and a more generous RAM offering without a price increase. Sadly, Apple is still miserly with the iMac's storage. 11/7/2024 - 12:00 am | View Link
New details about Libby's phone and the impact of isolation: What defense revealed to jurors Jurors in the trial of Richard Allen heard from a parade of experts whose testimonies are meant to challenge some of the state's strongest evidence. 11/6/2024 - 4:25 am | View Link
Apple iPhone 16 A pple’s annual iPhone launch has been and gone, and with it came the usual quartet of new devices; two ‘standard’ iPhones and two ‘Pro’ iPhones. As expected, Apple spen ... 11/6/2024 - 2:47 am | View Link
Wireless Headphones & Earbuds Enjoy premium sound quality without wires. Shop wireless headphones and earbuds, including Apple AirPods. Buy now at apple.com. 11/4/2024 - 10:55 am | View Website
AirPods Requires an Apple Account and a compatible Apple device running the latest operating system software. Adaptive Audio is available on compatible devices running iOS 18, iPadOS 18 or macOS Sequoia and later when paired with AirPods 4 with Active Noise Cancellation or AirPods Pro 2 with the latest firmware. 11/3/2024 - 3:04 am | View Website
Headphones & Speakers Enjoy premium sound quality on iPhone. Get headphones, earphones and microphone speakers for iPhone from Apple. Buy online with fast, free shipping. 11/3/2024 - 2:14 am | View Website
Apple introduces AirPods 4 and a hearing health experience with AirPods ... Building on years of work in hearing health — including the Noise app on Apple Watch, headphone audio levels with iPhone, hearing accessibility features, and the Apple Hearing Study — Apple is introducing an end-to-end experience focused on prevention, awareness, and assistance. 11/3/2024 - 2:07 am | View Website
AirPods Not all content available in Dolby Atmos. iPhone with TrueDepth camera required to create a personal profile for Spatial Audio, which will sync across Apple devices running the latest operating system software, including iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and tvOS. 11/3/2024 - 1:19 am | View Website
MINNEAPOLIS — When the Miami Heat pulled into Ball Arena on Friday night for what turned into a 135-122 loss, the matchup against the Denver Nuggets was a reminder of how fleeting championship contention can be in today’s NBA, a world of salary-cap, luxury-tax, penalty-apron trap doors.
No, these were not the same Heat and Nuggets that had met two seasons earlier in the 2023 NBA Finals, each with rotations stripped down from what had gotten each to the top, and, in the case of the Nuggets, over the top.
For the Heat, Max Strus, Caleb Martin, Gabe Vincent were gone from the rotation that had fought its way to a Game 5 of that championship series.
For the Nuggets, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and Bruce Brown essentially were forced to take their championship rings elsewhere.
In an NBA world where the emphasis of the collective-bargaining agreement has been a structure designed to maximize the opportunity for continuity with eased extension rules and limitations on outside poaching, the other side of that very CBA conspired to alter the faces of the 2023 Finalists.
Yes, the Nuggets and Heat could have paid to retain each of the aforementioned lost components, allowed to do so under the league’s working agreement … but at a staggering cost.
A cost, granted, the Boston Celtics have agreed to pay to run it back, even as ownership moves forward to sell.
Which brings us to another matchup two days before the Heat and Nuggets met Friday at altitude.
On Wednesday night, in the league’s showcase game of the week in Boston, the Golden State Warriors showed a different side of the stripped-down contender approach.
Facing their own massive tax bill, the Warriors allowed Klay Thompson to walk over the summer in free agency, now a member of the Dallas Mavericks.
Abortion rights advocates want to take their fight back to the Florida Legislature armed with a new talking point: Their cause got about as much support from Florida voters as President-elect Donald Trump did.
But the appeal is unlikely to persuade a Republican supermajority whose members were mostly lockstep against Amendment 4.
That assessment — disheartening though it may be to advocates — rests firmly on an Election Day conundrum: The same electorate that voted 57% in favor of a ballot initiative to protect abortion access also returned to Tallahassee a Legislature nearly identical to the one that approved the six-week abortion ban the initiative sought to overturn.
“Most of the people who got elected voted for the bill that we passed,” said incoming state Senator Randy Fine, R-Palm Bay, who served in the House before winning election to the Senate.
Dear Readers: On Sept. 23, I published two letters from older adults struggling to find a connection (“Still Grieving” and “Wants a Connection”). I asked those of you who have successfully found friendship and romantic partnership at a later stage in life to write in.
I shared some of those great responses last Thursday and, as promised, some more today.
In 2023, United States Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD, released a Surgeon General Advisory on what he termed “the public health crisis of loneliness, isolation, and lack of connection in our country.” Even before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, he said, approximately half of U.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: My wife and I were attending a college production of “HMS Pinafore.” A student was sitting directly in front of me wearing a white baseball cap.
I could tell the hat was going to detract from my pleasure in the show, so I asked the young man, “Would you mind removing your hat?
The 2024 election is over, and the real-life impact of what voters did is far from clear.
People across Florida made their choices, as they also did closer to home in Broward and Palm Beach counties. We accept the results, however puzzling some of them were.
Before we get to those, this fact is telling: Fewer people voted in 2024 in Florida than four years ago, even though the state is much bigger now than it was then.
Unofficially, 10,986,175 people voted in Florida, compared to a total of 11,144,855 four years ago (returns won’t be official for another week or so).
This makes no sense.
Now that a proposed amendment to enshrine abortion access in Florida’s constitution has been defeated, hundreds of volunteers and organizers across the state face the difficult question: What’s next?
Will Floridians of childbearing age continue to live under a six-week abortion ban indefinitely? Could restrictions on abortion become even tighter in the state?
In the days after the amendment’s defeat, reproductive rights advocates considered next steps.