Weeknote: Apple at 50, Mac OS X at 25, BlackBerry, UK age verification, The Last Ninja OST and more

Apple is 50. Almost. I asked everyone on the Stuff team about their favourite Apple products and wrote about the top 50, which the editor scythed into five parts, which start today. Some of the choices (and omissions) may well surprise you.
Mac OS X isn’t 50. It hit its quarter-century, though, and I wrote a quick piece about this most lickable of operating systems.
BlackBerry is back. Ish. The new Titan 2 Elite is aiming at the thumbs of the nostalgic. So I wrote the tongue-in-cheek ‘Over 6,000 people backed this new BlackBerry wannabe and I think they’re all mad’, which apparently pissed off QWERTY fans. Perhaps they can use those tiny keys to search the web for a sense of humour.
Before BlackBerry phones was the BlackBerry 850. Effectively a souped-up pager, it made business types very happy. I wrote about that too.
I recorded a podcast! I’ll be on The Bunker next week, talking about Apple, who’ll duly remove me from the company’s Christmas card list. Again.
Apple loves ads. Apple is going to infest Apple Maps with them. Apple appears to have lost sight of doing everything for the benefit of the user and not treating people who buy its gear as the product.
UK age verification continues to be a shitshow. Apple is now challenging user ages, to which you must respond with a credit card, driver’s licence or passport, unless the account itself is over 18 years old. Bit of an edge case and not got one of those proof methods? Tough.
It’s Clockschangemas Eve here in the UK. Overnight, the clocks will shift to British Summer Time, and I’ll be able to breathe again. I adore this time of year, with mornings where the sun doesn’t rock up at stupid o’ clock and where there’s more light in the evening to play football with my kid while she’s still keen. Honestly, I wish we’d ‘forget’ to change them back in the autumn one year…
The Last Ninja was a game for the C64 that got a lot of praise at the time, even though it was a bit fiddly and shit. It looked good, though, and it sounded great. Now, its music sounds even better, due to Matt Gray’s new recordings.


