Weeknote: 13 June 2026 – touchscreen Macs, iPhone Fold apps, WWDC, footie games, CrazAI Taxi, John Wagner gets an MBE and more

A touchscreen Mac might be on the way. I write for Stuff about why it would be a bigger risk for Apple than you’d think.
We know how iPhone Fold apps will work. Probably. Basically, Apple has finally decided iPhone apps can be responsive and adjust to fit a viewport. Yay, I guess. Although that surely means iPad apps on the iPhone Fold aren’t happening.
Screen Time is getting an upgrade. Which is probably just as well, because it’s full of problems. As a parent who uses Screen Time for my kid and myself, I like the look of some of the new features, not least scheduling.
WWDC happened. It had the weirdest keynote I’ve ever seen from Apple. No slides full of new operating system features. It was basically: Liquid Glass now sucks less; FASTER FASTER FASTER; we remembered Screen Time exists; AI AI AI AI. Anyway, here’s one piece on what I wanted and what we got and another on 8 things we learned at WWDC.
Apple Intelligence is somehow now ‘goodbad’. For Amateur Photographer, I argue that, despite some smart new features in iOS 27, Apple’s about to take a dangerous step towards fake photography. And over at TapSmart, I explain why Apple Intelligence in iOS 27 is a big leap forward and a mess of contradictions.
The World Cup has kicked off. As did Team Stuff when deciding which footie games should feature in the list. Here’s the top 30. And, no, the league leader is never going to shift.
Sayyyy-GAHHHH! The new Crazy Taxi game looks pretty great. Inevitably, though, Sega used generative AI during development. So, uh, CrazAI Taxi? But Sega then clarified that it was only for background assets. And then Sega clarified the clarification, claiming “everything in the final product is going to be original”. Good grief.
Judge Dredd’s creator is getting an MBE. John Wagner is on the 2026 list, which, given his anti-authority leanings, he probably thinks is pretty funny. Anyway, nice to see British comics – and especially Wagner – being recognised. Now the Americans need to do the same and get him in the Eisner Hall of Fame.