Weeknote: 21 June 2026 – social media bans, Mac gaming, AI, Apple prices, Commodore’s phone and Lego pinball

I don’t support social media bans. The UK government announced one this week and the response has been broadly positive. But that’s because people see a THINK OF THE CHILDREN headline and then don’t think about the deeper issues. I wrote for Stuff about why these bans rarely work – and what should be done instead.
Labour’s mulling a VPN ban too. Which will put the UK right alongside the most oppressive regimes in the world, while creating a nightmare for countless companies in the country.
Mac gaming’s future is bright. Mostly because it’ll soon be much easier to play Windows indie games on the platform. Read my piece about GameHub to find out how. (Bonus: Android users may find this piece interesting too.)
Stop using AI for making important decisions! That’s the core of two articles that went live this week, one on why you should be wary about using AI for purchasing decisions and one on why you should be very wary about using AI for health advice.
Apple’s raising its prices. No one knows when nor which devices will be affected. It’s quite possible Tim Cook’s announcement is preparing the ground for iPhone price-hikes this autumn.
Honestly, I’m half surprised Apple hasn’t done this sooner. Plenty of other companies have already ramped up prices to deal with rapidly increasing costs related to storage and RAM. But Apple has historically not changed prices once goods are on sale.
What I find interesting is there’s been a narrative building that Apple currently offers reasonable value regarding RAM and storage – perhaps for the first time. But, really, does it? I’m aware Apple’s implementation cannot be compared with typical RAM and SSDs on a like-for-like basis. But its pricing right now is still significantly higher than what you find elsewhere.
I suspect when Cook called the increases “unavoidable” and the situation “unsustainable”, he’s really talking with regard to Apple’s profits. Apple could choose not to increase its prices, but it won’t – and its own AI efforts are further fuelling the problem.
What will be interesting is whether Apple’s prices will follow suit should RAM and storage prices rapidly fall at some point. If not, Cook is full of it.
Nu-Commodore announced a phone. It’s an odd one – seemingly a phone designed specifically to satisfy the wish-list of Commodore’s current CEO. The idea is it supports most Android apps and has a great camera, but reportedly blocks social media at a system level, along with by default removing various other elements that can be time sinks.
But it’s full of contradictions, such as claiming to be great for privacy yet preinstalling WhatsApp, claiming mobile games are addictive and yet preinstalling C64 games, and marketing itself with a slew of GenAI despite Commodore’s promise being to counter the shitshow that can be modern tech.
Pushback has been severe in some circles – even those that support Commodore’s comeback. Commodore’s response was defensive and whiny. It’ll be interesting to see how well the phone sells.
Lego made a pinball table. I’m in two minds about this one. I love pinball and the kit seems very clever. But I fear that, once complete, it will get old very quickly and not look especially amazing on display.