Highlights from Apple’s WWDC: iOS 16, new M2 chip, and watchOS 9

It’s the day after Apple’s WWDC, one of the biggest tech conferences of the year where the company announces its latest, shiniest software (and sometimes hardware) releases. Or, in other words, it’s like Christmas Day for developers.
The announcements created quite a bit of buzz, maybe even more than usual. Some folks are arguing that certain new features are trying to monopolize individual markets and existing stand-alone products like Buy Now, Pay Later apps, whiteboards, and password managers. Here are some of the highlights.
As part of iOS 16, Apple introduces Safety Check, meant to protect people in abusive environments by allowing them to revoke access to passwords and apps. Focus Mode is leveling up, allowing users to customize their lock screen and create more boundaries to only display certain content. Notifications will also roll in from the bottom to keep them from obscuring your photo. iMessage is getting a makeover, too. This includes marking text threads as unread, unsending messages, and an edit button. Twitter, we’re looking at you. 👀
The new M2 MacBook Air sports a 13.6’’ display with a notch, MagSafe, a 1080p camera, and fast charging. The all-new M2 chip debuts with a CPU 18% faster than its predecessor, 20B transistors, 50% more memory bandwidth than the M1, and 24GB of unified memory. In addition to silver and space gray, it now comes in a dark blue called “midnight,” and a light gold titled “starlight.” Soon enough you’ll also be able to upgrade to the new macOS Ventura.
For the health fanatics out there, watchOS 9 introduces more customizable watch faces, an enhanced Workout app, sleep stages, a first-of-its-kind (FDA approved) atrial fibrillation history feature, and an all-new Medications app.
Other key announcements include the iPadOS 16 with Freeform, a Miro-like whiteboard tool, a major update to CarPlay that allows for deeper integration with your vehicle, Apple’s fitness app coming to all iPhone users (even if you don’t have a watch), and the new macOS will allow you to use your iPhone’s camera as a webcam.
What are you most excited about? Let us know.

-
Check out how large brands evolved their messaging over time on CopyFoundry.
-
Purpur is a mental health app that helps build deep relationships. People answer questions about sex and relationships chosen by experts, open up about their desires, and learn effective communication tactics.
-
Call of Fame lets you listen to real-life cold calls made by SDRs in SaaS.
-
Unreal Speech offers an affordable text-to-speech AI that can be used for narrating articles, blogs, newsletters, books, and PDFs.
Grow your app with Setapp: revenue, users, & AI

You shipped the app. Now comes the part nobody warns you about.
Billing across dozens of countries. Licensing agreements. Tax compliance. Customer support for users you haven't met yet. And if your app does anything with AI, add provider management and infrastructure costs to the pile. None of that is why you started building — but all of it is now your problem.
Setapp is trying to take it off your plate.
You probably know Setapp as the subscription marketplace — one monthly price, hundreds of Mac apps. On May 21st, they turned toward developers. The pitch is simple: list your app, reach users who are already looking, and let Setapp handle the business layer.

CryptOS is a collection of Notion templates built to track crypto investments.
Templates can be used to track staking and trading, calculate impermanent loss, and compare yields.
Monday through Friday
Our ultra-fast Daily: Three takes on new products. Yesterday’s top ten launches. That’s it.