Chapter 4 discusses all things Apple TV+, including how to use it with your Apple TV streaming box.
The Apple TV moniker can be a bit confusing because it’s been used for more than one product. Apple TV+ is the service we’re discussing, Apple TV is the name of a hardware device, and Apple TV was the name of an app (now known as simply TV).
Photo courtesy of Apple, Inc.
FIGURE 1-2: Apple TV+ provides great original programming.
Apple Arcade
For years, iPhone and iPad have been great gaming devices, but no one would mistake either of them for an Xbox or a PlayStation. Games on an iPhone or iPad are fun to play and there’s been a huge selection of them for quite a while. Some of the biggest games of recent years may even owe Apple a debt of gratitude for the reach into the world’s households they’ve enjoyed; Minecraft, Angry Birds, and Fortnite leap readily to mind.
Then Apple had the wonderful notion that it would be fantastic if we could carry over gameplay from one device to another in the Apple ecosystem. You know, play your game in the car (as a passenger, of course!), and then pick up right where you left off on your Apple TV. Figure 1-3 illustrates the same game running on iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, and a Mac.
Photo courtesy of Apple, Inc.
FIGURE 1-3: Apple Arcade games can easily jump from one Apple device to another.
They then had the wonderful notion that they should provide games in a subscription format, which would cost only a small amount per month yet deliver a massive library of the latest and greatest games for their platform. Think Netflix, but for games.
Voila! Apple Arcade was born.
Although some of Apple’s services are available across non-Apple platforms, this is not the case with Apple Arcade. You can't take advantage of the Apple Arcade service on Android and Windows devices.
Apple News+
I mention in the Introduction how my parents always knew where they could find me: hovering around the magazine rack in our neighborhood grocery store. Back in the day (I won’t say which day, to maintain some sort of mystery in the author/reader relationship), the magazine rack was where you could find at least some kind of information on just about any topic under the sun: news, sports, computers, cooking, religion, automobiles, fashion, entertainment, crosswords, and many other topics I’ll save my poor tired hands from typing. Now that the Internet is the virtually unlimited source of knowledge, magazine racks have become more sparse at time goes by. (Yes, I did get a bit misty-eyed writing those words.)
Apple must have someone after my own heart working there, because I believe they saw the same distressing situation and decided to do something about it. That something is Apple News+.
Apple News+ is a virtual magazine rack, giving you online access to some of the best journalism and publications on God’s green earth. Not only can you read the latest and greatest articles, but you can also listen to (many of) them, too! And Apple News+ is available on all Apple devices, including automobiles outfitted with Apple’s CarPlay, shown in Figure 1-4.
Apple News+ offers entire magazines (cover to cover, no less), newspapers (local, national, and international), articles curated to your tastes, audio articles, and more. Chapter 6 gives you all the details you need to make the most of Apple News+.
Photo courtesy of Apple, Inc.
FIGURE 1-4: You can listen to articles on Apple News+ in your car with CarPlay.
Apple Fitness+
Several companies deliver exercise regimens via the web, giving you access to some of the world’s top trainers in your own living room. But as we all know, when Apple jumps into an existing market, they tend to not only do it well but also take it up a notch. That’s what they’ve done with Fitness+.
Fitness+ offers video workouts by great trainers but also incorporates them into Apple’s ecosystem of hardware and software catering to health and wellness. Fitness+ can offer workouts anywhere at any time and uses your Apple Watch to keep track of your body’s vital health statistics before, during, and after your workouts. Those stats can be displayed onscreen (shown in Figure 1-5) using your iPhone, iPad, or Apple TV.
Photo courtesy of Apple, Inc.
FIGURE 1-5: Apple Watch shows your health stats onscreen.
To use Apple Fitness+, you must have an Apple Watch (Series 3 or newer). Fitness+ is one of Apple’s services that won’t work with non-Apple hardware.
Chapter 7 will get you going with Apple Fitness+.
iCloud
iCloud isn’t where Apple devices hang out when they die, in case you read the name of this service and envision iMacs laying on iClouds playing a harp. Rather, it’s Apple’s suite of online storage and productivity tools.
iCloud gets its name because Internet-based storage and other services are said to exist in the cloud, meaning they’re not stored or installed directly on your computer or smart device.
iCloud with Apple One includes several tools:
iCloud Drive: Take advantage of up to 2TB of online storage for your files. Chapter 8 shows you how to use iCloud Drive across your devices, both Apple and non-Apple.
Photos: Upload and share your photos and videos across all your devices and with some of your favorite contacts (see Figure 1-6). Chapter 10 provides the details.
Mail: Access your email on any device anywhere you have an Internet connection. Check out Chapter 11 to learn more on checking and sending email with your Apple email account.
Calendar: Keep track of your events and subscribe to multiple calendars. Chapter 12 will help get you going.