APPLE
The event began with Apple’s take on the digital newsstand, and the first of several announcements that underscored the importance of storytelling. Apple News+, a new premium version of Apple News, is designed to bring all of your magazine subscriptions into one place.

For a $10 monthly subscription fee, you get full digital access to over 300 magazines. Titles like National Geographic, The New Yorker, Popular Science—and, yes, WIRED—have signed on as part of the service, plus newspapers like The Los Angeles Times and The Wall Street Journal. But this isn’t just reading the news on your iPhone. Each magazine issue will be designed specifically for Apple News+, with features like “live” covers that move around and magazine stories formatted to fit your phone. It will recommend issues based on your interest and show you titles similar to the ones you’ve read in the past. The price covers your whole family, and Apple says it won’t allow advertisers to track what you read. Apple News+ is available starting today, and Apple will even throw in the first month for free.

Apple TV

The new Apple TV experience will combine all of your streaming subscriptions, cable channels, and specialty add-ons into one interface. Open Apple TV and you’ll find recommendations based on what you’ve watched in the past, plus lists of what you want to watch next. A new feature called Apple TV Channels will let you add HBO, Starz, Comedy Central, MTV, Showtime, and others with a single click. Peter Stern, Apple’s VP of services, described it as " only the channels you want, all in one app, with the password you already have."

All of these updates are coming to Apple TV starting this May. Apple is also making a big push to get its content on more television screens: It’ll introduce an Apple TV app for high-end smart TVs, Amazon Fire TV, and Roku later this year.

Apple TV+

But wait, there’s more! Apple will now make its own original content too, with a subscription service called Apple TV+. Think of this as Apple’s answer to Netflix or Hulu. It’s starting off with a star-studded list of collaborators, like Steven Spielberg, J.J. Abrams, and Sophia Coppola, who will create content exclusively for Apple TV+.

Like Apple’s other subscription services, this one will be available both online and offline in the Apple TV app. The company didn’t announce pricing or availability, but offered a "sneak peek" at what’s to come. That included glimpses of a Steven Spielberg-directed sci-fi series called Amazing Stories, a Steven Knight show about a world where everyone is blind, Kumail Nanjiani’s immigrant-focused Little America; and a series called The Morning Show with Reese Witherspoon, Jennifer Aniston, and Steve Carell. Big Bird also made an appearance onstage, as did Oprah Winfrey.

Apple Card

You’re going to need a way to pay for all of these new subscription services, right? Apple announced today that it will make its own credit card, backed by Goldman Sachs, that will upend the way you’ll pay for things.

The Apple Card isn’t like other credit cards. There are no late fees, annual fees, or international fees. Customer support comes through iMessage. And while there is a physical card you can swipe (made of titanium, naturally), it’s designed to be used primarily on your iPhone, like Apple Pay. “It’s always with you because it’s in your iPhone, in the Wallet app,” said Apple Pay chief Jennifer Bailey onstage today. When you spend with an Apple Card, you earn 2 percent cash back (3 percent when you buy Apple products). A feature called Daily Cash puts these rewards in your Apple Cash app to use right away. You can spend it like real cash: online, at points of sale, or sending it to friends over iMessage. Each transaction is authenticated with TouchID or FaceID, and Apple says it won’t share your purchasing data with anyone. It will be available in the US starting this summer.

Sourced through Scoop.it from: www.wired.com