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The Verge’s 2024 Father’s Day gift guide

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The Verge’s 2024 Father’s Day gift guide

Custom Lego minifigure

I’m as big a fan of Lego’s new Barad-dûr set as anyone, but $459.99 is a steep price to pay for a brick-ified rendition of Sauron’s iconic fortress of evil. Thankfully, for a mere $11.99, you can build your pops a minifig version of himself, complete with accessories and a T-shirt showing off his favorite catchphrase. Whether you want to give him a full head of hair is entirely up to you.
Price: $11.99

Hoto electric screwdriver

Hoto’s electric screwdriver is the perfect around-the-house tool for a frequent tinkerer or a weekend warrior building some Ikea furniture. Its simple design makes it compact enough to keep nearby for small to medium-size projects, so your dad doesn’t have to bust out the big tools unless he needs some serious torque.
Price: $42.99+

Elgato Stream Deck Neo

It doesn’t matter whether or not your dad fancies himself an influencer, Elgato’s Stream Deck Neo can make managing his workflows that much easier. The programmable, eight-key macro controller cribs many of the best elements from the company’s pro-grade models and adds two capacitive buttons, letting him switch pages for an infinite amount of customizable LCD keys.
Price: $99.99

Garmin Forerunner 165 Music

Making sense of Garmin’s crowded Forerunner lineup is as easy as learning the platform — which is to say, it’s not. For the uninitiated, however, the Forerunner 165 Music is a great entry-level training watch. It features support for in-depth training metrics and all your basic fitness activities, along with marathon battery life, a crisp OLED display, and a price that’s actually palatable.
Price: $289+

iPad Air (2024)

If your dad is the creative type with a penchant for big screens, Apple’s latest iPad Air isn’t a bad bet. Not only is the new M2 model the least expensive way to get access to the new Apple Pencil Pro but it’s also the cheapest way to get a 13-inch iPad without stepping up to the pricier iPad Pro. It’s also just a fantastic tablet overall, regardless of which size you choose.
Price: $569+

Wavelength

Think you and your old man are on the same wavelength? CMYK’s outstanding board game is one way to find out. The simple premise has you guessing where your partner thinks a specific word or topic fits between two diametric ends of a spectrum, which, believe it or not, can be incredibly difficult depending on how well you know your teammate.
Price: $29.99+

Blink Mini 2

If you want to outfit your dad with a cheap but good security camera, look no further than the Blink Mini 2. The basic 1080p cam is small in stature but big in value, especially now that it packs an LED spotlight, a wider field of view, and USB-C power. It also features IP65 weatherproofing, which means you can use it outdoors if you pony up an additional $10 for the weather-resistant adapter.
Price: $39.99+

Three-Body Problem Boxed Set

Liu Cixin’s The Three-Body Problem is a brilliant piece of sci-fi, so much so that the folks behind Game of Thrones recently adapted the first book in the series for Netflix. The titular box set brings together all three novels in the Remembrance of Earth’s Past trilogy, which chronicles the larger than life story of how humanity responds after making contact with a distant alien race.
Price: $28.78+

AirPods Pro with USB-C

At this point, what can be said about the latest AirPods Pro that hasn’t been said already? The second-gen earbuds have become the default pick for many an Apple user thanks to their great sound, intuitive controls, and deep integration with the rest of the Apple ecosystem. The fact that they can deftly drown out the world outside so your dad can better hear Vampire Weekend’s knotty polyrhythms doesn’t hurt, either.
Price: $249+

PlayStation Portal

Make no mistake, the PlayStation Portal is not a handheld — well, at least not in a traditional sense. It’s essentially an eight-inch, 1080p LCD display wedged between two halves of a standard DualSense controller, providing PS5 users with a way to stream games from their console via Remote Play. It’s not perfect, but at least your dad will be able to get his Final Fantasy VII Rebirth fix even when Bluey comes on the TV.
Price: $199+

Bachan’s Japanese Barbecue Sauce

Like Aardvark, Bachan’s Japanese Barbecue Sauce has become a regular staple in my household. The savory-sweet condiment is pretty atypical compared to American BBQ sauces, which often rely heavily on brown sugar or molasses for taste. Instead, Bachan’s recipe offers a nice balance of ginger, soy, mirin, green onion, and other Japanese flavors that work great if you’re trying to add a kick of umami to your next meal.
Price: $7.98+

Google Pixel 8A

Like the Pixel 7A before it, Google’s latest budget phone is a sensible choice for sensible shoppers. It offers many of the same features found on the standard Pixel 8, including Qi wireless charging and Google’s speedy Tensor G3 chipset, along with a 6.1-inch 120Hz OLED display and a surprisingly good camera system. More importantly, it comes with a staggering seven years of OS updates, which is the kind of ROI that would make even your dad proud.
Price: $499

Moment Santa Fe Shoulder Bag

Every good adventure requires gear. Thankfully, Moment’s rugged Santa Fe Shoulder Bag is built for impromptu road trips and weekend escapades, the kind that require you to pack light and stick to the essentials. The sling’s main compartment is perfect for stowing a 35mm point-and-shoot cam and a few rolls of film, and because it’s made of durable 500d nylon, you needn’t worry if a little rain happens your way.
Price: $60+

Bose QuietComfort Ultra Headphones

Bose’s latest flagship headphones offer some of the best comfort and noise cancellation around, with an excellent transparency mode for when it’s time to let the outside world back in. They may have a high price, but the QuietComfort Ultra Headphones make a great gift for a frequent traveler or commuter who really enjoys their music.
Price: $379

Panel Sound Pickleball Paddles

If your local city noise ordinance hasn’t killed pickleball yet, nothing will. Panel Sound’s fiberglass pickleball rackets are nothing fancy, though they are lightweight, inexpensive, and rather comfortable thanks to their rippled 4.8-inch grip. Plus, they’re certified for tournament play by USA Pickleball, just in case your dad ever feels his third-shot drop is better than it actually is.
Price: $19.54+

Milwaukee M12 Fuel Hammer Drill

Sometimes an electric screwdriver just won’t cut it. Luckily, Milwaukee’s cordless M12 Fuel Hammer Drill is built for such occasions. The compact drill is one of the shortest models in its class, though it comes with a larger 0.5-inch metal chuck that gives it some serious power when your pair it with larger drill bits. However, we do recommend snagging a 4.0Ah high-capacity battery to go along with it — that is, assuming your dad isn’t already tapped into Milwaukee’s 12V ecosystem.
Price: $149+

Helldivers 2

Spreading democracy may not seem like a light objective — especially with today’s politics — yet Helldivers 2 makes it surprisingly fun. That’s partly because the online co-op title is incredibly silly and partly because it has you battling giant space bugs, Starship Troopers-style, instead of campaigning for NATO status. Just remind your dad to watch out for friendly fire and Bile Titans. They’ll get ya!
Price: $39.88+

Fanttik X8 Portable Tire Inflator

Your dad might have been able to inflate your water wings as a kid, but I doubt he could do the same for the tires on his Model 3. Fortunately, Fanttik’s compact tire inflator comes with enough nozzles and packs enough power to fill pretty much anything. It even has a built-in LCD display that lets you set your desired PSI, so he never has to worry about overinflating.
Price: $40.47+

Nocs Provisions Zoom Tube 8X32 monocular

There are plenty of entry-level tools for birding, though I’d argue few of them are as fun as the apt-titled Zoom Tube. Even if it can’t rival a legitimate pair of binos, Nocs’ pocketable monocular affords you crystal-clear 8x magnification and a terrific field of view, not to mention plenty of style if vibrant shades of red, teal, and orange are your thing.
Price: $74.95+

Belkin BoostCharge 3 Port USB-C Wall Charger with PPS 67W

Belkin’s 67W three-port charger is perfect for the dad who has exiled any and all Lightning devices from their life. The portable charger supports USB PD 3.0 and PPS, with the maximum output for each USB-C port clearly labeled should you ever wonder how much power you’re getting when multiple ports are active. Needless to say, achieving optimal charging speeds is rarely as easy.
Price: $35.99+

Lego NASA Artemis Space Launch System

My colleague Sean Hollister, our resident toy expert, once dubbed Lego’s NASA Artemis Space Launch System the best rocket launchpad Lego has ever made. I’m inclined to agree based solely on the sheer spectacle of the towering 3,091-piece replica, which includes a multistage rocket with two solid-fuel boosters, an Orion capsule with foldout solar panels, and a detailed launch tower that makes for a fine piece of nerd decor.
Price: $259.99

8BitDo Ultimate 2.4G Controller

No dad should have to settle for a subpar gamepad. 8BitDo’s Ultimate 2.4G Controller is a budget-friendly premium option with its own charging dock, customizable controls, and a pair of back paddles. The remappable gamepad also sports drift-free Hall effect joysticks and a 2.4GHz wireless adapter, so you can pair it wirelessly with a wide range of platforms, including Windows, Android, and iOS.
Price: $44.99+

A La Sala
(vinyl)

No band conjures pure vibes quite like Khruangbin, especially on wax. The Houston trio’s fourth studio album is a kaleidoscope of low-key sounds from around the globe, all of which buoy their groovy, instrumental psych-rock. It doesn’t matter if your dad can’t pronounce their name — the Congolese rhythms and sun-kissed guitar are impossible to ignore.
Price: $25.99

MeatStick 4 Set

The MeatStick 4 isn’t your average meat thermometer. The wireless, stainless steel striking probe is equipped with four sensors, three of which let you gauge the internal temperature of your meat and a fourth that clocks the ambient temp of your oven. It also offers up to 70 hours of battery life and a 164-foot Bluetooth range, so your dad doesn’t have to miss the game just to keep an eye on his rib eye.
Price: $74+

Onyx Boox Palma

If you’re curious about what would happen if you combined a low-end Android phone with your favorite ebook reader, look no further than the Boox Palma. It’s essentially a 6.13-inch slate with page-turning buttons and a Kindle-style E Ink display, one that allows you to listen to podcasts, peruse newsfeeds, and download all your favorite reading apps via the Google Play Store.
Price: $279.99

Wera Tool-Check Plus bit ratchet set

Every dad likes high torque transfer, which is why Wera’s Tool-Check Plus makes for a nice gift. The durable 39-piece tool set contains all sorts of color-coded bits and bobs for tackling routine bike maintenance and DIY repairs, including a ratchet, seven sockets, a bitholding screwdriver, and 28 nickel-coated bits. Wera tools don’t come cheap, but a quality piece of kit seldom does.
Price: $74.95+

Samsung Music Frame

Eat your heart out, Ikea. The Music Frame is similar to the latest Symfonisk collab in that it’s an Atmos-ready speaker masquerading as a piece of wall decor, except Samsung’s new Alexa-powered Music Frame lets you insert your own physical photographs or artwork instead of relying on Ikea’s default art design. That makes the 12.9 x 12.9-inch frame a hell of a lot more personal.
Price: $397.99+

The Creative Act: A Way of Being

Superproducer Rick Rubin is responsible for some of the most iconic records ever made, including hits from Adele, Run-DMC, and everyone’s favorite sock-loving alt-rockers. His new book, The Creative Act, isn’t so much a tell-all memoir or a collection of name-drops but, rather, a thought-provoking distillation of what he’s learned about the creative process from his four decades working through it.
Price: $16.99+

JBL Charge 5

Pristine stereo sound is great and all, but there’s something to be said about a portable speaker that can truly go the distance. Take the JBL Charge 5 as an example. The powerful Bluetooth speaker relies on a mono driver, yet it offers up to 20 hours of continuous playback on a single charge. That’s long enough for dad to listen to Wilco’s entire studio discography… twice.
Price: $139.95+

Fellow Clyde Electric Kettle

You don’t need to spend much to get a decent electric kettle. That being said, Fellow’s Clyde Electric Kettle feels tailor-made for the hot beverage connoisseur who also has exquisite taste in gadget design. The classy kettle holds a generous 1.5 liters of water and features a wide mesh spout, which is a welcome reprieve from the gooseneck design on Fellow’s pour-over model.
Price: $125

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Mystery box shows are complicated for everyone — even the actors

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Mystery box shows are complicated for everyone — even the actors

Silo is such a complicated show that even its showrunner gets confused sometimes. While filming the final seasons of the Apple TV sci-fi thriller, Graham Yost remembers two instances where he messed up details: once it was an actor who realized that a conversation they were about to shoot should’ve already taken place, the other involved the Japanese localization team pointing out that a subtitle didn’t match what was going on onscreen. In both instances, the problem was ultimately fixed, but Yost’s reaction was the same: “Oh shit, you’re right.”

Keeping everything straight is one of the big challenges of working on such a complex series, and as Silo enters into its final two seasons, the challenge has only increased. So it’s a good thing Yost has a team working alongside him looking for those mistakes. “It’s a lot to keep track of, but everyone is pitching in,” he says, “and I love this sense of collaboration.”

Season 3 of Silo starts streaming on July 3rd, and it expands the story’s scope quite a bit. The series follows the lives of the residents of a huge underground bunker hundreds of years in the future. The silo is home to 10,000 people who essentially live in a vertical city, one divided into layers that each have their own jobs and cultures, from the mines at the bottom to the government up top. The only way to navigate the silo is through a massive spiral staircase that goes from top to bottom, creating a very physical form of class division.

Initially it seemed the residents were the last remnants of humanity living in a postapocalyptic wasteland. But over the course of the first two seasons, it became clear that they lived in but one silo of many, each housing their own communities while isolated from the rest. Season 3 adds a new wrinkle: showing how the world came to be this way in the first place, a process that starts in a world that looks much like our own.

The season 3 premiere constantly jumps back and forth between the bleak future where we’ve spent the last two seasons and our present day, when the decisions were made that led to everyone being trapped inside of underground bunkers. Things are already complicated as the show picks up from last season — protagonist / silo mayor / reluctant revolutionary Juliette (Rebecca Ferguson) has just become the first person to venture between silos and is now suffering from memory loss — and the multiple timelines only ratchets that up.

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“It’s a lot of pieces you’re trying to put together.”

The cast of Silo all have different techniques for dealing with this challenge, which becomes even harder given that scenes are rarely shot in chronological order. For some, daily team meetings with directors can be an invaluable tool. “A lot of days, we’d start the day with story time, and the director would go through where we’re at, where we just came from, what happens next,” explains Alexandria Riley, who plays newly promoted authority figure Camille Sims in the show. “It’s already a complicated story anyway, but then when shooting out of order, you do get a bit foggy.” Ferguson notes that the hair-and-makeup team can be particularly helpful in tracking the story, as they need to be on top of things like scars and burns to maintain consistency. Every detail counts. “The little changes that you do have enormous ripple effects going forward,” she says.

“It’s a lot of pieces you’re trying to put together,” adds Common, who plays Camille’s husband Robert on the show. “It is our job to know where we are, but thank god we had support, too. There are times when I’d have to talk to Alex about something just to be reminded.” The two actors even had separate rehearsals together to make sure they had everything down.

Others took a different approach. Jessica Henwick, for instance, joined the main cast as the present-day investigative reporter Helen in season 3, and says that “I didn’t read any scenes except my own. Because I’m a fan of the show, I wanted to preserve that experience. I will watch season 3 as a fan and see what happens. I don’t know what happens except in our storyline.” (Henwick is such a fan that, soon after she was cast, she had a single goal in mind: “I went to the set and explored the stairs.”)

Image: Apple

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One thing that doesn’t help much, however, is delving into the source material. Silo is based on a trilogy of books by author Hugh Howey; the first two seasons explored the first book, while the final two will wrap up the rest of the story. But much has changed in the adaptation as the TV show attempts to both make Juliette a more visible figure in the central part of the story and update some of the plotlines to reflect present day concerns like AI.

“I started reading the books and realized very quickly that that wasn’t going to help, because the books are so different,” explains Ashley Zukerman, who plays a congressman in the present day storyline. He says that keeping both the novels and the TV show in his mind at the same time wouldn’t be helpful and instead found “that reading the whole scripts and then finding a way to forget [what his character wouldn’t know] was useful.”

With two seasons to go, Silo is racing toward a conclusion as it attempts to wrap everything up. Yost says that four seasons was always the plan, so the process has been figuring out how to fit everything into a set number of episodes. But since the final two seasons were filmed back to back, it also means that the Silo team are done having to worry about keeping all of those complicated plotlines straight. And as much as she says she’ll miss the experience of working on the show, there is one thing Ferguson is excited to be done with beyond memorizing storylines.

“I fucking hated running up and down those stairs,” she says.

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Booking a summer trip? Here’s what you’re giving scammers

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Booking a summer trip? Here’s what you’re giving scammers

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You found the flight, booked a hotel, and gave them your name, passport details and everything else they asked for. At this point, most of us close the laptop and start counting down the days.

But nobody warns you that the moment you hit “confirm,” your trip stops being only yours. Just this spring, hundreds of thousands of travelers learned the hard way what happens when the personal details you share with those companies get out (and how easily they get out).

Some got a scam text quoting their real hotel and check-in date before they were even told their information had been stolen. If you’ve got a trip on the calendar, this is worth ten minutes.

TRAVEL MISTAKE PUTS PHONE, LAPTOP AND STREAMING ACCOUNTS AT RISK

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A single summer travel booking can hand over your name, contact details, trip dates, payment information and even passport data. (Neil Godwin/Future via Getty Images)

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What a single booking hands over

A travel booking may look like a routine form, but it can collect enough personal details to map your trip and your life back home.

  • Full name
  • Home address
  • Phone and email
  • Travel dates
  • Payment details
  • Passport number

Individually, none of it feels alarming. Together, it’s a complete snapshot of who you are, where you live, and when you won’t be home. That is the kind of profile scammers dream of.

How scammers use that data

A criminal who knows your hotel, dates, and confirmation number can send a message that looks exactly like it’s from the hotel: “We couldn’t process your payment. Re-enter your card to hold your room.” It may not feel like a scam. It feels like a headache you want to clear up before your trip. It gets personal, too. If a scammer knows you’re traveling and knows your family, they can call an elderly parent (or you) with a “grandchild stranded abroad” emergency that lands because the timing and names check out.

Trusted travel companies can still expose your data

If your first thought is, “But I only book through trusted companies,” you are not alone.

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So did everyone caught in the breaches below. If a single careless business were the problem, I’d just warn you to steer clear of it and call it a day. Unfortunately, it’s more of an industry problem. And the size of the company doesn’t protect you, because the weak point usually isn’t the company itself, but the chain of partners behind it. So you can do everything right and still have your details slip out through one hotel employee’s infected laptop.

Over the past year, the travel sector has been hit again and again.

  • Booking.com (April 2026). The world’s largest travel platform warned that “unauthorized third parties” accessed reservation data: names, emails, phone numbers, and details like customers’ hotels, dates, and confirmation numbers. No financial data was taken, and the break-in came through hacked hotel staff. The chilling part: scammers sent travelers WhatsApp messages quoting their real booking details, some before the official breach notice even arrived.
  • Amtrak (April 2026). A reported Amtrak data exposure involving more than 2.1 million customer accounts. The exposed information included names, email addresses, physical locations, and customer support records. That kind of data can make a fake “problem with your trip” email feel personal enough to click.

Scammers can use stolen reservation details to send fake hotel, airline or booking messages that look surprisingly real. (Felix Zahn/Photothek via Getty Images)

  • Carnival (June 2026). Carnival confirmed a breach affecting nearly 6 million people after a social engineering attack on a single user account. Some exposed data may have included names, contact details, dates of birth and government-issued ID numbers. For cruise customers, that creates an opening for fake trip alerts, identity-verification scams and phishing messages that sound much more believable.
  • KLM and Air France (August 2025). A third-party customer-service platform was breached, exposing names, contact details and frequent-flyer numbers, which is plenty of material for a convincing “there’s a problem with your flight” call.

GLOBAL SCAM CRACKDOWN LEADS TO 276 ARRESTS

Curious how exposed you already are? Run a free scan to see where your information is showing up online-results usually land within an hour. Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web: CyberGuy.com.

How to protect yourself before your next trip

You don’t have to stop booking trips online, but you do need to make it harder for scammers to turn your travel details into a payday.

1) Verify every booking message directly

Treat every “problem with your booking” message as suspect, especially if it asks you to click a link, re-enter your card or confirm personal details. Instead, open the airline, hotel or booking site directly through your browser or app. You can also call the company using the number on its official website, not the number in the message.

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2) Use a credit card or virtual card when possible

A credit card usually gives you stronger fraud protection than a debit card. If your bank offers virtual card numbers, use one for hotel and travel bookings. That way, if the card number gets exposed, you can shut it down without replacing your main card.

3) Turn on travel account alerts

Before you leave, turn on transaction alerts for the card you use to book travel. Also check the security settings on your airline, hotel and booking accounts. Use a password manager to create and store strong, unique passwords for each account. Strong passwords and two-factor authentication (2FA) can make it much harder for someone to break in, even if your email address or phone number leaks.

4) Don’t store your passport or card in travel apps

Saving your passport, ID or payment card may save a few seconds next time. But if that account gets compromised, those details become part of the damage. After your trip, remove stored passport information, old cards and any documents you no longer need in the account.

5) Set a family code word

A word only your family knows can stop the “stranded grandchild” or “relative in trouble” scam fast. If someone calls claiming there’s an emergency, ask for the code word before you react, send money or share information. That tiny pause can save your family from a very expensive mistake.

6) Shrink your data-broker footprint with Incogni

A travel breach becomes more dangerous when scammers can match it with your home address, relatives, phone numbers and other personal details sitting on data-broker sites. That extra information can help them make a fake hotel message, family emergency call or identity scam feel much more convincing.

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You can try to remove your information yourself, but the process can be frustrating. There are hundreds of data brokers and people-search sites, and each one may have its own opt-out process. Even worse, your information can show up again later.

A data removal service can help by sending removal requests on your behalf and checking whether your information reappears. It will not erase every trace of you from the internet, but it can shrink the amount of personal information scammers can easily find and connect to your travel plans.

Shrinking your online data footprint before you travel can make it harder for criminals to connect your trip details to your home and family. (Al Drago/Getty Images)

Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting CyberGuy.com.

Kurt’s key takeaways

Every travel booking bundles your name, address, trip dates and contact details into one valuable package. Once that information moves through hotels, airlines, booking platforms and outside vendors, it may not stay where you think it does. That is why stolen reservation details are so dangerous. Scammers can use them to impersonate your hotel, send fake payment alerts or target your family while you are away. Book the trip and pack your bags. Just verify messages directly, use a password manager, turn on account alerts and shrink the personal data brokers keep on you.

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What extra step do you take before traveling to keep your personal information out of scammers’ hands? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.

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  • Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide free when you join.

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Apple’s entry-level MacBook Pro could be up for a redesign

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Apple’s entry-level MacBook Pro could be up for a redesign

Apple is working on a “revamped” version of its entry-level MacBook Pro that it could launch as soon as the first half of 2027, Bloomberg reports. The company is also testing four new iPad Pros that are set to launch in the spring with a focus on “internal improvements.”

The updated MacBook Pro, which will keep the 14-inch screen size, will have a design that’s “in line” with what Apple is planning for the touch screen MacBooks it also has in the works, Bloomberg says. Those new touch screen laptops are set to be released between “the end of this year and early next year,” and Bloomberg has previously reported that they will get a Dynamic Island-like pill at the top of the screen.

Apple last updated the base MacBook Pro in October with an M5 chip bump. The company is working on an M6 processor, and Bloomberg says that Apple “finished work months ago” a different base MacBook Pro upgrade that keeps the laptop’s present design and is scheduled to launch this year. Apple will quickly move to the M7 line in 2027, including new Pro and Max chips, Bloomberg previously reported.

As for the iPad Pros, Bloomberg says that they’ll retain 11-inch and 13-inch screens. Apple last updated the iPad Pro line last October with the M5 chip.

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