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It's different for guys. We have alot more that's sensitive down there, whereas if a girl doesn't have her clitoris, she's lost alot of sensitivity. I'm not particularly against male circumcision, since it's just removal of skin, but to cut off someones clitoris is plain mutilation.

You cannot support one form of circumcision and not the other. You either do it to both or do it to none. Who are we to judge what is mutilation and what isn't. Both forms can be judged to be mutilating.

I'm not particularly against male circumcision, since it's just removal of skin, but to cut off someones clitoris is plain mutilation.

Firstly there are three different types of female circumcision, though this is what is said about Type I:

""Clitoridotomy" (which is also called "hoodectomy" as a slang term) involves the removal or splitting of the clitoral hood. The United Nations Population Fund states that this is comparable to male circumcision." (Wikipedia)

Type II is slightly more extensive, whereas Type III is very drastic and is the one that is most criticised. However, the point I am making is why should any parent have the right to do something so drastic and permanent to a child? That is not a point you can just shrug off.

What's the difference to the guy if it happened before he can even remember? Even if it does decrease the pleasure of sex, so what? How would he even know what he's missing? It's like asking somebody if they'd have been happier if they were never born. How could you possibly have any basis to compare in the first place, you know?

Firstly there is no "even if is does decrease the pleasure" - it is fact. As an uncircumcised man I can tell you that when the foreskin is retracted the skin underneath it is very sensitive - remove the foreskin that protects it and have it constantly rubbing against your underwear and the skin toughens up and becomes less sensitive. A circumcised man can have rashes and dryness that are typically prevented by the foreskin. Secondly, remove people's eyes at birth and they grow up not knowing what they've missed - it's still wrong.

Having decreased 'sensitivity' during an activity that you occasionally spend a few minutes doing (and presumably still enjoy) is pretty different from being unable to function properly in every-day life.

Blind people can still function properly, it is an insult to say they can't, they just don't have the full range of abilities that a fully abled person does. The point is where do you draw the line? How about finger nails? Hair? Toes? If you remove a toe it doesn't compromise a person's ability to function, they just have reduced ability (in this case ability to walk/balance is slightly reduced, comparable to the loss of sensitivity through circumcision) - it's still wrong for a parent to choose to do that. Unless it is for strictly medical reasons (as stated in the British Medical Association guidelines) it should not be carried out. When a child is older (13 is a typical age for that sort of responsibility) they can decide for themselves whether they want to have it done... however, if their parents have already gone and done it they cannot take it back and decide to keep it.

It's not different for guys (for Type I/II at least - Type III is barbaric), it's just more accepted culturally (particularly in the US).

You cannot support one form of circumcision and not the other. You either do it to both or do it to none. Who are we to judge what is mutilation and what isn't. Both forms can be judged to be mutilating.

No that's not accurate. Male circumcision removes foreskin, female circumcision removes the clitoris, so to compare if you did similar female circumcision to a man you'd be removing the head of the penis.

But at the end of the day the only reason to circumcise a man is medical, and the medical reason is based on cleanliness. Instead of circumcision a parent should sit down with their child and explain to them, if/when I have children I'm never going to hold back on information or detail when it's needed. Why be vague?

Afaik there is no reason to circumcise women (at least that I would deem acceptable).

If my example in the post above seems extreme, I was trying to get across an idea, not say it is exactly the same as, I'd much rather be circumcised than have 1 hand, as I still function well enough (read: enjoy myself) like I am - though I wouldn't object to more. Hedonism ftw.

Edit: What's type 2, if 1 is the removal protective skin and 3 is the complete removal of the clitoris?

Or is type 1 reduction and type 2 removal of the skin?

I still do not buy this medical excuse. From what I can see, there is absolutely no excuse to circumsize a male other than it being "cleaner" for you, when in reality, there is less than a 4% chance to get infected, assuming you never clean it out (stats were from BMJ (British Medical Journal). There was a study a few months ago by an American Medicine Journal from New England that said that circumcision is lowering drastically and should even out at 50/50 for new borns in the coming years in the US.

In Canada you gotta pay $200-300 when your baby is born to get it circumsized, this went into effect a few years ago I think. I support circumcision but I don't think it should be mandatory. Leave it to the parents and their beliefs.

There isn't really an arguement you can make in support of it, but what's the arguement against it? 'It's wrong' doesn't really do it for me.

What's the difference to the guy if it happened before he can even remember? Even if it does decrease the pleasure of sex, so what? How would he even know what he's missing? It's like asking somebody if they'd have been happier if they were never born. How could you possibly have any basis to compare in the first place, you know?

The argument against it does not even need to exist: there needs to be an argument for it. To say that there must be an argument against it is the same as saying there must be an argument against removing your eyes at birth, or your thumbs, or the tip of your tongue. I don't need to argue why not; there is no question why not as there is no rational argument in support of it.

On the matter of arguing against the reasons for it: cleanliness is not something that is handled with surgery. It is something that is handled with soap, water, and care. Armpits generate foul odor from apocrine glands in the skin. By burning the skin--thus destroying the hair follicles and covering the area with scar tissue--the odor will be almost entirely eliminated. Is that an appropriate way to move towards greater cleanliness?

If you take the time to read the link I posted, you'll find a very helpful FAQ that answers this question even further. http://www.mgmbill.org/faq.htm would be the page.

If it weren't this way, what would be the problem with cutting one of your testicles out? After all, even though "it's wrong," that's not a good enough reason not to do it.

What's the difference if it happened before he can remember? If you can't remember pain you experienced does that mean the pain never happened? Not remembering pain necessarily happens after experiencing the pain. By your same reasoning it is perfectly acceptable to inflict any other kind of pain on an infant because the child will never remember the pain. Not only that, but the pain can be on the level of having your genitals cut without anesthetic and could last for years. What's the big deal? They won't consciously remember it.

Regarding the decrease of sensitivity during sexual pleasure, you've got your facts mixed up. It's not a matter of "never know what he's missing." Sexual pleasure decreases gradually over time due to the build up of keratin on the penis. This is caused by the penis being unprotected by the foreskin and constantly rubbing against the body and clothing. Sexual pleasure most definitely decreases over time, so the pleasure that was once experienced diminishes with time.

Even then, when posed the way you pose it, it's like having one eye removed at birth. While your capacity for vision has been diminished it hasn't been lost, but since you never experienced life with full vision how can you know you're missing anything?

I hope this answers your questions. Your arguments (or perhaps they were only questions) come up empty. It always comes back to "Can I cut part of your dick off to save you some time in the shower?" So, can I?

You can do some googling on that and it'll reveal that circumcised penises are supposed to get less sensitive.

Find a guy who has two penises. Circumcise one leave the other alone. Let him "test" it. Any experiment that doesn't follow those steps won't justify it for me.

And as for the cleaner, what - didn't your parents teach you how to wash yourself?

Oh I get it, it's the easy way out from actually being a parent that teaches your children, just snip a little here, a little there and hey - no need to talk about 'the private parts'.

Isn't that basically it?

I didn't get my circumcision until I was 12. It doesn't feel any different. Only it doesn't feel as itchy as it did when I didn't have it circumcised. And those white thingies that collected behind the foreskin don't appear anymore. So I'm pretty glad I got mine circumcised. Less hastle.

And those white thingies that collected behind the foreskin don't appear anymore. So I'm pretty glad I got mine circumcised. Less hastle.

:wacko:

Guess what?

People tend to shower more often than once every month, hence their personal hygiene tends to be a little better than "oh look at all this stuff that's gathering here, lol!". :|

You cannot support one form of circumcision and not the other. You either do it to both or do it to none. Who are we to judge what is mutilation and what isn't. Both forms can be judged to be mutilating.

No that's not accurate. Male circumcision removes foreskin, female circumcision removes the clitoris, so to compare if you did similar female circumcision to a man you'd be removing the head of the penis.

Exactly. It's really insignificant for a guy, but for a girl it's totally different. I honestly wouldn't have been bothered if my parents had had it done at birth.

Quote - (SaLiVa @ Jun 4 2006, 11:27)

And those white thingies that collected behind the foreskin don't appear anymore. So I'm pretty glad I got mine circumcised. Less hastle.

ew! :no:

People tend to shower more often than once every month, hence their personal hygiene tends to be a little better than "oh look at all this stuff that's gathering here, lol!".

Much agreed dude.

I was never "cut".

Im happy for it too. If somone wants to go chopping on my "lad" i would expect to be informed about it first. :crazy:

:wacko:

Guess what?

People tend to shower more often than once every month, hence their personal hygiene tends to be a little better than "oh look at all this stuff that's gathering here, lol!". :|

Hey! Give me some slack :p I was 12 back then. Didn't even know what the penis was used for other than peeing!

I hope this answers your questions. Your arguments (or perhaps they were only questions) come up empty.

They were mostly only questions. As i already said, i don't support non-consensual circumcision on the sole basis that it should be up to the individual. I just don't think 'it's less sensitive' is a very good arguement.

I just don't think 'it's less sensitive' is a very good arguement.

How has it got to the stage where cutting off skin at birth is almost considered routine? And now people have to come up with reasons why it's right to leave it there, it's ridiculous. And the fact that there are now products available to recreate the foreskin shows that there are enough people out there that are displeased with what has been done to them.

There was a documentary on BBC 3 a few weeks ago called 'Circumcise Me', can't find it anywhere except ed2k, you should watch it. What it seems to boil down to in the US is that you have to pay for the procedure ($100?) so people are making lots of money.

Let's not forget that this is also a surgical procedure and as with any surgical procedure (however minor) there are risks.

No that's not accurate. Male circumcision removes foreskin, female circumcision removes the clitoris, so to compare if you did similar female circumcision to a man you'd be removing the head of the penis.

Actually, the UN said that Type I female circumcision was comparable to male circumcision.

NEway, it's black and white to me. You either respect the rights of other people or you don't. I know I wouldn't like anyone messing with my body, so I would certainly not force that upon anyone else. I don't have any problem with circumcision - I disagree with it but it is my right to do so - but I do have a problem with it being FORCED upon very children that have no say in the matter.

'however, if their parents have already gone and done it they cannot take it back and decide to keep it.'

actually, there is a reversal operation. they stretch the skin over the head and basically make a new foreskin.

also, the arguement for? how about the fact that virtually every STD study, from HIV to herpes finds that men with uncut penises contract and spread STI's more than circumsized men. the cells of the foreskin shed easier inside of a vagina than other cells of the penis.

i'm circumsized, it wasn't at birth when i was about 7-10 years old i had enumerous operations on my unit and i guess they just lopped it off. Sex life is not hindered, and i think you'll find instances when it is due to circumsion are quite rare.

i can see why not to circumsize a male boy, for sure. i just don't really see why it's so bad if a competent parent decides for their child. that's what parents do, God bless 'em.

How has it got to the stage where cutting off skin at birth is almost considered routine? And now people have to come up with reasons why it's right to leave it there, it's ridiculous. And the fact that there are now products available to recreate the foreskin shows that there are enough people out there that are displeased with what has been done to them.

There was a documentary on BBC 3 a few weeks ago called 'Circumcise Me', can't find it anywhere except ed2k, you should watch it. What it seems to boil down to in the US is that you have to pay for the procedure ($100?) so people are making lots of money.

Let's not forget that this is also a surgical procedure and as with any surgical procedure (however minor) there are risks.

I don't know what you're talking about, i already said i disagree with it. My contention was basically that there are many other, far more important, reasons to be against it than the fact that it's less sensitive.

edit: Well, maybe not many other reasons. One or two i guess.

The argument against it does not even need to exist: there needs to be an argument for it. To say that there must be an argument against it is the same as saying there must be an argument against removing your eyes at birth, or your thumbs, or the tip of your tongue. I don't need to argue why not; there is no question why not as there is no rational argument in support of it.

On the matter of arguing against the reasons for it: cleanliness is not something that is handled with surgery. It is something that is handled with soap, water, and care. Armpits generate foul odor from apocrine glands in the skin. By burning the skin--thus destroying the hair follicles and covering the area with scar tissue--the odor will be almost entirely eliminated. Is that an appropriate way to move towards greater cleanliness?

If you take the time to read the link I posted, you'll find a very helpful FAQ that answers this question even further. http://www.mgmbill.org/faq.htm would be the page.

If it weren't this way, what would be the problem with cutting one of your testicles out? After all, even though "it's wrong," that's not a good enough reason not to do it.

What's the difference if it happened before he can remember? If you can't remember pain you experienced does that mean the pain never happened? Not remembering pain necessarily happens after experiencing the pain. By your same reasoning it is perfectly acceptable to inflict any other kind of pain on an infant because the child will never remember the pain. Not only that, but the pain can be on the level of having your genitals cut without anesthetic and could last for years. What's the big deal? They won't consciously remember it.

Regarding the decrease of sensitivity during sexual pleasure, you've got your facts mixed up. It's not a matter of "never know what he's missing." Sexual pleasure decreases gradually over time due to the build up of keratin on the penis. This is caused by the penis being unprotected by the foreskin and constantly rubbing against the body and clothing. Sexual pleasure most definitely decreases over time, so the pleasure that was once experienced diminishes with time.

Even then, when posed the way you pose it, it's like having one eye removed at birth. While your capacity for vision has been diminished it hasn't been lost, but since you never experienced life with full vision how can you know you're missing anything?

I hope this answers your questions. Your arguments (or perhaps they were only questions) come up empty. It always comes back to "Can I cut part of your dick off to save you some time in the shower?" So, can I?

lol your arguement about pain just shows the way the world is going. pretty soon the baby will be sueing the doctor for slapping it on the butt. and as for pain not being remembered/not existing, well, that's the tree falling in the woods arguement, isn't it?

as for pleasure 'decreasing with time', that doesn't make much logical sense. skin is skin, after all, even if penile. sure, if i wore gloves all the time except when i did some really important task my hands might feel whatever it was slightly more. i'm sure if a guy wore silk boxers for a few weeks this same scenario would happen.

also, i'm glad the WHO is using it's time and resources for such precious matters such as this, rather than something insignificant like the bird flu or HIV.

I didn't get my circumcision until I was 12. It doesn't feel any different. Only it doesn't feel as itchy as it did when I didn't have it circumcised. And those white thingies that collected behind the foreskin don't appear anymore. So I'm pretty glad I got mine circumcised. Less hastle.

Thank god you got it done then. Now you can take less showers than you did before and not witness that dirtyness under your foreskin from lack of washing yourself ;)

'however, if their parents have already gone and done it they cannot take it back and decide to keep it.'

actually, there is a reversal operation. they stretch the skin over the head and basically make a new foreskin.

also, the arguement for? how about the fact that virtually every STD study, from HIV to herpes finds that men with uncut penises contract and spread STI's more than circumsized men. the cells of the foreskin shed easier inside of a vagina than other cells of the penis.

Firstly, the reversal operation is very crude and nothing like having a proper foreskin. Secondly, a three year old doesn't have to worry about STD's. Once the child is 13, which is a reasonable age (and way before most people have sex), they can decide to have it done themselves. I know parents make decisions for a child but forcing a circumcision on them should NOT be one of those decisions - I personally think it should be illegal. Parents shouldn't be allowed to bleach black children's skin, cut off toes, pull out fingernails, circumcise them or anything else - that should be for the child to decide when they are old enough to do so.

As I said I have NO problems with circumcision - I do have a problem with it being forced upon a child for non-medical reasons.

also, i'm glad the WHO is using it's time and resources for such precious matters such as this, rather than something insignificant like the bird flu or HIV.

So the WHO should only focus on the number one issue of the day and ignore everything else... do you have any idea how retarted that sounds? That is one of the most ridiculous statements I've heard all day!

I'm going to reply to a bunch of people at once.

Find a guy who has two penises. Circumcise one leave the other alone. Let him "test" it. Any experiment that doesn't follow those steps won't justify it for me.

This shows your inability to visualize, rationalize, deduce, and a complete ignorance about the scientific method, the topic at hand, and while it's troubling that proving things to you requires jumping through impossible hoops it's satisfying knowing that those of us who adhere to reason know better.

lol your arguement about pain just shows the way the world is going. pretty soon the baby will be sueing the doctor for slapping it on the butt. and as for pain not being remembered/not existing, well, that's the tree falling in the woods arguement, isn't it?

To equate slapping on the butt, which is done to stimulate the baby into breathing and has tangible medical benefit, which leaves no mark and has pain lasting only a few seconds, with cutting part of his dick off is to attempt to distract from the true argument and is a straw man.

The whole "tree falling in the woods" thing is an inaccurate analogy as well. If a tree falls in the woods and no one is there to hear it, no one hears it. If a knife cuts part of your dick off and you're there to feel it, you are there to feel it. If you are there to hear the tree and later forget you heard it, the past does not magically change and the event un-happen.

as for pleasure 'decreasing with time', that doesn't make much logical sense. skin is skin, after all, even if penile. sure, if i wore gloves all the time except when i did some really important task my hands might feel whatever it was slightly more. i'm sure if a guy wore silk boxers for a few weeks this same scenario would happen.

This isn't something that's up for debate. This is acknowledged medical fact. Take the time to read up on the fact that it happens before saying it doesn't make sense. In any event, the skin of the head of the penis is very, very different than the skin on your hands. The penis is made to be sensitive so as to induce orgasm so as to provide for procreation. The penis is used rarely. Your hands are used constantly and provide your primary method of physical interaction with everything.

I just don't think 'it's less sensitive' is a very good arguement.

As I said, it isn't a matter of arguing "don't do it because it decreases sensitivity," it's a matter of the person that wants to cut part of a man's penis off arguing effectively for doing so. If that argument were effectively made, the decrease in sensitivity argument would be a part of a larger argument that would be intended to show that the benefit of circumcision is outweighed by its negative effects.

actually, there is a reversal operation. they stretch the skin over the head and basically make a new foreskin.

If you read the link to the mgmbill faq, one of the questions is: "Can circumcision be reversed?" And the first sentence replies: "The unique nerve endings that are cut off during circumcision cannot be restored." There is no reversal of circumcision, there is only a workaround.

also, the arguement for? how about the fact that virtually every STD study, from HIV to herpes finds that men with uncut penises contract and spread STI's more than circumsized men.

How about the fact that virtually every case of STD transmission has resulted from genital-to-genital contact? If the entire head of the penis were removed at birth there would be nearly no pleasure from sex for men and STD transmission would fall dramatically. Men with full length penises would be the agents of disease.

That's called cutting off your nose to spite your face and is an after-the-fact argument in support of circumcision. If we ritually cut out one eye of newborns and found--hundreds of years later--that in the one-eyes the incidence of pink-eye was diminished when compared to the two-eyes, would that be a justification?

In any event, your information is factually incorrect (and you can verify that through studying the matter, perhaps on Wikipedia or Google or the mgmbill.org site among others).

i can see why not to circumsize a male boy, for sure. i just don't really see why it's so bad if a competent parent decides for their child. that's what parents do, God bless 'em.

Agreed. It is a necessary part of human existence for parents to decide for their children. But it is also a necessary part of human existence for the strong to defend the weak, and today the weak are having their genitals ritualistically mutilated. We stop parents from abusing their children, even in the name of their religion, yet we permit an irreversible highly painful abuse of their genitals? How is that consistent, appropriate, or right?

Agreed. It is a necessary part of human existence for parents to decide for their children. But it is also a necessary part of human existence for the strong to defend the weak, and today the weak are having their genitals ritualistically mutilated. We stop parents from abusing their children, even in the name of their religion, yet we permit an irreversible highly painful abuse of their genitals? How is that consistent, appropriate, or right?

You seem to have changed direction in your argument halfway through.

but circumcision changes nothing really. I mean, it doesn't limit the guy in any way, it's just a hell of a lot cleaner.

Ahem.

circumcision removes many nerves which make sex more exciting. You don't need a scientist to prove that, nerves make you feel. The more nerves, the more you feel. Right? Right. Take that out and what you got? Slightly less fun (but still fun) sex.

And it doesn't make it cleaner. For christ sake how many times do you guys shower? Is it that hard to wash it? Stroke back, wash, rince stroke front Done!

Oh wahtever, back on topic.

female circumcision is ****ing barbaric. male circumcision, whatever, it's just skin for most people but unlike what religion claims, it doesn't make it cleaner. It should only be removed IMO if it causes any problems in the near future.

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There, the company announced plenty of cool stuff, including a remake of Halo: Combat Evolved, a special 25th anniversary XBOX Series X with a classic translucent green design (coming in November 2026), details about Gears of War: E-Day, Spyro: A Realm Beyond after nearly 20 years since the last release, a new Hellblade game from Ninja Theory, a new expansion for DOOM: The Dark Ages, fresh details about State of Decay 3, and even a new entry in the Crazy Taxi series. More improtantly for XBOX fans, Microsoft announced the return of XBOX exclusives, with Gears of War: E-Day and Clockwork Revolution kicking it off. Microsoft also has some good news for Nintendo Switch 2 owners. Minecraft is coming natively to the second-gen Switch, offering better performance and new features, including the visual overhaul called "Vibrant Visuals." Playground Games revealed a 30-minute gameplay video of the upcoming Fable, showcasing combat, action, NPC simulation, relationships, and player choices. Additionally, the studio confirmed a bug with Forza Horizon 6 wiping saves for some gamers. It also had to shut down one of the game's online modes after users discovered an infinite money glitch. NVIDIA announced new games for the GeForce NOW streaming service and a big Summer sale that lets you get 12 months of GeForce NOW for $35 or $70 less, depending on the tier. Speaking of discounts, check out this week's Weekend PC Game Deals article, full of discounts and the latest freebies from the Epic Games Store. Great deals to check Every week, we cover many deals on different hardware and software. The following discounts are still available, so check them out. You might find something you want or need. GIGABYTE Radeon RX 9070 XT Gaming OC ICE 16G - $649.99 | 13% off 1TB Samsung T7 Portable SSD - $189.98 | 31% off AirPods Pro 3 - $179 | $50 off Edifier R1280Ts Powered Bookshelf Speakers - $129.99 | 24% off This link will take you to other issues of the Microsoft Weekly series. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing for extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option.
    • Microsoft Flight Simulator's City Update 15 enhances Midwest cities by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The third major city update of the year has landed for the original Microsoft Flight Simulator and the 2024 release. The latest drop is upgrading the visuals and regional accuracy of three metropolitan regions in the American states of Illinois, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The 15th city update is adding eight new areas of interest that have been enhanced with high-fidelity TIN (triangulated irregular network) surface texturing in the mentioned regions. The free update highlights Chicago, Elgin, Cicero, and Arlington Heights in Illinois, as well as Minneapolis, St. Paul, Bloomington, Duluth, Brooklyn Park, Woodbury, Lakeville, Plymouth, and Blaine in Minnesota. In Wisconsin, the development has also upgraded the lands and buildings of Milwaukee, Madison, and Racine. The update lands just as one of the world's largest enthusiast flight simulation conventions, FlightSimExpo, kicks off in downtown St. Paul, Minnesota, on June 14. The Flight Sim development team's 40-minute keynote at the event can be watched here. At the same time, Microsoft is bringing the 6-seat, single-engine, multi-use light civil airplane Piper M600 into the game as a part of its Expert Series 2 program. This premium plane can be purchased from the in-game marketplace for $24.99. City Update 15: The United States Midwest is now available in Microsoft Flight Simulator, as well as the newer Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, as an optional download. It can be accessed across Steam and the Microsoft Store for PC, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5, as well as Xbox and PC Game Pass subscriptions. Xbox One, mobile, and PC players can also jump into the new content using Xbox Cloud Gaming if they have a Game Pass Ultimate membership. The game must be updated to the latest version to download this free update from the in-game marketplace.
    • Five things you might have missed during Apple's WWDC 2026 by Aditya Tiwari Image: Apple Apple's annual developer event, WWDC 2026, happened from June 8 through June 12. We have already covered several new features and updates that the iPhone maker unveiled during the official keynote. Apple took Google's help and finally announced the upgraded Siri AI personal assistant, which now comes with an app. Moreover, a truckload of Apple Intelligence features took the center stage. That said, this year's WWDC is a bit different, and you might have noticed or missed the following stuff: Apple's ongoing unification of platforms Image: Apple One thing Apple is widely known for is its seamless hardware-software ecosystem. The company added a new chapter in 2020, when it began the Apple Silicon transition and launched macOS 11 Big Sur with native ARM support. Some major changes happened last year as well, when Apple renamed all of its operating systems to version 26 and introduced the Liquid Glass design language. Until WWDC 2025, Apple keynotes had dedicated segments for iOS, iPadOS, macOS, watchOS, and other operating systems, in which the company discussed each in detail. The WWDC 2026 keynote was different, and Apple allotted most of the screen time to Apple Intelligence and Siri. It didn't even publish separate press releases on its website for different operating systems. While it might seem surprising at first, it shows how Apple plans to move forward with its software ecosystem. Be it the Liquid Glass changes, child safety updates, or other features, they are mostly rolling out across multiple platforms. In other words, Apple is slowly blurring the line between its operating systems and achieving feature parity wherever possible. It's easy to rule out that someone in Apple's marketing team forgot to press the publish button. Everything is a calculated move when it comes to a company like Apple. Putting Apple Intelligence left, right, and center hints that the OS itself is no longer the product anymore. It's Siri, not Pepsi Time and again, various Apple products have been compared to unrelated things and turned into meme material. You might have heard about the "cheese grater" Mac Pro or the "trash can" Mac Pro, to name a few. It's Siri's turn this time. The upgraded AI assistant got a fresh logo, and people have started comparing it with Pepsi. There are other contenders, such as the Sony Ericsson logo and the Yin and Yang symbol. Shot on iPhone. Edited on Mac Image: Apple Apple has been putting the iPhone's camera muscles to the test on various occasions. Even NASA astronauts took it to Space earlier this year and captured some out-of-this-world photos. Recently, Apple TV streamed the first major live sporting event shot entirely on iPhone 17 Pro: an MLS match featuring the LA Galaxy vs. the Houston Dynamo FC. The 'Pro' iPhone has also been used to shoot Apple events in recent years. It's "Scary Fast" Mac event in 2023 was among the earliest attempts, and the tradition trickled down to the WWDC 2026 keynote, which ended with the tag line "Shot on iPhone. Edited on Mac." It's unsurprising to see Apple flexing the camera capabilities of its Pro models, especially when it has been baking professional-grade features, including ProRes RAW and Genlock. Hints for the foldable Apple has been sitting on the foldable iPhone for so long. There is still confusion over when the company will make it official. A recent report said that the iPhone Fold might get delayed as Apple is struggling to perfect its hinge mechanism. But Apple has been dropping hints here and there. A developer dug into the iOS 27 beta code and found internal references about device folding states. As verified by Macworld, the code includes references to "foldState" and "angleDegrees" internal status values, which are apparently designed to tell apps if a device is folded and at what angle. As of now, no other Apple device uses these states. The publication also found internal code suggesting Apple has been testing a device with both Touch ID and Dynamic Island, a combo that doesn't exist today. Last event as Apple CEO Image: Apple Tim Cook's bond with Apple is now almost three decades old, having started in 1998 as the SVP of Worldwide Operations. Back in August 2011, Steve Jobs stepped down as Apple CEO months before his passing, and Cook took charge. Now, the baton has been passed to the hardware chief, John Ternus, who will take over the role on September 1. WWDC 2026 is the last major Apple Event for Tim Cook as CEO. We have seen so much during Cook's tenure over the years, much of which defines Apple as we know it today. From new hardware product lines like Apple Watch, AirPods, Apple Vision Pro, and Apple Silicon, to boosting Apple's services business with Apple Music, Apple TV, Apple Pay, Apple Arcade, Apple Fitness+, Apple Care One, and more. That said, the first developer betas for Apple's latest operating systems are now available. You can check if your device is supported on iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27 Golden Gate, watchOS 27, and other platforms. What's your favorite feature that Apple announced this year at WWDC 2026? Tell us in the comments.
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