In The Last Campfire, you play as a lost ember trapped in a dark fantasy adventure. Through a variety of tactile puzzles, you must find a way home while restoring hope to friends along the way.
Tap the joystick icon on the App Store to find this and over 100 other ad-free games with no in-app purchases.
Find it on the App Store: https://apple.co/3gYAuXm
Learn more about Apple Arcade: http://apple.co/AppleArcade
A journey through cinema history is reimagined for the vertical screen in Damien Chazelle’s “The Stunt Double,” a short film Shot on iPhone 11 Pro.
Watch as classic genres are flipped on their side, from action movies to silent films, spy flicks to westerns, reframing and modernizing the movie magic we know and love.
Original Score by Grammy Award® winner Lorne Balfe. Listen here http://apple.co/LorneBalfeYT. Or on iTunes http://apple.co/LorneBalfeiTunes.
We reached that goal in April 2020, and we’re certainly proud that our facilities, corporate emissions, and corporate travel don’t contribute carbon to the planet. We use 100 percent renewable electricity, and we’ve invested in the restoration of forests, wetlands, and grasslands to remove carbon naturally.
However, all of this is just a starting point. We have an entirely different goal in mind. It’s kind of an audacious plan. By 2030 our whole carbon footprint — from manufacturing to transportation to end-of-life material recovery — will be nonexistent. All of Apple will be 100 percent carbon neutral. To do that, we’ll be using renewable energy and recycled materials throughout our supply chain. We’ll be restoring natural ecosystems around the world. And we’ll reuse as much as we can.
While designing the world’s most innovative products, we’re also designing a sustainable manufacturing process.
To really get to carbon zero while making products people all over the world love — a lot of people might say that’s impossible. We say it won’t be. Keep an eye on us and see.
“What can I do with the sweaters I’ve worn on my back.” Tyler Mitchell takes us to his place in Bed-Stuy, as he works on a new portrait series using only elements from his own bedroom. Remote cameras were set up in the fashion photographer’s apartment, capturing his creative process as he shot and edited the series over a 24 hour period. Digging through references, compiling a mood board, capturing the images, scanning them into his MacBook, and editing the selects in Photoshop. Putting the final touches on the portraits just before midnight.
Learn more about MacBook: https://apple.co/2OEx9kt
Song: “one life, might live” by Little Simz: https://apple.co/397fsn1