Finder Guy is an adorably chunky, dual-toned blue creature with a rounded head and a perpetual smile. Apple is being fairly tight-lipped about him; he hasn't been officially announced or acknowledged by the company.
The man's voice is menacing, and British, as he says, 'Today we celebrate the first glorious anniversary of the Information Purification Directives' in a 'garden of pure ideology, where each worker may bloom secure from the pests obeying contradictory thoughts.'
On March 2, Apple unveiled the iPhone 17e, the successor to last year's budget-friendly model. The device finally includes MagSafe support, a feature conspicuously absent from its predecessor, along with an A19 chip and Ceramic Shield 2 for improved durability.
The Apple II put the small, scrappy upstart company on the map. It was Apple's first mass-market personal computer, designed by Wozniak as a complete, ready-to-use machine rather than a bare circuit board for hobbyists which had been the home-computing norm up to that point. The Apple II combined the electronics, keyboard and power supply in a single case, and could plug straight into a monitor screen, making computing feel far less intimidating.