Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple’s new TV app puts all your shows and movies in one place

New MacBooks may have been the highlight of Apple’s “Hello Again” event on Thursday, but the Cupertino, California company made sure to give its streaming TV platform more than a little love. The company announced two new apps for Apple’s set-top boxes and “TV,” a new portal for the Apple TV, iPhone, and iPad that collates content from across your pay-TV subscriptions in a single, unified place.

First on stage were the new apps for Apple TV, the latest to join Apple TV’s burgeoning crop of content – the set-top box’s app store recently surpassed 8,000 titles, company chief Tim Cook said. Microsoft’s blockbuster Minecraft game is coming to the platform by the end of this year, but more significantly, so are what Cook called “a new category of apps […] that combine the power of Apple TV to make watching video more interactive and social.” The first is Twitter: the social network’s product manager, Ryan Troy, demoed NFL live stream integration. During a football broadcast, a rail along the right-hand side of the screen showed tweets, Twitter polls, and Periscope streams “from multiple angles” in real time.

Recommended Videos

Second up was TV, a new app for the Apple TV and Apple’s mobile devices that delivers what Cook describes as “unified TV experience.” Aesthetically speaking, it looks a lot like a sleek, modern digital TV guide, and that’s sort of the point — it’s partly a “recommendation engine” that surfaces new shows based on content you purchased, rented, downloaded, or otherwise streamed via any Apple TV set-top box. But that’s just the tip of TV’s iceberg.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

TV surfaces shows and movies from all of the services to which you subscribe, organized principally by items you’ve purchased, the TV app’s top recommendations, and shows and movies you’ve marked as “favorites.” Up Next presents shows you’ve bought on iTunes in the order you’re most likely to watch them. And a final category, “Watch Now,” changes to reflect which pay-TV services you use on your Apple TV — install a new streaming app on your set-top box and “Watch Now” automatically populates with that provider’s shows and movies. “It will completely change how you watch TV on your Apple TV as well as your iPhone and iPad,” said Cook.

Enhanced search is another way the viewing experience on Apple TV and iOS devices is improving. A beefed-up version of Siri, Apple’s cross-platform voice assistant, can resume shows where you’ve left off and search across streaming providers to find program schedules. Ask “what football games are on right now,” for instance, and it’ll pull up a schedule, a list of games that can be watched live, and related events both ongoing and upcoming.

“With Apple TV, we [wanted] the experience on your television to be as great as the experience across the rest of your Apple devices,” said Cook. “Now with the TV app, there’s really no reason to watch TV anywhere else.”

The new TV app will begin rolling out to Apple TV devices, iPhones, and iPads in December. Improved Siri search launches on Apple TV today.

Apple’s TV builds on the company’s ongoing effort to make combing its platform’s myriad programming less of a chore. In early August, the company debuted a redesigned, Siri-touting Apple TV remote app for iOS that recognizes voice queries — shout “search for movies starring Johnny Depp,” “play music by the Beastie Boys,” or “show me popular sci-fi shows” and the Apple TV responds accordingly.

And it’s a boon for Apple’s partners, besides. “For network programmers, it provides a central hub for promoting new shows,” wrote USA Today. “[It’s] a helpful tool at a time when old programming tricks for launching a new series, such as wedging a freshman show next to a hit program, don’t work in a digital world.”

But not everyone’s joining the party. According to a report from Recode, Netflix won’t be among the list of pay-TV providers available on TV at launch.

Apple’s pivot to curation services amounts to a concession, on its part, to TV content producers. In 2015, Bloomberg reported Apple had “indefinitely” suspended plans to launch a live TV service over pricing disagreements with launch partners. Not much has changed since then —  in February, CBS CEO Leslie Moonves said the company had not had any recent conversations with Apple about live streaming.

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
New Siri remote for Apple TV could be easier to find with an embedded AirTag
The Siri Remote in someone's hand.

Buried deep inside the code for Apple's latest mobile software -- iOS 16 -- is a reference to "SiriRemote4" and "WirelessRemoteFirmware.4," according to MacRumors, which noted the discovery made by a contributor at AppleDB, an online database of Apple software and devices. Given that all previous Siri remotes (the two original touchpad editions, plus the newest silver model) have been accounted for through other references like "SiriRemote3," the conclusion is that Apple is readying a fourth generation of this device.

Why is the the reference in a beta of iOS, when the Apple TV runs tvOS? On the one hand, it could simply be that Apple needs to keep its mobile remote functionality (which is now embedded in an iPhone's Control Center) up to date with whatever features a new remote might offer. Or, it could be because Apple is planning to add a feature to the next Apple TV remote that would require (or at least benefit from) an iPhone. And that feature could be a detailed Find My function, courtesy of Apple's AirTag technology.

Read more
Can’t stand the Apple TV touchpad? You can buy the new Siri remote for $59
Apple TV 4K new remote.

If you've been putting up with the touchpad on Apple's Siri remote for the last four years, we've got good news: You can now replace it with something better. The second-generation Siri remote, which was announced at the Apple Spring Loaded event (along with a refresh of the Apple TV 4K) can be purchased separately for $59.

The new remote will work with the 2017 Apple TV 4K as it's now the default remote that ships with the $149 Apple TV HD (which hasn't been updated).

Read more
Is this leaked image the new Apple TV Siri remote?
Apple TV (2015)

There's been a lot of speculation that Apple might be planning a replacement for the remote control that ships with both the Apple TV HD and Apple TV 4K. Today, that possibility seems closer to reality than ever courtesy of a leaked image acquired by 9to5mac.com, which editor Filipe Espósito claims is "definitely the new remote being developed by Apple." Espósito further claims that the new remote is referred to internally at Apple by the model designation B519.

There's no way to be sure -- Apple is notoriously silent on all rumors and leaks -- but the shape and button layout captured by this simple line drawing has many of the hallmarks of Apple's previous design work.

Read more