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what's up Doc?!....Apple launches all-in-one Apple products Documentation website......
#1
.....website that provides links to user guides, repair manuals, tech specs, software downloads, and more for a variety of products all at one place.....


Apple Launches All-in-One 'Manuals, Specs, and Downloads' Website

....Apple recently added a new "Documentation" page to its website that provides links to user guides, repair manuals, tech specs, software downloads, and more for a variety of products. Some of this information was previously found across separate pages on Apple's website, and it has now been combined in one place for convenient access.

The page includes categories for the Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod, Vision Pro, Apple Watch, Apple TV, AirPods, HomePod, displays like the Studio Display and Pro Display XDR, accessories like the Apple Pencil and Magic Keyboard, and software.



There is also a search tool on the page that provides links to support documents and other relevant information based on the keywords entered.

The new page was earlier spotted by Japanese blog Mac Otakara, and it may be worth bookmarking for reference purposes......



...........everything.......at one place.................?!
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#2
Link to the actual documentation site.

https://support.apple.com/en-us/docs
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#3
Based on your subject, I thought they were getting into the Electronic Medical Record business.
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#4
Apple had such a page decades ago where a person could get manuals and repair guides.
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#5
GGD,

Thank you for the link. The software page is interesting. Lots of titles including older versions of iTunes, iPhoto, iWork components like Pages and such. The one key thing missing is the links for downloading various versions of the MacOS. I guess Apple doesn't want you messing around with stand-alone installers and/or wants you to get it via Software Update. Annoying.

Robert
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#6
GGD wrote:
Link to the actual documentation site.

https://support.apple.com/en-us/docs

I've had this bookmarked for 20 years - it can't be THAT new...
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#7
Somewhat hard to read the way they refer to some of the models in the titles. I actually struggled to find my 1 year old MBP M2 Pro because they refer to the chip name only if it was a later variant of that year's computer or a materially different design.

So:

MacBook Pro (14-inch, 2023)

but then:

MacBook Pro (14-inch, M3, Nov 2023)

and then:

MacBook Pro (14-inch, M3 Pro or M3 Max, Nov 2023)
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#8
That's a great resource. Thanks.
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#9
There was a time when Apple had such a page, that, if I recall correctly, had manuals available as pdfs.

I'm not crazy about the inability to download a 'manual' from this sight.

Keeping manuals locally is so convenient.

Anytime I buy a devices of some nature, I look for an online pdf manual to download.

This site seem more of an update using Apple's idea of a Apple-modern motif, a face-lift.

It may have more info added to the page than years past, but the basic page/content isn't new.
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