Todd Haselton

Todd Haselton is CNBC's deputy technology editor in New Jersey. Todd has been covering technology for 15 years and joined CNBC in 2017. He's a graduate of Lehigh University with a degree in English.

49%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a poor reputation for journalistic standards and is not considered a reliable news source.

Bias

86%

Examples:

  • major influencers on Telegram were celebrating.
  • verified accounts on X

Conflicts of Interest

0%

Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

85%

Examples:

  • Apple promises up to 4x faster rendering over the M2 and 1.5x faster processor performance in new iPad Pros.

Deceptions

47%

Examples:

  • But it still feels big, but it's more manageable.
  • Here's what you need to know about it. What's good
  • It still runs the same iPad software, and that's starting to feel dated.

Recent Articles

New iPad Pro Models: Thinner, Lighter, and More Powerful with M4 Chip and OLED Screens

New iPad Pro Models: Thinner, Lighter, and More Powerful with M4 Chip and OLED Screens

Broke On: Monday, 13 May 2024 Apple's new iPad Pro models, starting at $999, are the thinnest Apple products yet with a 5.1mm thickness on the 13-inch version. Featuring stacked OLED screens and updated Magic Keyboard and Apple Pencil Pro support, these devices boast a powerful M4 chip with a 50% faster CPU and four times the GPU performance of its predecessor. Despite hardware upgrades, concerns arise about their value due to running on the same iPad software.
Apple's Vision Pro: A High-End Augmented Reality Device with Ambitious Goals

Apple's Vision Pro: A High-End Augmented Reality Device with Ambitious Goals

Broke On: Wednesday, 31 January 2024 Apple's new Vision Pro is a $3,500 high-end device that combines augment reality (AR) with Excel, Webex, Slack and 4K HDR movies. Despite its shortcomings it's the most fun product in years. Analysts expect massive revenue but don't see it as successful as other products like iPhone or iPad.