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Apple packs iPad Pros with faster chips, slims iMacs and jumps into tracking tags

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(Reuters) - Apple Inc announced yesterday a range of new computers, a paid podcasting service and devices for finding lost items, signaling the continued expansion of its once-simple product line into more and more corners of customers' lives.

The new $30 AirTags, tiny devices that can be attached to items such as keys and wallets to locate them when they are lost, were applauded by analysts as a likely hotseller that would also keep the company's more than 1 billion customers locked into its products.

A new iPad Pro tablet, featuring the same Apple-designed processor that powers the company's more recent Mac computers, has keyboard and trackpad options that help make it a full-blown alternativ­e to traditiona­l laptops and desktops.

And a refresh of the Mac desktop line boasts seven color options, harkening back to the famous candycolor­ed Macs that helped Steve Jobs revive the company in the 1990s.

The announceme­nts show how the iPhone maker is accelerati­ng the expansion of its product portfolio and working to keep customers committed to its family of devices even as government scrutiny of the power and reach of major technology firms intensifie­s.

Most of the product introducti­ons had been telegraphe­d before the presentati­on, which had no major surprises. Shares of Apple were down 1.3%, slightly more than the 1% drop in the Nasdaq index.

The new iMacs, which start at $1,299, feature a higher quality frontfacin­g camera and microphone, responding to complaints from consumers during the pandemic that the computer's cameras had not kept pace with iPhones and iPads during an era of pervasive video calls.

"Apple cameras in their computers have been terrible, frankly. They finally have a reasonable camera in the iMac," said Bob O'Donnell, head of TECHnalysi­s Research, who added that the new colors were likely to stand out in a market dominated by black, white and silver machines. "For right now, it feels fresh and new."

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