An Apple event is always a spectacle, and Wednesday’s “Far Out” launch was no exception. There were new iPhones, new watches, new Airpods—and car crashes, lots and lots of car crashes. The company laid out its latest lineup of products, which it hopes will be in high demand as the holidays draw near.
But between the introductions, there were a few themes Apple hit on to underscore the features of the new devices. Here’s a look at some of the most notable.
Women’s health is a priority

More importantly, however, the company emphasized the Watch’s privacy features, noting “your health data is yours and yours alone.” Undoubtedly anticipating fears of tracking data being used against women who choose to get abortions in the post-Roe v. Wade world, Apple said all data was encrypted on the device and only accessible via passcode or biometric ID. Even if your watch is synced to iCloud, Apple is unable to access it.
Apple sees a big market in adventure seekers

The extreme athlete market, though, is a limited one. And Apple is acutely aware of that. It certainly made the case to that audience, but in doing so, it made the Ultra the “cool” offering, which should boost sales to people whose idea of deep-sea diving is swimming to the bottom of their pool to pick up the toy their kid dropped.
The design isn’t changing much

And the iPhone 14 (starting at $799), while it too has plenty of new features, like the expected better camera and boosted battery life, doesn’t offer any design updates. In many ways, the 14 felt like a slight upgrade of the 13 (which isn’t a bad thing, given how well the 13 was received).
Admittedly, the 14 Pro ($999 and up) had some notable changes, like what Apple dubs the “dynamic island,” a moving notch at the top of the screen, which expands into different shapes to alert you to calls and other notifications, and a big upgrade on the camera, particularly the ability to shoot 48MP resolution RAW photos.
Disaster looms
Although there were plenty of new features and products, Apple went a bit dark with its marketing at times. There were heart attacks, bears, plane crashes, and lots and lots of car crashes (shown to highlight the vehicular crash detection of the new watches and phones). Apple also spent a fair bit of time focusing on emergency SOS operations, both in the iPhone and the Apple Watch Ultra. (That SOS satellite system will be free for two years. Apple didn’t announce what it would charge after that.)

Farewell sim cards

The metaverse can wait
While there was plenty of speculation that Apple might use this event to debut, or at least hint at, its virtual or mixed reality headset, it did not. We think. There was an odd teaser that appeared to be from the show Severance after the event ended, almost like a post-credits scene in a Marvel movie. It could have just been a teaser for season two or it could be something more. Either way, the lack of a definitive update leaves an open path for Meta, which will reveal its high-end VR headset on October 11.
Apple, though, has never rushed into a market. But don’t expect it to sit on the sidelines forever.
Ak chcete pridať komentár, prihláste sa
Ostatné príspevky v tejto skupine


More than a decade after Casey Anthony was accused of murdering her daughter in one of the country’s most notorious murder cases, this weekend she emerged on TikTok to reintroduce herself.

If what you don’t know can’t hurt you, Elon Musk may be in luck. With a series of candid posts on X, the White House’s resident broligarch has lately been divulging which aspects of civics and dat

When it comes to airports, travelers tend to fall into two camps. There are the anxious types who show up four hours early, with plenty of time to leisurely peruse duty-free and enjoy the airport

Starting today, if you call an Uber in Austin you can match with a self-driving Waymo vehicle.
The launch in the Texas capital is part of an expanded partnership between the two te

The price of used Tesla’s Model 3 and Model Y vehicles depreciated more than any other cars in 2024, according to a Fast Company analysis of CarGurus data.
The average pri

As frustration with corporate power grows under the oligarch-friendly Trump administration, Mozilla Firefox