People Have A Lot Of Feelings About Apple's New Cordless Headphones

&;Apple gotta get rid of our ears next.&;

Apple has just unveiled the newest iteration of its headphones: a cord-free set of EarPods it’s calling “AirPods.”

Apple has just unveiled the newest iteration of its headphones: a cord-free set of EarPods it's calling "AirPods."

Apple

This is Apple’s demonstration of how it works/how you’ll look:

This is Apple's demonstration of how it works/how you'll look:

And if you&;re wondering how it actually works, here&039;s a lot more detailed info.

Apple

Sure, some people were totally impressed by their sleek, ~ergonomic~ design…

Sure, some people were totally impressed by their sleek, ~ergonomic~ design...

Twitter: @TwristN

Twitter: @CherryWallis


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Quelle: <a href="People Have A Lot Of Feelings About Apple&039;s New Cordless Headphones“>BuzzFeed

Apple's Strategy Is Innovation By A Thousand Tweaks

Via Apple

You probably want to talk about the headphones. You’re pissed about having to buy a new pair of headphones, or haul around an easily lost dongle adapter, or to have to use the word “dongle” in public. You’re frustrated that you need to pay $150 for wireless danglers that might fall out of your weirdly shaped ears. You’re angry that this company invented a brand-new category of thing for you to buy, and you’re angry that you think you might kinda want it, this product you didn’t even know existed when you woke up this morning.

But that’s a distraction. To focus on the missing 3.5mm hole in the top of your next hunk of metal and glass and plastic is — unless you’re an audio engineer — to miss the point. You’ll use the dongle, or you’ll buy some new headphones, and in a couple of months this entire conversation will feel so incredibly beside the point. This is what Apple does best: It spends untold hours and countless dollars tinkering and perfecting until it can make a seemingly user-hostile decision in order to scrap what it deems to be a piece of vestigial technology. There might be a little turbulence along the way but today is arguably the day that bluetooth and wireless audio becomes the new standard for consumer headphones. Airport vending machines will be lousy with them by Christmas.

But that’s not enough for Apple. It doesn’t just push people into unfamiliar product spaces, it also works hard to make sure those spaces are firmly within territory it controls. It isn’t pushing Bluetooth headphones, it’s pushing AirPods (and, of course, wireless headphones from its subsidiary Beats that use the same technology). And AirPods are all about lock in.

Via Apple

The way the company envisions it, AirPods will make your other Apple products, like iPhone and Mac, even more essential. They will connect (via Bluetooth and Apple’s own proprietary technology) instantly to your devices. Because the case connects with iCloud, you’ll be able to seamlessly switch between different iOS devices. No need to take off your headphones when you walk into work from your commute — just hit one button and you’re now streaming from your computer.

This — these masterful incremental tweaks that add up to a different way of living with your devices — is Apple in 2016. It’s evolutionary and not always flashy, but it’s often just enough to pull you deeper into the Apple universe of products and services. It’s what CEO Tim Cook meant when, about 56 minutes into today’s keynote, in one of his throwaway victory laps about iPhone sales (over one billion sold&;), he boasted that the newest iPhone will “enrich your daily experiences.”

All the painstaking engineering inside the AirPods (the Accelerometers, optical sensors, microphones, and antennas that makes them so damn expensive) is all geared toward drawing you deeper into Apple’s ecosystem. The quick double-tap that triggers Siri is not just meant to, well, help you access Siri: it’s a ramp to get more people into the habit of using Apple’s personal assistant, which is slowly evolving into the connective tissue between Apple’s product suite as well as the primary way the company would have you navigate its operating systems. And even though they’re costly, the AirPods are new and fancy and maybe even a little bit cool. They’re not for everyone, but for Apple’s core users — the ones who’ve been through nine years and three or more iPhone upgrades — the earphones give you yet another reason to upgrade your iPhone and also maybe not jump ship from your Macbook to a $200 Chromebook.

Same can be said of the newest edition of the Apple Watch. While the watch now comes in something called ceramic and has a new series of customizable bands and faces, its main selling points are almost all small-but-important evolutionary tweaks. There’s built-in GPS, water resistance, and a partnership with Nike that creates a social workout experience that seems to be centered around guilting you to get off your ass and move around.

These improvements are meaningful but still subtle enough that you might not really notice them unless you’ve been paying attention. The Series 2 is less of an attempt to introduce a New Computing Device™ than it is a sensible fitness product. Like the earphones, the watch is a portal for Siri. It’s also a gateway into Apple’s growing collection of health apps and it’s all part of the continuity push across devices. Sure, you could just get a FitBit for cheaper but this watch is arguably better AND let’s you shoot off an emoji iMessage or check your email by yelling into your wrist. Basically: Here&;s this awesome thing for working out that’s especially great if you already have other Apple products. And that kind of continuity just might make you less likely to swap your iPhone for a Samsung when it’s time to re-up.

And then there’s the phone. The new iPhones are perhaps the most direct embodiment of Apple’s philosophy: Innovation by a thousand tweaks. Despite two (two&033;) new black finishes and the extra camera in the Plus, and the water resistance, and that missing headphone jack, the phone looks and behaves much the same as it did before.

Near the end of the keynote, in a slick video wrapping up the new iPhone features, Apple VP Greg Joswiak summed it up: “iPhone 7 makes the thing you do most even better.” The video — not much longer than a minute — is full of superlatives: “better,” “more powerful,” “brighter,” “faster,” more. Last year Apple’s approach toward this methodical innovation was a bit ham-handed — the company suggested that “the only thing that’s changed” with the new iPhone “is everything,” which some (including myself) dismissed as marketing jargon.
This year Apple seems more confident in its evolutionary stance.

Every keynote is a state of the union — an opportunity to get a glimpse into how Apple sees itself. And the lesson from this year’s seems to be that it’s time to stop thinking of Apple in the classic Jobsian sense. That every product introduction is a paradigm shifting game-changer. Today, we saw a company — which is setting its sights on non-tech related initiatives like making TV shows and investing in moonshots like cars — stand on stage and own what it is: a hardware company that&039;s making smart little evolutionary changes at just the right time.

Quelle: <a href="Apple&039;s Strategy Is Innovation By A Thousand Tweaks“>BuzzFeed

Inside iPhone 7: Why Apple Killed The Headphone Jack

Apple VP Greg Joswiak is grinning as he holds up what is easily the smallest iPhone adapter I have ever seen. iPod white and about the length of a matchstick, it’s designed to connect audio headphones with an industry standard 3.5-millimeter analog plug to the Lightning port on Apple’s newest iPhone, which no longer bears the industry standard jack they require to work.

“This time, we’re putting an adapter in every box,” Joswiak quips, a wry nod to the backlash evoked in 2012 the last time Apple killed a widely used iPhone port — a move that rendered thousands of peripherals designed to interact with it incompatible without a $29 adapter, and pissed off legions of people in the process.

Apple is no stranger to killing things people use all the time — and even love. But the headphone jack? It’s on a whole other level than disc drives or ports named after their number of pins. The headphone jack predates not only Apple, but computers themselves. And it is ubiquitous. So, when you’re killing a century-old standard around which the entire audio industry developed, it’s wise to take precautions.

Thomas Edison listening to a phonograph through primitive headphones.

Getty Images

Invented for use with telephone switchboards in the late 1800s, the audio jack is among the oldest existing electrical standards. Originally 6.35-millimeter in width, it was reduced to 3.5-millimeter in the &;60s, a transformation that made it pervasive across most every piece of electronic audio equipment you can think of — home stereos, car stereos, camcorders, guitar amps, laptops, airplane entertainment systems, cochlear implants, smartphones, and — until today — the iPhone.

Apple is arguing that the future of audio is wireless, that the world’s current assumptions about mobile audio are not only antiquated, but worthy of immediate abandonment. In a world of Spotify and Sonos, it’s tough to disagree. But right now that future comes with a price: You’ve got to leave behind the perfectly good headphones you own and you’ve got to purchase the new wireless ones as an iPhone accessory. It’s up to Apple to make the case that this is a worthwhile exchange.

“It’s a dinosaur. It’s time to move on.”

“The audio connector is more than 100 years old,” Joswiak says. “It had its last big innovation about 50 years ago. You know what that was? They made it smaller. It hasn’t been touched since then. It’s a dinosaur. It’s time to move on.”

Perhaps, but “if not now, when” is hardly a good argument when there are two pairs of reasonably high-end headphones in my desk that require that connector and every audio device I own has a 3.5-millimeter port. So does my car. And my laptop. The last plane I flew on. The alarm clock in my hotel. Microphones. Speakers. Baby monitors. Audio equipment and accessories purchased in every stage of my life. Everything. That little jack is in everything.

Historically, Apple has been pretty savvy about moving away from legacy standards and adopting new technology. Historically, this has been because whatever new tech Apple has adopted has delivered value orders of magnitude greater than whatever it replaced. Many have pointed to the floppy drive as a previous example of Apple’s willingness to kill off a widely used standard to make way for the future. But the thing is, when Apple scrapped the iMac’s floppy drive, the floppy disc was ferociously inadequate as a storage solution and in obvious need of replacement.

The 3.5-millimeter audio jack, however, is neither inadequate nor in obvious need of replacement. Sure, it is certainly dusty. But it is widely used and unencumbered by patents. You don’t have to pay anyone to use it. The signal it transmits doesn’t need to be decoded. And because it is an analog and not a digital standard, it cannot be locked down with digital rights management (DRM). Like the AC power socket adorning the walls of our homes, the headphone jack is a dumb interface. In Apple parlance, “it just works.” Buy a pair of headphones — from an audiophile store or an airport vending machine — and plug them into a headphone jack and you’ll likely hear whatever it is you were planning on listening to. So why send it off for a dirt nap?

The iPhone&039;s 3.5-millimeter headphone jack.

iFixit / Via ifixit.com

For Dan Riccio, Apple’s senior vice president of hardware engineering, the iPhone’s 3.5-millimeter audio jack has felt something like the last months of an ill-fated if amicable relationship: familiar and comfortable, but ultimately an impediment to a better life ahead. “We’ve got this 50-year-old connector — just a hole filled with air — and it’s just sitting there taking up space, really valuable space,” he says.

Riccio has been at Apple since 1998, and he has had a hand in most all of the company’s marquee hardware. He’s fully on board with the company’s wireless narrative, as well: “In a world of mobile and cellular connectivity, the one wired vestige out there is this cable hanging from people’s ears to their phones — why?” he asks. But he’s far more interested in the ripple effect of advancements the removal of the audio jack set off in the iPhone.

“It was holding us back from a number of things we wanted to put into the iPhone,” Riccio says. “It was fighting for space with camera technologies and processors and battery life. And frankly, when there’s a better, modern solution available, it’s crazy to keep it around.”

It’s hard to imagine Apple’s hardware design team hamstrung by a diminutive legacy port. But when you’re dealing with a computing device with extraordinarily tight dimensional tolerances, there are bound to be challenges. Riccio spends a good 15 minutes explaining them. I’ll try to do it in two.

A tentpole feature of the new iPhones are improved camera systems that are larger than the cameras in the devices that preceded them. The iPhone 7 now has the optical image stabilization feature previously reserved for its larger Plus siblings. And the iPhone 7 Plus has two complete camera systems side by side — one with a fixed wide-angle lens, the other with a 2x zoom telephoto lens. At the top of both devices is something called the “driver ledge” — a small printed circuit board that drives the iPhone’s display and its backlight. Historically, Apple placed it there to accommodate improvements in battery capacity, where it was out of the way. But according to Riccio, the driver ledge interfered with the iPhone 7 line’s new larger camera systems, so Apple moved the ledge lower in both devices. But there, it interfered with other components, particularly the audio jack.

So the company’s engineers tried removing the jack.

In doing so, they discovered a few things. First, it was easier to install the “Taptic Engine” that drives the iPhone 7’s new pressure-sensitive home button, which, like the trackpads on Apple’s latest MacBook, uses vibrating haptic sensations to simulate the feeling of a click — without actually clicking. (Did we mention that Apple killed the physical home button too?) Taptic Engine vibrations will also be used to deliver feeling specific notifications — hitting the end of a scrolled page, for example. And because Apple has given developers an API for it, an awful lot of other stuff as well — particularly in games.

“You can’t make it feel like there’s an earthquake happening, but the range of customization lets you do an awful lot,” Apple SVP Phil Schiller explains. “With every project there are things that surprise you with the meaning they take on as you start to use them. The Taptic Engine API is one of them. It turned into a much bigger thing than we ever thought it would be. It really does transform the experience for a lot of software. You’ll see.”

Second, there was an unforeseen opportunity to increase battery life. So the battery in the iPhone 7 is 14% bigger than the one in its predecessor, and in the iPhone 7 Plus, it’s 5% bigger. In terms of real-world performance gains, that’s about an additional two hours and one hour, respectively. Not bad.

Even better, removing the audio jack also eliminated a key point of ingress that Riccio says helped the new iPhone finally meet the IP7 water resistance spec Apple has been after for years (resistant when immersed under 1 meter of water for 30 minutes).

The 3.5-millimeter audio jack has been headed to its inevitable fate for some time now. If it wasn’t the iPhone 7, it might have been the iPhone 8 (or, for that matter, the iPhone 6). In the end, it was simple math that did the audio jack in, a cost-benefit analysis that sorely disfavored a single-purpose Very Old Port against a wireless audio future, some slick new cameras, and the kind of water resistance that anyone who has ever dropped an iPhone in the toilet has long wished for.

Apple

When you think about the iPhone, you probably think of it as a single gadget. So it’s helpful to step back and realize that it contains an array of formerly distinct devices sandwiched together. When Steve Jobs introduced the original iPhone in 2007, he said that it wasn’t one device, but three: “a widescreen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a breakthrough internet communications device.”

And as it turns out, among the features people most care about in a high-end smartphone — enough so that Apple is willing to spend millions of advertising dollars to remind you of its dominance, and upend a decades-old standard — is the camera.

“End-to-end these camera systems are a massive jump in capability over the ones in the 6s,” Schiller says when I observe that the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus have the same 12-megapixel cameras as their predecessors. He rattles off a list of camera geek specs to prove his point. They are faster, gather more light, have custom low-energy, high-performance chipsets and a bunch of near-future, gee-whiz stuff. Much of this is impenetrable: A slide in Apple’s Wednesday keynote presentation proudly touts a new image signal processor’s ability to calculate 100 billion operations in 25 milliseconds, for example. But it all comes together for me when I see a stunning un-retouched aerial shot of Coney Island that was, incredibly, shot on a phone.

“The new iPhones are crazy powerful,” says Neill Barham, founder and CEO of Filmic, a highly regarded mobile video app for iOS. He’s effusive in his praise, saying Apple’s new A10 chip has brought a “seismic” improvement in video processing to the iPhone. He jokes that Stanley Kubrick probably would have loved the 7 Plus, though he concedes he probably wouldn’t have shot Barry Lyndon with it.

“In layman’s terms, the prior 6S/+ is like a sprinter: it can do a lot of work in a short amount of time,” Barham offers. “The 7, on the other hand, is more like a marathon runner, or better yet, a triathlete that can perform multiple processor intensive loads all day long.”

Shot on iPhone 7 Plus at 2x optical zoom

Courtesy of Apple.

At a small vineyard in the Santa Cruz Mountains far above Silicon Valley, a brief camera demo. Panoramas, portraits, Live Photos, close-ups, video of the vineyard dog that wanders into our group with a well-chewed tennis ball. To my nonprofessional photographer’s eye, everything looks really good. The images are sharp, vibrant. The new wide color capture support Apple has built into the iPhone makes the orange of a California poppy appear psychedelic. On the iPhone 7 Plus, switching between the two side-by-side cameras is pretty much seamless; the changes between the wide and tele lens occur so quickly and smoothly you don’t notice them. It feels like a single camera. With the zoom, I can just barely see pick-stitched lines of glue affixing a wine label to its bottle.

A few months from now, Apple will roll out a software update that adds a new camera feature to the iPhone 7 Plus. It’s called “Portrait,” and it basically creates a bokeh effect — a sharply detailed subject in the foreground set against a soft, out-of-focus background. Because both cameras in the 7 Plus can be run simultaneously, it can capture nine layers of depth from foreground to background. And it can display them in real time. So when you’re in Portrait, you’ll be able to see that bokeh effect and, crucially, whether it’s worth using or not.

“Is it a better bokeh effect than the one you’d get with a Leica M and a 50-millimeter lens?” Schiller said earlier. “Of course not. But have you ever seen anything like it in a smartphone before?”

Nope.

But a “coming soon” camera advancement isn’t exactly the sort of tectonic smartphone innovation we’ve come to expect from Apple — though Apple CEO Tim Cook thinks the changes in this year&039;s iPhone are pretty big. When I ask him if — after a run of tectonic innovations like FaceTime, Siri, and Touch ID — we&039;ve reached the point where we’re starting to exhaust the innovation possible in the smartphone, he disagrees — diplomatically — with the premise of my question.

“Innovation is making things better,” Cook says. “If you step back and look at the things that are most important to iPhone users, it&039;s the photos they take and the other stuff they use to build the diaries of their lives. So the camera updates, the software optimization that we&039;ve done, the increases in battery life, and then all the features in iOS 10? These things collectively are a huge advance forward.”

Earlier this year, Apple’s rumored plan to remove the headphone jack from the next iPhone was met with predictable outrage and apology, delivered from equally predictable soapboxes. (Nevermind that two other smartphone manufacturers had already released phones without the port.)

The headphone jack is great for delivering audio, widely used, and unencumbered by patents and digital rights management, critics argued. Why remove it, leaving only an Apple-proprietary digital port that might in some dystopian future be locked down with the very DRM schemes that Steve Jobs bemoaned in his 2007 essay “Thoughts on Music”? Why provide a diminutive headphone jack adapter that will cost me $9 to replace when I inevitably lose it? Why allow even for the possibility of a scenario in which I cannot play a song that I own, whether it be because of copy protection lockdown or a “This accessory has not been certified by Apple” error? How does Apple respond to critics who’ve described removing the headphone jack from the iPhone as “user-hostile”?

“That’s pure, paranoid conspiracy theory.”

Schiller thinks it’s a silly argument. “The idea that there’s some ulterior motive behind this move, or that it will usher in some new form of content management, it simply isn’t true,” he says. “We are removing the audio jack because we have developed a better way to deliver audio. It has nothing to do with content management or DRM — that’s pure, paranoid conspiracy theory.”

For what it’s worth, USB audio has allowed for copy protection since the mid-2000s, and according to Abdul Ismail, USB-IF CTO and principal engineer at Intel, the recording industry guys don’t really use it. “Audio content owners are a lot more comfortable with not requiring copy protection,” he says. “It has been almost a decade since iTunes started selling DRM-free music, and illegal file sharing hasn’t been rampant.”

Beyond that, Lightning is a good portable high-fidelity audio solution. It’s a powered connection, so it can support things like noise cancellation in headphones that typically require batteries, and because it’s digital, it can provide a lot of granular control over the frequency response and whatnot (Audeze makes a pair of Lightning headphones with a 10-band EQ of -10 to +10 decibels for each band).

But that’s not the argument Apple is making. Remember, the future of audio is wireless. And while the company might be giving every iPhone 7 owner a pair of Lightning EarPods (and an adapter&;), what it really wants is for them to buy a pair of wireless AirPods.

Apple&039;s new wireless AirPods

Apple

Quelle: <a href="Inside iPhone 7: Why Apple Killed The Headphone Jack“>BuzzFeed

Nintendo Stock Booms As Mario Comes To The iPhone

Yahoo Finance

The Nintendo stock market rollercoaster back, this time thanks to Apple.

Nintendo&;s U.S.-traded stock shot up over 23% Wednesday afternoon after Apple announced the company will release a version of its Super Mario franchise for the iPhone and iPad, and make a version of Pokémon Go. for the Apple Watch.

Investors have been clamoring for signs the company will get serious about mobile games, and Pokémon Go was the first sign of that — it&039;s been downloaded over 500 million times. Its early success pushed Nintendo stock to an all-time high, making the company more valuable than Sony, but the shares fell as investors realized Nintendo&039;s profits would not be boosted substantially by the game, which was developed by an independent studio.

Today&039;s stock price spike could also be short lived: Neither the Super Mario Run iOS game nor Pokémon Go for the watch are available yet, and Nintendo has yet to say how much money it expects to make from the games. Super Mario Run will be available by this holiday season and the watch version of Pokémon Go will be available by the end of the year.

Quelle: <a href="Nintendo Stock Booms As Mario Comes To The iPhone“>BuzzFeed

The New Apple Watch Is All About Fitness

Priya Anand / BuzzFeed

When the Apple Watch was unveiled in March 2015, it was billed as the company&;s “most personal device ever”: a wearable that provided instant access to information and communication — from news and calendar alerts to phone calls and weather forecasts — as well as track your fitness.

A year and a half later, the Watch can still do a little bit of everything. But in a nod to the athletes who are becoming some of the Watch&039;s most fervent fans, Apple is doubling down on features that make it significantly more of a health and exercise tool.

During its keynote on Wednesday, Apple unveiled a slew of wellness-related updates to the second-generation Watch, known as Series 2. For the first time, it&039;ll be water-resistant up to 50 meters, not merely splash-proof — “so you can wear it whether you&039;re swimming or surfing or just doing the occasional cannonball,” Chief Operating Officer Jeff Williams said, adding that 700 swimmers in Apple&039;s fitness lab had put the feature through the wringer. (Notably, it comes after a week after Fitbit announced its first swim-proof wearable.)

Caroline O’Donovan / BuzzFeed

The Watch will also come with built-in GPS, so runners can go for a jog without their phones and still record a map of where and how far they&039;ve gone. And it&039;ll have its first-ever hiking app, ViewRanger, which downloads maps of places like Yosemite so you don&039;t need cell service to see where you&039;re going.

Priya Anand / BuzzFeed

There&039;s even a Pokémon Go angle. In the wake of this summer&039;s augmented-reality game craze, which got hundreds of millions of people trying to catch &039;em all (and walking a stunning 4.6 billion kilometers in the process, according to Nintendo), a version of the app is coming to the Watch. It&039;ll show trainers a daily summary of not just which medals they&039;ve won, but how far they&039;ve walked.

The biggest fitness news, however, is a brand-new line of running-oriented watches designed with Nike: the Apple Watch Nike+. With neon-colored, perforated designs that make them clear fitness devices, they&039;ll show you your distance and pace at a glance. But they&039;ll go one step further than just showing your stats. They&039;ll try to prompt (guilt) you to work out, with messages like “Are we running today?” and dashboards of your friends&039; progress in comparison, a social “running club” that provides tips and encouragement, and standing invitations to run on Sundays (because, Nike President Trevor Edwards explained, those who run on Sunday are more likely to be active the rest of the week).

“This isn&039;t just a watch, it&039;s your perfect running partner,” Edwards told the crowd. “It&039;s simple, it&039;s fun, it&039;s easy to use, and we think it delivers the best running experience that&039;s out there.”

Priya Anand / BuzzFeed

Running, hiking, Pokémon-catching, swimming, and (previously announced) guided breathing exercises: Apple&039;s vision for its smartwatch is clear. In Williams&039; words, “The Apple Watch is the ultimate device for healthy lives.”

Quelle: <a href="The New Apple Watch Is All About Fitness“>BuzzFeed

Pokemon Go And Mario Coming To Apple Watch And iOS

Pokémon Go, which has been downloaded more than 500 million times since it was launched in July, will be coming to the Apple Watch by the end of the year, company executives announced onstage at today&;s Apple keynote. The watch game will let people play Pokémon Go in a heads-up mode, highlighting some of the fitness features of the watch and giving players the ability to better appreciate the physical landmarks that appear in the game as Pokéstops.

During walks, players can see how far they have traveled, how manny calories they have burned, and what Pokémon are nearby. John Hanke, — CEO of Niantic labs, which developed the game — said that Pokemon trainers have collectively walked more than 4.6 billion kilometers while playing.

Super Mario Run coming to iOS

Nintendo’s legendary game designer Shigeru Miyamoto announced that one of the most iconic characters in video-game history is coming to iOS, starting with a game called Super Mario Run. Miyamoto emphasized that the game can be played one-handed — nodding to subway commuters and sandwich-eating players. Super Mario Run also features a battle mode that will let you play friends or others around the world.

Miyamoto said the game would be “coming soon,” in time for the holidays in 2016. It’s also going to have a set price, which means you won’t have to pay to level up as you often do with other games.

Quelle: <a href="Pokemon Go And Mario Coming To Apple Watch And iOS“>BuzzFeed

Everything You Need To Know About The First Phone With Android N

The LG V20 is the first phone shipping with the latest Android OS, Nougat.

Today, LG announced its new ~very premium~ phone, the LG V20. It’s the first device to come with Android 7.0 Nougat installed, ahead of Google’s own Nexus devices.

Today, LG announced its new ~very premium~ phone, the LG V20. It's the first device to come with Android 7.0 Nougat installed, ahead of Google's own Nexus devices.

Google typically ships the latest version of its Android operating system with the Nexus line, under which it partnered with hardware makers like Huawei and LG, but rumor has it that the company is killing the Nexus brand in favor, perhaps, of a “Google” or “Pixel” moniker.

In any case, Android 7.0 has officially launched for existing Nexus devices, and the LG V20 will be the first new phone to have it. The phone Google is working on won&;t be announced until early October.

Here&039;s a first impressions hands-on with the brand, spankin&039; new LG V20, a device that was designed with a focus on high-fidelity video and audio recording tools – and intended to look and feel fancy AF.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed

Android 7.0 has a lot of great features, including multi-window split screen support.

Android 7.0 has a lot of great features, including multi-window split screen support.

The LG V20 phone I tried wasn&039;t set up or connected to the Internet, so it couldn&039;t really show me anything, but setting up the split screen and quickly switching apps was super easy.

Other notable Android N features are:

  • A ton of new emojis, including multiple skin tones.
  • More battery efficiency and power saving features.
  • New custom quick settings that appear when you first pull down the notification shade.
  • Quick replies to texts and emails from the notification shade.
  • A new data saver that limits how much cell data apps in the background can access
  • Being able to change the size of the font, icons, and interface.
  • Direct boot, which loads apps before you unlock your device for faster startup.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed

Here’s what the multi-window, new emojis, and custom quick settings are supposed to look like.

Here's what the multi-window, new emojis, and custom quick settings are supposed to look like.

android.googleblog.com

Android N runs alongside LG’s own software, LG UX 5.0.

Android N runs alongside LG's own software, LG UX 5.0.

LG’s software re-introduces the much-requested app tray that was removed in the previous version and incorporates Material Design concepts, a minimalist design language developed as a guide for developers by Google.

Nicole Nguyen / BuzzFeed


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Quelle: <a href="Everything You Need To Know About The First Phone With Android N“>BuzzFeed

Here’s How To Make Sure Facebook Doesn’t Have Your Phone Contacts

There may be some privacy settings and policy changes you may have missed.

Take a look at contacts you may be uploading to Facebook without realizing it.

Take a look at contacts you may be uploading to Facebook without realizing it.

Facebook could be using contact information, including names, phone numbers, and email addresses, that&;s stored in your phone to make friend recommendations to others. This can be problematic when your contacts are confidential sources or patients.

You can view these imported contacts here. There should be a Delete All button at the top of the list that will clear all contacts at once. I had apparently uploaded over a hundred of my high school friends&039; contact information in Facebook, when I first joined the service.

You can prevent Facebook from uploading contacts in the future by tapping on the menu button on the bottom right, scrolling to the bottom of that page and tapping Privacy Shortcuts > More Settings > General > Upload Contacts > and then disable Upload Contacts. Manage the contacts you may have uploaded to Facebook Messenger here.

Nicole N / BuzzFeed

Nicole N / BuzzFeed

Prevent WhatsApp from sharing your data with Facebook.

Prevent WhatsApp from sharing your data with Facebook.

On Aug. 26, the messaging service WhatsApp, which was acquired by Facebook in 2014, announced that it was going to start sharing user information, like what device you&039;re using, your mobile carrier, and how often you open the app, with Facebook. Facebook would use this data to inform what types of ads it serves you. The app is giving users 30 days after agreeing to WhatsApp&039;s new terms of service to opt out.

In the WhatsApp app, go to Settings > Account and uncheck Share my account info. If you have not accepted the new privacy policy yet, another method of opting out is to tap Read more about the key updates to our Terms and Privacy Policy when prompted and slide the green toggle to the off position at the bottom of your screen.

If you&039;ve already opted out, you may no longer see the option to opt back in.

WhatsApp / Nicole N / BuzzFeed


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Quelle: <a href="Here’s How To Make Sure Facebook Doesn’t Have Your Phone Contacts“>BuzzFeed

The Race Is On To Tax Apple's "Pot Of Gold" In Ireland

djmcaleese/flickr / Via flic.kr

Ireland will appeal against an EU ruling that Apple owes it $14.5 billion in unpaid taxes, its prime minister confirmed on Friday, saying its challenge “is about Ireland, it is about our people, it&;s about us as a sovereign nation.”

And while the appeals process drags on, the EU&039;s ruling has already made its mark elsewhere — in the race among tax collectors across the world to claim their share of trillions of dollars of untaxed cash stowed away by multinational corporations.

In that race, Apple&039;s stockpile looms largest: the accumulated windfall of the company&039;s singularly profitable position in the mobile revolution of the past decade. Apple has made more profit from mobile devices than the rest of the industry combined, and for every iPhone and iPad sold anywhere in the EU — the world&039;s largest economic bloc — profits found their way to Ireland. And now that mountain of money, more than $200 billion of it, has its first big tax claim. More will come.

First in line, if its lawmakers can get their act together, will be the US Treasury. Apple has said it is open to bringing much of its offshore cash home if tax rates on overseas profits are lowered, as many politicians, both Republican and Democrat, have proposed. But the likelihood of any deal being struck in the near term is remote, meaning for the time being, the EU is in the lead.

“The EU has taken their share of [Apple&039;s revenues], but that doesn’t mean the US can’t take theirs,” wrote George Turner, who runs Finance Uncovered, a British investigative project on the financial industry. “The problem is that US policy makers have been unable to determine how to do that. That is not the EU’s problem however.”

But while it may be overturned on appeal, some believe the EU&039;s ruling will inspire a fresh round of deal-making in Washington, where policymakers fear a European tax windfall could pre-empt one of their own.

“All of a sudden the pot of gold starts dwindling and there are fewer chips to negotiate with,” Stephen Myrow, a managing partner at Beacon Policy Advisors, told BuzzFeed News. “It lights a fire under the US, it&039;s basically saying, &039;People, listen, we have to get a deal done. If these companies are paying this money, better pay to us than the Europeans.&039;”

As an example of such thinking, consider Chuck Schumer, the New York Democrat who has led efforts to assemble a corporate tax reform package. He said the EU ruling was a “cheap money grab” that specifically targeted “US business and the US tax base.”

“The European Union is going to grab this money, instead of the U.S.,” he told the New York Times.

Not everyone agrees with Schumer&039;s interpretation of exactly where Apple&039;s European profits should go. Turner wrote that Apple is “liable to pay taxes on profits made in other countries to the governments in those countries” and that its Irish tax arrangement allowed Apple to avoid paying taxes on profits earned elsewhere in Europe. “This scheme has deprived European nations of tax due to them, but hasn’t deprived the United States of anything,” he wrote.

Outrage over Apple&039;s tax arrangements largely originated in the United States, with a congressional investigation in 2013 that lad to Apple chief executive Tim Cook&039;s appearance before a Senate committee. When Cook took questions, Michigan Democrat Carl Levin said that Apple&039;s financial shenanigans were “the epitome of creative tax gimmickry.”

In a white paper released last week, the Treasury Department said that the EU&039;s investigations into US companies “was an unforeseeable departure from the status quo” and that the investigations could “undermine the United States&039; efforts” in setting tax rules. The EU&039;s actions could even “call into question the ability of Member States to honor their bilateral tax treaties with the United States,” the Treasury said.

But the Treasury needs to worry about more than just tax treaties: Its own tax receipts could take a hit. Apple, if it ever pays the $14.5 billion the EU insists it owes Ireland, could use that payment as a credit against taxes owed in the US, said William Gale, the co-director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

And it might not be the last company to do that. The European Commission is also looking at similar tax arrangements for Starbucks in the Netherlands, and Amazon and McDonald&039;s in Luxembourg. So could the threat of US tax receipts taking a hit due to European rulings spur DC into a rare moment of cooperation?

“There&039;s nothing like an external enemy to unite people,” Gale said.

Quelle: <a href="The Race Is On To Tax Apple&039;s "Pot Of Gold" In Ireland“>BuzzFeed

Apple Is Getting Stricter About Health Apps

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Hundreds of health and medical apps abound on Apple&;s App Store, but for consumers, there&039;s no easy way to tell which ones are effective and tested — and which ones are useless, or even harmful. Medical experts and regulators have questioned apps that claim to calculate insulin dosages for diabetics, diagnose melanoma risk, measure blood pressure, care for patients with schizophrenia, and offer reproductive health advice but don&039;t mention contraception.

Apple is now trying to filter out the noise by getting stricter about which health apps it&039;ll permit in its store. In developer guidelines released today, it tells iOS app makers: “If your app behaves in a way that risks physical harm, we may reject it.”

“If your app behaves in a way that risks physical harm, we may reject it.”

Apple will heighten its scrutiny of apps that “could provide inaccurate data or information, or that could be used for diagnosing or treating patients.” Apps that calculate drug dosages need to come from an institution like a drug manufacturer, a hospital, or an insurer, or have FDA approval.

In addition, Apple will not allow apps that encourage people to illegally or excessively consume drugs or alcohol — for example, to drive drunk. Marijuana sales, too, are banned.

And apps shouldn&039;t tell consumers to use their devices in ways that put them at risk for physical harm: “For example, apps should not encourage placing the device under a mattress or pillow while charging.”

The FDA does regulate medical apps, just on a very limited basis. It focuses on the narrow segment of apps that effectively act as medical devices, and last month, it clarified that it&039;ll be hands-off for wellness apps that promote general healthy behaviors (like losing weight). But Apple, the actual gatekeeper to iOS apps, has the power to be just as, or even more, effective in weeding out harmful software.

Quelle: <a href="Apple Is Getting Stricter About Health Apps“>BuzzFeed