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14
Jun

Insomniac’s take on Spider-Man features an experienced hero


Tired of seeing superhero origin stories retreaded again and again and again? Then the next Spider-man game might be for you. At its E3 press event today, PlayStation announced a new take on the series from Insomniac Games — one that focuses on the exploits of a more experienced adult wall-crawler.

It’s refreshing in more way than one — for the better part of the last two decades, it’s been hard to find a Spider-Man game without some sort of narrative tie to an ongoing film franchise. This game looks different: it seems to feature an older version of the hero with new, distinctive costume that sets it apart from the previous films, or the upcoming Spider-Man Homecoming. Insomniac games says it’s a “brand-new, authentic Spider-Man story” that focuses on an “experienced Peter Parker who is more masterful at fighting crime.”

So, the narrative is fresh, but how about the actual gameplay? It’s hard to tell from the teaser, but Insomniac has a decent track record, including last year’s Sunset Overdrive, which was praised for having a fluid movement system. Either way, we probably won’t know for awhile: the game was announced with no release date on the horizon and incredibly temporary title of “Spider-Man PS4.”

Follow all the news from E3 2016 here!

14
Jun

Everything we saw at Ubisoft’s E3 event


Ubisoft’s annual bit-too-weird E3 event went as scheduled, with acid-colored dance routines, weird ironic (?) Ubisoft creatives in comedy skits I didn’t quite understand, oh, and a bunch of games. That included closer looks at Watch Dogs 2, Ghost Recon: Wildlands, as well as some virtual Star Trek and a sneak peak behind the scenes of Fassassin’s Creed. Let’s take a look.

14
Jun

Scientists find the largest known planet to orbit two stars


The notion of planets in a Tatooine-like system with two or more stars isn’t strange (they’ve been known since 1993), but a truly massive planet hasn’t been seen before… until now. Scientists using NASA’s Kepler space telescope have discovered Kepler-1647b, the largest known planet to orbit two stars (aka a circumbinary planet). The 4.4 billion year old gas giant is about as large as Jupiter, and orbits at a much further distance than other confirmed planets with a 1,107-day trip. That’s still much closer than Jupiter, which takes 12 years, but it remains a rarity given our current knowledge.

To no one’s surprise, researchers are doubtful that there’s any life to be found on Kepler-1647b; you won’t be visiting Aunt Beru and Uncle Owen any time soon. There’s a chance that any large moons around the planet might harbor organisms, though. And the discoverers are quick to note that this is just the “tip of the iceberg” for large, long-orbit circumbinary planets. Although the chances of finding a planet that supports life are very slim, there should be enough of these unusual star systems out there that the concept is plausible.

Via: Space.com

Source: NASA, ArXiv.org (PDF)

14
Jun

Jason is still up to his old tricks in ‘Friday the 13th: The Game’


Jason Voorhees is all about chasing his victims down and ensuring they meet grisly deaths. It’s good to see him keeping true to form in Friday the 13th: The Game, which we’re finally able to look at some decent gameplay for.

The video below lets us check out some of the action from both Jason’s perspective and the victims, showcasing Jason’s uncanny ability to find the squealing teenagers in the dark. Honestly, it seems a little unfair to play as one of the unsuspecting victims unless you’re super crafty. You’re definitely going to need to work together if you want to survive.

Friday the 13th: The Game drops for Xbox One, PS4 and PC this fall.

Via: Polygon

14
Jun

What happened at WWDC 2016?


Need a quick recap on all the news from WWDC 2016? Our own Dana Wollman and Chris Velazco were on the scene and are ready to run through all the news about macOS, iOS, watchOS, tvOS and any other platforms Apple may have introduced. Most of these changes won’t hit your devices until the fall, but this way it will only take a few minutes to get familiar with all the new features immediately.

Get all the latest news from WWDC 2016 here!

14
Jun

How to sign up for the iOS 10, MacOS Sierra public betas – CNET


Apple unveiled iOS 10 and Mac OS Sierra, the operating systems for its mobile and desktop platforms respectively, Monday at the company’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference.

As with past WWDC announcements, developer betas will made available today, with public betas and official releases to follow. The public betas for both iOS 10 and MacOS Sierra will available in July, with the final releases of each scheduled for the fall.

  • iOS 10, MacOS Sierra and a better Siri: Everything Apple just announced
  • Apple WWDC 2016 keynote kicks off
  • See all of CNET’s WWDC coverage

If you want to get your hands on Apple’s latest software and don’t have a developer account with Apple, you can sign up now to be notified when the public betas are released in July (Apple hasn’t specified an exact date in July). You can sign up here and will need to provide your email and password for your Apple ID. You need to sign up only once to be notified when both the iOS 10 and MacOS public betas are available.

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Apple’s iOS 10 was unveiled at WWDC 2016.


CNET

As with any pre-release software, you may encounter bugs and other performance issues. The purpose of the developer beta as well as the later public beta is to help Apple and its developers iron out the kinks before the final versions are released. Thus, we urge you to proceed with caution, using an old device and backing up your data before installing beta software.

For more, see our complete coverage of WWDC 2016.

14
Jun

8 reasons you’re finally going to wear your Apple Watch – CNET


At its yearly developer conference that kicked off on Monday, Apple announced iOS 10, renamed OS X to MacOS and showed off new features on tvOS. WatchOS 3 — the next software update for Apple Watch — got a lot of attention, to, and it looks to be a doozy.

It might even turn the Apple Watch into something you (and I) will want to use more of.

Below are eight features that make the Apple Watch a whole lot better:

No more staring blankly at your wrist

From day one, the Apple Watch has been plagued with slow loading times for apps. Currently, the process goes something like this:

  • You raise your wrist and tap on an app icon.
  • The circular, spinning dots start up.
  • With your wrist still raised, you go walk the dog, take out the trash, take a nap and then the app finally loads.

With WatchOS 3, your most-used apps will load seven times faster according to Apple. The onstage demo of apps launching was impressive and if it works the same off the WWDC stage, faster app loading will make the watch a lot more usable.

Apple Watch gets an app dock

With apps now loading faster, it would make sense for you to have quicker access to those apps. For that, Apple included an app dock similar to the one found on MacOS or iOS. So, you can set certain apps to live in the dock and quickly open the dock by pressing the side button on your watch.

You can then scroll through previews of the app and tap on the respective card to launch the app. This is a far better use than using the side button as a shortcut for digital touch.

Compete with friends in fitness

Tracking your activity on the Apple Watch has been a very lonely experience, since you can’t share or send your stats to friends or family members and encourage one another to try harder.

Taking a page from Fitbit’s playbook, Apple is bringing friends to the Activity app. You can cheer on or trash talk those on your friends list, depending on their daily activity status (or lack there of).

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Screenshot by Jason Cipriani/CNET

Scribble

There are times when you simply cannot dictate a message to your watch, so Apple has added the ability to write on the watch using you finger.

Apple is calling the feature Scribble. When it’s activated, you write out your message, one letter at a time on the screen of your watch. The watch will identify your handwriting and translate it to text, ready to be sent in a message.

As promising as it sounds, I can’t help but worry my horrible handwriting will be unreadable even to a computer.

More Apple Pay

When WatchOS 3 launches this fall, not only will you still have the option to use Apple Pay by tapping your wrist on a compatible payment terminal, but you can also complete purchases directly on your wrist through apps.

Instead of taking your phone out to complete a purchase on, say, Etsy, you can complete the payment directly on your wrist with a few taps on the screen.

Easier watch face changing, better complications

The process for switching between watch faces is now improved, requiring nothing more than a simple swipe to the right or left across your current watch face.

In addition to being able to quickly change faces, the Apple Watch app on your iPhone will now display which complications an app has. This will help with making a purchase decision by knowing exactly what an app is capable of doing on your wrist.

Just breathe

A new health app, called Breathe, will remind you to take a moment and breathe. Not that Apple thinks you are dumb enough not to know how to breathe, but the thinking here is that we should all take a few minutes every day to clear our mind, be more aware of our breathing in an attempt to relax and lessen stress levels.

Accessibility

Apple has long prided itself as a company that pushes accessibility features forward, making the company’s various devices usable for all.

As detailed during Monday’s keynote, Apple has developed a wheelchair mode for the Apple Watch. When activated, users will get credit for activity as he or she moves around in a wheelchair. And instead of getting an hourly alert to stand up, wheelchair users will be told “It’s time to roll.”

14
Jun

See which Macs will — and won’t — work with MacOS – CNET


Apple rebranded Mac OS X as MacOS on Monday at the company’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference. In addition to changing the name of its Mac operating system, Apple dropped support for a number of Macs, the first time it has adjusted the hardware requirements for a Mac OS release since 2012 with OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion.

According to a slide at the end of Craig Federighi’s MacOS presentation at the WWDC keynote, the following models will support MacOS Sierra:

  • MacBook — late 2009 and later
  • MacBook Air — 2010 and later
  • MacBook Pro — 2010 and later
  • iMac — late 2009 and later
  • Mac Mini — 2010 and later
  • Mac Pro — 2010 and later

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Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

From OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion to OS X 10.11 El Capitan, Apple’s hardware requirements were:

  • MacBook — late 2008 aluminum/early 2009 and later
  • MacBook Air — late 2008 and later
  • MacBook Pro — mid/late 2007 and later
  • iMac — mid 2007 and later
  • Mac Mini — early 2009 and later
  • Mac Pro — early 2008 and later

This change leaves the following models out in the cold for MacOS Sierra:

  • MacBook from 2008 and early 2009
  • MacBook Air from 2008 and 2009
  • MacBook Pro from 2007, 2008 and 2009
  • iMac from 2007, 2008 and early 2009
  • Mac Mini from 2009
  • Mac Pro from 2008 and 2009

For more, see our complete coverage of WWDC 2016, learn how to sign up for the iOS 10, MacOS Sierra public betas, and which iPhones and iPad will and won’t work with iOS 10.

14
Jun

Sony PlayStation VR Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET


Sony’s got its own virtual-reality hardware for the PlayStation 4, and it’s called the PlayStation VR. And now we know it costs less than the Oculus Rift or HTC Vive, and isn’t arriving until later this year. But it could be the most accessible high-end VR hardware of all. The PlayStation VR costs $399, £349 or AU$550, and will arrive on October 13 2016.

You still need a PS4 to use it: All you get for that price is the headset, and necessary connector hardware and cables. While it works with the PS4 and its DualShock 4 controllers, the motion-tracking Move controllers and PlayStation Camera ($60, £39, AU$75) don’t come packaged in. You need the camera, so expect to pay for one, and you’ll probably want the controllers, unless you still have them lying around from the PS3.

Sony promises that the PSVR will come with up to 50 games at launch. Many that Sony teased are familiar from other VR demos we’ve seen, such as Job Simulator and Eve: Valkyrie. A good handful, like a newly announced Star Wars Battlefront game, look like exclusives, at least for now.

The PlayStation VR headset still looks similar to what we tried below during previous sessions with it. While wearing the headset you’ll be able to access the PS4’s menus and features. You can even enter “cinematic mode” and play any game or app in a simulated 16:9 screen.

So far, what we’ve seen looks pretty good.

Up close with Sony’s PlayStation VR headset…
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The headset

  • 5.7-inch 1080p OLED display
  • 100-degree field of view
  • 120Hz refresh rate

Sony’s PlayStation VR is a different type of VR headset. Some VR headsets run off phones. Others use high-end PCs. By connecting to a PlayStation 4 — 40 million of which have been sold around the world — PSVR could be an instant option for people who just don’t have and will never buy an expensive PC for games. And what we realized, after playing more of the PSVR’s games, is that it’s really good at what it does.

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The PSVR headset feels pretty comfy.


Josh Miller/CNET

Like the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive, the other two high-profile virtual-reality systems you should expect to see in 2016, the PlayStation VR is a tethered headset that uses special curved lenses to magnify and stretch a 5.7-inch screen across your field of vision.

Like those other headsets, it also uses a host of sensors to tell which way your head is pointing at all times. That way, no matter where you look (even if you turn around and look behind you), you see the portion of a virtual world that you’d expect to see if you were actually there, looking at it with your own eyes.

No, the PSVR isn’t as high-res or graphically superpowered as the top-end Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. But we’re not sure you’ll notice. Games run smoothly and look crisp on the headset’s clear, bright display. You can see pixels, yes, and sometimes games or videos can look blurry, but for many games it just works, like the Nintendo Wii used to just work. Forgive that analogy, because it’s meant in a good way. The PSVR seems like a more family-friendly kind of virtual reality than its more serious competitors.

The PSVR’s headset fits better than the tight scuba-goggle designs of Vive or Rift. A simple headband, and gentle rubber eyepieces fit over glasses easily. The display doesn’t fog up, and while the porthole-style field of view can sometimes seem narrow, you forget about it and take in the games, and suddenly become immersed.

Sony’s PlayStation VR headset will cost you…
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Sony has far more experience building consumer electronics (including earlier headsets) than its competitors, and it shows in the PlayStation VR’s comfortable design. The well-padded headset easily and securely cinches up to your head, just by turning a clicky, bike-helmet like dial on the back of the device.

The front section, the part that goes over your eyes, can slide toward your face or away from it with the press of a button. That means it can easily accommodate people who wear glasses, or allow you to briefly peek at the real world around you without fully removing the headset from your skull.

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Adjusting the headset to fit.


Nate Ralph/CNET

The PlayStation VR plugs into your PS4 with a breakout box that includes an HDMI splitter, so you can hook up the headset and a TV at the same time. That way, friends and family can see a portion of what you’re seeing, and play certain kinds of games together.

The controllers

  • DualShock 4 gamepad for many games
  • PlayStation Move wand controllers to simulate hands
  • PlayStation Camera to track everything

How do you control yourself while using the PlayStation VR? So far, Sony’s been showing the headset off with some controllers you might already be familiar with: The PlayStation Camera, DualShock 4 gamepad and the wand-like PlayStation Move motion controllers that were designed for the last-generation PS3 console nearly five years ago.

The camera can track the bright blue LEDs on the headset and the ones in the gamepad as well as the Move wands simultaneously: We’ve seen up to one headset and two controllers at a time.


A pair of PlayStation Move controllers in use.


Nate Ralph/CNET

The wands mean you can not only turn your head in a virtual world, but also have a pair of basic hands to pick up and drop virtual objects, fire virtual guns or manipulate all kinds of virtual tools. Problem is, at least in the demos we’ve tried, the Move controllers haven’t been particularly great at that job.

While the HTC Vive’s controllers are responsive enough to let you literally juggle virtual pots and pans (no kidding) and the Oculus Rift’s upcoming Oculus Touch controllers feel pretty fantastic, too, we’ve frequently failed to pick up virtual items with the Move.


$399, but you won’t get everything

The PSVR sounds affordable, maybe, at first: It undercuts the $600 Oculus Rift and $800 HTC Vive. But hang on, all you get with PSVR is a headset and cables. You don’t get any controllers, including the PlayStation Move wands that PlayStation’s VR uses for many of its games. You can use a DualShock 4 controller, yes, but that’s not included either. But more importantly, you need a PlayStation Camera. That’s another add-on. Sony hinted it will offer bundles that include these accessories, but there’s a good chance that package will creep back towards at least $500.

You can use it as a second screen for your PS4

The PSVR can run any PlayStation game on its screen, or show your movies or apps, in a cinematic 2D big-screen mode. It may sound silly, but it also means you could use it to play games while someone else has the TV on, like the Wii U and its gamepad.

The PSVR can also play 360-degree videos and show panoramic photos. I looked at a sample video, but it looked pretty blurry. A better, professionally made 3D 360-degree video of Joshua Bell playing a violin solo looked much better, but was shot with Sony’s own rig of action cameras and produced solely as a tech demo.

The games look good

PlayStation VR will have 50 games by launch, according to Sony, and hundreds of developers working on titles. The biggest game announced so far is Star Wars Battlefront, but there are other exclusives peppered throughout Sony’s announced games so far. Others are games debuting for Oculus Rift and HTC Vive.

We tried a lot of games we’d never seen. And mostly, the games were really good.

Rez Infinite updates the classic, trippy cyberpunk music game to feel like you’re slipping along through a neon dream concert. Rigs, a multiplayer mech-suit sports game where you throw yourself through a metal hoop and blast your opponents, was full of lag last year but now plays silky-smooth and nausea-free. Weird puzzle games like Gnog feel like the types of strange but wonderful PSN games we love, but in 3D VR. Sony’s own collection of game franchises, plus a stable of developers, could make a huge difference.

In our experience though, there are already two VR games pretty far along in development that you won’t want to miss: Eve: Valkyrie and Job Simulator. They could be killer apps for virtual reality — reasons you might run out and buy a VR headset to begin with.

Eve: Valkyrie is an incredibly immersive space dogfighting game, one that puts you in the cockpit of a fast-moving fighter and does it damnedest to convince you that you’re actually there. Your armed-to-the-teeth space capsule is filled with holographic user interfaces and physical controls that float right in front of your eyes, looking pretty darn realistic.

You can turn your head, look up, down and even over your shoulder to keep a bead on your foes as they whiz past. Wheel your ship about to engage them, and you can lock onto enemy craft with guided missiles as long as you keep your gaze fixed for long enough. Perhaps the most impressive touch is how your in-game body mirrors your actual body, even leaning when you lean in the real world. (You use a gamepad to steer your ship, not your head.)

Job Simulator feels like the polar opposite of Eve: Valkyrie, with no fast-paced dogfighting among the stars. Instead, you’re an office drone in the year 2050, tasked with performing jobs that even robots find too menial to bother with (or so we presume). Mostly, though, the game is about messing with as much stuff as possible using the Move controls.

You can grab just about anything in the office, throw it anywhere you like, and just enjoy the zaniness of using your real hands in a virtual world. There’s a red Swingline stapler that shoots staples clear across the room, a working computer that plays an Angry Birds clone — if you plug in the power and find the right disc — and a dunking bird that’ll drink from your coffee mug, just to give an idea of some of the things you can do.

PSVR could also be used to play more experimental storytelling apps and experiences, just like on Rift and Vive. Allumette, from Penrose Studios, is a storybook world telling a tale of a sad girl in a floating city that looks like it’s made of stop-motion physical objects. A concept social app threw three of us at CNET into a weird cartoon playground where we threw balls at each other and danced badly, waving giant emoji-like hands.

Would we buy the PSVR?

It’s still hard to tell. This is expensive stuff, even if it’s cheaper than the Rift or Vive. Sony promises 50 games when the PlayStation VR launches in October. That’s plenty, and Sony is also promising entertainment and social apps too. The bar is being set high. But so far, PSVR delivers in its demos, and its games and comfortable headset could be its greatest strengths.

14
Jun

Apple iOS 10 Release Date, Price and Specs – CNET


Apple spent the bulk of its annual Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) talking up iOS 10, its new software for the iPhone and iPad — and for good reason. The exhausting list of new features takes in the Siri voice assistant, photos, maps and my personal favorite, the ton of new ways to interact with friends using the Messages app.

Any iPhone 5 and newer will run Apple iOS 10 (sorry, iPhone 4 and 4S) — check out the complete list here. Features that use 3D Touch for pressure sensitivity will only work on the iPhone 6S, 6S Plus and forthcoming iPhone 7.

iOS 10 is available to developers now (so they can start taking advantage of the new capabilities) and due out to everyone else in the fall (the public beta drops in July). Some of the additions are admittedly more interesting than others, but they’ll all help build on Apple’s OS empire. Here they are in order of my favorites.

1. Incredibly interactive messages

Disco balls! Invisible ink! Emoji out the wazoo! This is Apple jumping on the zeitgeist of social messaging with the new Messages app in iOS 10. This is Apple’s most developed change to the sprawling software, and also its broadest-reaching and most light-hearted. You’ll get:

  • Rich links that show photos and video when you paste a URL
  • Better access to the camera and photo gallery
  • Emoji appear in your predictions list (and you can tap words to replace with emoji)
  • Emoji appear 3 times larger in the chat dialog
  • Text bubbles paste in sizes ranging from extra-small to extra-large
  • Double-tap a bubble to send a reaction
  • Invisible ink message you scrub with your finger to unveil
  • Animated stickers (like from JibJab)
  • Pay friends using Apple Pay, right in the message

Messages for iOS 10 is now open to developers, so expect a dizzying amount of options by launch.

Here are the coolest new features of iOS…
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2. Lock screen becomes more of a hub

You’ll be able to:

  • Raise the phone to wake the lock screen
  • Use 3D Touch to jump into a notification
  • Respond to messages from the lock screen
  • Slide right to open the camera
  • Slide left to open widgets
  • Access to the new Home app

This, too, will work with third-party apps, which means that you may be able to take care of much of your business without even needing to unlock the phone (we expect this to be optional, in case you’re worried about others messing with your lock screen.)

3. Voice-command Siri to do stuff in your favorite apps

Expanding on the theme of newfound openness, Apple is letting app-makers latch on to Siri, so you can dictate Apple’s voice assistant to do your bidding in other apps. Example: “Siri, use WhatsApp to tell Andy I’m running 5 minutes late.”

You’ll then be able to preview the message within the Siri app before sending it on its way.

Press here, pay somewhere else!


CNET

4. Buy stuff from your Mac, but pay from your iPhone

You could already answer iPhone calls on your Mac, but a change to Mac and iPhone software means you’ll be able to pay for things as well. Let’s say you’re shopping on your laptop. Come checkout time, you can place your thumb on the iPhone home button and use TouchID to authenticate the purchase taking place on a totally different device (with an Apple Pay partner). Genius.

Also, Apple Pay is coming to Safari on iOS.

5. New keyboard tricks spare your tired, typing hands

While you’re typing, Siri can now anticipate what you might want to do or say and suggest information you may need, like a contact’s phone number, or an action, like put your dinner reservations on the calendar.

6. Control your smart home from any screen

A quick swipe to call up the Control Center gets you quick access to gear in your house that works with Apple’s HomeKit, like a doorbell camera. In addition, the brand-new Home app groups controls for all your HomeKit-enabled appliances into one screen for you to adjust one at a time or as part of a “scene,” or profile. (Bonus! You can say “Good morning, Siri” — or tap it on the Home app — to launch the morning scene.)

7. Paste iPhone URLs on your Mac, and vice versa

As part of the same set of iPhone/Mac bridging software called Continuity, you’ll also have a universal clipboard that will let you paste URLs and other text on either your Mac or your iPhone or iPad. As a Mac user who has access to an iPhone (and a million other phones as well), the convenience factor is going to be huge.

8. Find photos more easily

iOS 10 uses facial recognition software to automatically build albums of people, places and events. This takes a lot of organizing work out of your hands, and also makes photos a heck of a lot easier to search.

9. Better mapping for your phone and car

I’m a Google Maps kind of gal, but Apple is making a big effort to catch up. It’s refreshed Maps app starts with suggestions when you slide up. It also bakes in alternate routes, traffic information along the route, as well as gas stations and restaurants — the app will also tell how you much time a fill-up will take. You can order an Uber from the app (and track it), and even book a dinner reservation with OpenTable and pay with Apple Pay, all without leaving the app.

If you have Apple Car Play, turn-by-turn directions read out on your car’s instruments.

10. Music app redesign lets you rock and rap along to lyrics

You can sum up the completely redesigned Music app like this: Lyrics, discovery and recommendations. For music lovers who don’t use a third-party service, this one makes music easier to find than before. But the best part of the app was still the way it was announced on stage.

11. Automatic photo albums and videos

Click the Memories tab in your iOS 10 photo reel to see auto-organized albums (see #8) and video highlights, like of a family vacations. You’ll also see a map of all your locations, and other related content, like another event where Grandpa and Grandma also tagged along.

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You’ll be able to easily reach contacts that use third-party services.


Tyler Lizenby/CNET

12. More ways to contact friends from the address book

I suffer from having contact information spread out across all my chatting platforms, so I love the idea of Apple making it easy to contact friends on third-party apps (like What’s App, for example) directly from their contact card.

Likewise, a VoIP call from this service or others can integrate into the lock screen and your list of recent calls. iOS 10 will also include voicemail transcription, and you can use a third-party app to suggest if an unknown caller is spam (Apple demoed Tencent.)

13. Reading subscription magazines in the News app

You can already see newsfeeds laid out in snazzy ways, but in iOS 10, you’ll be able to also see spreads for content you already subscribe to, like The Wall Street Journal. Breaking news notification also make the cut. This is how the old Newsstand should have always been.

14. Delete unwanted Apple apps

You know those apps on your home screen that you never use and don’t really want? You can yank ’em out in iOS 10. Here’s how.

15. Collaborate in a Note

I use Notes all the time to write stories and to-do lists, so the option to collaborate is pretty welcome.