iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus Sales Top Thirteen Million in Launch Weekend
Apple today announced that opening weekend sales for the brand-new iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus have exceeded thirteen million units, breaking the previous record of ten million units sold by the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus last year.
“Sales for iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus have been phenomenal, blowing past any previous first weekend sales results in Apple’s history,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “Customers’ feedback is incredible and they are loving 3D Touch and Live Photos, and we can’t wait to bring iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus to customers in even more countries on October 9.”
The company claims, as with previous years, that demand for the new smartphones is at an all-time high, and confirmed that the new iPhones will be coming to 40 additional countries beginning on October 9, including Italy, Mexico, Russia, Spain and Taiwan. The company has stated it plans to have the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus in over 130 countries by the end of the year.
iPhone 6s breaks Apple sales record with 13 million sold
Apple’s iPhone 6s is the company’s new sales champ, with 13 million units sold just three days after launch. “Sales… (blew) past any previous first weekend sales results in Apple’s history,” said CEO Tim Cook in a statement. The new handset easily beat the iPhone 6, which was in 10 million consumer’s hands by the same three-day period a year ago. So how did Apple manage to sell around $10 billion worth of phones in such a short time-frame? Good press on the devices didn’t hurt, but for the first time, the iPhone 6s launched in China at the same time that it debuted in the US and Europe.
The iPhone 6 and 6 Plus were also supposed to debut in China last year, but the launch was delayed by regulatory hurdles. The vast number of extra consumers in the nation, which is Apple’s second biggest market, no doubt juiced sales this time. It doesn’t diminish the feat, however, because the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus launched in just 12 countries, and will be available in 40 more starting on October 9th. When all is said and done, Apple’s latest smartphones will be on sale in 130 countries total by the end of the year.
Source: Apple
‘iPhone 7’ Rumored to be Waterproof, Possibly Adopt Non-Metallic Casing Material
The iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus just released in first wave launch countries around the world last Friday, but a few first rumors about the 2016 “iPhone 7” have begun to surface online this morning. According to a source from the Chinese social media site Weibo (via Macotakara) [Google Translate], the next version of the iPhone will have a strengthened, waterproof frame and may ditch metallic casing altogether.
This strengthened body would certainly follow in the footsteps of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, which bolstered the weak points of its predecessors with the inclusion of 7000 Series aluminum alloy. But, according to today’s rumors, the so-called iPhone 7 will find its strength in a focus on a waterproof and dust-proof body that would allow iPhone users to worry less about dropping their smartphone in liquids.
This big new upgrade to the iPhone 7 would call for a new frame and casing material, and according to one of the postings on Weibo, Apple is in fact planning on adopting an entirely new material next year for the iPhone 7. If this turns out to be the case, the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus would be the last in the iPhone line to include a metallic casing for the smartphone.
Macotakara also received news from reliable sources stating that the upcoming iPhone would have a “completely flat” LCD screen, but, as with all of today’s rumors, it should be taken with a grain of salt given that we’re just now under a year away from Apple confirming or denying any of today’s claims. These aren’t the first rumors of the iPhone 7, either, with reports dating back to March concerning the 2016 iPhone’s possibility of adopting Intel LTE Chips, including glass-on-glass touch panels, and be the thinnest iPhone yet.
The iPad Pro’s biggest challenge: finding its place between tablet and laptop
This article originally appeared on Fast Company and is reprinted with permission.
By Jared Newman
When Apple launched the iPad in 2010, the biggest question was whether it could carve out a space between smartphones and laptops.
For a while, the answer was yes, as the iPad became Apple’s fastest-growing product. But since then, smartphones have become larger and more powerful, while laptops have become thinner, lighter, and more battery-efficient. iPad sales have felt the squeeze, declining for two straight years even as Apple’s iPhone and Mac sales flourish.
Rather than give up, Apple is sharpening its focus with the iPad Pro, which is larger and more powerful than its predecessors, with an optional keyboard and drawing stylus. The question now is whether this new space—somewhere between smaller media consumption tablets and full-blown laptops—can help revitalize the iPad as a whole.
Put another way, can the iPad become even more like a laptop without losing its sense of purpose?

Making Trade-offs
During Apple’s September event, CEO Tim Cook offered a refresher on what the iPad is supposed to accomplish. “iPad is the clearest expression of our vision of the future of personal computing, a simple multi-touch piece of glass that instantly transforms into virtually anything you want it to be,” he said.
What Cook didn’t readily acknowledge is that the iPad Pro appears to compromise this vision, with both its hardware and software becoming more laptop-like.
The $169 Smart Keyboard accessory, for instance, could turn out to be essential for anyone doing copious amounts of text entry on the iPad, but it may also feel like a trade-off. As a tablet, the entire device will become heavier and more cumbersome. And as a laptop, there’s no trackpad to give your arms a rest from reaching out to the touch screen. (The iPad’s software keyboard will offer a cursor for selecting text, but there’s no word on how to access this cursor with the physical keyboard attached.)

Even without the keyboard, the size of the iPad Pro brings trade-offs compared to its smaller predecessors. While the display itself may be more immersive, the larger footprint will inhibit certain actions such as thumb typing or cradling the device in one hand. And while the iPad Pro’s upgraded processor and RAM will allow for more powerful apps, it could also create a class of software that doesn’t work with smaller models.
Meanwhile, the iPad’s software is becoming increasingly complex. The new Slide Over and Split View features in iOS 9 let users run two apps side by side, adding an element of window management to the iPad. And with iCloud Drive, users can now expose a file system for all their documents. These features will surely make the iPad much more powerful. But as some observers such as Ben Thompson have pointed out, they also risk making the iPad feel less like a simple piece of glass.
Better Ingredients, Better Apps
Unless Tim Cook has a short memory, he must be conscious of these compromises. It was Cook, after all, who once dismissed laptop-tablet hybrids such as Microsoft’s Surface. “Anything can be forced to converge,” Cook said in a 2012 earnings call, “but the problem is that products are about trade-offs, and you begin to make trade-offs to the point where what you have left doesn’t please anyone.”
It makes you wonder why Cook and company ultimately felt that some trade-offs were necessary.
The iPad Pro’s more laptop-like qualities could be Apple’s way of appealing to app makers, says Kevin La Rue, vice president for photography software maker Macphun. As an example, he points to Adobe, whose Creative Cloud apps will make use of the Apple Pencil stylus, and Microsoft, which is fully embracing Split View multitasking in its Office software.
“I think they had to get there from a hardware standpoint, and I think it could actually cause a resurgence in serious app developers wanting to do stuff for the platform,” La Rue says.
Macphun, for its part, is planning to port more of its Mac apps to the iPad Pro in 2016, taking advantage of the Apple Pencil, faster processor, and 4 GB of RAM. (The company is debating whether these apps should have Pro-only features or be entirely exclusive to iPad Pro users). And if anything, La Rue is hoping for even more PC-like conceits, such as connectivity to a second display or an external hard drive.

Sketching on the iPad Pro with the Pencil stylus
Defining The Productive Tablet
At some point, however, the thing that La Rue is describing starts to sound like a Mac. But he’s emphatic in saying that the two platforms should not converge. The appeal of the iPad is that it’s still fundamentally a tablet, but that users can mix or match accessories as the situation demands.
“You can go in with a base iPad, and that may be perfectly fine for 60 of the buyers, and then you add on these accessories,” La Rue says. “If you bought it, and had all that stuff in-box, then you’re getting awful close to the [MacBook] Air.”
But again, we come back to the central question: Why even bother tacking on these accessories at all? Why use an iPad Pro if your Windows PC or Mac is already an effective productivity tool?
Understanding how best to use the iPad Pro is going to take time.
In talking to app makers, there’s a sense that the answer is still illusive. La Rue, for instance, says Macphun is still figuring out how many people will finish a photo-editing job on their tablets, versus using it as a starting point.
But Peter Arvai, cofounder and CEO of presentation software Prezi, believes that’s okay. He sees the iPad as an entirely new computing format, one that’s more adaptable and flexible than anything that came before. Understanding how best to use it is going to take time, and that only speaks to its disruptive potential.
“To assume that just because we launch an iPad that we immediately figure out how to use it the right way, I don’t think it’s the right assumption,” he says.
In the meantime, the iPad Pro is merely providing some more familiar tools from the laptop age. Even if they cloud Apple’s vision for the future of computing, it’s a better alternative than no future at all.
[Photo: courtesy of Apple]
More from Fast Company:
Video Shows Benefits of 2GB RAM in iPhone 6s
When Apple announced the iPhone 6s, they didn’t mention that the new iPhones carry 2GB of RAM, an increase from 1GB on the iPhone 6. The 2GB RAM was later confirmed in Xcode and benchmarks. This increased RAM allows the iPhone to keep more Apps and data active in memory.
iDownloadBlog recorded this video showing the difference between the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6s after loading several websites in Safari:
The iPhone 6s is able to keep more websites active in memory without requiring a reload when returning to the tab. The additional RAM should also allow more apps to remain active in memory without relaunching.
The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus just launched on Friday.
Inhabitat’s Week in Green: Off-grid homes and fold-up planes
Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.
What does it take for a house to go completely off-grid? A diverse range of energy sources is key — and this new 3D-printed house can be powered by built-in solar panels or tethered to a hybrid car. We also love this pop-up transparent dome shelter that lets you sleep beneath the stars. In other architecture news, Apple just launched its first store under the guidance of Jonathan Ives — and it’s warmer and more curvaceous than the company’s previous brick and mortars. MAD Architects unveiled out-of-this-world plans for a futuristic George Lucas Museum in Chicago. And a team of researchers found a way to build a functional 24-foot rope bridge using drones.
The Volkswagen emissions scandal rocked the auto industry this past week — and the fallout is severe. The company is being forced to recall 500,000 vehicles and CEO Martin Winterkorn has officially resigned. Meanwhile, the rumor mill is spinning up around Apple’s top-secret electric car — new reports indicate the vehicle could launch as soon as 2019. Tesla is the king of EVs — but Taiwan-based Thunder Power is looking to steal the crown with a new electric sports car that can travel 373 miles on a single charge. A bullet-shaped super bicycle just broke a new world speed record by hitting 85.71 miles per hour on pedal power alone. And Icon launched an amphibious airplane that can fold up to fit in a camper.
Most wind turbines are gigantic — but this week a tiny portable turbine blew through nearly all of its Kickstarter goal in a single day. In other tech news, researchers just developed what could be the world’s most effective invisibility cloak. It’s made from near-microscopic pieces of gold, and it can be draped over virtually any object to conceal it. You’ve probably never heard of jellyfish leather before — but it exists, and it could offer a sustainable alternative to cowhide. And since Halloween is just a month away, we showcased the work of Magic Wheelchair — a nonprofit that creates incredible costumes for children in wheelchairs.
Latest iPhone screen bypass is tougher than the Contra code
Apple has just rolled out iOS 9.1, and it unfortunately has a flaw in tow that gives nosy techies a way to bypass your lock screen — yet again. YouTube user videosdebarraquito posted a recording of how the hack is carried out, as you can see below the fold. Similar to previous bypass techniques (and there were several), the latest one is also quite tough to execute: the hacker has to be fast enough to launch Siri after typing in five incorrect passcodes and before the device locks him out. The timing has to be perfect or else it wouldn’t work, but if it does, then he can jump into the clock app from Siri, then into Messages, Contacts and Photos.
That potentially compromises your friends’ and families’ details, private communications and images. Thankfully, Ars Technica says that the technique doesn’t always work. It might be because the other people who attempted it weren’t fast enough (we sure weren’t when we tried), but it could also be due to specific settings. To be safe, you can use a six-digit/letter passcode instead of four, disable Siri until the flaw gets fixed or make sure no random person touches your phone.
Via: Ars Technica
Source: videosdebarraquito (YouTube)
Aaron Sorkin Apologizes for Blasting Tim Cook’s ‘Opportunistic’ Comment
Early this month Tim Cook sat down with Stephen Colbert for an interview and called movies made about Steve Jobs “opportunistic.” Yesterday, during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, screenwriter Aaron Sorkin issued a scathing response to Cook, saying “if you’ve got a factory full of children in China assembling phones for 17 cents an hour you’ve got a lot of nerve calling someone else opportunistic.”
Today, during an interview with E! News, Sorkin walked back his comments, saying that both he and Cook went a little too far.
“You know what, I think that Tim Cook and I probably both went a little too far. And I apologize to Tim Cook. I hope when he sees the movie, he enjoys it as much as I enjoy his products.”
Sorkin’s Steve Jobs film, which stars Michael Fassbender as Jobs and Seth Rogen as Steve Wozniak will be released in New York and Los Angeles on October 9. The film will expand to more theaters on October 16 and open nationwide on October 23. Early reviews of Steve Jobs have called it “thrilling”, with Oscar buzz surrounding the film.
The film is based on Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography, which Cook has said does a “tremendous disservice” to the Steve Jobs that he knew. The movie follows Jobs during three product launches, providing a behind-the-scenes look at how Jobs interacted with friends, colleagues and family.
iPad Mini 4 review: A long wait makes for a potent upgrade

Fans of Apple’s smaller iPad Mini caught a tough break last fall when the company unveiled its new tablets for the year. Although Tim Cook & co. lavished plenty of attention on the faster, slimmed-down iPad Air 2, the upgraded iPad Mini 3 was regarded as a mere afterthought. The list of changes was so short, in fact, that some of us wondered why Apple would introduce a performance gap between the Air and Mini lines. Still more people wondered when they’d get a Mini with enough power to match its larger sibling. Turns out, the answer was “a year later.” I’ve been testing the new iPad Mini 4 for over a week now and can say with confidence this is the Mini we should’ve gotten last year.Slideshow-323041
Hardware
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Apple’s design team did most of the heavy lifting with the iPad Air 2 and now we’re finally seeing that sleek aesthetic trickle down to the Mini. The 4’s fit and finish is still first-rate and, more importantly, the whole package is about a tenth of a pound lighter than last year’s model. That might not sound like a dramatic difference, but when you’re building a device with a bigger-than-phone-sized screen, every ounce and gram matter. The iPad Air 2 felt almost unnaturally light for its size, so you can imagine how light the even smaller Mini 4 feels — holding it aloft and watching YouTube videos for hours was none too painful.
The Minis were never exactly tanks, of course, but this year’s thinner and lighter model (0.65 pound and 6.1mm, the same thickness as the Air 2) makes prolonged, one-handed use a pleasure. The Air-ification of the Mini line also means that handy rotation-lock switch — part of the iPad’s hardware formula for years — has been excised. Keeping your screen from spinning around now requires you to swipe up the Control Center and tap an icon down there. This is one of those little changes that most people won’t notice until they start feeling around for that familiar nubbin. Despite not using it that frequently, I still miss having it there.

It’s easy to imagine Apple just took a shrink ray to an iPad Air 2 and called it a day, but there’s more going on here than meets the eye. You see, rather than carry over the modified A8X from the Air 2, Apple kitted out the new Mini with the same A8 processor that’s currently powering the iPhone 6, albeit except it’s paired with 2GB of RAM instead of one. I’ve never had much reason to complain about the iPhone 6’s performance, and the combination of that chipset and the extra RAM means the Mini 4 is, unsurprisingly, a snappy performer (more on that later). My review unit was a 128GB model, although Apple also offers 16GB and 64GB options with prices starting at $399 for a WiFi-only configuration. Toss in an updated 8-megapixel rear camera, not to mention faster 802.11ac WiFi and 20 LTE bands, and we’ve got a much-improved device on our hands.
Display and sound

The iPad Air 2 might give you more screen real estate, but the Mini 4 wins on pixel density, hands down. Like the Mini 3 before it, the newest generation squeezes 326 pixels into each linear inch of the device’s 7.9-inch screen, making for crisp text and eye-popping visuals. Even better, Apple finally got rid of that tiny gap between the Mini’s display panel and the slate of arsenic-free glass covering it; it’s all been combined into a single, laminated panel.
What sounds like an exercise in LCD screen minutiae makes for some dramatic changes: It means less glare, better viewing angles and a touch more crispness. When we tested the Air 2 and the Mini 3, the difference in color clarity and saturation was pretty pronounced, but that’s thankfully now a non-issue. Oh, and a brief aside: Older Minis also made a bit of a hollow thunk sound when you tapped them a certain way, an issue that’s been addressed on the new model.

If you’re hell-bent on using the Mini as a media machine, you’ve probably got a decent pair of headphones to go with it. Thankfully, you needn’t fret if you accidentally leave them at home: The speakers housed on the Mini’s bottom edge are impressively loud for their size. You won’t be able to fill a room with the mid-heavy sound they churn out, but I discovered I could leave a video playing in the kitchen and still hear it while folding laundry downstairs.
Software

iOS 9 is such an important step forward that we just published a few thousand words all about it. Assuming you don’t have the time to sift through our full review, here’s a quick rundown on what iOS 9 means for the new Mini. In short, Apple’s latest software update is focused more on stability and thoughtfulness, using Siri’s new proactive smarts to surface information and apps when you might want them. Throw in plenty of neat design changes — like a revamped app switcher and a fantastic “Back” button that lets you follow the breadcrumb trail of apps you were just using — and we’ve got a more smartly put-together update than we initially gave Apple credit for.Slideshow-322375
iPads got plenty of attention in this update, and fans of mobile multitasking should be especially pleased. Consider Slide Over, which lets you swipe open a drawer full of first-party apps that can be opened in a smaller, separate window that takes up about a quarter of the screen. By jumping into any of those apps, you’re effectively putting the other, primary application you were just using on pause until you’re done texting or checking Apple News. You can go a step further and drag the line that divides those apps; that resizes both of them until they each take up 50 percent of the screen. Why hello, Split View. Honestly, as neat as this trick is, it feels sort of silly on a screen this small. Running two apps side by side makes sense on a larger display — say, on a full-sized Air 2 or an enormous iPad Pro. Shoehorning two apps onto an 8-inch screen can feel a little claustrophobic after a while.

Then there’s picture-in-picture mode, which, yes, is exactly what it sounds like. Any time you play a video in Apple’s stock media player, you can tap an icon to shrink it down and stick it in a corner so you won’t miss a moment of JK Simmons being an epic jerk in Whiplash. Give that small window a quick pinch-zoom and it’ll roughly double in size; the default view on the Mini 4 is pretty tiny, so you’ll probably spend most of your time in this mode.
Moving on, the Notes app also now supports richer text formatting (heck yeah, subheadings) and packs a reasonably thorough sketching tool for adding drawings and diagrams to your text. The smaller screens on iPhones make random doodling tricky, but that’s not a problem with the Mini’s nearly 8-inch screen. All told, iOS 9 is a must-have download, and the Mini 4 gives it plenty of space — and power — to shine.
Camera

I’ll be the first to admit I sometimes glare at people shooting tab-photos in public, but the appeal is pretty obvious. For one, it might be the only camera folks have on them, and we all know the adage there. A bigger screen also makes it easier to frame shots, and really, who among us couldn’t stand to be better at that? What I’m saying is this seemingly silly habit isn’t going anywhere, and the iPad Mini 4’s rear-facing 8-megapixel camera does a fine job of capturing the world around you. Slideshow-323032
Tablet photos are hardly ever outstanding, but the Mini 4, like the Air 2 before it, is capable of capturing crisp colors and reasonable detail when the light is right. White balance is generally more accurate now too, which is especially apparent since the Mini didn’t get left in the display quality dust this time. Things obviously get muddier in dimmer conditions, but really, if you’re using a tablet to take photos in the middle of the night, you might want to rethink your strategy. Meanwhile, the front-facing camera is stuck at 1.2 megapixels, but it now has an f/2.2 aperture lens to help suck in the light bouncing off of your face. Still, I haven’t noticed much of a difference between this camera and the one in last year’s Mini.
Other changes include the ability to shoot in burst mode thanks to the A8 chipset thrumming away inside, and improved support for HDR photos and video. The iPad Mini 4 isn’t going to be anyone’s first choice for mobile photography, but it’s a solid, if unremarkable, performer.
Performance and battery life

I sort of alluded to this earlier, but let’s be clear: The Mini 4 is not just a shrunken-down Air 2. The difference in the chipsets powering these things is apparent in our benchmark tests below, but the Mini 4 is still no slouch compared to its more premium cousin. It’s buttery smooth as you leap in and out of apps and swipe through web pages. The only time I noticed the Mini’s A8 chipset struggling was while running two apps in Split View, and even then, it was only when I was trying to fiddle with both simultaneously. While I’m comparing the Mini 4 to other iPads, it’s noticeably quicker to react than last year’s Mini. In fact, Apple says the A8’s CPU is 30 percent faster than the Mini 3’s A7, and that graphical performance is up 60 percent from last year. That helps explain why Asphalt 8 and Modern Combat 5: Blackout ran like a dream, but I’ll let the numbers do the rest of the talking.
| iPad Mini 4 | iPad Air 2 | iPad Mini 3 | NVIDIA Shield Tablet | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geekbench 3.0 | 3,236 | 4,510 | 2,470 | 3,423 |
| Basemark X | 17,212 | 29,518 | 14,839 | TBD |
| 3DMark IS Unlimited | 16,291 | 21,659 | 14,595 | 30,970 |
| SunSpider 1.0 (ms) | 349 | 303 | 439 | 463 |
| SunSpider: Lower scores are better. | ||||
So, pretty much exactly what I expected: The Mini 4 strikes an appropriate balance between the Mini 3 and the Air 2 (which has the edge thanks to an extra CPU core). Usually it performs just a hair better than last year’s iPhones too. Of course, horsepower means nothing without battery power, and the new Mini has that in spades. The usual Apple refrain is that the Mini is rated for about 10 hours of continued use, but that might have been understating things a bit. In our usual video rundown test (video looping with the screen brightness set to 50 percent), the Mini 4 lasted 13 hours and 4 minutes before needing an emergency trip to the power outlet. That’s just short of the 13 hours and 45 minutes on last year’s model, which isn’t bad at all considering the new Mini 4 actually has a smaller, 5,124mAh battery.
The Mini fared similarly well in the battery test called “living with me.” After pulling it off of the charger at around 7 AM, schlepping to the office and using it for emails/reading articles/the occasional game, I’d usually wind up with 10 percent remaining when I returned home at 9 PM.
| Tablet | Battery life |
|---|---|
| iPad Mini 4 | 13:04 |
| iPad Air 2 | 11:15 |
| iPad Mini 3 | 13:45 |
| iPad Air | 13:45 (LTE) |
| Apple iPad Mini | 12:43 (WiFi) |
| Samsung Galaxy Tab S (10-inch) | 12:30 |
| Microsoft Surface 3 | 9:11 |
| Galaxy Tab S2 | 7:30 |
The competition
If you’re in the market for a sleek tablet, consider Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S2 (starting at $400 for the 8-inch model). While it lacks the kooky style of its immediate predecessor, the 10-inch screen is one to behold — it is Samsung after all — and it’s only 5.6mm thick. The downgraded battery might sting, though: It only managed 7.5 hours in our tests, down from 12.5 hours for the previous-gen model. Itching for something more portable? ASUS just launched its 8-inch ZenPad S, a $200 Android slate with a waistline similar to the Mini 4’s and a 2,048 x 1,536 display, to boot. Then there’s the iPad Air 2 itself, which is still the most powerful tablet in Apple’s roster. It’s incredibly sleek and can be held one-handed for longer than you might expect, but its size means it’s just not going to fit into some lifestyles. The thing is, it’s almost worth trying to see if the size can work for you; prices for the Air 2 start at $499, and sales or buying refurbished can bring that base price down even lower.
Wrap-up

Some might gripe about the Mini 4’s year-old internals, but after my week of testing, I feel confident saying that it doesn’t matter much. The tablet’s entire package, from the still-snappy A8 chipset to the beautiful and almost-pocketable screen, to the incredibly sleek chassis, makes it worthy of your consideration. If you’re on the lookout for a super-portable tablet with strong fundamentals and great app support, you probably won’t find a contender better than this one. That said, if you can fit a bigger tablet into your life, you could easily upgrade into an iPad Air 2 for not much more money and get even more processing power.
Hands-On With 3D Touch on the New iPhone 6s Plus
The standout new feature of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus is 3D Touch, which Apple is billing as an evolution of Multi-Touch. The new feature allows the display to sense how much pressure is being applied, opening up new ways for users to interact with their phones. We went hands-on with the 6s Plus and explored what the feature is capable of.
3D Touch can be used both in and out of apps. Outside of apps, on the Home Screen, a user can press down on an app’s icon to quickly interact with the app. This feature is called Quick Actions. For instance, pressing on the Phone app allows you to quickly call a recent contact. Or, pressing down on the Camera icon allows you to quickly take a selfie.
Inside of apps, 3D Touch allows users to “Peek” and “Pop” into their content. For instance, within the Messages app a user can press down on a contact’s message thread to see their latest message and then press down harder to Pop into the thread to reply. Finally, 3D Touch can be used to turn the keyboard into a trackpad.
Apple notes that creating 3D Touch was “unbelievably hard”, and that the company had to work with Corning to create a new pliable iPhone cover glass. When the glass is pressed, the 96 sensors embedded in the backlight display to measure microscopic changes between it and the glass. The measurements are combined with the touch sensor to sync finger motion with images on the screen.
On first impression, users are enjoying 3D Touch. MacRumors forum member jsmith189 said he thinks it could become an integral part of navigating an iPhone.
I really enjoy the 3D Touch – while there aren’t too many apps that use it right now, I can definitely see it becoming part of my everyday ‘without thinking about it’ navigation.
Other users, like forum member Boardiesboi, note that the feature does take getting used to and that he adjusted the sensitivity on the feature so that it responds to lighter touches.
Users who prefer to use screen protectors on their devices shouldn’t hesitate to purchase one for the iPhone 6s or 6s Plus, as Apple marketing chief Phil Schiller confirmed in an email to 3D Techtronics that screen protectors would work with the new display technology as long as they comply with Apple’s design guidelines.
While 3D Touch is mostly compatible with Apple apps so far, third party companies are likely to embrace the new functionality in their apps in the near future. Today, Twitter updated its app to take advantage of the feature, allowing users to quickly access search or compose new tweets from the home screen.












