Pixelmator for iOS Gains iOS 9 Support With Split-Screen Multitasking on iPad
Pixelmator for iOS was today updated with full support for iOS 9, enabling split-screen multitasking when used on an iPad. Pixelmator supports full Split View, which will allow the Pixelmator app to be used side-by-side with other apps on the iPad mini 4 and the iPad Air 2. On older iPads, split-screen multitasking will be limited to Slide Over.
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“Pixelmator always takes advantage of the latest iOS features and technologies, and today we’re thrilled to bring Pixelmator for iOS 2.1, which includes full support for iOS 9, 8K image support, and the ability for iPad users to work in Pixelmator and any other app at the same time with Split View and Slide Over.” said Aidas Dailide, one of the founders of the Pixelmator Team. “With the new features in Pixelmator for iOS, it is even easier and more fun to edit images on the go.”
Today’s update also includes support for 8K resolution images, letting users edit photos that are up to 64 megapixels on their iPhone or iPad, and Spotlight Search on the iPhone and iPad will now index Pixelmator documents so they’ll show up in search results.
There’s a new “Open in Place” feature to open images from anywhere and save edits in the same place, and the “Save to Photos” feature will now open images from Photos and save edits onto the same image without creating a duplicate image.
Pixelmator can be downloaded from the App Store for $4.99. [Direct Link]
T-Mobile trade-in promo gets you an iPhone 6s for $5 per month
You can be sure that carriers will be trying hard to get your iPhone 6s purchase when the device launches on September 25th, but T-Mobile may be trying harder than most. It’s launching a promotion that day which will drop the cost of an iPhone 6s when you trade in your old iPhone and go with the network’s Jump On Demand upgrade program. If you hand in an iPhone 6, you’ll pay as little as $5 per month for the new handset; turn in that ‘old’ iPhone 5s and you’ll get the 6s for a still-reasonable $10 per month. Giving up any other device will lower the payments to $15 per month. You can pay more if you want something beyond the base model, of course. While you’ll likely want to look at Apple’s own installment plan if you insist on a factory-unlocked iPhone, the rate is low enough that it may well lure you away from Sprint and other providers with Apple-specific deals.
6/ YES – you read it right! Trade-in an iPhone6 & get a new #iPhone6s for $5/mth or trade-in your iPhone5s & get a new one for $10/mth!
— John Legere (@JohnLegere) September 22, 2015
Source: John Legere (Twitter), (Periscope)
Apple Notifying iPhone 6s Pre-Order Customers About Shipping Delays Ahead of Pope Visit
Apple has started sending emails to customers who may be affected by shipping delays caused by Pope Francis’ visit to the United States, letting them know that they may not be able to receive their iPhone 6s and 6s pre-orders on launch day.
Based on an image shared by Sam Biddle on Twitter, Apple is informing customers that while there may be delivery issues on Friday in restricted areas, Saturday deliveries will be available in most areas. Any customer in an affected area can expect to receive an email from Apple and from UPS or FedEX.
As MacRumors reported over the weekend, Pope Francis will be visiting New York City and Philadelphia this week, with all of the major shipping companies planning to shut down deliveries in select areas during his visit. UPS, FedEX, and USPS will all be following security protocols that will delay package deliveries in the following ZIP codes:
New York City: 10001, 10007, 10017, 10021, 10022, 10023, 10029
Philadelphia: 19102, 19103, 19104, 19106, 19107, 19109, 19123, 19130, 19146, 19147
Package pick ups and deliveries will be unavailable in areas of New York City on Thursday and Friday, and in areas of Philadelphia on Friday and Saturday. With Saturday delivery available, many who are not able to get their phones on Friday may be able to have them delivered on Saturday instead, and both UPS and FedEX may allow customers to route packages to an area where deliveries are available.
For customers outside of New York and Philadelphia, the first iPhone 6s and 6s Plus pre-order shipments will be arriving on Friday, September 25.
Note: Due to the political nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Politics, Religion, Social Issues forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.
T-Mobile Offering iPhone 6s Starting at $5/Month With iPhone 6 Trade In
T-Mobile CEO John Legere has announced on Twitter that it will offer the iPhone 6s for $5 per month through JUMP! On Demand with an iPhone 6 trade in, or $10 per month with an iPhone 5s trade in. The exact monthly payment will range between $5 and $15 per month depending on both the iPhone model you purchase and trade in.
If you do not want to trade in your current iPhone, T-Mobile has a JUMP! On Demand promotion that offers the 16GB iPhone 6s for $20 per month for 18 months with zero dollars paid upfront, totaling $360 under the agreement the device is returned in good condition. To keep the iPhone, you must pay an additional $164, bringing the total cost to $524 — a savings of $125 and the best deal for those willing to join T-Mobile.
6/ YES – you read it right! Trade-in an iPhone6 & get a new #iPhone6s for $5/mth or trade-in your iPhone5s & get a new one for $10/mth!
— John Legere (@JohnLegere) September 22, 2015
http://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsT-Mobile will begin selling the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus on September 25. The smartphones will support T-Mobile’s Extended Range LTE on the 700MHz spectrum, which extends the network’s LTE signal twice as far from its cellular towers and works four times better in buildings. T-Mobile Extended Range LTE is live in 170 markets and covers more than half of the American population.
iOS 9 review: making the basics work even better
iOS 9 is deceptive. When Apple first publicly trotted out the update at WWDC a few months back, it seemed happy to hang its hat on just a few new features: Apple News, better Maps and an improved Notes app. After using the betas for months and putting in still more time with the final, ready-for-everyone build, though, it’s clear that what Apple built is far more nuanced than it might have let on. (And there I was, thinking I’d have an easy review to write. Silly me.) Instead, what we’ve got here is in some ways a continuation of a philosophy that seemed to start in earnest in the Apple Watch. iOS 9 is less about new, whizbang features and more about getting the stuff we do everyday done just a little quicker, a little more efficiently. And you know what? That’s more valuable than you might think.Slideshow-322376
Getting started
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Download. Install. Boot. Setting up iOS 9 follows the same streamlined approach you’re probably already used to (unless you’re one of those people who habitually stays a version or two behind just because). The differences here are minor: Apple really wants you to set up a six-digit passcode instead of the standard, not-terribly secure four-digit alternative, although you can still choose the latter if you’re not too concerned about security. (Side note: You probably should be.) Of course, this is all moot if you can’t actually complete the update thanks to a bug that could strike post-install. Some users are reporting that they can’t use the “Slide to Upgrade” gesture after the iDevice restarts, prompting Apple to issue emergency suggestions while it works on a fix.
Anyway, before you even get to your home screen, you might notice all the text looks a little different. After years of Helvetica Neue in our faces, Apple swapped in its San Francisco typeface (first used on the Watch) and it very subtly changes the feel of iOS. It’s sort of like walking into your living room and seeing that your maroon walls are suddenly just a hair lighter than they used to be. I’ll leave it to the font buffs to debate the relative merits of Helvetica versus San Francisco, because the rest of us won’t find much to get worked up about. (I’ve come to really like it.)Slideshow-322375
San Francisco aside, your home screens have hardly changed, so anyone hoping for a radical, iOS 7-level redesign will have to wait a few more years. That’s not to say Apple left its now-standard aesthetic completely unchanged: Alerts and action boxes have slightly rounder corners (I call them “jelly beans”). The Notification Center displays your missed missives and calls in reverse chronological order, making it easier for you to triage from the top down. Oh, and there’s a battery widget that now lives in the Today screen, letting you know how much juice remains in your device (and Apple Watch, if you have one). This is all pretty minor stuff that does little to change the core of the iOS aesthetic, but it does reflect an understanding that people want information to be easier to find and digest.

Turns out the biggest visual change is also the one you’re going to use most often. Double-tapping the home button brings up a revamped app switcher that’s much prettier than the original. Rather than the usual, flat app screenshots aligned side by side, we now have a layered, three-quarter view that stacks apps on top of each other for snazzier perusing. It’s certainly a huge aesthetic improvement; peer closely enough and you can make out four apps running at a time, and just about every card has an up-to-date preview of what you were doing before you suddenly jumped somewhere else. I was no fan of the ugly, blank cards that populated iOS 8’s app switcher, and Apple clearly wasn’t either as they’ve been fixed (even if it sometimes takes a second for them to update). In fairness, the whole thing feels a little like the app-switching implementation in recent versions of Android. Whatever: It works well.
Biggest is one thing, but the best design tweak in all of iOS 9 is the one that’s easiest to miss. If you follow a link in one app into a completely separate one, the carrier/WiFi signal readout in the top-left corner of the screen disappears entirely, replaced by a handy “Back to [insert app here]” button that whisks you back one step along a trail of behavioral breadcrumbs. It’s one of those little, “oh duh” things that belonged in iOS from the start, and indeed, I predict you’ll be using it all the time.

And then there’s the keyboard. I can’t count the number of times I’ve accidentally SHOUTED at friends via text because there wasn’t any visual feedback worth a damn when I tapped the Shift button one time too many. Not so anymore. The letters on the keyboard visually switch between caps and lowercase depending on what you do with the Shift key, which itself changes color when you tap it. It’s about time: My friends and colleagues might finally believe I’m not a jerk. I won’t be the first bearer of bad news, but it’s worth repeating: There are no new emoji in iOS 9. You’ll have to wait for 9.1 to drop later this year before you can deploy your tacos and middle fingers mid-conversation.
More mindful of your space

When Apple launched iOS 8, plenty of people had a serious decision to make: Delete apps and content to make room for that huge install file, or hold off on updating indefinitely. Thankfully, that’s way less of an issue this year. If you’ve already downloaded iOS 9, you might’ve noticed the size of the update is much smaller than it used to be — it takes up 1.3GB of space, down from the hefty 4.6GB or so that iOS 8 required. Apple insisted on keeping 16GB iPhones around for at least another year rather than sticking 32GB into the entry-level model, and leaner updates will help keep people from having to make that agonizing choice again. To that end, Apple is also pushing what it calls “App Slicing,” a way for developers to tag the parts of their apps meant for devices other than yours — install one of those apps and you’ll only get the stuff meant for you.
A smarter Siri

Apple’s virtual concierge gets a little more capable with every update, and this time around it has a new look to go with its new tricks. The new Siri manifests in the form of a friendly, multicolored waveform (lifted from the Apple Watch) that pulses and surges in response to your voice. More importantly, Siri is starting to act more like an honest-to-goodness assistant thanks to some new contextual smarts. Go ahead, ask it to remind you of “this” while reading an article in Safari — Siri can figure out what you’re looking at and create the appropriate event for whenever you ask. I’ve mostly been using this feature to build an impromptu reading list and sure enough, it works like a treat. Siri can now also handle more specific tasks, like showing you photos from a specific time or location. Asking Siri to show off all my photos taken in 2014, or around here, or from Vietnam is a neat — and helpful — party trick. Not to mention, it sure beats sifting through the wilds of my Camera Roll.
But what about all the Proactive stuff Apple was talking up? You’ll see what it meant when you dig into the new search interface by swiping down or right on your home screen. While you’re going about your business, Siri quietly keeps tabs on what you’re doing to get a sense of who you like to talk to, what apps you like to use and when you like to use them. Once it’s done chewing on those behaviors, you’ll start getting Siri Suggestions for apps and contacts when it thinks they’re appropriate. Ideally, those suggestions would turn the search screen into a de facto, eight-icon quick-launch area (there’s that efficiency angle again).

The end result? Mixed. Siri’s very good at giving my girlfriend and sister Most Favored Contact status while the people I’ve spoken to most recently take up the other two slots. The app suggestions can be hit-or-miss, though — I don’t need Automatic when I’m sitting on the couch — but they’re better in the app switcher. Sometimes you’ll get a single suggestion (in the bottom-left corner) when you try to multitask, which Siri very often nails. NJTransit when I’m pulling into a train station parking garage? Spotify when I’m walking to the office? Yes, please.
Siri also finally learned to listen for your voice; when your iPhone is connected to a power source, you can get its attention with a quick “Hey Siri.” You’ll have to train it to listen for your voice specifically using a quick setup procedure that involves saying the launch phrase a few times. Now that I’ve done that, I’m pleased with its attentiveness even in mildly loud environs. I’d love for Siri to be able to listen for my commands all the time like the Moto X’s equivalents can, and it can do just that… as long as a hardware upgrade is in your future. Apple says the improved M9 co-processor wedged into the new phones’ A9 chipset makes efficient, always-on listening possible on the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, but anyone using a current-gen 6 or something older will have to stay tethered to a power outlet. Keep a Mophie or some such handy if you really need to bark commands at Siri on the go.
Improved search

While we’re at it, the line between Siri and Spotlight has started to blur, so let’s shift our attention to search. Just like in iOS 8, Spotlight reaches deep into the Apple-owned parts of your iDevice. Consider the word “karaoke,” which I think about abnormally often. Typing it into the search bar brings up apps I don’t want, sent and received messages containing the word, a Maps suggestion for a karaoke bar in Philly, a contact with whom I’ve often used the word “karaoke,” Bing search results for “karaoke” and so on. Here’s the kicker, though: Developers can now let Spotlight peer into their apps and websites thanks to a trio of new APIs, so sources beyond Apple’s first-party apps will eventually appear in your search results. That’s… pretty exhaustive, but also a huge improvement.
In days past, you could ask Siri about Amazon’s stock price or what the weather’s going to be like in Shenzhen and get a neat little visual readout of that info. Now you can feed those same queries — along with things like basic math problems — right into Spotlight and you’ll get a quick answer too. Talking to Siri’s a little faster, but it’s still a nice feature to have. And since we’re talking about talking, you can finally tap a microphone icon to speak them aloud, though you can’t ask Siri to universally search your device for you. Guess we’ll have something to look forward to in iOS 10.

Now dragging down from the home screen still reveals the Spotlight search bar (plus suggested apps), and it also lives in the dedicated search space to the left of your home screen. Siri’s app and contact suggestions live there too, where they’re joined by Maps buttons for local points of interest. Some of them are pretty pointless — here’s looking at you, Shopping — but I’ve had to frantically use the Gas locator more times than I care to admit. Below all that is where you’ll find articles culled straight from Apple’s new News app. Well, most of the time, anyway. Sometimes they just don’t appear and I can’t make out the rationale here; it would’ve made sense if they didn’t appear after just leaving Apple News, but that doesn’t seem to be it either. Go figure.
Apple News

If any one part of iOS 9 still feels like a work in progress, it’s Apple’s newfangled News app. This update heralds the demise of Newsstand as we knew it, not that most people would notice; it was always one of those apps that seemed to wind up forgotten in some untouched folder. What we have instead is effectively a slick-looking RSS reader with some nifty bolt-on features and a bit of potential that isn’t lived up to yet. The first few moments in the app will be spent picking out your preferred news sources and subjects, and then you’re plopped into a list- (iPhone) or image-heavy grid (iPad) of stories to dig into. Pretty soon you’ll notice a discrepancy in how some articles are handled — most are just formatted text on a white background with the outlet’s logo up top, but the few publishers that have already jumped on Apple’s News format bandwagon are more visually sumptuous and smartly laid out. While you have the option of poking around different “news” channels and searching for new publications to follow, I’d wager most of your time will be in the For You section… for better or worse.

Let’s take a step back for a second. Apple’s been working to reconfigure its existing services into things that better cater to us, the users; a bunch of design changes in iOS 9 make the whole thing more intuitive, and the rise of the customized “For You” section in Apple Music is mirrored here in the News app. Unlike in Apple Music — which has done a pretty great job of figuring out things I want to listen to based on my likes — News hardly ever has a clue what I want to read. I’ve been dutifully “hearting” articles to give the app a sense of my tastes (which are pretty eclectic, in fairness), but the “For You” section continues to play home to things I just don’t care about. Maybe it needs way more time to suss out my preferences. Maybe Apple needs to take things a step further with a “Hate” button to help fight the noise with negative feedback.
I don’t mean to make Apple News sound like junk, because it’s not. It’s a fluid, perfectly usable RSS news tool and the promise of fancily formatted stories has the news nerd in me quivering in anticipation. Still, I’m curious how everyone else takes to it; news gets disseminated through so many other channels that a separate one-stop shop seems a bit redundant.
Notes gets noteworthy, Maps figure out the subway

Sometimes Notes feels like one of iOS’ unsung workhorses, so it’s nice to see it finally getting some extra attention. Sure, you can still peck out your random thoughts (or in my case, ongoing karaoke list) and iOS 9 comes with formatting tools to add headers and full-blown checklists right into your notes. The added richness here isn’t just textual, either. Adding photos or links to websites is dead-simple and bring some much-needed depth to what once was a bare-bones experience. And the really fun bit? A tap on a new squiggly icon brings up a proper doodling interface with three pen choices and eight colors. When the situation calls for more precision, there’s an on-screen ruler to invoke that really helps nail those straight lines. Think of it as a software version of what Adobe did with its curious Slide ruler.

Meanwhile, Apple Maps is closing the gap between itself and Google Maps with the addition of mass transit directions. I spent most of my time sussing out the quickest routes across Manhattan and Brooklyn, and the feature works just as well as you’d expect (although it means HopStop is now about to shut down). The only times I got lost were when my own sense of direction got screwy and led me astray. The caveat: As of this writing, it only works in Baltimore, Beijing, Berlin, Chicago, Guangzhou, London, Mexico City, New York, Philadelphia, the SF Bay Area, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Toronto and the District of Columbia. Tap the search bar and you’ll get a batch of eight location categories — food, shopping, drinks, travel, services, fun, health and transport — similar to the ones in Spotlight. One more tap on any of those icons reveals a list of Yelp listings nearby; think of it as a quick, at-a-glance way to sift through all the stuff around you.
Safari

Safari doesn’t have a huge changelog, but the few tweaks are definitely noteworthy. You know those web views that apps like Twitter fire up whenever you click on a link? They’re now powered by Safari, so there’s an added layer of continuity, meaning your saved passwords and the like will carry over into those app experiences. There’s also a new formatting menu for Safari’s reader more that gives you seven additional font choices as well as new background colors if white tends to sear your eyes.
All told, though, Safari’s most notable change lies under the hood. You can now banish ads from your web experience completely thanks to a cottage industry of content blockers that now live in the App Store, which may or may not completely change how publishers and content providers like us approach the mobile web depending on how big a deal they become. We can save the ethical discussion for another time; content blockers like Purity do a fine job stripping the web of additional cruft, which more than a few people will love.
Multitasking

In years past, iOS has tended to cater to the needs of the iPhone — hardly a surprise considering the huge gulf between the numbers of phones and iPads floating around out there. This time, though, iOS 9 is arguably more impressive on Apple’s tablets, though your mileage will vary depending on the model you have.
Anyway, Apple’s push for efficiency is back in full-force on these big screens. A swipe over from the right side of the screen opens a drawer of apps you can run in tiny applet form when you need to do something quick without leaving the app you’re already in. This feature is called Slide Over, and it’s frankly how I spent most of my time while multitasking — it’s nice to be able to sift through an iMessage thread or refer to an email while I’m poking around and Safari and the experience is bound to get better once developers start cooking up apps to take advantage of this. This quick way to split focus between two apps will be good enough for most, so it’s no wonder it’s supported by the most iPads; Slide Over works on both generations of the iPad Air and the last three iPad minis.

If you need even more multitasking power, and you’ve got an iPad Air 2 or iPad mini 4, say hello to Split View. As the name implies, you can drag the dividing line one of those “applets” from Slide Over until it takes up a full 50 percent of your iPad’s screen (see the handy GIF above). At this point you’re running two apps side by side. You can interact with both halves simultaneously, too, as long as you don’t require use of the keyboard. It’s not always a perfect system, though. You might notice hints of jerkiness if you’re fiddling with both apps at once (at least I did, on the iPad mini 4). Also, this might just be me, but I wish I could run multiple instances of the same app; I really just want to have two Safari windows open at once so I can read while I read. Don’t get me wrong: Split View is a lovely little feature and it’s going to shine on the new iPad Pro, but it won’t make sense all the time.

Picture-in-picture is exactly what it sounds like, and surprise: It’s more helpful than it seems at first. When you’re watching something using the stock Videos app, you can tap a new button in the bottom-right corner to shrink it to about a quarter of its original size. It’s not going anywhere unless you want it to, meaning it hovers in the same sport on top of apps and the homescreen until you flick it around to other corners. Need to give J.K. Simmons more room to breathe in Whiplash? Pinching to zoom out on that small window bring it up to about half of the screen’s width (and you can shrink his bloviating Fletcher character again with a double tap). I love this feature already, but here’s the thing: I have all of two movies in my Videos app so getting players like Netflix and YouTube on board with picture-on-picture would be a huge win for people with compatible iPads.
The keyboard got some major upgrades too, if not the ones you might expect. Beyond the visual feedback that comes with the improved Shift key, Apple threw in some context-sensitive shortcut buttons on top of the keyboard that (among other things) let you paste content with a single touch or format text when in appropriate apps. Of course, that’s not to say iPads clearly got the better deal here. iPhones running iOS 9 get a low-power mode (as on newer Android builds) that keep disables background tasks and throttles down performance to keep the gadget going. It is, for lack of a better word, indispensable, and battery sizes aside, there’s no reason why the iPads shouldn’t have gotten this feature too. And the keyboard’s pièce de résistance is a feature that’s actually coming to the iPhone 6s, too: plopping two fingers onto the keyboard causes the letters to fall away and turn into a trackpad for smoother cursor action. Where… where has this been all my life?
The little things

Beyond everything I’ve already discussed, Apple’s made plenty of teensy tweaks that don’t fall neatly into any one category, so I’m just going to stick them all here. The Podcasts app has gotten an overhaul with an Unplayed tab. Unlike other tech pontificators out there, I never had an issue with Apple’s earlier implementations, but since we’re in something of a podcasting renaissance, it’s nice to see the company try to keep up with awesome third-party apps. I’m still not giving up Pocket Casts, though. You can now searching for specific items inside the Settings app, making all the web’s tutorials that much easier to follow.
While you’re in the settings, you can change that vibrate toggle on your iPhone to lock screen rotation instead (à la the iPad) and dig into the battery section for a full breakdown showing how badly some apps eat into your power reserves. You’ll also get a better sense of who’s behind random calls thanks to a location display in the Phone app; it’ll match the area code to a known region in the US. If you don’t feel like shelling out $99 for an Apple Developer account, no worries: You can sideload applications without one. You’re also given the option to install a separate iCloud Drive app so you can manage your selfies more easily. Speaking of selfies, Camera.app now saves photos taken with the front-facing camera in a separate “Selfies” folder (the same goes for screenshots, finally).
Wrap-up

iOS 9 is a must-have update. That perhaps didn’t need to be said considering it’s the fastest adopted iOS update ever, but the level of thoughtfulness and refinement here more than make up for the lack of groundbreaking features. The tentpole features Apple we did get mostly work well, though it’s not hard to see iOS 9 as Apple’s attempt to keep with Android. That’s why the smaller, lower-level changes to iOS are so much more important this year: Apple has had its core features in place for ages now and iOS 9 works to connect them in subtler, more intuitive ways. Think of the new software as a layer of polish you may not have even realized iOS needed. More importantly, that polish strengthens iOS’s foundation in preparation for the bigger, broader changes to come in future software updates.
Live Photos Called ‘Best New Feature,’ Composed of Separate JPG and MOV Files
The iPhone 6s and 6s Plus include several new camera features that have been highly popular in reviews thus far, but there’s also a fantastic update to the way photos are displayed on the two devices. With Live Photos, exclusive to the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, a bit of motion is captured alongside each photo, enabling short animations that bring each image to life.
To enable Live Photos, the iPhone captures 1.5 seconds before every picture is taken and 1.5 seconds afterwards. The motion is then displayed whenever a 3D Touch force press is used on a photo, activating the animation to add a bit of context.
With iPhone 6s reviews coming out today, we’ve learned several interesting details about the Live Photos feature, including some negative aspects that Apple’s working to improve. We’re also able to get an in-depth look at what the reviewers thought of the feature, giving us an idea of whether it’s truly useful or more of a gimmick.
Image via TechCrunch
Apple has been quick to point out that a Live Photo is not a video, and it appears the feature is enabled by combining a 12-megapixel JPG with a MOV file. TechCrunch‘s Matthew Panzarino reports (in his full review of the new iPhones) that a Live Photo consists of a JPG combined with a MOV file that contains 45 frames playing back at around 15 frames per second. Combining a JPG with a MOV file means Live Photos take up twice the space of a normal image. Panzarino also shared some tips on getting good Live Photos shots, but said he believes the best use cases are still undiscovered.
In my experience, Live Photos work best when capturing ambience, not action. Because the frame rate is relatively low, moving the camera a ton while you shoot them or having a subject move will display a bit of jitter. If, however, you’re shooting a still image with some moving elements, the effect is extraordinary.
According to The New York Times’ Brian X. Chen, there’s a “short learning curve” for Live Photos, because moving a camera immediately after taking a photo will ruin the Live Photo, something Apple says it will fix in an upcoming software update. There’s also no way to remove audio, and editing a Live Photo only applies edits to the still frame.
Two other items that I’d like to see addressed in future software updates: One, when Live Photos are captured, they include audio. I’d like the option to disable that because images alone can speak loudly enough. You also can’t edit Live Photos. You can only apply an edit to the still frame, but not the motion frames. It would be ideal to at least be able to make minor adjustments to Live Photos, like increasing brightness or contrast.
The Wall Street Journal‘s Joanna Stern calls Live Photos “the phone’s best new feature,” in her review, and shares a selection of example images that give a good look at how Live Photos look.
Live Photos File Details
Because of the way Live Photos work, combining a MOV file with a JPG file, the full Live Photo experience will only be viewable on iOS devices that run iOS 9, the Apple Watch with watchOS 2, and Macs running OS X El Capitan. Sending a Live Photo by email or directly to non-supported devices, the Live Photo will be stripped of the MOV component and sent as a regular JPG.
However, when importing Live Photos to your Mac in the Photos app, they’re imported as a separate JPG and MOV file. When TechCrunch‘s Matthew Panzarino sent a Live Photo to our iPhone 6 running iOS 9, the Live Photo was viewable (with motion) in iOS 9. When imported into Photos, the image was split into the JPG and MOV components.
As you can see, the JPG and MOV components took up 2.5MB and 1.7MB of space, respectively, for this Live Photo taken with the iPhone 6s back camera. Meanwhile, the front camera took a lower resolution 1MB image, but with the same size 1.7MB MOV file. The MOV resolution was 960×720 at ~12FPS for both sample Live Photos.
We’ll learn a lot more about Live Photos this Friday, when the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus become available to the public.
Google should steal these iOS features for Android
After the recent announcement of Apple’s iPhone 6S and iOS 9 (along with the confusing iPad Pro), I started thinking that there is a lot Android could learn (or just steal) from. There are a few features Google has yet to implement or get right with Android even to this day.
Also, due to Android being on more devices than iOS, I won’t be talking about things like build quality or better cameras because Android is meant to run on many different types of devices, all at different price points. It’s not fair to say Android should get a better camera, like the iPhone’s, when this would be a manufacturer issue and not actually an Android problem.
Fast Updates
Google may release new versions of Android every year or so but good luck actually seeing it come to your phone. Even the most expensive high-end Android phones usually don’t see the latest version of Android until about six months later. If you have a low-end or mid-range device phone, your chances of seeing multiple updates in its lifetime are slim.
Apple’s iOS 9, on the other hand, was officially announced on June 8 with public beta testing starting on July 9. A month later, on September 9, the company unveiled the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus running an official version of iOS 9. Both will be available around the world on September 25. iOS 9 actually came out a bit before the iPhone 6S on September 16. Not only is that a fast release, but the amount of included devices to get the iOS 9 update on the same day is huge. Even as far back as the iPad 2, which was unveiled in March 2011, by Steve Jobs, will be receiving the iOS 9 update. Look at all the devices that saw the update on September 16.
I understand Android is a much larger ecosystem with many more devices having to be coded for the latest update, but the wait is just crazy. You would think at least the flagship devices from the top manufactures would receive the latest updates in a timely fashion but that isn’t the case. Once Google creates the next version of Android, it has to be passed down to the device manufacturers and after that the carriers perform tests of their own. This creates a sluggish release and most of the time results in bugs which aren’t taken care of until the next update. You could be waiting up to an entire year to receive the next update just to fix small bugs you got from the last update. It has gotten a bit quicker over the years but is still comically bad compared to how Apple handles the process.
Full Phone Backups
One of the first things I noticed when I made the switch to Android from iOS was that there was no way of backing up my device. If it got lost, stolen, broke, or I just wanted another phone, there was no easy way of loading all data to it. This became extremely annoying and frustrating. The most insane part was the only way to do a full backup was to root your phone in order to install an app that could back it up. You couldn’t even get an app from the Play Store without having root access.
Nowadays there are apps like Helium, which can backup your phone without ROOT access, but this is not something users should have to install, but should be included directly into Android. Other manufacturers, like Samsung, have backup tools as well, but they aren’t that easy to use and, again, shouldn’t even be needed.
With iOS you can back up to iCloud or plug the iPhone into your computer to back up with iTunes. Very simple and hassle-free. I have had problems with iPhones and Android devices, both having to fully return the device for a new one. When I returned the iPhone 3GS and got a new one, I just plugged it into my computer and iTunes set everything up just like how I had it. When I returned my Android phone and got a new one, it was basically hours of re-downloading apps and entering passwords for each one. I am not an app-heavy person, but I can not imagine how horrible it would be for people with tons and tons of apps installed.
Google has said the next version of Android, Marshmallow, will be able to backup all your app data to Google Drive for free. It has a limit of only 25MB per app, but at least we are heading in the right direction.
No Bloat
I am so tired of paying huge amounts of money for high-end phones only to have half their internal storage gone towards useless pre-installed apps. The carrier ones are especially annoying because they never offer anything great and are usually ripoffs of better apps. Feel free to make all the apps your want, but release them in the Play Store and tell your customers to get them. Don’t force these apps down their throats.
I bought an unlocked phone from one carrier and use it on another carrier, but still have the first carrier’s garbage installed. Obviously, I’m never going to use their apps to check my plan or whatever, but I’m forced to have them installed forever. Again, this is an unlocked phone that I paid full price for. I have no connection with this carrier at all and there is no reason why I shouldn’t be able to uninstall their apps.
Manufacturer bloat is sometimes as bad as the carriers’. I can understand that each manufacturer has to give consumers a reason to choose their phones. And when most of your competition is also using the same operating system, it becomes more difficult. They have to create unique apps and user interfaces to get consumers to buy their products over the rest. Fair enough. However, it is extremely annoying having apps like Facebook pre-installed on my phone. The most infuriating thing is being unable to remove them. Android is supposed to be all about choice and personal freedom, but having apps like Facebook forcefully installed ruins all of that.
I’m sure everyone has installed an app from the Play Store and seen a huge list of requesting permissions for you to accept. I appreciate being shown this list as it gives me the decision to install it or not. When apps are pre-installed, that choice is taken away, and since you can’t uninstall them, those apps can “spy” on you forever. I can just picture Mark Zuckerberg sitting at his desk, laughing away, knowing that you can never escape his control.
Apple knew from the first day of the App Store’s existence that this would be annoying and forced the carriers to agree to not include any extra apps on the iPhone. They also don’t pre-install any third-party apps.
Uniformity/Simplicity
This is another one that is tricky to fix. As I mentioned already, Android has a huge user base with different devices, making it very difficult to keep everyone on the same page. Google does a good job creating guidelines, such as Material Design, for everyone to follow, but many developers do not care to implement them into their apps, creating a problem when actually using many Android devices as nothing ever matches very well. There really isn’t an easy way to fix this without having harsh penalties towards developers who don’t modify their apps to reflect the new design principles, and that would go against what Android is all about.
However, there is no excuse for large manufacture skins. They have the money to hire the best designers in the world and their skins should reflect that. I hate buying a new Android phone only to instantly replace the keyboard, messaging app, and launcher because they don’t match anything else or function horribly.
Technically, the purest form of Android would be on a Nexus device. Definitely the smoothest of all Android phones, but compared to the latest iPhone, it’s really not that smooth. There are always little bugs or animation glitches that don’t make it perfect compared to the iPhone. Anyone who has used a Nexus device and an iPhone will know exactly what I mean.
There are other little things like the icons being all different sizes. Luckily, aftermarket launchers like Nova Launcher are adding uniformed icons that are visually the same size while still maintaining different shapes, but this shouldn’t be something aftermarket launchers even have to worry about and definitely already built into Android.
Plus, features like the notifications bar including quick toggles. Only recently did stock Android get this feature and it’s not implemented as well as it is in iOS, in my opinion.
Other things like showing the actual battery percentage at the top, as far as I know, still isn’t possible in stock Android. Just look at the status bar on the iPhone compared to the Nexus 6. Both are probably about 44%, but it’s impossible to tell on the Nexus 6 since it won’t tell you real numbers.
Android provides a lot of unnecessary work.
Battery Efficiency
The iPhone 6 has an 1810mAh battery and the iPhone 6S has a 1715mAh battery. Apple made it smaller this time around! Both batteries are very small compared to Android flagships and yet they last roughly the same amount of time. For a phone with a battery that is basically half of an Android phone’s, it should be much worse. One reason they get such long lasting performance is because iPhone’s barely lose any battery while in standby mode. When you aren’t using it, you basically aren’t using the battery either. Android phones will have double the size battery and lose 4%-20% just while you are asleep. Again, this is with basically double the size! If the iPhone drained that much, you would go to sleep just to wake up to basically a dead phone every morning.
Fortunately, Google sees this as a huge problem too and is working on a new feature called Doze for Android 6.0 Marshmallow. It is tasked with watching how you use your phone and adjusting certain things when you aren’t using it to give you maximum standby battery life. Will this feature realistically improve battery life? I can’t say right now, but we can certainly hope it will. The only problem I can see is where Google says Doze will only work when your phone is perfectly still. Once you start moving, the feature turns off. This means if your phone is in your pocket all day, literally doing nothing, Doze will seemingly not be working and battery drain will be the same. If you leave your phone on a desk all day, that is when Doze would be saving you battery. I think, overall, it’s meant for when you are asleep and won’t be looking at your phone at all. Also, don’t forget Doze is only for devices running Marshmallow, meaning you probably won’t be receiving it on your device anytime soon. Either way, this is a huge area that Android needs improvement in.
Rogue apps are another huge problem for battery life. Most of the time, apps use what I would consider to be a normal amount of battery drain, but every once in a while a ‘noob’ developer will release an app that works great yet murders battery life. Even huge apps like Facebook are always notorious for using an absurd amount of battery life. Whether the developer isn’t as skilled to create an app with battery efficiency or a large developer does not spend the time making their app energy-efficient, this has got to change. Apple’s iOS never runs into these problems, and Google definitely needs to investigate how they do it, and implement it into Android.
Tap To Top
On any iOS device, you can just tap the top of the screen in any app to get back to the top of it. This is amazing for long webpages where you would reach the bottom, but want to go back to the top; all you had to do was tap and you were there. With Android, you have to scroll for what feels like days. After knowing a feature like this exist elsewhere, it feels so primitive having to physically scroll to the top. I assume Apple has a patent on this feature, which is why no one has ripped it off yet. Samsung, though, did try to clone it on their Galaxy S III, but asked users to tap the phsysical top of the device to get to the top. It wasn’t as clean to use since the device was much larger than an iPhone at the time, but the worst part was it only worked in certain Samsung supported apps. Something like Apple’s ‘tap to top’ feature would be highly welcomed in Android.
So what do you think — which features does Google need to consider implementing in Android?
Come comment on this article: Google should steal these iOS features for Android
Teen Receives Call From Tim Cook, iPhone, and Apple Internship After Apple Watch Saves His Life
Apple has been putting a significant focus on health-related topics in recent months, led by the Apple Watch’s health and fitness sensors and associated app functionality. In fact, just a few weeks ago at its “Hey Siri” media event, the company showed off some Apple Watch apps that could help doctors keep track of patients and even read the heartbeat of a baby still in its mother’s womb.
Now, the Apple Watch is becoming known as a lifesaver, as well, with a story emerging over the weekend about a teenage football player’s abnormal after-practice heartrate and his Apple Watch’s tracking that led him to determine something was seriously wrong.
Paul Houle Jr., a 17-year-old Tabor Academy senior in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, discovered after practice one day that he had pain in his chest and back when taking deep breaths, along with a rapid heart rate.
“After practice I went and took a nap, my heart rate was still at 145.” He went to the hospital, where he learned he had heart, liver and kidney failure, which could have been fatal if not for his watch.
“If my Apple Watch hadn’t shown me it was 145, I would have done nothing about it.”
Houle was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis, a condition that occurs after intense exercise results in the leaking of enzymes and proteins into the blood from muscle cells. Some cases can lead to kidney failure and can be fatal and when Houle arrived at the hospital he was suffering from simultaneous heart, liver, and kidney failure.
Although initially a skeptic of the Apple Watch, Houle’s father is now a convert and has recently purchased Apple Watches for both himself and his wife, thankful for the lifesaving intervention of Apple’s product in his son’s life.
http://up.anv.bz/latest/anvload.html?key=eyJtIjoiY2JzIiwicCI6ImRlZmF1bHQiLCJ2IjoiMzI5NjQyNyIsInBsdWdpbnMiOnsiaGVhcnRiZWF0Ijp7ImFjY291bnQiOiJjYnNsb2NhbC1nbG9iYWwtdW5pZmllZCxjYnNsb2NhbC1zdGF0aW9uLXNhbmZyYW5jaXNjby11LGNic2xvY2FsLXN1YnByaW1hcnktc3d0di11bmlmaWVkLGNic2xvY2FsLW1hcmtldC1zYW5mcmFuY2lzY28tdW5pZmllZCIsInB1Ymxpc2hlcklkIjoiY2JzbG9jYWwiLCJqb2JJZCI6InNjX3ZhIiwibWFya2V0aW5nQ2xvdWRJZCI6IjgyM0JBMDMzNTU2NzQ5N0Y3RjAwMDEwMUBBZG9iZU9yZyIsInRyYWNraW5nU2VydmVyIjoiaGVhcnRiZWF0cy5vbXRyZGMubmV0IiwiY3VzdG9tVHJhY2tpbmdTZXJ2ZXIiOiJjYnNkaWdpdGFsbWVkaWEuZDEuc2Mub210cmRjLm5ldCJ9LCJjb21zY29yZSI6eyJjbGllbnRJZCI6IjMwMDAwMjMiLCJjMyI6IlNhbkZyYW5jaXNjby5jYnNsb2NhbC5jb20ifSwiZGZwIjp7ImNsaWVudFNpZGUiOnsiYWRUYWdVcmwiOiJodHRwOi8vcHViYWRzLmcuZG91YmxlY2xpY2submV0L2dhbXBhZC9hZHM%2Fc3o9MngyJml1PS80MTI4L0NCUy5TRiZjaXVfc3pzJmltcGw9cyZnZGZwX3JlcT0xJmVudj12cCZvdXRwdXQ9eG1sX3Zhc3QyJnVudmlld2VkX3Bvc2l0aW9uX3N0YXJ0PTEmdXJsPVtyZWZlcnJlcl91cmxdJmRlc2NyaXB0aW9uX3VybD1bZGVzY3JpcHRpb25fdXJsXSZjb3JyZWxhdG9yPVt0aW1lc3RhbXBdIiwia2V5VmFsdWVzIjp7ImNhdGVnb3JpZXMiOiJbW0NBVEVHT1JJRVNdXSIsInByb2dyYW0iOiJbW1BST0dSQU1fTkFNRV1dIiwic2l0ZVNlY3Rpb24iOiJmZWF0dXJlZCJ9fX19LCJhbnZhY2siOiJhbnZhdG9fY2JzbG9jYWxfYXBwX3dlYl9wcm9kXzU0N2YzZTQ5MjQxZWYwZTVkMzBjNzliMmVmYmNhNWQ5MmM2OThmNjcifQ
Since Houle’s story surfaced late last week, word of the ordeal reached Apple CEO Tim Cook, who contacted Houle with a personal phone call a few days after his diagnosis and recovery. “I got a phone call from a California number,” said Houle. “And he said ‘Hello, my name is Tim Cook, CEO of Apple.’” Cook proceeded to offer the Cape Cod teenager a brand-new iPhone and a summer internship at the company’s corporate headquarters in Cupertino next year.
New Apple TV Teardown Provides Closer Look at A8 Chip, Larger Heat Sink and Siri Remote
iFixit has posted a hardware teardown of the new fourth-generation Apple TV, providing a closer look at the set-top box’s A8 chip, flash storage, redesigned power supply with a larger heat sink and other logic board components. The website also provided a teardown of the accompanying Siri Remote.
Under the hood, the new Apple TV features a dual-core, 64-bit Apple A8 chip with 2GB of SK Hynix LPDDR3 SDRAM, custom Apple memory controller, SK Hynix NAND flash storage, Universal Scientific Industrial Wi-Fi module and SMSC USB 2.0 to 10/100 Ethernet controller.
Apple TV 4 Components List
The new Apple TV also has a larger heat sink, which is likely a contributing factor to the set-top box’s taller form factor. The redesigned power supply is rated at 12V at 0.917A, compared to the third-generation Apple TV’s rating of 3.4V at 1.75A. The heat sink is situated above the heat-sensitive logic board.
The teardown of the Siri Remote reveals a ST Microelectronics low-power ARM Cortex-M3 MCU, Qualcomm CSR1010 Bluetooth radio, Texas Instruments low-power digital signal processor, the same Broadcom touch screen controller used in the iPhone 5s/5c and iPad Air, 410 mAh battery and a few other chips.
iFixit gave the new Apple TV a strong repairability score of 8 out of 10, with ten being the easiest to repair, because it has only a few major components, a replaceable power supply and standard Torx screws. It also found the Siri Remote has a wide gap, making it easy to pry apart for repairs.
iPhone 6s Puts Focus on Its Cameras With Higher-Quality Photos and Video, Front Flash, and More
With the launch of the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus a few days away, the first reviews for the new devices have begun appearing online today. Many reviewers touted Apple’s inclusion of the new 3D Touch technology and the overall performance enhancements that were brought in thanks to the A9 processor. One of the biggest points of attention given in a number of the reviews, however, was the 12-megapixel camera, which has the ability to capture Live Photos and shoot 4K video.
In one of its two in-depth reviews on the iPhone 6s, The Verge simply called the new smartphone’s camera, “the best camera most people will ever own.” Still, the site thought that the overall camera improvement from the iPhone 6’s 8-megapixel offering was a “mild” update in the grand sense, given that most customers probably won’t be able to tell the difference between the two unless they were side-by-side. Not to mention that most people will be using the camera on its simplest terms for social media.
Pocket-lint noted the front-facing camera’s 5-megapixel upgrade also has some improvements that are worth mentioning. The site described the new flash feature — which turns the entire iPhone screen into a camera flash — works quite well and provides impressively dynamic color palette to match the lighting situation, from “bright clean whites to creamy tones.”
Pointing out that the iPhone 6s rear camera upgrade is the first resolution improvement made to an iPhone since the iPhone 4 in 2011, The Telegraph called the new 12MP camera “a necessity.” Impressed with the better and more accurate autofocus and bump in pixel density, the site found photos taken with the camera to have “greater depth of field, richer, more accurate colour and greater detail.”
Aside from today’s reviews, the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus have also been used in a few high-profile photo shoots in recent days, including the above photos from TIME, a set from Sports Illustrated shot at recent San Francisco Giants games, and even a few pictures from New York Fashion Week taken by Vogue. Video footage taken with the 4K-enabled iPhone 6s rear camera is also appearing online, with popular YouTuber Casey Neistat trying out the high-quality format for his latest vlog.






















