Apple held its annual September event earlier today, announcing a new iPhone (a few of them, actually), a new Apple Watch, and a handful of other goodies.
If you missed out on watching the event live, you can watch a replay of all the action on Apple’s website. In the meantime, here’s a quick rundown of what you missed:
There Are a Few New iPhones
Apple announced three new iPhones: The iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max and iPhone XR. Both the XS and XS Max look like last year’s iPhone X, including that iconic notch. Just like most other “S” updates, the difference between this year’s phones and last year’s model is mostly a spec upgrade.
[referenced url=”https://staging.lifehacker.com.au/2018/06/how-to-get-ios-12-features-on-your-apple-iphone/” thumb=”https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/t_ku-large/o0qurvpc0ovwzg2xqqie.jpg” title=”Five ‘Exclusive’ iOS 12 Features That You Can Use Right Now” excerpt=”iOS: Apple unveiled some killer new features in its WWDC 2018 keynote presentation earlier this month. In iOS 12 (which you can beta-test right now), users will be able to train Siri, stop sites from tracking them, and limit how much time they spend in apps. The worst part? These new features won’t officially launch until spring.”]
The XS has a 5.8-inch screen while XS Max has a 6.5-inch screen. Both have OLED displays and an “all new” camera system. This system has a new wide-angle camera with larger pictures and a telephoto lens with a wider aperture, making it so both should do a bit better in low-light than their predecessor.
Both use a new method for taking pictures called “Smart HDR”, which essentially takes a bunch of pictures when you press that shutter button and then stitches them into one finished image. Google does something similar with the Pixel.
Both phones also offer dual SIM support (which is great if you travel internationally a lot). Both are also expected to get a bit more battery life, with the XS getting roughly 30 minutes more and the XS Max getting an hour more. Both will come in 64GB, 256GB and 512GB sizes. It’s the first time Apple has offered a 512GB phone.
Preorders for the XS start at $1629, and the XS Max starts at $1799. Preorders start Friday and the phone ships on September 21.
The XR is this year’s budget version of the iPhone. It has a similar look to the others but has a 6.1-inch LCD display. It starts at $1229, with preorders available October 19 for shipping on October 26.
No iPhones Have Headphone Jacks Any More
Say goodbye to your headphone jack. Apple has discontinued all of its phones that use headphone jacks, and it’s no longer including a lightning dongle in the box with phones to allow you to use a traditional headset. That means if you haven’t already embraced wireless headphones, now’s the time.
About That New Apple Watch
The newest version of the Apple Watch, Apple Watch 4, launches September 21. The first new design for the watch since its launch three years ago, the new Apple Watch has a nearly edge-to-edge display and comes in both 40mm and 44mm sizes. The larger display size allows the device to show more information.
It also has an updated accelerometer and gyroscope as well as a new built-in EKG scanner, marking the first time an EKG product has been available over the counter directly to consumers. The FDA has also approved the Watch for use as a medical device in the US.
All that new hardware has a number of benefits. One large one is the ability to detect falls and call emergency services on your behalf if you’re unresponsive. The device will also screen your heart rhythm and look for irregularities.
Like the iPhone, the Apple Watch is available for pre-order on September 14, and will ship on September 21. Pricing starts at $599 for the GPS version and $749 for the GPS + LTE model.
iOS 12 Comes September 17
iOS 12 officially launches on September 17. The beta for iOS 12 has been a bumpy one, so you might want to hold off for a week or so before updating your phone, as per usual with Apple’s system updates.
[referenced url=”https://staging.lifehacker.com.au/2018/06/how-to-install-the-ios-12-public-beta-right-now/” thumb=”https://i.kinja-img.com/gawker-media/image/upload/t_ku-large/m9yxyitdcw8gjzio1xxw.jpg” title=”How To Install The iOS 12 Public Beta Right Now” excerpt=”Happy beta day! Apple has finally released iOS 12 to the non-developer masses – assuming you didn’t use a crafty trick to get your non-paying-self enrolled in the beta a few weeks ago.”]
That said, if you’ve been waiting for the official release, the big day is next week. The newest version of Apple’s tvOS also drops on the same day.
Comments
6 responses to “The 4 Announcements From Apple’s iPhone Event That Actually Matter”
Instead of embracing wireless headphones, I embraced… Android. And hundreds of dollars of savings on a handset with comparable tech specs. Yeet
yeah same comparable specs, garbage performance. Specs mean nothing if not utilised properly. Apple are able to push the same specs twice as far as android devs as they are in control of the hardware and software. There is no comparison.
Once you are used to not having to worry about wires on your headphones you’ll never go back. Switching ecosystems all because you want to retain your wires seems crazy.
That’s not the only reason but go off, I guess.
Instead of embracing a company that harvests my data, to sell to advertisers, …
Pretty much every benchmark puts Apple phones ahead of Android. So no, they are not comparable specs.
Sorry I forgot I had to be hyperspecific. *specs that I actually care about. My Android phone does everything I need it to and it does it well, why would I shell out for the much costlier iPhone unnecessarily?
Looks like you’ve upset the apple fanbois lol.
Fair enough.
As long as you dont mind being tracked, and your data sold, then all’s good.
*grabs popcorn*