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"iPhone 12 Pro Max" #45
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Consider incorporating #21 into this piece. (Keep gettin bigger tho...) |
Some related links
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Remember to organize and properly index all iPhone photography across Google Photos. |
Apparently I'm going to have to go back and find what Twitter has deleted from the iPhone 12 Pro Max Twitter Moment because Moments have a silent 98 Tweet limit. I'm going to have to gather them as well as what's left of the Moment, currently, and migrate the Tweets to this collection. (Yes, that's a shortlink.) Apparently, the only way to accomplish this is to do it through Tweetdeck, so this is definitely a task that's going to have to be done on desktop. |
Add my iOS Twitter List to Wiki. |
"The best phone for telling yourself that you don’t need an actual camera"For years now we’ve been told that phone cameras are so good that you don’t need an actual camera. The iPhone 12 Pro Max might be the best example of that yet. It’s got a bigger sensor! It’s got three focal lengths! It can shoot video in Dolby Vision HDR! At the end of the day, it’s still a phone camera and can’t really hold a candle to the image quality or creative control you get with a larger mirrorless camera. But hey, it’s fun to live in that lie and you can totally see the difference between the 12 Pro Max images and other phones. When you blow them up on a big screen. And zoom in. ==12495== Words |
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Fuck.... didn't mean to do that. I'll use this note to reference #159 though. |
A Closer Look At The iPhone
A.Closer.Look.At.The.iPhone-.240p30.mp4 |
"Latest iOS and iPadOS 15 Betas Allow Apps to Request Access to More RAM"27-06-2021 21:07
In the second betas of iOS and iPadOS 15, released to developers yesterday, Apple is introducing a new entitlement that developers may request that will expose their apps to more memory. Apple says that this entitlement will inform the system that an app "may perform better by exceeding the default app memory limit." Apple's developer documentation doesn't specify how much extra RAM an app may be exposed to and also says this is limited to "supported devices."
While Apple doesn't specify the amount of extra RAM an app may request, the wording of the documentation, which advises developers to use a function to "determine the amount of memory available," suggests the ceiling of memory apps may request may be relatively high. It's unlikely that Apple will allow developers to utilize the full amount of memory on a device. While that scenario may be useful for high-end professional apps on the iPad Pro, it would significantly slow down the system and make it harder to multitask with different apps. Users of the iPad Pro, and more so recently thanks to the M1 iPad Pro, have complained that iPadOS is limiting the true potential performance of the iPad. Despite many users' hopes, iPadOS 15 didn’t introduce any significant features that took full advantage of the hardware of the iPad, specifically the M1-powered iPad Pro. However, the ability for apps to request access to more on-device RAM will go a long way in apps being able to utilize even more of what a device has to offer. The new entitlement is available for developers to test, but it won't be made available to apps on the App Store until this fall when iOS and iPadOS 15, alongside watchOS 8, tvOS 15, and macOS Monterey are made available. ==2637== Words |
"14 years ago today, iPhone changed the world – relive the magical launch through this collection of photos, videos, and more - 9to5Mac"By Parker Ortolani This post is best experienced in dark mode. It’s hard to believe, but it’s been 14 years since Apple shipped the first iPhones. On this day in 2007, Apple Stores across the United States hosted the “iPhone World Premiere,” and life was never the same. Looking back on that day, it’s clear that it marked a turning point. It was the beginning of a revolution in basically every single industry. It fundamentally changed the way almost every task is accomplished. It spawned entirely new industries and ideas. We take our iPhones for granted today, but life before the iPhone was very different. Let’s take a look back at the day the world changed in the blink of an eye. At 2 p.m. on June 29, 2007 Apple Stores closed to prepare for the premiere. Just a few hours later at 6 p.m. Apple Stores opened their doors to long lines of anxious Apple fans who had been waiting six months to get their hands on the borderline mythical device. It was a very special day and people knew it. Whether you waited in line in a mall or in the queue at a big city store like Apple Fifth Avenue in New York, the energy was the same. Longtime Apple retail enthusiast Gary Allen, who sadly passed away in 2015, left behind one of the most incredible resources for Apple fans. His Flickr page is chock full of incredible albums from store openings, product launches, and more. One of Gary’s best albums is from the iPhone World Premiere at the Apple Store in Palo Alto. Apple fans line up outside of Apple Palo Alto._ Photo: Gary Allen_ His photos capture the very first time Apple fans lined up in droves to get their hands on an iPhone. In every year that followed, fans would continue to line up to get their hands on the next generation of iPhone. The excitement wouldn’t wane either, in fact I’d say it grew continuously over the years. Customers flood the entrances to Apple SoHo and Apple Michigan Avenue. Photos: Nate Tharp & Andy One of the coolest things Apple did for the launch of the original iPhone was to create giant phones that were displayed in store windows. These iPhones displays a gorgeous countdown that led up to the moment the doors opened, with large Myriad Pro numbers in a sleek silver gradient. All of Apple’s static in-store graphics somehow captured the magic of the device, particularly the magic of multi-touch. The large display iPhones made for the launch. Photo: Ed Kohler Right before the doors opened, employees peeled away the curtains hiding their preparations. In the photo below you can see store employees at Apple’s store in Seattle removing the curtains as a camera crew watches on. The iPhone launch was covered heavily by the traditional media and you can see camera crews in just about every single shot from that day, regardless of the city. Apple Store employees in Seattle peel back the curtain. Photo: Eli Duke Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak was first in line at his local Apple Store at the Valley Fair Mall in San Jose. This awesome photo taken by Anuj Biyani captured the moment the doors opened and Woz entered the store. You can see him wearing a shirt that says “The line starts here.” Lots of people that day wore shirts that celebrated the launch, while many others wore shirts advertising their business knowing the press was covering the event. Woz enters his local Apple Store to buy the iPhone. Photo: Anuj Biyani Fans who lined up at Apple Palo Alto didn’t know it, but they were in for a special surprise. Apple Palo Alto happened to be Steve Jobs’s local store and it wasn’t uncommon to see him in downtown Palo Alto. On launch day he stopped by the store with his wife Laurene to visit with friends and fans. In the photo below, you can see him chatting with longtime friends and original Macintosh team members Andy Hertzfeld and Bill Atkinson. Steve Jobs visits with Andy Hertzfeld and Bill Atkinson. Photo: Gary Allen I can’t forget to give some credit to the online store. You know how Apple takes down the store before releasing a new product? They did just that on June 29, 2007 with a special page designed just for the iPhone launch. Luckily, François Proulx on Flickr saved and posted a screenshot of the page. The iPhone World Premiere set the bar for future product launches. It showed just how excited the world was and just how important many of us expected it to be. It turned consumer product launches into a phenomenon. You weren’t just waiting to buy a product, you were waiting to buy the future. One Flickr album from the original launch I came across is full of photos of the phones customers had while waiting in line. It really highlights just how big of a deal that day was. For the launch of the original iPhone, Apple employees were given two shirts. The first was to be worn ahead of the launch. It had a single Calendar icon marking the Friday, June 29, launch date with a simple “The wait is almost over” tagline. Once the iPhone was launched, shirts displayed the simple, “Say hello to iPhone.” iPhone launch shirts given to employees. Photo: SportsCards Of course these two shirts are fairly rare these days and occasionally appear for sale on the web. I’d argue that the pre-launch shirt is one of, if not, the most important piece of Apple Store memorabilia. An Apple Store employee wears an iPhone launch shirt. Photo: daveynin Customers who purchased an original iPhone were given a special limited-edition shopping bag. It was a higher-quality board bag with fabric handles, rather than the plastic sling bags regularly used at the time. It had a beautiful depiction of a glowing iPhone on the side with shiny text below it. The bag itself is now a collector’s item. It was designed to match the box of the original iPhone. The iPhone launch bag Photo: lambo The box for the original iPhone was famously designed by Apple’s now head of human interface, Alan Dye. Dye told students at Syracuse University that every single black iPhone box had to have its corners painted so as not to have any color inconsistency. They “wanted a box that was completely black.” It was the kind of attention to detail we expected from Apple. The original iPhone box Photo: Powerbook Medic Inside the box was a whole host of accessories. Apple included a special white plastic dock that was designed specifically for the original iPhone in addition to the large power brick, earbuds, and 30 pin connector cable. Another goodie included in the box was a black microfiber cloth with “iPhone” embossed on it. The original box also included a crystal-clear tray that held the iPhone. Later, iPhones would use thinner black or white trays. Lucky you sticker on the original iPhone._ Photo: Jay Tong_ Some iPhone boxes even got a special “Lucky you.” sticker placed on them at the time of purchase. It was a very nice little touch and something Apple stores did in the mid to late 2000s. While the iPhone included several common accessories in the box, Apple sold a few optional ones as well. The most interesting one was without a doubt the iPhone Bluetooth Headset. It was a single black earbud with a button and charging pins on the bottom. The shape of the earbud itself resembled the standard iPod headphones but attached to a wireless bluetooth stem. The iPhone’s Bluetooth Headset was very similar to modern day AirPods. It had a unique black design that set it apart from Apple’s standard iPod headphones. It included a unique 30-pin connector cable in the box that let you simultaneously charge your iPhone and your Bluetooth Headset. The box itself was actually a miniaturized version of the iPhone’s box. It had the same top sliding black box that revealed the earpiece in a clear tray. The headset itself was priced at $129, not too far off from what AirPods usually cost when they are on sale today. Apple also sold a special version of the dock that was included in the iPhone’s box, but with a charger for the Bluetooth Headset. It cost $49 on top of the $129 for the headset. Another accessory Apple sold for the original iPhone was a TTY adapter that connected via the headphone jack. The adapter allowed you to connect your iPhone to TTY accessories for users who are deaf or heard of hearing. Apple continued to sell the adapter for many years, and while it’s no longer for sale, the listing is still on Apple.com. The TTY adapter was compatible with all iPhones that had a headphone jack, meaning all iPhones from the original to the iPhone 6s, 6s Plus, and SE worked with it. iPhone stereo headsets on Apple store shelves. Photo: Jun Seita Another accessory that Apple originally created just for the iPhone was their earbuds with a built-in remote and microphone. They were officially called the “iPhone Stereo Headset” but later became standard with Apple devices when they gained volume up and down buttons. Nowadays it’s totally normal for companies to seed tons of review units of upcoming devices to publications big and small. But for the launch of the original iPhone, Apple only passed out a handful of units to some very lucky writers. Apple seeded a unit to the legendary Walt Mossberg in addition to Katherine Boehert, David Pogue, Ed Baig, Steven Levy, and Phil Baker. Walt Mossberg’s original iPhone video review Walt Mossberg reviewed the iPhone with fellow Wall Street Journal writer Katherine Boehret. They both believed the iPhone to be a hit and said that it would set a new bar for the cell phone market. They said in their written review:
Mossberg and Boehret’s review of the original iPhone Photo: AllThingsD David Pogue at the_ New York Times_ titled his review, “The iPhone Matches Most of Its Hype.” Pogue said in his review, “As it turns out, much of the hype and some of the criticisms are justified. The iPhone is revolutionary…” Ed Baig at USA Today detailed a wide variety of aspects of the original iPhone that set it apart from the rest of the smartphone industry. Steven Levy wrote for Newsweek before the iPhone was even released, “In a sense, the iPhone has already made its mark.” In the days that followed the original iPhone’s release, many other reviewers and publications you know today got their hands on the device. Jason Snell wrote for MacWorld in early July 2007:
In addition to the many written reviews, tons of videos were posted, and they’re actually really fun to look back on. You can watch reviews from several sources, as well as Walt Mossberg’s, below: One video that’s particularly special isn’t a review, but a tribute to Steve Jobs. Filmmaker Casey Neistat made a movie about waiting to buy the original iPhone back in 2007 but didn’t publish it until Steve had passed away in October of 2011. Neistat waited overnight in front of the AT&T store in Union Square to get his first iPhone and documented the experience. Several other videos documented the special day, some even including brief appearances by Steve himself. You can still find many on YouTube, from news reports to fan documentaries. While many of these videos are low quality by today’s standards, they live on as time capsules that captured the spirit of the moment. One thing every single iPhone buyer had to do on launch day was activate their device at home. After returning from the Apple or AT&T store, users had to download the latest version of iTunes and connect their device to their computer. iTunes would then allow you to activate your iPhone on AT&T’s network. Activation in iTunes. Photo: Wired The weirdest part of the process was choosing data and text plans right in iTunes. After your iPhone activated, which could take a considerably long amount of time due to the amount of people trying to activate their devices at the same time, you could sync your personal content. Steps to activate your iPhone. Photo: Wired Apple lauded the new activation process a few days before the iPhone World Premiere in a press release. It focused on how activation would be similar to setting up an iPod, making it instantly familiar to millions of people. Activation required iTunes 7.3 on a Mac with Mac OS X Tiger or a PC with Windows XP or Vista. In the first 30 hours of sales, Apple sold 270,000 iPhones. Within 74 days, Apple had sold 1 million iPhones. Steve Jobs said it took nearly two years for that many iPods to be sold. iPhone was an instant hit. The company launched the first iPod touch to give customers the iPhone experience without the phone part in September 2007. They also cut the price of the 8GB iPhone and stopped selling the smaller 4GB model. Apple gave iPhone buyers who spent up to $200 more on the device a $100 store credit. Now, 14 years later, Apple has more than 1 billion iPhones out in the world in active use. I’d call that a helluva success. Main graphic of the iPhone: Credit to Rafael Fernandez via Wikipedia FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More. |
"Apple iPhone 12 Pro Max"NR 5G LTE 4G WCDMA 3G CDMA 2G / 3G GSM 2G |
Somehow, My Grandfather's Age is Relevant to this review (thread)
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Image Processing Really Is Just Bullshit |
Nilay on John Gruber's Podcast
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The detailed specifications of the apple iphone lines are the best and most stable, it is hard for any company to surpass apple in this, the upcoming apple iphone 15 device is mentioned here: https://onezdevice.com |
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