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Showing posts with the label Apple Announcement

How to Watch Apple's 2018 iPhone #appleevent

Apple's annual iPhone event starts at  10 am Pacific  (1 pm Eastern) on  Wednesday, September 12 . Apple is expected to unveil a new version of the iPhone X, a lower-cost iPhone, a new Apple Watch, an update on  iOS 12's release , and  possibly more . How to Watch You can catch the festivities via livestream on Apple TV, on an iPhone or iPad, in a browser,  by following along with our  Apple iPhone 2018 liveblog  here on Wired.com, also on Twitter. #appleevent hashtag on Twitter https://twitter.com/hashtag/appleevent You can watch the livestream directly from  Apple's website . You'll need an iPhone, iPod, or iPod Touch with Safari on iOS 10 or later. To watch on your desktop, make sure you're using a Mac with Safari on macOS Sierra 10.12 or later, or a PC with Windows 10 and Microsoft Edge. According to Apple's website, you might be able to watch the iPhone announcement using Chrome or Firefox, as long as you're using versio

Apple launch: Bigger! Faster! Pricier! Innovative?

Getty Images Apple has given the Oval Office a run for its money in the past few weeks – we’ve had an unprecedented number of leaks ahead of the firm’s annual product launch. So, barring any surprises – a Steve Jobs-esque “one more thing” – we have a pretty good idea of what to expect when Tim Cook heads out on stage on Wednesday. He’ll do it as the chief executive of the first US company to reach a value of $1tn (£768bn). To keep it that way, Apple will be building on past successes rather than introducing anything dramatically new. We’ll likely see three new iPhones, a revamped Apple Watch, and maybe some new iPads. Later in the year, rumor suggests a budget laptop may be on the way. What we won’t see, however, are some of the innovative leaps being promised by some of Apple’s competitors. Samsung plans a device with a flexible display by the end of the year. OnePlus said its next phone will have a fingerprint sensor built into the screen. Huawei, which recently overtook Ap

Apple's iPhone XS Max Suddenly 'Confirmed'

Apple   AAPL -1.66% ’s  three new iPhones  are nearly here ( one delayed release  aside), and they contain some  genuinely groundbreaking advancements . Furthermore, new leaks have now confirmed Apple’s biggest, most expensive model of them all…   Credit goes to both  BGR  and  9to5Mac  who have both broken the news that Apple will scrap its iPhone ‘Plus’ branding and complement the  recently revealed 5.8-inch ‘iPhone XS’  with a 6.5-inch beast called the ‘iPhone XS Max’. And its price will turn heads. iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max renders based on official leaked images CONCEPTSIPHONE Interestingly, both sites reference a pair of sources “familiar with Apple’s marketing plans” (presumably there’s some overlap) and the duo - which have strong track records with their exclusives - are convinced the information is rock solid. The move is surprising given Apple has been condensing its brands under a single name for different sizes (iPad Pro, MacBook Pro, Apple Watch)

New iPhone X 2018 - New details revealed ahead of launch will excite Apple fans

Apple has been widely rumored to launch three new iPhones in September; one will be a direct successor to the current iPhone X while another will keep the same aesthetic but come in a much bigger size. The third device is said to be a cheaper iPhone model that will forgo some premium features in order to be more affordable. Market intelligence firm  TrendForce  recently insisted the cheaper hardware will feature an LCD screen instead of the OLED present in the current iPhone to keep manufacturing costs down. An alleged prototype of the smartphone was also recently shown off by YouTuber  Marques Brownlee  - the most notable feature of the product was its lack of a dual-camera setup. Instead, the hardware only touted a single sensor on its rear. But now a new report from  Bloomberg  has added further fuel to speculation surrounding the three products. Citing people "familiar with the matter", the publication declared this year will be a more iterative one for t