Showing posts with label iphone6. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iphone6. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Apple has figured out a brilliant way to wirelessly charge iPhones, iPads and iWatches

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iPhone, iPad and iWatch Wireless Charging
Apple is constantly trying to improve the battery performance of its devices, including iPhone, iPad and MacBook, working on various ways to either increase efficiency or provide alternative charging methods. For example, the company has a patent describing ways of intelligently adapting iPhone power consumption to cater to a user’s daily needs, but also at least one patent on charging a device’s battery using solar power.
Now, Patently Apple has discovered a new Apple patent application related to battery charging that describes a brilliant way of wirelessly charging a device without compromising its design.
Published by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office on Thursday and titled “Wirelessly Charged Electronic Device With Shared Inductor Circuitry,” the application explains that future Apple devices may include multi-purpose electrical components that may be used for different things including powering a speaker element in the device, enabling NFC-related features, or wirelessly charging a device.
By recycling components, Apple would be able to add wireless charging abilities to its devices without having to increase their overall sizes. The system would smartly deliver current to enable certain functions or wirelessly charge a device, although the patent also says that ways of simultaneously charging the device and using some of the other functions are possible.
“Electronic devices often include batteries,” Apple writes. “A battery in an electronic device can often be charged by using a cable to couple the electronic device to a source of power. It is not always convenient to rely on wired charging arrangements such as these. In compact and portable devices, for example, the use of a charging cable may be unwieldy. Charging cables can be avoided by using wireless charging, but wireless charging circuitry can be bulky.”
“It would therefore be desirable to be able to provide electronic devices with improved wireless charging capabilities,” the company adds.
The device used in one of the images from the patent looks like a square-shaped wrist-watch, but Apple’s patent doesn’t specifically restrict the use of the described technology to a smartwatch like the rumored iWatch the company is getting ready to unveil.
Instead, Apple says the technology may also be used by a wide variety of devices, including cellular telephones, tablet computers, notebook computers.
Interestingly, the patent mentions near field technology (NFC) features quite a few times, saying that a device packing such circuitry could be used for wireless payments and security applications (such as opening secured doors). Apple also happens to have a variety of patents on wireless payments technology, a product it’s expected to soon launch, maybe as soon as the iPhone 6 becomes official.
Just like with other patents, there’s no guarantee the tech described in this particular document will actually be available to users in the very near future – for what it’s worth, the patent was filed in late February 2013.
Images from the patent follow below, with the full patent available at the source link.

Via:
Patently Apple
Source:
USPTO
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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Apple wants to stick physical keys under the iPhone's screen... some day

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Apple wants to stick physical keys under the iPhone's screen... some day
We've been hearing about Apple's plans to implement a haptic feedback system for quite some time now. The first filed patents we know of date back to 2009, but the Cupertinians have yet to deliver a device toting the system. Haptic feedback is a tech that provides localized vibrations whenever the user touches the screen, in order to better simulate the use of a keyboard, or to enhance app experience.We have heard rumors about the iPhone 6 finally arriving with haptic feedback on board, sources calling it Apple's “secret weapon”, though that remains to be (dis)proven in a couple of weeks.

Now, a tech that is most probably not going to be found in the iPhone 6 has been uncovered in an Apple patent, filed on the 28th of June, 2011. It shows that the company is definitely exploring options to add a physical keyboard-like feeling to the 'lifeless' virtual QWERTY. The patent describes a device that may tote a flexible display, designed to allow physical keys, buttons, speakers, and microphones to be placed under it. Pressing on the screen would make it bend inwards, allowing the user to click the button underneath. To finish off the feel of the press – haptic feedback would be employed to vibrate the area of interaction. Alternatively, the device could be able to have its under-the-screen keys pop up and push out the flexible display in the form of a grid – presumably, to simulate a keyboard. As an extra bonus, the paper suggests that the display will be able to cover up the entire front of the screen – since the Home could easily be hidden under the display, and the patent does describe speakers and microphones to be hidden underneath the display.

Now, this tech is probably far off – a patent doesn't guarantee that the company is ever going to manufacture something. Still, it's an interesting sci-fi-phone idea.

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source: USPTO via AppleInsider
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Alleged photo of iPhone 6 box shows brand new design

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The previous iPhone 6 box we saw proved to be fake but here's one that may be more plausible. If nothing else at least because it looks quite different from previous iPhone boxes – it has a very clean design that serves as a sort of manual for the iPhone.
The box shows a diagram of all buttons on the Apple iPhone 6, including the Power button that was moved to the side (to be easier to reach after the increase in screen size). The Touch ID home key is still in place as is the Lightning connector.

Alleged photo of the Apple iPhone 6 box.
The box doesn't mention screen dimensions or the rumored 128GB storage option.
Note the date shown on the screen – September 9 – the alleged launch date of the next iPhone. 9:41 seems a bit early for the actual announcement but Apple hasn't sent out invites yet so we don't know when the even starts.
Source (in French)
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Monday, August 25, 2014

TSMC is ahead of schedule on production of 16nm wafers expected for next year's iPhone

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TSMC is ahead of schedule on production of 16nm wafers expected for next year's iPhone
With Samsung breathing down its back, TSMC is now planning on producing 50,000 wafers a month using its 16nm process during the first quarter of 2015. The wafers were originally scheduled to be produced in the second quarter of next year, and will be employed in the production of the Apple A9. The latter is the SoC that should be used on next year's version of the Apple iPhone and Apple iPad.

Apple is expected to eventually become TSMC's largest customer. But last month, KGI Securities analyst Michael Liu told his clients that Samsung will be taking the reigns back from TSMC in the second half of 2015, with the production of 14nm chips. TSMC started delivering the A8 chip for the Apple iPhone 6 last quarter. Speculation has the A8 running at 2GHz, the first chip in the series to hit that mark.

As if the back and forth between TSMC and Samsung weren't confusing enough, TSMC CEO Morris Chang said that his company will bounce back in 2016. Since the chips are made to Apple's specs, it shouldn't matter to consumers which foundry the SoC comes from.

source: EconomicDailyNews (translated) via DigiTimes
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The iPhone 6 will have a new co-processor code-named “Phosphorus”, dedicated to motion and health data

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The iPhone 6 will have a new co-processor code-named “Phosphorus”, dedicated to motion and health data
It's another day, another iPhone leak here at Phone Arena, and this time the word is that the upcoming iPhone 6's A8 processor will have a new pal to share additional processing with. The iPhone 5s's M7 motion co-processor will be succeeded by a new chip code-named "Phosphorus".

Coming across as a more powerful successor to the M7, it will be tasked with processing health data such as heart rate, burned calories, cholesterol levels, and blood sugar for Apple's new HealthKit platform, on top of the usual motion processing. It is said that the Health app can obtain said data manually (with users entering it themselves), or automatically collect it from accessories and wearables.

If Apple's willing to upgrade its components solely for better supporting its Health platform, then the company must be quite serious about it. This further reinforces the rumor that the fabled iWatch will be a very health-conscious device that's able to measure many kinds of bodily functions. Whether we'll see it this year, or sometime in 2015, is still widely debated. Meanwhile, the HealthKit platform and Health app will debut in iOS 8 along with the new iPhone.

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Friday, August 22, 2014

Here's how big the iPhone 6 may be compared to most other flagships

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Here's how big the iPhone 6 may be compared to most other flagships
Even those who are only remotely interested in the phone industry must have been reached by the hype that's started to build around the upcoming Apple iPhone 6. Apple's next-gen smartphone is expected to
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Thursday, August 21, 2014

Apple iPhone 6 may finally bring 128GB model

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Ever since it became obvious that Apple wouldn't be adding any options for expandable storage on the iPhone (which occurred somewhere around June 29th, 2007; when the first iPhone launched), customers have been asking for larger storage options for the handset. It wasn't until 2011 and the iPhone 4s that Apple introduced the 64GB model, and now it looks like there may be a higher storage option soon.
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