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iPhone 6 release date, news and rumors

Tuesday 9 September 2014
iPhone 6 release date, news and rumors

Release date, price and display

The new iPhone could be one of the most pivotal devices in the Cupertino brand's history - with the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C simple updates to previous models, there's a lot of pressure heaped on the iPhone 6.
As per usual, the internet is awash with rumor, speculation and downright lies over this next-generation handset, which is why we spend our time trawling through each nugget of info, debating its merits and curating it into this easy-to-read hub for all things iPhone 6.
According to a survey of 4109 US consumers the iPhone 6 is the most anticipated Apple smartphone ever, with interest easily outstripping that of the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5.
We've already been given a small sneak peak at what Apple may have in store for us on the iPhone 6 thanks to the announcement of iOS 8 at WWDC - from a bigger screen and camera to health monitoring and more storage.
Some of you might have been expecting the iPhone 6 to have debuted in 2013, but given the iPhone's history - from the 3G onwards, there's always been a half-step S model before the next numbered iPhone - we were never going to get the 6 until 2014. In fact, it will technically be the iPhone 8 when it finally launches... but hey, who's counting these days?
One thing is for sure, with the Samsung Galaxy S5, Sony Xperia Z2 and HTC One M8 now out in wild, Apple needs to be on its game with the new iPhone - and many believe a bigger screen is simply a must.

Cut to the chase

  • What is it? A major revision of the iPhone including entire design
  • When is it out? September 2014 seems most likely
  • What will it cost? Prices are likely to start at around £550 / $944 / AU$1006
Latest update: A image has hit the web claiming to show the iPhone 6, iPad Air 2 and iPad Mini 3 all sporting Apple's TouchID fingerprint scanner.

iPhone 6 release date

The iPhone 6 release date will be in 2014 and it's looking increasingly likely that we'll see it in September, which would fit in nicely with the rollout of the newly announced iOS 8.
Apple has launched the last few iPhones at a special event in September, so the smart money has always been on September 2014 for the iPhone 6's arrival.
Not to mention the fact that according to ifun.de Apple is restricting holidays during September for employees at German Apple Stores, which strongly suggests a new hardware launch then.
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It's looking increasingly likely that we'll see more than one Apple handset this year though. KGI's analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has thrown his hat into the ring and seems to think a duo of new iPhones will be released, with a 4.7-inch iPhone coming out towards the end of the third quarter and a 5.5-inch iPhablet hitting the market late in the fourth quarter.
Suggestions of both sizes arriving September could also hold water, though we've also heard that Apple has had trouble finding appropriate batteries for the 5.5-inch device and that as a result it might even slip into next year.
Other rumors point to a September launch for both sizes, though they do re-iterate that the 5.5 inch model is facing production problems. While more recent rumors also claim a September launch, 19 September to be precise.
On the other hand reports out of China claim that while it will be unveiled on September 15, the iPhone 6 won't be released until September 25. Whatever the case though, September is looking pretty locked in.
Reuters reports that Apple has gone on a massive hiring spree at factories in China, so it's clearly preparing to take the iPhone 6 into production, which makes sense if the handset is launching just a few months from now.
After trawling through all the iPhone 6 rumors we kicked our render machine into gear and came up with a concept of what we'd like Apple's eighth generation flagship smartphone to look like.
Check out our creation in the video below.
FutTv : IZrksBKedN09a

iPhone 6 price

There's one thing we can be sure about when it comes to the iPhone 6 - it won't be cheap.
Apple's legacy is a long line of premium devices sporting premium price tags and you can expect that trend to continue with the iPhone 6.
One analyst even goes as far as predicting that Apple will hike up the price of the iPhone 6, possibly by as much as $100 (around £60, AU$110). With a larger screen, new glass covering the front and possibly even a new, more impressive, material used in construction, we can see the price being hiked.
We'd be surprised is the mooted 4.7-inch iPhone 6 would get such a massive price bump, as it needs to stay competitive, but the hike does make sense if Apple launches a larger, phablet sized iPhone.
We have now got wind of possible pricing for the 4.7 inch model and it's reportedly starting at around £500 for a 32GB handset, which is around the same as a 16GB iPhone 5S, so if anything it might be a little cheaper, but that still leaves the 5.5 inch model open to being more expensive.
Indeed the latest pricing rumors echo the £500/$858/AU$915 pricing for the 4.7 inch model, but add that the 5.5 inch handset is likely to start at around £563/$966/AU$1030 and those are based on Chinese prices, so won't account for local taxes. Interestingly the same sources claim that the 5.5 inch handset will be called the 'iPhone Air'.

Bigger screen(s)?

One of the most enduring rumors about the iPhone 6 is that it will have a bigger screen than the iPhone 5S.
Apple has even acknowledged that consumers want a larger screen after an internal slide was revealed in its court battle with Samsung entitled "Consumers want what we don't have."
According to Business Insider, of the many iPhone 6 prototypes Apple has made, one has a giant Retina+ IGZO display and a "new form factor with no home button. Gesture control is also possibly included." It will surely include Apple's new Touch ID fingerprint tech though?
The Retina+ Sharp IGZO display would have a 1080p Full HD resolution. However we're not convinced that the prototype will make it to market. Ditching the home button would be a big change and no other rumors point in that direction.
It has however been widely reported that Apple could introduce two handset sizes as it seeks to compete with the plethora of Android devices now on the market - with both being a lot thinner thanks to big improvements in LED backlight technology to reduce the thickness.
With everything we've seen so far we reckon there will almost certainly be two screen sizes and resolutions, as mentioned above.
iPhone 5S
In fact the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 has been tipped again alongside a larger 5.7-inch (or is that a QHD 5.5-inch screen?) model as part of Apple's double attack on the market following the 5S and 5C.
A Full HD display makes perfect sense for the iPhone 6, especially if it grows to a 4.7-inch screen as mooted, and the iPhablet will push things even further to preserve the Retina experience on a larger display.
While we'd love to see the Quad HD resolution adorn the iPhone 6, the fact it's such a great leap from the sub-720p Retina display on the 5S and 5C makes it seem very unlikely.
The most recent resolution rumors come from insiders who claim that Apple has been testing a pixel-tripling display which would have a resolution of 1704 x 960.
That's not quite full HD, but it would allow the phone to retain the iPhone 5S's 16x9 aspect ratio and give a 4.7 inch iPhone a pixel density of 416 pixels per inch and the rumored 5.5 inch phablet a density of 355 pixels per inch, both of which trump the 326ppi screen of the iPhone 5S.
There is a chance that our eyeballs could be in for a real treat though, with Apple employees apparently quoted in Hong Kong saying that the iPhone 6 will sport a QHD resolution (2560 x 1600) - the same as you find on the LG G3. That would be impressive, although rather unlikely if you ask us.
iPod Nano 7th Generation
All that said, while a 5.5-inch iPhone is certainly looking likely we may have to wait longer than expected for it, as we're now hearing that the larger iPhone 6 has hit production problems, which may see it delayed until 2015.
However other sources sound optimistic that it will arrive at the same time as the 4.7-inch model.
The 4.7-inch version is said to still be on track with an images of a supposed iPhone 6 production mold and front plate sneaking onto the web on more than one occasion.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
There's still a small possibility of the iPhone 6 sporting a flexible wraparound display after more patents were uncovered, but we reckon that's more likely to feature on the iPhone 7 or 8 instead.
iPhone 6 front panel
A recent leak from ifanr.com gives us a very clear look at what's believed to be a final or near final version of the iPhone 6 front panel. It's clear from the images that we are looking at a screen of around 4.7 inches as has long been rumored and it also has slightly rounded edges, which may allow it to arc seamlessly into the chassis. The source of the leak also claims that the display might be made out of sapphire.

An unbreakable display

Here's an interesting one: Apple looks like it's signed a big deal to use a lot of sapphire glass in its phones, with the company buying up enough to use the super-hard technology for its displays.
Sapphire is already used by the Cupertino brand for its Touch ID sensor cover and the camera glass, so extending it out makes a lot of sense. Whether it will be cost effective remains to be seen - but given iPhones are one of the top devices for broken screen repair, reducing this problem would go down nicely.
However, there's an issue here: it's really expensive, and as such seems like it would bump up the cost of the phone too much for Apple, even though its customer base expects to pay a premium.
Canonical's CEO thinks that the Cupertino firm has been buying up swathes of the material, but that doesn't necessarily mean it will be used in the iPhone 6. Instead could this be for the iWatch? Seems more likely than an entire phone screen.
Apple even has a patent for an oleophobic (anti-smudge) coating that works on sapphire crystal to ensure the surface doesn't get covered in grubby fingerprints - exactly what you need if you're going to cover the front of a phone with it, but again, we're inclined to think that the equally prod-prone iWatch is a more likely candidate.
We're also hearing that it could even self heal, with Apple trying to patent a special screen coating that could heal to dramatically enhance the appearance of the iPhone 6, as well as other Apple products.
FutTv : k5C7uNPo0Lkau

Design, healthcare and power

iPhone 6 design

It's been suggested that there could be as many as three size variants of the new iPhone - think iPhone 5C sequel, an iPhone 6 and an iPhone 6 XL - the latter being a larger size to compete with the likes of the Galaxy Note 3, as phablets are becoming hugely popular in areas like Asia.
"If the iPhone 6 doesn't have a Liquidmetal body, then we'll probably never see one."
One thing you probably can expect is more premium metal to come your way with the iPhone 6, and Apple patents for liquidmetal 3D printing suggest there may be a new way to form the sultry chassis on the new iPhone.
Writing in early January 2014, MacRumors quotes a batch of liquidmetal patents reportedly filed by Apple employees.
This has been doing the rounds for a while though, and apparently it's a tricky material to work with.
Liquidmetal or not, that chassis could well be the thinnest yet (thanks to that LED backlight we mentioned earlier) - with word that Apple will slim down the svelte 7.6mm 5S body for the iPhone 6, and if leaked images of the phone's case are legit the handset may well be shockingly slender.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
We may also be in for a subtly curved screen, as a rumor has popped up claiming that the iPhone 6's display will curve slightly at the edges so that it sits flush with the phones chassis, which itself will apparently also be curved, perhaps along the lines of the Samsung Galaxy S3 or even Apple's own iPhone 3GS.
That's looking ever more likely as we've also now seen some images that purportedly show an iPhone 6 dummy and the screen seems ever so slightly curved.
iPhone 6 dummy
With talk of larger screens, we can expect the body of the iPhone 6 to grow and leaked schematic designs claim the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 will be 66mm wide and 7.0mm thick (the 5S is 58.6 x 7.6mm).
Further evidence for a super slim design comes from a video posted by Unbox Therapy, which shows a 6.1mm thick iPod touch Fifth Generation being put in a case supposedly designed for the iPhone 6 and fitting perfectly in terms of thickness if not length and width.
Not the most scientific of tests perhaps, but along with those renders it certainly looks feasible that we could be in for a roughly 6mm thick handset.
The larger 5.7-inch handset is said to be 77mm in width and a super svelte 6.7mm in depth - the Galaxy Note 3 is 79.2 x 8.3mm. The 5.5 inch model is rumored to be called the iPhone Air, so it makes sense that it would be exceedingly slim.
These super slim dimensions have been given a little more firepower as we've now had multiple sources claiming to have case designs and schematics for the new iPhone 6, showing off designs similar to the iPad Air and Mini 2.
For a start, we saw photos supposedly showing off the design of the iPhone 6 reveal a slender smartphone.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
We've also seen what is purportedly an iPhone 6 dummy unit. The handset has been put side by side with the iPhone 5S in the pictures, showing a much larger and more rounded but similarly slim device, which is roughly along the lines of what we're expecting based on other rumors.
As mentioned, it takes some design cues from the likes of the iPad Air and Mini 2 - that's something we think would be a great idea, as those both have a great feel in the hand.
iPhone 6 dummy
Aside from the change in size and shape the other visible difference is that the power button has been moved to the side of the handset.
This could of course be a fake, but moving the power button to the side would make sense given the larger size of the phone and a few more images have since appeared showing a similarly designed device.
iPhone 6 dummy outdoors
Another set of dummy images has since been unearthed, this time by 9to5Mac, showing the new handset in gold, silver and grey and they more or less match the previous ones, with a rounded design and a power button on the side.
iPhone 6 dummies
With evidence mounting it looks increasingly like this could be the shape of iPhones to come, though being a dummy unit the hardware won't be final.
Another leak shows the design getting apparently closer to the final shape - and this time the Apple logo has been removed to possibly allow it light up in a similar way to the Macbook. Head on over to nowhereelse.fr to see the full slew of pics.
iPhone 6
While it's tricky to confirm the authenticity of these leaks they suddenly look a whole lot more convincing after Taiwanese actor Jimmy Lin posted a photo of himself holding an iPhone 5S and what he claims is an iPhone 6.
Why is this significant? Well Lin posted pictures of the iPhone 5C ahead of its launch last year, so it looks like he may have repeated the trick in 2014.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
Mr Lin may also have the larger 5.5-inch iPhone 6 (or at least a mockup unit) in his posession, after he posted another photo online which a big looking iPhone sitting on a work bench.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
The same design keeps popping up in the leaked photo, and surely this isn't coincidence as even more images along the same design lines pop up from Sonny Dickson - again claiming to show the iPhone 6.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
Sonny Dickson has gone one further though after getting his hands on mockups of two sizes of iPhone 6 handsets - could these be the 4.7-inch and 5.5-inch variants we've heard so much about?
iPhone 6 - LEAK
As well as coming in gold/white, chances are we'll also see a black/space grey version of the iPhone 6 too, and that's exactly what has appeared in leaks from two different sites.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
Apparently the iPhone 6 has also been snapped alongside the iPad Air 2 and the iPad Mini 3, all three of which are showing off their TouchID sensors as well.
iPhone 6 - LEAK
Moving on from images to videos, Mac Otakara posted one to YouTube. It shows mockups much like we've seen in countless images, but it also gives us a look at what might be the actual back of the iPhone 6.
A larger body housing a larger screen would mean there would be some additional space which a larger power pack could accommodate, and we've even spotted an image claiming to show the iPhone 6 battery on the production line.
In other areas, patents show that Apple has been thinking about magical morphing technology that can hide sensors and even cameras. Will it make it into the iPhone 6? Probably not.

NFC and Touch ID

What's this? NFC in an iPhone? About time too. Well, that's what iDownloadblog reckons, quoting Jefferies analyst Peter Misek. He's not the only analyst tossing his hat into the iPhone 6 NFC ring, with Ming-Chi Kuo also supporting the theory.
It's a theory that's looking ever more likely as it's now been revealed that Apple has partnered with China UnionPay to add its banking service to Passbook. That in itself needn't mean NFC, but apparently users will also be able to make payments on China UnionPay's QuickPass machines, which use NFC.
Many Android phones now boast NFC and Apple appears to have been happy to be left behind here, so we'd be a little surprised to see it suddenly rocking the contactless technology when it appears to be on the wane. Then again, the evidence for it is mounting.
Meanwhile Touch ID is unsurprisingly expected to make a return, but sources claim that Apple is making the sensor more durable this time around. We're not sure how durable something that you lightly press your finger against really needs to be, but increased durability is surely no bad thing.

It could save your life - with iOS 8

With iOS 7 heading out of the traps now, who's betting against the next iPhone coming with iOS 8?
Apple has already lifted the lid on iOS 8 at its WWDC 2014 conference in San Francisco and going by previous iterations of the software it'll arrive alongside a new iPhone in September.
The much rumored "HealthBook" does makes its way to iOS 8, but with the slightly altered name of "Health."
This app can pull in data from various health monitoring applications, providing you with one centralized sourced to view all your vital statistics, while the HealthKit developer tool will allow applications to make greater use of this function.
With the Health app now on the scene, reports that the iPhone 6 will apparently come with an array of sensors to monitor your health and environment begin to look far more credible.
FutTv : qF7X7injV3X6R

iPhone 6 power

Not a huge surprise, this one: the next processor will be a quad-core A8 or an evolved A7. The big sell here is more power with better efficiency, which should help battery life.
Anyone hoping for some juicy Samsung technology hidden under the iPhone 6 body will be disappointed though, as reports suggest Apple is looking to push its Korean rival further out of the iPhone picture with its eighth-gen handset.
Apple is apparently cutting the amount of A8 processors it is having made by Samsung, although it hasn't severed ties completely just yet.
There's not been much word on how much RAM the iPhone 6 will come with, but KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reckons it will have 1GB, just like the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5S before it.
On the storage front it's been reported that for the first time we might get a 128GB iPhone, but that only the 5.5 inch iPhone 6 will reach that capacity, while the 4.7 inch model will be capped at 64GB.

Camera and wireless charging

The best iPhone camera yet

Apple's bought camera sensors from Sony before, and this year there's signs that we're going to see a new, 13-megapixel sensor that takes up less room without compromising image quality.
With the arrival of iOS 8 at WWDC, Apple showed off a whole host of fancy new photo editing options and what better way to take full advantage of the new features than with an upgraded camera on the iPhone 6?
But that's not what everybody thinks.
The China Post, quoting a tip from the country's Nomura Security, claims that the next iPhone won't go for a 12 or 16-megapixel sensor, instead sticking to the existing 8-megapixel unit.
With more recent rumors suggesting that Apple has signed up to use a new material that will dramatically improve the quality of light trickling into the phone, a 10MP+ sensor could be possible - but we're more inclined to believe that, as another report recently suggested, Apple will stick with the current resolution.
iPhone 6 camera
Why go for more megapixels if the pictures won't be any better? The notion that Apple will stick with an 8MP sensor might not be so good for marketing, but news states the iPhone 6 will have an f/2.0 aperture and dramatically enhanced image processing, so your snaps will look so good that most won't even care that the numbers are down.
And you shouldn't - 5MP is enough to blow up a photo to A3 size, so when are you going to need more?
Sun Chang Xu, the chief analyst at ESM-China, has also claimed on Weibo that the iPhone 6 will have 1.75 um pixels, compared to the 1.5 um pixels on the iPhone 5S. Bigger pixels let more light in and deliver better quality shots, particularly in low light, but if Apple is increasing the pixel size then that further suggests that the company won't be upping the megapixel count.
On top of that, more impressive tech will also help make your snaps stand out. A patent confirms this, saying Apple's aim is to use "voice coil motor actuators" to move the lens around the optical axis.
An Apple patent, uncovered by Apple Insider in May 2013, shows a system where an iPhone can remotely control other illuminating devices - extra flashes. It would work in a similar manner to that seen in professional photography studios. Interesting stuff, though there are dozens of Apple patents floating around and there's no reason to think this particular one will make it into a finished product.
Say Cheese to the iPhone 6
More convincingly, Sun Chang Xu reported on Weibo that the iPhone 6 will use Electronic Image Stabilisation (EIS). That's a software alternative to Optical Image Stabilisation (OIS). Both solutions aim to prevent images from coming out blurred, but while OIS uses moving parts to balance the camera, EIS uses software algorithms to compensate.
It doesn't work as well as OIS, but with less hardware it allows the phone to be slimmer, lighter and cheaper to produce, so it looks like Apple might be going for a slim design at all costs.
Meanwhile KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reckons that the 5.5 inch iPhone 6 will get OIS, but the 4.7 inch model won't.

iPhone 6 wireless charging

Wireless charging still isn't mainstream. Could Apple help give it a push? CP Tech reports that Apple has filed a patent for efficient wireless charging, but then again Apple has filed patents for pretty much anything imaginable.
The tasty bit of this particular patent is that Apple's tech wouldn't just charge one device, but multiple ones. Here are more details on the iPhone 6 wireless charging patent.
Wireless charging is slowly starting to pick up steam and Apple could give it just the push it needs to really get there, but we're not convinced we'll see the tech in the iPhone 6, as it seems like something that Apple's more likely to wait on until the infrastructure is in place to make it genuinely useful.
Meanwhile, a further Apple patent seems to imply that future iPhones will be able to adjust volume as you move them away from your ear. Again, there's a big difference between a patent and a finished product and little reason to think it will make it into the iPhone 6, but it's certainly an interesting idea.
Read more ...

iPhone 6 Launch Day Rumours Roundup

Tuesday 9 September 2014
NDTV
iphone_6_compared_with_iphone_5s_nikkei_side.jpg
The day is upon us - possibly the most-anticipated smartphone launch since the iPhone 5s and 5c last September, Apple is all set to unveil what's expected to be called the iPhone 6 on Tuesday, at an event kicking-off at 10:30pm IST at Flint Center for the Performing Arts, where Steve Jobs first introduced the original Macintosh 30 years ago.
Just what does Apple have in store for us? Only the Cupertino giant will be able to tell us for sure, but if past events are anything to go by - then a significant proportion of the innumerable iPhone 6 leaks should be right on the mark, giving us a fair idea of just what to expect.

First and foremost - Apple is said to have finally heard the global criticism of its insistence on making ergonomically-sized smartphones with miniscule (by today's standards) displays. While the iPhone 5s came with a 4-inch display, the next iPhone has long been rumoured to come in two display size variants - 4.7-inch and 5.5-inch - helping Apple compete in a smartphone market that is seeing a converged devices trend, with users wanting the best of the smartphone and tablet worlds in a single device.

Just what will these two expected display size variants of the iPhone be called? The rumour mill has some suggestions. The smaller, 4.7-inch iPhone is expected to be called the iPhone 6, while the larger 5.5-inch iPhone is expected to be called either the iPhone 6L, or the iPhone Air. The most recent rumours however, indicate the larger new iPhone will be called the iPhone 6 Plus.

Apart from just an increase in size, Apple is also expected to introduce higher resolution displays, with the most recent reports pointing to the company using displays with a resolution of 828x1472 pixels for both the 4.7-inch and 5.5-inch iPhone 6 models. While more weight is being given to the report that both models will feature the same resolution (translating to a pixel density of 359ppi for the 4.7-inch display, and 307ppi for the 5.5-inch display), it is possible Apple will use a higher screen resolution of 960x1704 pixels on the 5.5-inch model (356ppi).

Alongside larger and higher-resolution displays, numerous leaks agree on a new design philosophy for the next-generation iPhone models - one that is inspired by the fourth-generation iPod touch and its curved design. Unlike the straight edged design of the iPhone 5 and 5s, Apple is said to be using a slim, curved edge design for the iPhone 6, with ellipsoidal instead of circular volume buttons on the left side alongside the mute switch, and a power button on the right side.

The iPhone 6 design is said to feature its camera and LED flash sitting right on top, with a protruding camera ring that protects the camera's lens and may allow for OIS. An improved and more durable Touch ID sensor, made by TSMC, is expected to be included.

The iPhone 6 is expected to bear the Apple A8 SoC, however not much is known about this. Reports have been pointing to TSMC as the manufacturer for these chips, with Apple said to be doing away with Samsung as a chip vendor. Other reports however maintain that both TSMC and Samsung will be producing the A8 chips, with the former handling 60-70 percent of the manufacturing. The new chip is expected to be fabricated on the 20nm process node, compared to the 28nm process on the Apple A7. Of course, as introduced on the A7, Apple will continue with 64-bit architecture on the Apple A8.

Alongside the Apple A8 SoC, the Cupertino giant has been rumoured to be using 1GB of RAM alongside. While this will not be confirmed until after a hardware review site tears down the iPhone 6, it seems like the minimum Apple could use to compete with modern day Android smartphones - though of course, Apple in the past has proved hardware enthusiasts wrong, managing with meagre specs to deliver top-end performance.

Further on the hardware side of things, the iPhone 6 is expected to finally bring NFC (near field communications) connectivity, apart from supporting Wi-Fi 802.11ac. While NFC is not expected to power sharing or device connectivity features (as it does on modern Android smartphones), Apple is expected to introduce its anticipated mobile payments and wallet system, one that should also tie in with the Touch ID sensor for biometric authentication, and the anticipated iWatch for ease of use. Lastly, the iPhone 6 is also expected to be the first generation to introduce a 128GB storage variant.
The 4.7-inch iPhone 6 is rumoured to ship with a 2100mAh battery, while the larger 5.5-inch iPhone 6 is expected to feature a 2500mAh battery. More recent reports however point to the 4.7-inch model featuring a 1810mAh battery, and the larger model a 2915mAh battery.

Coming to the software side of things, the next iPhone will ship with iOS 8 - the company's latest version of its mobile and tablet operating system, which was unveiled at WWDC this year. While many of the new features the new OS will bring are already known (such as HealthKit and HomeKit integration; third-party keyboards and Touch ID-based applications; improved iMessage and Siri features; continuity features with OS X Yosemite, and iCloud Photo Library), some are only rumoured.

Most recently, the larger 5.5-inch iPhone 6 model was reported to arrive with functionality that lets certain apps be used in landscape mode - similar to the iPad interface for improved productivity - truly taking advantage of the increased visual real estate.

Apple has been for a while rumoured to include new split-screen multitasking feature in the next-generation of iPad tablets, which are expected to be launched at a separate event at the end of September, or in early October.

Coming to perhaps the most important aspect of any smartphone's launch - price. The reports are ambiguous thus far, with some tipping the iPhone 6 will in effect cost less than the last generation iPhone 5s, the most recent reports tip the smartphones will be a fair bit more expensive. Some industry watchers expect the larger 5.5-inch iPhone 6 to cost $100 more than the 4.7-inch iPhone 6, taking the price to a new extreme - past the $1,000 mark unlocked.
Reports have been tipping that both models of Apple's next iPhone would hit shelves on September 19, the traditional 10 days after the unveiling of the smartphone. However, new reports tip that while Apple will be launching the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 alongside the 4.7-inch model, the former will only be available in limited quantities at launch.

The company is also expected to introduce its first smartwatch, much-anticipated to be called the iWatch, at its September 9 event. The iWatch is expected to arrive in two size variants, both featuring flexible displays, and help power the health and location-based functions. While the release of the smartwatch is rumoured to be set for early 2015, the company's unveiling will give developers time to make apps for the new wearable device - with the latest rumours pointing to the iWatch supporting third-party apps and boasting of App Store access. An early version of the Apple SDK with iWatch APIs is said to also already have been shared with top firms, such as Facebook, for the iWatch demonstration on Tuesday.

Stay tuned to this page, as we bring you the latest rumours and leaks about the new iPhone 6 right up to its launch on Tuesday.

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RIL's GenNext Ventures, Microsoft set up innovation hubs for technology start-ups

Sunday 7 September 2014

GenNext Ventures, Microsoft set up innovation
The three-year partnership to set up a pan India initiative to catalyse the country's technology startup ecosystem was signed today by R A Mashelkar, Chairman, GenNext Ventures and Board Member, RIL, and Bhaskar Pramanik, Chairman, Microsoft India.
   
The MoU allows GenNext Ventures and Microsoft Ventures to bring together key stakeholders -— academia, students, entrepreneurs, investors, and corporates -- at the GenNext Innovation Hubs.
   
Microsoft Ventures will help GenNext identify, shortlist, on-board promising startups and power the accelerator programme. Microsoft Ventures will also provide these startups access to software and technology advice.
   
"At the end of the accelerator program cycle, GenNext will invest strategically and selectively in some of these IT startups," the two companies said in a joint statement.
  
Mashelkar said: "Technology startups, which are a key source of innovation in India, are at an inflexion point today. While the numbers have grown exponentially year on year, the industry is at a nascent stage."
  
Microsoft India's Chairman Bhaskar Pramanik said the initiative, called GenNext Innovation Hubs, is not aimed at generating profits but boosting entrepreneurship.
   
The company's Microsoft Ventures runs an accelerator lab for entrepreneurs in Bangalore, while Reliance Industries already has its venture investing business GenNext Ventures.
   
Entrepreneurs will have to apply for four-month long course aimed at enhancing strategic, tactical and communication skills.
  
Officials, including GenNext Ventures' chairman and scientist R A Mashelkar and Pramanik, at a press conference here refused to give any indication on the investments, including the size of the corpus created to invest.
  
"The first hub will start operations in October in Mumbai, and will be subsequently emulated across multiple cities in India," the companies said in the joint statement.
  
The company's Microsoft Ventures runs an accelerator lab for entrepreneurs in Bangalore, while Reliance Industries already has its venture investing business GenNext Ventures.
   
Entrepreneurs will have to apply for four-month long course aimed at enhancing strategic, tactical and communication skills.
Read more ...

The ugly truth about wearable technology

Sunday 7 September 2014

When it comes to putting computers on our bodies, everyone's an armchair Anna Wintour. Take a look at the comments on any story about wearable technology, just about anywhere. Ugly is in the eye of the beholder. And with good reason. While some of us view our PCs, smartphones and tablets as status symbols, our clothing and accessories are more closely tied to our identities than anything else.
Over the past few years, the frenzy for wearables has reached its peak. This week alone,SonySamsungLG and Motorola have all shown off their next attempts at wrist-worn technology. And with each announcement comes a new set of sartorial critiques.

And yet, despite a seeming consensus from the tech press about the aesthetic appeal of devices like the Moto 360 and Pebble's Steel, the world is still waiting for the one wearable that will have us all strapping a computer to our wrists, faces, waists or whatever. But the real obstacle to wearable adoption isn't a matter of style; it's a matter of taste.
The real obstacle to wearable adoption isn't a matter of style; it's a matter of taste.

New York Times tech-scribe-cum-style savant, Nick Bilton recently penned a speculative editorialproclaiming the as-of-yet-unannounced iWatch as the device that could finally take wearables mainstream. Apple will no doubt roll out a beautiful piece of machinery -- it has an excellent track record and a proven team of designers, engineers and businesspeople on board -- but the truth is, no matter how good the software, no matter how innovative the functionality, no matter how versatile and beautiful the design, there will never be one wearable for everyone.

Almost every player in the wearable game thus far has proven an ability to produce successful consumer technologies. Some of us can even agree that they're starting to get the style right, but the truth is we all fancy ourselves individuals when we get dressed in the morning. No single company, whether it's Apple or Motorola or even Swatch is ever going to make a single device that we all want to wear.

Apple's wearable device, whether it's a watch or a fedora or even a condom, will no doubt be a meticulously designed piece of hardware, but it's going to take a much more robust and diverse market, full of choice for wearables to really take off. It's going to take more than NFCfitness tracking and Jony Ive's magic touch. It's going to take more than killer features and refined hardware.
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Obama names Google exec Megan Smith as new US chief technology officer

Sunday 7 September 2014
Former Twitter lawyer and NSA resister Alex Macgillivray is second-in-command

Megan Smith, a Google vice president and champion of women in technology, has been named the new chief technology officer of the US. Smith is an MIT-educated engineer who worked most recently at Google X, the company's lab for hyper-ambitious projects like the self-driving car and the future of robots. Before that, she led the business development team for nine years.
Alex Macgillivray, Twitter's former top lawyer, has been named deputy CTO. It's an interesting choice: at Twitter, Macgillivray set a tone for that company's independence from the US government and resistance to law enforcement data requests.
SMITH IS ONLY THE THIRD US CTO EVER
The US CTO position is relatively new. The first US CTO, Aneesh Chopra, served from 2009 to 2012. He was succeeded by Todd Park, who left in late August. Smith will be the third US CTO ever.
The role is loosely defined as an advisor on technology policy. "Smith will guide the Administration's information-technology policy and initiatives, continuing the work of her predecessors to accelerate attainment of the benefits of advanced information and communications technologies across every sector of the economy and aspect of human well-being," writes presidential science advisor John Holdren, according to The Washington Post.
The previous US CTO, Todd Park, has been moved to an advisory position based in Silicon Valley. Park was responsible for launching the much-lauded Presidential Innovation Fellows program, which brings young tech talent to the White House for two year stints, and helping to coordinate repairs to the technical side of Healthcare.gov.
The appointments of Smith and Macgillivray, both hard-hitters from two major Silicon Valley companies, shows the White House is taking this role seriously. The position is so new, however, that Smith and Macgillivray have the opportunity to define what the US CTO should be.
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Apple's iWatch And The Technology Of Cyber Luxury

Sunday 7 September 2014
Apple AAPL +0.87% has emitted a time-release drip of information about the iWatch. Starting with John Gruber’s joke-as-leak and seeming to culminate in Re/Code’s sourceless pronouncement, the era of Apple wearables is almost certainly upon us. The most curious leak came on Wednesday from Nick Bilton at the Apple-PR-approved New York Times. According to Bilton, an Apple designer who works with Jony Ive described the Cupertino design czar gloating on the demise of the Swiss watch industry. Ive apparently dropped the “F-bomb” “in bragging about how cool he thought the iWatch was shaping up to be.” The designer spoke of Ive, “gleefully [expressing] how he thought the watchmaking nation might be in a tough predicament when Apple’s watch comes out.”
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Gold iWatch concept and matching iPhone 6 by Martin Hajek
What’s funny here is not the fact that Apple’s design chief swears like a sailor or a chef—or a designer. What’s funny is that Apple wanted us to know it. This whole iPhone season featured earlier-than-usual leaks followed by more-than-usual direct briefings of journalists. This “openness” appears to be the stamp of Tim Cook. Mark Gurman of 9to5Mac wrote an exhaustive series of posts last week on the history of and changes within Apple’s PR machine.
The other funny thing about Apple is its reticence. Like a person who doesn’t say much, when they open their mouth you hang on every word. There is a confidence to Apple’s releases because if it isn’t confident, it doesn’t release. Therefore, it is axiomatic to say that the iWatch will be amazing. Because if it weren’t, Apple would just keep “pulling the string” as it is with the Apple TV.
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iWatch concept with Health app by Martin Hajek
This brings me to my real point—and the point that Ive is making about the Swiss. Unlike the smartwatches to date, the iWatch will not just be a product but a platform. I don’t just mean that it will have an app ecosystem. So do Pebble, and Android Wear and even Samsung Gear. The Moto 360 is an elegant instantiation of Google’s software, but it doesn’t go farther than that.
iWatch concept by Martin Hajek
iWatch concept by Martin Hajek
The difference with Apple is that both the chips that drive the iWatch and the software that runs it are its own. It can package the chipsets and software for sale to other manufacturers and luxury good brands—some of them in Switzerland. In the 20th century, “Swiss mechanisms” were the ne plus ultraof luxury timepieces. On Tuesday, Tim Cook will raise his iWatch-bearing hand and say, “our turn!”
Apple is not only pursuing the luxury channel with the iWatch. Health, fitness, the connected home and electronic payments are each significant drivers of customer adoption. But it is the appeal to status and the invention of cyber luxury that Apple is most confident of. Just look at the trio of European fashion heavyweights it has brought on board. Ahrendts, Deneve and Pruniaux are not at Apple to sell medical devices!
I got a peek into Apple’s possible strategy from Omri Yoffe, CEO of the Israeli wearable tech company LifeBEAM. If there are any discussions between the two companies, Yoffe is not saying, but the strategy he laid out to me is like what Apple may be embarking on with the iWatch. LifeBEAM got its start making highly-accurate biometric sensors for fighter pilot and astronauts. These are mission critical wearable devices, quite literally. They protect lives and expensive equipment from harm in extremely challenging situations.
LifeBEAM specializes in optical sensors for a wide variety of body locations. These can capture data from the forehead, temple, inner ear, arm, wrist and foot. It packages these as compact components for wearable applications from bike helmets to clothing. It’s current components are part of its first generation Ray Platform. This provides “plug-and-play bio-sensing technology that delivers the most accurate pulse and activity data available.” Most striking is that there are two more generations in the pipeline (Spark and Flare, respectively.) LifeBEAM combines the quality of its existing sensors with the promise of continued innovation. This make it an attractive supplier for wearable manufacturers.
With the iWatch, Apple will be selling this promise of high-quality hardware combined with the software and data infrastructure that drives it. As LifeBEAM shows, Apple is not the only vendor that makes these kinds of promises, but it is the most important one. To follow LifeBEAM’s aerospace metaphor, the sky is the limit for what affluent consumers will pay for luxury timepieces. Bespoke sensors and software along with de rigur precious materials could make for limited edition iWatches with price points in the tens of thousands.
It is axiomatically true that if Apple is confident about wearables, consumers and the rest of the industry will be too . Apple owns the technology of luxury in this century as the Swiss did in the last.
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GM to Offer Technology to Help Avoid Vehicle-to-Vehicle Crashes

Sunday 7 September 2014

Auto Maker Could Have First Wireless System Available in Some Models by 2016

DETROIT— General Motors Co. GM -0.14% plans to install vehicle-to-vehicle communications systems on some products in two years, part of a broad push by regulators and auto makers to introduce technology that can prevent collisions without human intervention.
GM Chief Executive Mary Barra is expected to announce the auto maker's move toward so-called V2V technology on Sunday at a conference in Detroit, people familiar with the matter said. The auto giant's strategy is one example of how car companies are seizing on advances in computing power, cheaper machine vision technology and better software to automate more aspects of daily driving.
Delphi Automotive LLP, a U.S. auto-technology supplier once owned by GM, said on Friday it has an agreement to supply hardware for V2V communications systems for a major auto maker's North American models by 2016, but didn't identify the customer.
GM's decision to push ahead with V2V technology comes after months of controversy over its decadelong failure to recall vehicles with a potentially deadly safety defect. Ms. Barra has responded to that crisis by vowing that GM will make vehicle safety central to its business.
"We are past the tipping point," Delphi Chief Technology Officer Jeff Owens said on Friday. "Everybody's making moves" to bulk up vehicle safety.
A group of auto makers and suppliers, including GM, Ford Motor Co. -0.75% , Toyota Motor Corp. 7203.TO +0.46% , Honda Motor Co. 7267.TO -0.01% and Nissan Motor Co.7201.TO -0.29% are funding an expanded transportation research effort at the University of Michigan. The program aims to put 9,000 vehicles equipped with V2V technology on the road in Ann Arbor, Mich., the university said on Friday.
Cars that use radar sensors and cameras to detect other cars or objects and warn drivers are increasingly common. Vehicle-to-vehicle communications technology could go a step further, and warn drivers of potential collisions with cars they or their bumper-mounted cameras and radars can't see.
The Troy, Mich., company said the agreement signals some auto makers want to move ahead of a potential government mandate requiring that all vehicles sold in the U.S. be capable of communicating their position as part of a system programmed to prevent collisions.
The U.S. Department of Transportation last month said it is considering adopting a rule by 2016 requiring such vehicle-to-vehicle communications systems in the future.
"We are very bullish on the technology that is emerging in the auto industry," Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said in an interview on Friday. Mr. Foxx will join acting National Highway Traffic Safety Administration administrator David Friedman at the technology conference in Detroit where Ms. Barra will outline GM's plans.
Wide adoption of vehicle-to-vehicle locator systems could advance the industry's progress toward automating larger chunks of the daily commute, although many auto industry executives caution that fully autonomous driving in all conditions remains years away.
Mr. Friedman said auto makers don't necessarily have to wait for regulation to offer emerging autonomous driving systems that enable automatic braking or hands-free driving in certain circumstances, such as traffic jams.
"It is common to bring new technology well before we regulate them," he said. NHTSA will look at whether such systems improve safety, Mr. Friedman said.
Auto makers so far have tended to introduce advanced safety features, such as automatic braking or cameras that alert drivers to cars in blind spots, as options on expensive models.
One way in which the NHTSA could respond is with new rules designed to push such technology into more cars. NHTSA is aiming to decide within about six months whether to require automatic braking systems, Mr. Friedman said.
Car makers have resisted mandated safety technology in the past, worried that customers won't accept the higher costs of vehicles. But competitive and regulatory pressures are changing that.
In Europe, a consortium of auto makers has agreed to start rolling out by 2015 cars capable of communicating with each other, or with transmitters embedded along the highway. European crash test standards already are pushing car makers to equip vehicles with automatic braking systems, and by 2016 will reward them for installing systems that can detect pedestrians and brake to avoid injuries, IHS Inc. IHS -0.26%senior analyst Jeremy Carlson said.
"Consumers are expecting more and more out of the vehicle to help keep them safe," said Mike VanNieuwkuyk, executive director, global automotive at market researcher J.D. Power and Associates.
Toyota officials said this week they plan to offer an array of crash avoidance technology across all of its Toyota and Lexus models by 2017, including automatic braking systems the company currently offers mainly on its luxury Lexus models.
Toyota will be chasing rivals, including Ford and Korea's Hyundai Motor Co.005380.SE -1.81% , that are already offering automatic braking systems in mass market models for the U.S.
"Rapidly emerging technology will have a profound effect on the industry," Bill Fay, head of the Toyota brand in the U.S., said during a briefing this week on the company's technology plans.
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