Weekly poll: Apple iPhone 6s/6s Plus – hot or not

Though the heat of summer may be fading in the northern hemisphere, there’s no hotter month than September for Apple fans globally. The new iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus are official and lines will be forming in front of Apple stores come midday September 24 for the scheduled launch on the following day.

Will you sacrifice a night’s sleep this year to be among the first to lay your hands on the most advanced iPhone yet? More or less that’s what we’re asking in this week’s edition of our “Hot or not?” poll.

A new 12MP camera is perhaps the most alluring upgrade for any iPhone owner and now a compelling reason for members of the other camps to defect. With the 4K video recording checkbox ticked as well, the iPhone’s camera is no longer trailing in resolution and major features, and it certainly wasn’t in image quality. Meanwhile, an upgraded 5MP front camera with a display flash will keep the selfie-loving crowd entertained.

The internals have been addressed as well, and this generation is now powered by a new A9 chip. RAM has finally gotten a bump too – in this day and age a single gig was becoming out of place in a top end phone regardless of platform.

And the body – the new hero Rose Gold color adds an extra bit of flair to an already eye-grabbing device, while a higher grade aluminum makes sure any more potential bend-gates are avoided.

It’s not all roses, though. Newer materials and improved Taptic engine have meant a substantial weight increase in both models, and the Plus is now dangerously close to 200g. It’s also hard to ignore the Apple’s stubbornness in pushing a 16GB base version – no, it’s not enough, and no, cloud storage is not the same. Which makes 64GB the base usable version, and that’s an additional $100/€110 out of your pocket, as if you didn’t have to reach deep…

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El filtrado Dell XPS 12 sería un digno competidor del Microsoft Surface

Un nuevo e interesante equipo se divisa en el horizonte y está firmado por Dell. Se trata del llamado XPS 12, un dispositivo que, según la gente de Giga, ofrecerá a los usuarios un planteamiento a lo Surface, formado por una tablet con conector magné…

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Un nuevo Nexus Player pasa por la FCC

Google Nexus Player

Las empresas quieren cambiar la forma de ver la televisión y eso quedó claro cuando Google presentó su AndroidTV, Chromecast o Nexus Player. Empieza una nueva guerra y es ver qué sistema operativo es mejor para los televisores. Apple presentó hace poco su nuevo AppleTV, dotado de más potencia, nueva experiencia de usuario y perfecta para reproducir contenido multimedia así como para poder jugar.

Google ya lleva años buscando cambiar la “caja tonta”, por lo que puede llevar algo de ventaja con respecto al nuevo AppleTV de Apple. Han habido productos multimedia que han fracasado por parte de Google, como el Nexus Q, pero sin embargo otros dispositivos han sido todo un éxito de ventas, como el Chromecast.

Otro dispositivo que ha medio cuajado ha sido el Nexus Player. La primera generación de este dispositivo ya tiene, aproximadamente, un año de vida y tal y como avanza la tecnología, podríamos ver una segunda generación mejorada para el supuesto evento de Google para el próximo 29 de Septiembre.

¿ Nexus Player 2 ?

Google podría presentar, junto a los nuevos terminales Nexus de LG y de Huawei, un nuevo Nexus Player. Los rumores sobre el futuro gadget han salido gracias a que, una nueva generación ha pasado por la FCC. El dispositivo tiene el número de indentificación A4RNC2-6A5 bajo número de modelo de NC2-645. Junto a los documentos filtrados, los cuales en ningún momento reflejan la palabra Nexus, dejan una supuesta etiqueta en forma de curva muy similar a las que tienen los actuales Nexus Player, por lo que todo parece indicar a que el modelo pasado por la FCC sea la nueva generación del Nexus Player.

Nexus Player

No hay muchas diferencias, “a priori”, entre la primera generación y la segunda ya que, esta Nexus Player 2, vendrá luciendo Wi-Fi dual de 2,4 GHz y 5 GHz respectivamente, 4 puertos USB, 1 puerto micro-USB y un puerto LAN. Por el momento pocas cosas más conocemos al respecto de este futuro dispositivo multimedia de Google. Estaremos atentos a lo que suceda en el próximo evento para ver si de verdad existe tal dispositivo.

Un evento que estará repleto lleno de novedades ya que, como bien sabréis se presentarán dos teléfonos inteligentes bajo la marca Nexus, algo insólito en la historia de Google y bajo la nueva versión de Android, Android 6.0 Marshmallow. Además, también se ha rumoreado que los chicos de Mountain View podrían presentar una tableta de 8 pulgadas y ahora un nuevo Nexus Player. ¿ Se presentará todo lo rumoreado en el próximo evento de Google ? ¿ Qué creéis ?

 

El artículo Un nuevo Nexus Player pasa por la FCC ha sido originalmente publicado en Androidsis.

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Counterclockwise: the live and times of the iPhone

This week saw the announcement of the 9th generation iPhone, so it’s a good time to look back through its family tree. Welcome back for another weekend trip down memory lane.

Apple iPhone

It was the phone that changed the industry – not the first smartphone, not even the first phone with a capacitive touchscreen, but its influence in phone design is still felt today. Part of the credit goes to Steve Jobs’ dislike for styluses – the standard tool for touchscreens at the time – so he guided his team to design a user interface built from the ground up to be used with fingers.

At the time, touch phones tried to mimic mouse-driven desktop UIs, perhaps because that’s what users were familiar with. But Apple did what Apple does best – create an accessible experience and get users to do things The Right Way™.

However, “smartphone” wasn’t quite part of Steve’s original vision – no native apps were allowed, only “web apps.” And the Safari browser meant to run them supported neither Flash nor Java, which were still the predominant way to create apps for the web.

The original iPhone had plenty of limitation though. Its camera was very basic (no autofocus, no videos), there was no 3G for faster access to those web apps, Bluetooth file sharing was nowhere to be found, heck, you couldn’t even set a ringtone.

So how could such a limited phone shake the industry to its core? Well, Apple had one thing right – specs wars don’t matter if you can offer the best experience.

Apple iPhone 3G

The Apple iPhone 3G fixed many of the initial limitations. After unofficial ways to install apps became popular, Apple introduced the official App Store with iPhone OS 2.0. The new phone would also add 3D connectivity for faster internet access and added GPS for Google Maps.

Official photos of Apple iPhone 3G

Apple left some things unchanged though – the iPhone 3G used the same 2MP camera as the original, so no autofocus and no video. No video calls over 3G either, a feature other smartphones flaunted.

The phone also dropped the aluminum casing of the original and went with glossy plastic, making it the ugly ducking in an otherwise very nice looking family.

Apple iPhone 3GS

The birth of the S iPhones – the models that improve last year’s model, without any major design changes. Except the iPhone 3G brought relatively small improvements (really things that should have been part of the original), while the 3GS actually set the stage for some of Apple’s major iPhone features to come.

First, the camera was spruced up – autofocus added (with 10cm macro mode) and video capture was enabled at VGA @ 30fps (even though the competition was taking the first steps to 720p). An editor was added to trim your videos.

Voice control was added – not Siri, but its great-grandfather. Similarly Nike+ was precursor to Apple Health, hardware encryption was enabled too.

Apple iPhone 4

Even Apple’s magic couldn’t stave off the specs war and the Apple iPhone 4 (no more “G”) was a big change in direction. The Retina display bumped the pixel density to an unheard of 326ppi, kicking off the resolution race. It was a high-quality IPS display with great viewing angles and contrast too.

It was also the first iPhone to get serious about the camera – the 5MP/720p shooter was not impressive on paper, but produced spectacular photos. The iPhone 4 also added a camera on the front – not for 3G calls, but for Apple’s custom FaceTime.

Apple iPhone 4

Apple’s design was always a selling point, but the iPhone 4 took it to a new level. Thin (9.3mm) with a sleek metal-and-glass body, it was quite a looker. The return to a metal chassis brought connectivity issues with it though.

Along with the new iPhone Apple unveiled a tablet too – the iPad – but that’s a story for another time.

Apple iPhone 4S

Apple turned the screws on Android makers further with the iPhone 4S. It matched them at 1080p video with the new 8MP camera, which was nothing short of amazing. The 8MP/1080p camera, with minor updates each year, lasted Apple four generations. It was finally changed in full with the iPhone 6s, but that’s a highly impressive track record.

Apple also stepped up its performance game and introduced its first dual-core processor. Multitasking still wasn’t a thing though, not true multitasking that is (and…

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