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Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn leak. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn leak. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Bảy, 13 tháng 8, 2016

The iPhone 7 might not have stereo speakers after all

Thứ Bảy, 13 tháng 8, 2016 - 0 Comments

Image: Screenshot: unbox therapy/youtube

The most controversial change on the new iPhone 7 will be the removal of the headphone jack. You'll either love it or hate it. Accept dongle hell, go Bluetooth or buy new Lightning-based headphones.

In the run-up to the announcement, which is widely expected to be Sept. 7, we've been trying to make educated guesses as to why Apple will drop the jack.

Here are some possible reasons Apple will use to defend its choice:

  1. The headphone jack is analog and the iPhone 7 will support high-resolution audio so it needs a digital input.

  2. Apple wants to make thinner iPhones and the port's thickness is a limitation.

  3. Complete water-sealing.

  4. To sell you new Lightning earbuds and headphones.

  5. To squeeze in a bigger battery, the port had to die.

  6. Bluetooth is the future, no matter what you think. Get over it!

The best hypothesis has been: stereo speakers. In all of the leaked images that have surfaced of the alleged iPhone 7 and 7 Plus there are two sets of speaker holes on the bottom flanking the Lightning port.

A new report from Nowhereelse.fr, with alleged design schematics of the new iPhones, suggests that may not be the case and there will be no secondary speaker. The iPhone, for those who don't know, only has a single downward-facing speaker.

iPhones prior to the iPhone 6 all had dual speaker grilles flanking the connector port, but none were stereo speakers. No iPhone has had stereo speakers. 

One of the benefits of the iPad Pro is its enhanced audio. Both the 12.9- and 9.7-inch iPad Pro have four speaker grilles that output stereo sound.

With less space to fit components, it would be tough to squeeze in a secondary speaker into the already tightly packed iPhone.

Stereo speakers would be a good, but not great reason to ditch the headphone jack. But if that's not the reason, then what will be? It's starting to sound like whatever the reason is, it won't be one we'll be thrilled with. 

Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 5, 2016

Why you shouldn't believe every single iPhone 'leak' and rumor

Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 5, 2016 - 0 Comments

Iphone6s-headphone-jacks
Will the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus could be the last iPhones with headphone jacks?
Image: JHILA FARZANEH/MASHABLE

The iPhone 7 will not have a headphone jack. It will have a headphone jack. It won't have a headphone jack.

The rumor mill just can't decide if Apple will kill the headphone jack on its next iPhone or not.

For months, speculation has been the iPhone 7 will be the first iPhone to eschew the 50-something-year-old 3.5mm audio jack. Apple will reportedly release new Lightning port-based earbuds and headphones to compensate.

Apple could ship a 3.5mm jack-to-Lightning adapter for with the headphone jack-less iPhone 7 to ease the transition for users. Or it could not include one and sell the damn dongle like it always does when the company nixes ports from its products. (My money is on Apple selling the adapters and making bank.)

The latest iPhone 7 leak published by Nowherelse.fr, a blog with a history of sometimes being right with leaks on unreleased Apple products, claims the iPhone 7 may come with a headphone jack after all.

The purported iPhone 7 Lightning cable assembly, which you can see in the image above, shows what is clearly a headphone jack (the white component to the left of the blue-marked rectangle).

So it's settled then, the iPhone 7 will still have a headphone jack, right? 

Wrong.

From somewhere in China

The iPhone 7 is not expected to debut until this fall (September or October if Apple follows history). We're at least five months out. While it's common for next-generation parts to leak onto the Internet months in advance, these parts don't guarantee anything.

So-called next-generation iPhone parts start to "leak" every spring — many of them turning out to be completely off base.

The fact is, these leaked parts, which are almost always posted on some Weibo account in China, can't be verified in any capacity. They could just as well be from an Android phone that so closely resembles the iPhone, seeing as how phones are all so similar now.

Case in point: In March, an image of a metal phone with cleaner antenna lines claiming to be the iPhone 7's new body popped online (from Weibo and picked up by Nowhereelse.fr, no less) and sent every Apple blog on the web into a frenzy.

The "leaked" image was not of the iPhone 7. Li Nan, Meizu's vice president of sales and marketing, took to Weibo, to take ownership of the phone design for the company's upcoming Meizu Pro 6. The leak could have been from a disgruntled Meizu factory worker or from anyone with access to the phone, though it can't be ruled out that Meizu reps might have "leaked" the image themselves to drum up interest for the Pro 6. (Riding the iPhone's perpetual buzz is common marketing tactic in mobile, and it rarely, if ever, backfires.)

Look back far enough and you'll see the story is the same every year. So-called next-generation iPhone parts start to "leak" every spring — many of them turning out to be completely off base.

Apple is a secretive company. It prototypes many different versions of its products, some of which get sent to factories in China, for small batch productions. Not all of all them make the cut. The ones that don't meet the company's high quality bar get scrapped and tossed back into Cupertino's reject pile, likely never to be seen again.

Hell, it wouldn't surprise me at all if Apple plants a fake rumor or two to throw Internet sleuths off. Just as it's possible Meizu may have staged its own leak for the Pro 6, it's not out of the realm of possibility the company has slowly leaked out the notion the iPhone 7 won't come with an headphone jack. 

There are two reasons why Apple would do such a thing: 1) to temper expectations from users and essentially get them used to the idea of an iPhone with no headphone jack, or 2) to steer fans off and then surprise them with an iPhone 7 that does retain the jack, proving all the "rumors" wrong.

BS until Apple says otherwise

I'm as excited for the next iPhone as anyone (my busted iPhone 6 is barely hanging on), but let's not allow all these potentially dubious rumors to drive the conversation.

And that is, nothing is official until Apple makes it so. Oh, and anything you hear about the iPhone 7S or iPhone 8, which aren't supposed to come out until 2017 and 2018 — HA! As my colleague, Mashable senior tech correspondent Christina Warren put it perfectly: It's way to early to talk about the next iPhone

Her TL;DR:

  • It will be Apple's fastest iPhone ever

  • It will have Apple's most-advanced optics

  • There will be at least one extra feature you can't get on any other iPhone.

  • It will come in rose gold.

Apple CEO Tim Cook hinted in an interview on CNBC's Mad Money the company has big plans for its products, despite slowing iPhone sales. 

"We're going to give you things that you can't live without that you just don't know about today," Cook told Mad Money's Jim Cramer. "That has always been the objective of Apple." 

For Apple's sake, we hope the iPhone 7 will have something more groundbreaking than 3D Touch and Live Photos. Put that fingerprint sensor underneath the display, maybe?

Stay safe out there Apple fans (and haters). There's a lot of BS coming out the rumor mill. Don't be a fool and step in it.

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