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Showing posts with label Gadgets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gadgets. Show all posts

OS X is now officially macOS, and it has Siri

OS X is now officially macOS, and it has Siri
OS X is now officially macOS, and it has Siri
It’s official: OS X is now macOS, and it’s being tagged as ‘Sierra.’
With continuity, Apple is adding auto-unlock. Instead of having to type a password, you can use an iPhone or Apple Watch to authenticate a Mac.
There is also a universal clipboard feture. Text copied on your iPhone can now be pasted on a Mac.
Apple is also optimizing storage on Macs by offloading older files to iCloud when you’re running out of space on your computer. If you have files you know you won’t need, like redundant email stuff, Apple will also manage that by destroying your junk. Apple says it saw a 5x improvement in available space.
Apple Pay is also coming to the Mac via the Web. When you shop online, a ‘pay with Apple Pay’ button lets you authenticate a purchase on your iPhone using Touch ID.
Your messy tabs are also getting cleared up with support for third party apps, and developers don’t need to do a thing. It’ll happen automatically.
If you like watching video on the Web, and videos go picture-in-picture so you can keep working across apps.
siri mac

Siri!

And as expected, Siri is coming to the desktop. It’s the same experience you’ll find on your phone, more or less. She’s housed in the Dock as well as the Menu Bar.
Of course, she’ll have some insight into your Mac, and it’s mostly the same as you’ll find in Spotlight search. So, if you ask Siri to open up a file, she can; it just saves you the step of looking things up in Spotlight.
Interestingly, you can pin your recent Siri searches to the notifications bar.
Siri can also search the Web — just like on the iPhone. The neat trick there is that you can drag things like pictures into a document or a app like Notes. You can also message people with voice.
Developers can access macOS Sierra today, and the public beta is launching this Summer.

WWDC 2016 : Everything Apple Announcing in a Handy List

WWDC 2016 : Everything Apple Announcing in a Handy List
This year’s keynote from Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference is a wrap – but if you missed it, here’s a recap of the important bits you need to know. For more details on each news item, click the links below for an extended coverage.
Kicking off the keynote, Apple CEO Tim Cook opens with a moment of silence to honor the victims of the shooting at a nightclub in Orlando on Sunday night.
And then, we start.

iOS 10


iOS 10 suggests emoji
  • Updated iMessage app will be able to suggest emoji, send a range of new playful messages, and is open to third party apps for paying and shopping within messages
  • Siri will be opened up to third-parties, giving it the power to send a WhatsApp, order an Uber, and so on
  • Alongside a revamp for stock apps such as iMessage, Maps and Photos, users can now delete the default apps to save homescreen real estate 
  • Apple Music has been rebuilt with a cleaner, more intuitive design that takes cues from the old iTunes app and Spotify
  • Other functions include the phone lighting up to display notifications when you pick it up, and widgets for the lock screen
This is "the biggest iOS release ever for our users," said Craig Federighi. He notes there are 10 major new features in the new OS. The highlights include a redesigned lock screen with rich notifications, quick interactions with apps, and expanded use of 3D Touch. - A new "Raise to wake" feature will, as the name suggests, wake the phone's lock screen when it's lifted to give you an overview of notifications and updates. The new notifications look significantly different and, with the use of a 3D Touch, you can respond to and interact with the app sending them immediately. This is very much in line with what Google's been doing with Android.
- The expansion of 3D Touch on the home screen includes widgets for apps that don't require you launching the app at all. You'll be able to see things like the latest sports scores with the ESPN app, and even get into video highlights, without entering the app proper.

macOS

    Siri comes to macOS for the first time
  • Macs have full Siri integration in the renamed macOS, including file and internet search, and the ability to play music and make calls
  • Apple Pay comes to the web, meaning that you can pay for things in Safari using your iPhone's TouchID or Apple Watch, which can also be used to unlock your computer
  • Greater integration with other Apple devices through an iCloud Drive update, and new Universal Clipboard feature
The latest OS version will be called Sierra, with a focus on continuity. For example, if you’re wearing an authenticated Apple Watch, you can automatically unlock your laptop just by having that watch nearby. It’s a neat little feature… if you own all the right Apple gear.
There’s also Universal Clipboard which lets you copy text from your iPhone and paste on your Macbook, and an iCloud Drive to help offload older files to make room for local documents.
OS X Sierra brings Apple Pay to desktop as well, with a new payment feature that lets you authenticate the payment through your Apple Watch or iPhone via continuity. Again, great for someone who has all the Apple gadgets.
A few more organizational updates bring tabs to any apps, picture-in-picture capacity, and – yep – Siri on desktop. She’ll be available right on the dock.

Apple Watch, watchOS 3


Apple Watch gets a writing feature called Scribble
Apple Watch gets a writing feature called Scribble Credit: Getty
  • Apps on the Apple Watch will update automatically in the background, meaning they will open seven times faster than they currently do
  • "Scribble" means you can now reply to messages on the Watch screen by writing out each letter at a time
  • The Watch interface and apps will also get updates, and will support Apple Pay
watch os scribbleThe Apple Watch is the company’s latest hardware pillar, so it’s no surprise that it started the keynote with this platform. In an upcoming watchOS 3 update, app load speeds are up to seven times faster, and there is a new dock feature and control center like on iOS.
There are also new quick reply buttons with pre-written responses, as well as “Scribble,” a handwriting support app. It even works in Chinese!
In case of emergencies, there’s now an SOS mode that allows you to hold the side button to call 911. If you’re in an international city, holding SOS will also call the correct local emergency number (i.e. 999 in Hong Kong).
There are several new health apps as well, such as a breath meditation program and a wheelchair-friendly mode to promote regular exercises for handicapped users.
Oh, and Minnie Mouse is now available as a watch face in addition to Mickey from last year. Innovation, y’all.
The update is coming for free to general consumers this fall.

Apple TV , tvOS


Apple TV apps sync automatically with other Apple devices
  • Apple TV can now be controlled using an Apple TV Remote app, and an MFi game controller in addition to the Siri Remote
  • Enhanced search through Siri
  • Dark mode for the menu screen
  • Single sign-on for Apple TV and the apps saved to it
Screen Shot 2016-06-13 at 1.36.08 PM“The future of TV is apps” That what Eddy Cue, Apple Senior Vice President of Internet Software and Services said about Apple’s tvOS at last WWDC, when it introduced third party development on the device. The platform has since increased its video channels offerings from 80 to 1,300.
With this year’s update, there will be a new remote app in case you misplace the physical remote or need more remotes for multi-player games.
If you hate syncing your cable account to access live TV or video on demand on the Apple TV, the new tvOS has a single sign on mode that lets you log in once to access all the channels available from your cable provider.

Swift Playground

Screen Shot 2016-06-13 at 2.51.48 PMYou didn’t think we’d get away with WWDC without mentioning Swift, right? Apple introduced Swift Playground, a new iPad app to help kids learn how to code in Swift right from the iPad. The game-like app lets you learn different principles, like loops or turning specific features (such as gravity or gyroscoping) on and off.
Cook thinks it will help make learning more accessible to millions around the world, but of course that’s provided you can afford to buy an iPad to start.
Swift Playground will arrive with the developer preview today, and will arrive with the public beta and general public with the same timeline as iOS 10. The app will be free to download.

Photos, Maps, Music, News, Home, Phone

For Photos, you’ll be able to see a map-view of where your photos were taken Instagram-style, and Apple will incorporate facial recognition to sort through who’s in your images, Google Photos-style. It’ll also start creating movies based on photos you took during a recent period of time, if you’re into that kind of thing.
Screen Shot 2016-06-13 at 2.08.26 PMWith Maps, there are new recommendation shortcuts for you to find exactly what you want from Maps, such as cuisine types in a restaurant search mode. You can also search for nearby stops on a map route such as a gas station or restaurants and see how long it’ll take to detour over there.
Maps will be open to developers, too. For example, now you can book your dinner reservation from the map through a third party app like OpenTable, then book a ride to go there all via Maps.
apple music revampFor Music, Eddy Cue says it will get redesigned from the ground up with larger photos, and better tabs to find music you’ve recently added or music you’ve downloaded. There’s a lyrics tab and a daily-curated playlist too, Spotify-style. Hmm, looks like there is an ongoing trend for this keynote.
News gets a redesign too, which shares the same aesthetic as the new Music look with the giant font to separate each sections. You can now subscribe to newspapers and magazines from the News app as well.
Ck2dVp1WEAErOZzHomeKit gets a new Home app so you can control all your internet of things gear. You can even say good morning to Siri so she can set the house ready for you to get going. If someone rings a doorbell, you can get a notification, view a livestream of the front door, and unlock right from the homescreen.
And get this: If you’re the kind of person who uses your smartphone to actually make phone calls, now you can get voicemail transcriptions! Third party providers can also help detect spam phone numbers to avoid picking up annoying calls. VoIP can be integrated into the lockscreen, too.
emojificationiMessage gets a fun update with invisible ink, letting users tap to unblur a new photo or text. There are new text stylizations that lets you add animations as well, such as “smash,” “gentle,” or “loud.”
Emoji get supersized too – three times bigger in fact – and iMessage can recommend emoji to use or turn all your words into an emoji. What a time to be alive.
As you may have anticipated by now, Messages are open to devs, too.
The developer preview for iOS 10 will be available today, and a public beta will come out in July. The public rollout will arrive in the fall.

The 13 biggest announcements from Apple WWDC 2016

The 13 biggest announcements from Apple WWDC 2016
Apple’s WWDC this year was full of incremental updates to OS’s for the Mac, iPhone, Watch, and TV, as well as moves to open up services like Siri and iMessage to developers. A lot of the changes were geared toward moving between Apple devices easier — Siri is now on desktop, and Apple Pay will now work on Safari, for example. There were also a bunch of redesigns: new notifications and lock screen interactions for iOS; a new command center for the (faster) Apple Watch; and changes to Apple News, Music, Maps, and other services. 


macOS - New Name , More Continuity Across Devices , Siri

WWDC MacOS OS X is now macOS, and this iteration will be called Sierra. The public beta will launch in July with the final version coming in the fall. One of the big focuses of the new OS is continuity across devices. Craig Federighi demonstrated a feature called Universal Clipboard, which allows users to copy and paste across multiple Apple devices. You can also save your Mac desktop to the cloud and access it from a different computer using iCloud drive. There are other smaller updates as well, including a storage-saving measure that moves old files to the cloud and a way to unlock your Mac using your Apple Watch.
Sierra will also bring Siri to the desktop. Siri will be accessible in the dock as well as in the top-right corner near Spotlight. You’ll be able to use voice commands to find files, search the web, send messages, and other standard Siri functions.

Apple pay is coming to the web

WWDC Apple PayYou’ll be able to use Apple Pay to make payments online through Safari. Authentication will work through TouchID, either through your phone or Apple Watch, eliminating the need to type credit card details. Apple Pay is available in the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and Singapore, and will be rolling out to Switzerland, France, and Hong Kong.




The apple watch gets faster and ADDS new features

 watchOS 3 brings a host of updates, but perhaps most importantly, it loads apps seven times faster than the previous OS, thanks to background refreshing and keeping apps stored in memory. Navigation supposedly will be easier on the new OS, too. The side button can be used to access a "dock," which allows wearers to scroll through their apps, and the Watch will act a little more like an iPhone with a new Control Center. A swipe up on the Watch allows wearers to quickly switch into airplane mode or Do Not Disturb, just like the iPhone.
Other new features include a keyboard called "Scribble" that wearers can use to respond to a message. Instead of typing or dictating a response, they can draw out each individual letter. It works in either English or Chinese. Apple Watches will also come with a new SOS feature, which activates when the side button is held down and calls 911 and sends location information to first responder and emergency contacts. It'll also share users' medical ID, which displays their allergies, age, and existing medical conditions. The feature works internationally and will call country-specific emergency numbers, so long as the watch is tethered to a phone or is connected to Wi-Fi.

Apple emphasized fitness with the introduction of new activity-specific watch faces, a meditation app called "Breathe," and activity sharing to view friends' fitness levels.
 

iOS gets a slew of updates


Craig Federighi called the iOS changes "the biggest iOS release ever for our users," including complete redesigns for Music and Maps, new notifications, and an expanded role for 3D Touch. A new feature called "raise and wake" will wake the lock screen when you lift your phone, revealing redesigned notifications that you can interact with using 3D touch.

Apple news gets a redesign and supports subscriptions

Apple WWDC 2015 EYNTKApple News now features over 2,000 publications and over 60 million monthly readers. Apple is rolling out an all-new design that features clear sections, including Top News, Trending, and Sports. The app pulls together new sections based on your reading habits, and includes a Featured Stories section with editor picks. Apple News now also features subscriptions, which means you can subscribe and read full newspapers and magazines from the app. It will also send breaking news notifications and deliver them to your lock screen.

Apple music gets a discover playlist and a complete redesign


WWDC 2016 MusicAfter only a year of existence, Apple Music is getting a complete redesign. New sections make it easier to navigate, including one section for downloaded music and another for recently added songs and albums. Apple also appears to be coming directly for Spotify with its new "discovery mix" that tailors a playlist to listeners’ tastes. There will also be daily curated playlists and new sections to help users find new music curated by Apple’s music editors. You can also read song lyrics now.



Maps is Redesigned with Navigation in Mind


WWDC MapsMaps is getting a whole new feel. Its redesign will show more of a map when a user opens the app. Users can also book rides through Maps, pay for them with Apple Pay, and make restaurant reservations. Navigation is getting easier too, with directions that include traffic. Maps is also coming to CarPlay, which will show traffic and offer alternative routes, as well as precise navigation right from a car’s display.

Messages Get snazzier

WWDC Messages
Apple is revamping iMessage to include bigger emoji as well as suggestions for turning certain keywords into emoji. People can share songs directly from Apple Music and write notes to one another in their own handwriting. There are animated effects — like strobe lights, balloons, and confetti — and invisible ink hides messages until they’re swiped over. Invisible ink! Developers are also getting access to Messages and can develop apps like stickers. iMessage is turning into some kind of Snapchat-WhatsApp-Facebook Messenger conglomerate.

Photos takes on google photos


WWDC Photo

Photos is being updated with new features to help you organize and manage your collection. You can organize your collection automatically by person using facial recognition. The app is also adding Memories, which bundles together photos according to events and locations. You can also create a montage set to music automatically from Memories, much as you’re able to do in Google Photos.


Voicemail transcription comes to iOS 10

WWDC VoicemailiOS 10 will now feature voicemail transcription, which will automatically transcribe voicemails and offer them up like texts. In addition, iOS is taking on spam calls: the iOS will support APIs that can alert you to possible spam calls and warn you before you pick up. With VoIP, you’ll be able to see caller ID right on the lock screen.

tvOS is all grown-up


WWDC TVtvOS is less than a year old but now hosts 1,300 video channels and over 6,000 apps. That library is going to be expanding shortly: Dish’s Sling is coming to tvOS today; Fox Sports Go is coming later this summer; and Molotov, a French TV service, is coming next month. Apple is rolling out a new Apple TV remote app, which will have all the functionality of the... Apple TV remote. You’ll be able to use touch for navigation, Siri for voice command, and the phone’s built-in sensors for gaming control. Plus, you’ll have your trusty keyboard. Siri will now be able to search through the service’s 650,000 movies and shows, as well as live channels by name or category ("German high school comedy from 1962, please"). You’ll also now be able to use Siri to search in YouTube.
Apple’s also introducing a single sign-on system that lets your log into all of the network apps at once. You’ll have a page that shows you all the channels you have access to. Download a channel app onto your phone, and it’ll automatically appear on your tvOS. Seamless integration, folks.
And Apple quickly introduced two kits for developers: ReplayKit, which lets you live broadcast gameplay or save it for later, and HomeKit, which will let you control all the devices in your house, including tvOS. tvOS will roll out in a free upgrade this fall.

Siri is opening up to app developers


Siri, which now services over 2 billion requests per day, is now opening up to developers. That means you’ll be able to ask Siri to send a message through WeChat, ask it to call an Uber, search for photos on Pinterest and start and stop your workout apps all with voice command.

What's next

WWDC was packed with updates, many of which seem minor on their own, but taken together could make it easier navigate Apple’s ecosystem. With the Watch, incremental changes in speed and the command center could go a long way toward making it a more appealing device, and the new HomeKit hub could make connected appliances more attractive. It remains to be seen how well all these services work outside the Apple ecosystem, and whether opening up things like Apple Pay and Siri will be enough to surmount the lead of companies like Amazon, which has been aggressive about forming partnerships and developing frictionless ways to purchase. And of course, we’ll still be waiting for the Apple car.

New Linux-based Mobile Operating System is Arriving to ‘Kill’ Android and iOS

New Linux-based Mobile Operating System is Arriving to ‘Kill’ Android and iOS
New Linux-based Mobile Operating System is Arriving to 'Kill' Android and iOS

Just after the search giant Google was launched in 1998, Baidu was also launched by China two years later in 2000 to give Google a tough competition and now Russia seems to follow the same by launching its own operating system for Smartphone devices.

New Linux-based Mobile Operating System is Arriving to ‘Kill’ Android and iOS

As we noticed, Yandex the Russian search engine brought a complaint against Google for forcing its own apps and services like YouTube, Google Maps, Hangouts on the open source mobile platform “Android” and on which Google was on the losing side in an anti-monopoly case in Russia.

And following that another major development, Russia has taken the first step of developing the new operating system that will put an end to the monopoly of Android and iOS devices. And the amazing part is company has also gained the much-needed support from the Government of Russia.
According to the Nikolai Nikiforov, the Russian Communication Ministry tweeted last month about the development of the brand new Russian mobile operating system and are currently looking for best developers, online security experts, and engineers.
Russia is looking to develop a new Linux-based global operating system for business giants and privacy seekers which will turn out to be best for those looking for trusted mobile solutions. A few months earlier, Nikolai Nikiforov also discussed the new OS in Russia in which he mentioned that BRICS countries which include (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are also working on the project to dominate the American tech firm.
The new operating system will be built on the top of Sailfish OS, which is a mobile operating system combining the Linux kernel with a particular hardware platform use, the open-source Mer core middleware, a proprietary UI contributed by Jolla, and other third-party components. Moreover, Sailfish OS was developed by former Nokia employees.
Sailfish OS is good enough to challenge Android, as it comes up with some good features. Moreover, how can we forget BRICS countries which cover half of the world’s population are supporting to develop this operating system.
We can expect something great coming to our ways in upcoming years.