logo
iPhone 17 Pro launch soon: 3 reasons that make it stand out from the rest

iPhone 17 Pro launch soon: 3 reasons that make it stand out from the rest

Hindustan Times3 days ago

Over the past few years, we have seen similar-looking iPhones with smaller upgrades. While we have been waiting to see something fresh, Apple has been working on something new for the upcoming models. Reportedly, this year, the iPhone 17 Pro models will likely get significant design changes. These changes will likely make the new generation model look different from previous Pro models. Therefore, buying an iPhone 17 Pro model could provide users with a slightly new experience with a different design and upgraded features. To get a greater understanding, we have listed three major iPhone 17 Pro design features that make it worth the wait. Here's everything you need to know ahead of the September launch.
Also read: iPhone 18 Pro likely to ditch Dynamic Island for under-display Face ID- Details
New camera module: Instead of the square-shaped camera module, Apple has made some changes to the iPhone 17 Pro rear camera design. With the new-gen, Apple has integrated an expanded camera bar that takes up the entire top section of the rear panel. While the camera placement remains the same, the LiDAR scanner, flash, and microphone have been pushed to the right corner of the camera module. This gives the iPhone 17 Pro a slightly different look in comparison to the previous generation.
Also read: iPhone 17 Air likely to come with optional accessories for lasting battery life- Details
New rear panel design and materials: Over the past two years, Apple has been bringing stainless steel and titanium build for the Pro model. However, with the iPhone 17 Pro, Apple is bringing back the aluminium body. It is expected that the entire rear panel of the smartphone could feature aluminium with a glass window for wireless charging. Therefore, no titanium frame for this year's model. This change may have a significant impact on smartphones' weight and thickness.
Vapour chamber cooling system: Lastly, the iPhone 17 Pro model is expected to feature a vapour chamber cooling system to improve the thermal performance of the smartphone. This new addition could bring several benefits, such as better performance, ease in multitasking or gaming, faster charging, and more while keeping the smartphone cool. While this is not a new technology in the market, it could be a great addition to the iPhone 17 Pro models.
Also read: iPhone 17 Pro may not come with anti-reflective display coating as Samsung- Details
This year, the iPhone 17 Pro is slated for major camera upgrades. Reportedly, it could feature a 24MP selfie camera and a new 48MP telephoto lens. The smartphone is expected to be powered by the A19 Pro chip, but with an upgraded 12GB RAM. We can also get a new Wi-Fi chip or 5G modem similar to the iPhone 16e model.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Apple wants to turn AirPods into heart rate monitors, will use AI for it
Apple wants to turn AirPods into heart rate monitors, will use AI for it

India Today

timean hour ago

  • India Today

Apple wants to turn AirPods into heart rate monitors, will use AI for it

Apple is exploring how its wearable devices like AirPods can double as heart rate monitors. A newly published research paper from the Apple Research team discusses the possibility of using AI-powered acoustic models to estimate heart rate from heart sound recordings. These heart rate recordings or sounds can be captured from the body using devices like AirPods. The study, titled 'Foundation Model Hidden Representations for Heart Rate Estimation from Auscultation', seeks to identify if foundation AI models trained on general audio and speech can accurately estimate heart rate from heart sounds. This non-invasive method, known as auscultation, typically involves listening to sounds produced by the heart. The idea is similar to how doctors use a stethoscope to listen to heart rate to diagnose and monitor various medical conditions. The researchers at Apple want to follow the same technique and use wearables like AirPods to capture heart sounds and use AI to measure heart rate by analysing it. Apple revealed that its researchers tested six major foundation models, including HuBERT, wav2vec2, and its own internally developed version of CLAP (Contrastive Language-Audio Pretraining), to see how well these models could pick up heartbeats from phonocardiograms — recordings of heart sounds. The research shows that even though these models weren't built for healthcare tasks, they managed to outperform traditional methods based on handcrafted audio features. 'In this work, using a publicly available phonocardiogram (PCG) dataset and a heart rate (HR) estimation model, we conduct a layer-wise investigation of six acoustic representation FMs: HuBERT, wav2vec2, wavLM, Whisper, Contrastive Language-Audio Pretraining (CLAP), and an in-house CLAP model,' Apple said in the paper published online. During the research, the Apple team used a publicly available dataset of over 20 hours of hospital-recorded heart sounds, annotated by medical experts. The team then split the audio clips into 5-second segments, with the AI analysing them to predict heart rate in beats per minute (BPM). The study revealed that mid-level layers in AI models worked best for detecting heart signals, while deeper layers—which are usually fine-tuned for speech recognition—were less effective at analysing biological sounds like heartbeats. This suggests that Apple would need to focus on specific parts of AI models rather than using them as-is for health tracking. Although the research did not reveal any plans for a commercial product, it does suggest Apple's intent to do more with its devices. Apple has already previewed the expanding possibilities of earbuds like the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2, which can offer heart rate tracking. But with AI, Apple wants its wearables to do even more. AirPods already feature high-quality microphones used for Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) and Transparency Mode, which could theoretically pick up subtle heart sounds. If Apple manages to integrate this AI-powered heart rate detection into AirPods, it could help users with passive heart rate monitoring without needing an Apple Watch and offer more advanced fitness tracking and early detection of irregularities with the heart. advertisement

Mark Zuckerberg finally found a use for his Metaverse — War
Mark Zuckerberg finally found a use for his Metaverse — War

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Mark Zuckerberg finally found a use for his Metaverse — War

I can't think of any other deal that more encapsulates how Silicon Valley has changed in the past couple of years than this one, announced Thursday in a press release: Anduril and Meta are partnering to design, build, and field a range of integrated XR products that provide warfighters with enhanced perception and enable intuitive control of autonomous platforms on the battlefield. For starters, Anduril Industries Inc. is a defense tech company co-founded by Palmer Luckey , the man who created the Oculus VR headset that was acquired by Meta Platforms Inc. for $2 billion in 2014, only for Luckey to be pushed out when it emerged he had financially backed a pro-Trump campaign group. That he would be welcomed back with open arms is yet another sign that such stances are no longer taboo in the halls of Silicon Valley companies. (It could be argued they never should have been.) Second, developing technology for war had been considered a hard red line for many of the engineers working within those leafy campuses, at least in the era after the dot-com boom. At Google, for instance, workers in 2018 held walkouts and forced executives to abandon projects related to military use. Today, defense applications of technology are something companies want to shout from their rooftops, not bury in the basement. (Again, it could be argued that should have always been the case. Who will create tech for the US military if not US tech companies?) In Meta's case, there's another factor at play. Mark Zuckerberg 's deal with Anduril — which you assume is just the start of Meta's military hardware ambitions — offers a lifeline to its ailing Reality Labs business. The unit has lost more than $70 billion since the start of 2019. Advancements in quality haven't led to jumps in sales. I've written before that fitness applications are a great selling point, but apparently too few people agree with me. A newer form factor, sunglasses made in partnership with Ray-Ban, have shown potential but still represent a niche product. Live Events So instead, maybe the 'killer app' for mixed reality is indeed a killer app. 'My mission has long been to turn warfighters into technomancers,' Luckey is quoted as saying in a press release. 'And the products we are building with Meta do just that.' Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories A prototype of the 'Eagle Eye' helmet being developed by the companies is due to be delivered to the Pentagon this year, Luckey told journalist Ashlee Vance in a podcast published alongside the official announcement. He compared its utility to what a player wears in the video game Halo — a heads-up display offering reams of intricate information on targets and locations, plus an AI assistant, Cortana, relaying critical and lifesaving directions. What's also striking about this shift is that it is a sign the historical flow of technological innovation is being turned around. Silicon Valley began as a region set up to develop chips for military tech before the assembled talent branched out into making products for businesses and consumers, such as the personal computer. Many breakthroughs have followed this direction of travel — the internet, the microwave, GPS, super glue, to name a few — but it is now increasingly the other way around. As Luckey put it during the podcast discussing the deal, it turns out that Meta's headsets are 'just as useful on the battlefield as they are on the head of any consumer.' See also: artificial intelligence, developed first (and perhaps, at the cutting edge, always) by private sector tech companies. The opportunity is too big to pass up and too lucrative to hold grudges. Luckey says he was willing to work with Meta again because it had become a much different place from the one he was booted out of. Now friends again, he said he believed that Zuckerberg received bad advice when told to fire him and that his coming round to more Republican ways of thinking is genuine — as evidenced by his willingness to make Meta's AI available for government use, too. I've little reason to question Luckey's judgment here, though I wonder if it might be time for Meta to revise its mission statement. 'Build the future of human connection,' it states today, not yet updated to reflect that it's now also working on the future of human conflict. This column reflects the personal views of the author and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Dave Lee is Bloomberg Opinion's US technology columnist. He was previously a correspondent for the Financial Times and BBC News.

Samsung One UI 8 beta to bring max boost and new game booster features for gamers
Samsung One UI 8 beta to bring max boost and new game booster features for gamers

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Samsung One UI 8 beta to bring max boost and new game booster features for gamers

Samsung has started rolling out the One UI 8 beta, based on Android 16, which may introduce several enhancements to its Game Booster app. This app aims to improve gaming on Galaxy smartphones by managing device performance and providing useful tools for players. Recent leaks indicate that the new update will include a feature called Max boost, designed to optimise the phone's settings to push performance to its limits during gameplay A user known as @GalaxyTechie has recently shared insights about these upcoming features after analysing the Game Booster app's new version 7.0.51.13 within the One UI 8 Beta. Max boost appears to allow the phone to use more power, potentially increasing battery use and heat output to deliver better performance in certain games. Although the exact working of this feature is not yet clear, it signals a focus on enhancing gaming power. Also read: Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 likely to be world's slimmest foldable- Here's what we know One UI 8's Game Booster will also introduce AI Mute, a function that detects when a game is active and automatically manages sound by muting or adjusting volume as needed. Another addition called Respawn Timer is expected to show a floating countdown on the screen, helping players know when they can rejoin a game. So far, this timer may only support the popular game Honor of Kings. Also read: PlayStation Days of Play Sale: Spider-Man 2, God of War Ragnarök, and more games get big price cuts Further updates include Dash notifications and Super Microphone, both appearing in floating windows during gameplay. Dash notifications will remove alerts once they pass across the screen, reducing distractions. Super Microphone may enable the phone's microphone to be used within a game even if another app is currently using it. Gamers could also access a voice changer feature to modify their voice in multiplayer sessions, choosing from different voice types like robot or sci-fi horror. The update may support Bluetooth microphones to enhance voice chat quality. Also read: PlayStation Days of Play Sale: Spider-Man 2, God of War Ragnarök, and more games get big price cuts Lastly, the update mentions 4D Vibration and Virtual Gamepad features, though their exact functions have not been fully explained. These additions could provide further immersion and control options for players once the update rolls out to all eligible Galaxy devices.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store