iPad&iPhone user

iPhone X event recap

Everything Apple announced at its first Apple Park event. Leah Yamshon reports

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While the iPhone always headlines Apple’s annual September event, the opening acts are worth tuning in for in their own right – and this year was no exception. From three new iPhones (the iPhone 8, 8 Plus, and X) to an LTE Apple Watch to new animated emoji (‘Animoji’), this keynote certainly was one for the books. Read on to see everything

Apple announced at the stunning Steve Jobs Theater at Apple Park in Cupertino.

Rememberin­g Steve Jobs

The keynote was the first ever event held in Apple Park’s new Steve Jobs Theater, so it seemed right that the event kicked off with a heartfelt tribute to Steve Jobs – one of his famous speeches played over the sound system shortly after the theatre dimmed the lights. “I love hearing his voice, and his inspiring message,” an emotional Tim Cook said. “It was only fitting that Steve should open his theatre.”

Our first look at the Steve Jobs Theater

We also finally got to see the inside (and outside) of the Steve Jobs Theater (pictured above), with a bright, open-concept design that’s uniquely Apple.

Apple Town Square

Not too long ago, Apple dropped the name ‘store’ officially from its retail stores, changing the nomenclatu­re from Apple Store to Apple store (yes, it confused us a bit, too). Now, things are changing again – Apple SVP Angela Ahrendts explained that Apple’s retail stores will now be called Apple Town Squares, complete with Genius Groves, ‘plazas’ for hanging out, ‘forums’ for collaborat­ion, ‘boardrooms’ for smaller group meetings, and ‘avenues’ for curated retail opportunit­ies.

watchOS 4’s heart-monitoring software

The Apple Watch and watchOS were the first products discussed at the event, and watchOS 4 will have

some impressive new features. For workouts, its new Gym Connect feature will let you sync directly with compatible gym equipment, like treadmills and rowing machines, so that the machine instantly has all of your fitness statistics.

Thanks to better heart monitoring capabiliti­es, watchOS 4 will be able to tell you if you have an elevated heart rate during times when you’re supposedly not active, and you can also take a look at your pre- and post-workout heart rates, too. Apple COO Jeff Williams also announced the Apple Heart Study, a new partnershi­p that allows Apple Watch users to participat­e in a Standford Health heart study on heart arrhythmia.

watchOS 4 is available to download now alongside iOS 11.

Apple Watch Series 3 with LTE

The latest Apple Watch is the Series 3, which features a major brand-new feature: LTE, which lets you get calls, messages, and alerts even when your iPhone is well out of range. Impressive­ly, Apple figured out how to add LTE without increasing the Apple Watch’s size. It will also keep the same 18-hour battery life. Other new features: a vocal Siri, a barometric altimeter for more accurate elevation readings when you’re working out, and a new chip.

It’s priced at £399 with GPS and cellular connectivi­ty (not including the extra provider fee – we’ll let you know when we have more info there), and £329 for the non-cellular model. It’s available to buy now. For further details see page 26.

Apple TV 4K

The Apple TV got some stage time and a 4K upgrade. The new Apple TV 4K adds support for 4K video (naturally) as well as HDR, or High Dynamic Range. Customers who have purchased HD movies will receive upgrades in their iTunes libraries to correspond­ing 4K versions at no additional cost (hurrah), and new titles in 4K will be sold at the same price as HD versions – a huge win for Apple. Some other Apple TV 4K features: Live sports, live news, and Bluetooth 5.0.

Prices start at £179 for the 32GB model and £199 for the 64GB option. They are available to buy now.

iPhone 8

Of course, the event’s big draw was the iPhone, and we weren’t disappoint­ed. Apple announced three new iPhone models – the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, which are the follow-up phones to last year’s iPhone 7 and 7 Plus – and the futuristic iPhone X.

The 4.7in iPhone 8 still features the Home button, body bezels, Touch ID, Lightning port, and an LCD screen, but has some improvemen­ts, too. Namely: a glass back (like the iPhone 4), wireless charging using the Qi standard, a TrueTone Retina display, and an A11 Bionic chip.

The iPhone 8 is available to buy now in silver, space grey, and gold, priced at £699 for the 64GB option, and £849 for the 256GB handset.

For further details see page 20.

iPhone 8 Plus

The 5.5in 8 Plus has all the same specs as the iPhone 8, but with a dual-camera setup featuring f/1.8 aperture and f/2.8 aperture lenses (the iPhone 8 only has a single camera). The phone comes with has a beta feature called Portrait Lighting. You pose a photo, turn on Portrait Mode, and then the camera creates a depth map to pull the subject out of the background, then detects ‘facial landmarks’ such as your nose, forehead, and cheekbones, and then adjusts the lighting on all of them.

The 8 Plus is available in silver, space grey, and gold is on sale now. Prices start at £799 for the 64GB phone, with the 256GB option setting you back £949. For further details see page 20.

iOS 11 ship date

Apple’s mobile OS is available to download now.

macOS High Sierra

This will be ready to download on 25 September.

iPhone X

Apple’s ‘one more thing’ may not have been a huge surprise, but it was well received nonetheles­s: The iPhone X (pronounced “ten”). With the new thin bezel and no Home button, holding the iPhone X will feel like you’re holding a screen. That screen is 5.8 inches diagonally, and uses an OLED display instead of the LCD screen in past models. It’s got a resolution of 2436x1125, for a shocking pixel density of 458ppi. Apple’s calling it Super Retina. Like the iPhone 8, it supports TrueTone to adjust the colour temperatur­e to the ambient light around you.

Apple will take pre-orders for the iPhone X starting 27 October, and the phones ship 3 November. iPhone X starts at £999 for 64GB of storage (the highest starting price of any iPhone to date), with a 256GB upgrade for £1,149.

For further details see page 12.

Face ID and Animoji

Without a home button for Touch ID, how does one unlock the iPhone X? With your face. Apple demonstrat­ed Face ID, which uses a TrueDepth camera-and-sensor system along the top edge to detect your face quickly, even in the dark – and even with glasses on, or after a dramatic haircut.

The TrueDepth face-recognizin­g camera system has more tricks than just Face ID. A new feature in Messages called Animoji can mimic your mood and expression. They track 50 facial muscles to sync the emoji with what you’re saying, and then send your ‘talking head’ to a friend. You get a dozen options at launch.

AirPower

Now that the iPhone has inductive charging, Apple is working on its own wireless charging mat: The AirPower. It won’t ship until 2018, but it will be able to charge your iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods all at once, saving you valuable nightstand real estate. For further details see page 32.

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