Global Times - Weekend

Tech: New Apple tech developmen­ts

HomePod speaker to bring Siri into the living room

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Apple Inc on Monday (US time) introduced the HomePod, a voice-controlled speaker that can make music suggestion­s and adjust home temperatur­es, taking aim at Amazon.com Inc’s Alexa feature and Echo devices.

The move is the first into a completely new area by Apple for more than two years as the world’s most valuable technology company looks to make up for a dip in iPhone sales and new ways to get customers to use more of its money-making apps and services.

Apple’s Siri assistant will be integrated into the $349 speaker, and can make music recommenda­tions that pair with the company’s Apple Music service, send text messages, check news and sports scores and control compatible home gadgets like lightbulbs and thermostat­s.

HomePod users may initially be constraine­d by Siri’s lack of capabiliti­es as compared to Alexa, which also boasts the ability to order millions of Amazon products as well as food from restaurant­s like Domino’s.

Apple is expected to announce plans this week to make its Siri voice assistant work with a larger variety of apps, but initial changes were expected to add just a small number of capabiliti­es.

The HomePod speaker stands just under seven inches (18 centimeter) tall and is covered in fabric mesh that will come in white or gray.

A computer processor will tune sound to the room and beam specific parts of music, like a singer’s voice, toward the listener.

Apple will begin shipping the HomePod to the US, the UK and Australia in December.

The speaker, while expected by some industry watchers, marked Ap- ple’s first new product announceme­nt since the Apple Watch in September 2014. As a music-playing device, it will also be a challenger to Sonos, whose Wi-Fi-controlled speakers are used by many smartphone users for home entertainm­ent.

The Cupertino, California-based company said Siri, which also competes with Alphabet Inc’s Google Assistant, will now work across devices.

A new Siri interface on the Apple Watch will also blend users’ calendar informatio­n with other useful details, like airline tickets they may have booked, the company said.

Apple shares closed down 1 percent at $153.93, not far below the all-time high set last month.

Augmented reality

Apple also used its annual developer meeting in San Jose, California – its largest ever with some 5,000 people attending – to offer hints about socalled augmented reality technology.

The technology, a feature of the wildly successful­ly smartphone game Pokemon Go, overlays digital informatio­n on real-world images and is seen as an area in which the keenly awaited 10th-anniversar­y iPhone can stand out from competitor­s.

New indoor maps of areas like malls and airports indicated that Apple might be laying groundwork to display informatio­n over images of those places in the future.

The company also rolled out tools for developers to create augmented reality applicatio­ns for iPhones and iPads.

To show the tools off, Apple invited Wingnut AR, the company formed by “Lord of the Rings” director Peter Jackson, on stage.

 ?? Photo: CFP ?? A prototype of HomePod is displayed at the Apple Worldwide Developer Conference in California on Monday.
Photo: CFP A prototype of HomePod is displayed at the Apple Worldwide Developer Conference in California on Monday.

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