USA TODAY US Edition

Apple fans finally get a big bite of new tech

Long wait is over with new HomePod, ARKit

- Jon Swartz and Marco della Cava @jswartz, @marcodella­cava USA TODAY

Apple fans, don’t fear. The iPhone maker has finally jumped into two of the hottest tech trends of the past two years — augmented reality and voice-activated speakers — with a promise to dominate these markets pioneered by its rivals.

Two years after Amazon introduced its sleeper hit Echo device and a year after Google Home, Apple now has the voice-activated HomePod, a high-end music speaker priced at $349 that will be powered by Siri. That often maligned but widely used artificial intelligen­ce assistant is also getting an upgrade, though for HomePod, Siri’s main task is clear: play music. Apple also unveiled a new augmented reality developer kit that would help Apple app developers integrate this technology that overlays digital images on the physical world, made popular by Pokémon Go. Facebook and Google have been showcasing such distorted reality tech at their own demos, with plans to revolution­ize commerce and communicat­ion. Apple’s entrance into augmented reality on iPhone could jump-start the industry that has mostly been a playground for games.

The availabili­ty of AR technology on hundreds of millions of Apple’s mobile devices has the potential to help make iOS “the largest AR platform in the world overnight,” CEO Tim Cook said.

Apple has been playing catch-up on a variety of cuttingedg­e tech fronts, allowing com-

petitors to take the lead on the next big computing platforms, all driven by artificial intelligen­ce.

In the case of both HomePod and ARKit, Apple is banking on fans of the brand potentiall­y abandoning rival products in favor of whatever its in-house developers and independen­t developers create for the space.

“Today’s WWDC announceme­nts show that Apple is building the infrastruc­ture for a whole new decade of engagement with AI (artificial intelligen­ce) at its core,” said Raj Aggarwal, co-founder and CEO of Localytics, who worked with Steve Jobs on the launch of the original iPhone.

“The last 10 years since the introducti­on of the first iPhone were focused on the mobile revolution, but the mobile innovation has now hit its plateau,” he says. “AI really unlocks the power of what mobile offers. Now brands can take that data, make sense of it and interact with their users in real-time in a truly individual­ized way.”

There were few wow moments, though, extending a trend in recent years of incrementa­l refinement­s that keep loyalists happy but which fail to carve out huge new markets, like the first iPhones or iPods did.

Among the offerings: the ability to pay friends with Apple Pay. An iPad with a larger, sharper screen. How about an industrial strength iMac for $5,000?

Mainly, WWDC 2017 was just more than two hours of jargonfill­ed tech-speak aimed not at consumers but rather developers, who are the lifeblood of any large technology company. These conference­s, which include Google I/O and Facebook F8, are recruiting tools for companies to build hardware and software based on their computing platforms and products.

The biggest pitch was left for the very last, when Cook announced the 7-inch, $349 HomePod, which ships in December.

HomePod seems in many ways like an echo of existing products on the market, in everything from form to price. But where Amazon and Google are peddling a robotic home assistant, Apple leaned on its music roots with its pitch.

Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing, announced HomePod by taking a shot at the quality of the speakers in competitor­s’ products.

Apple purchased Beats Electronic­s a few years ago and is hoping to pull fans of Beats headphones and wireless speakers over to HomePod.

Beyond using Siri as “a great musicologi­st,” Schiller said HomePod users could ask Siri — which now has a more natural sounding voice and can translate up to five languages — about the weather, news and sports, as well as dictate a text message and activate appliances that use Apple’s HomeKit technology.

Apple finally made good on months of talk about the coming age of augmented reality with its new ARKit, part of iOS 11 that is available now for developers and is scheduled as a free software update for iPhone and iPad this fall.

The developer toolkit leverages iOS devices’ built-in cameras, processors and motion sensors to overlay digital images onto the physical world.

A demo of a steaming coffee cup next to a lamp on a table drew hoots and hollers from the developer audience, although the first vestiges of the technology are likely to emerge in gaming environmen­ts.

As for when an iPhone will be able to deliver an augmented reality experience, the only hint at timing from WWDC was when a representa­tive from director Peter Jackson’s Wingnut AR studios showcased an AR gaming demo that he said would arrive later in the year.

Some of the more meat-and-potatoes news zeroed in on making iPad, iMac and iPhone a bit easier to use. For example:

A new iMac Pro is menacing in sleek black with a 27-inch screen and technology that makes it the company’s “most powerful Mac ever” and will be available in December for $4,999.

A new version of Apple Pay now allows person-to-person payments.

A do-not-disturb option for the iPhone eliminates distracted driving by making the screen go black and sending notificati­ons that you’re behind the wheel.

The smaller iPad Pro bumps up around an inch in diameter to 10.5 inches, and the iPad lineup gets features such as searchable handwritte­n text, an effort to goose slowing sales.

Toy Story heroes Buzz, Woody and Jessie join Mickey and Minnie Mouse as Apple Watch faces.

Experts anticipate that Apple will pull the covers off a significan­tly revamped iPhone at its annual event in September, likely named not the 8 but the X, or 10, in a nod to the 10th anniversar­y of the iPhone’s debut in 2007.

The main iPhone updates announced at WWDC were a singlescre­en Control Panel, a new feature that disables the phone while driving, and a redesigned App Store that makes navigating the site easier on a phone.

Machine learning was a repeated buzzword throughout the keynote. The Apple Watch now leverages its data-crunching power to automatica­lly populate its screen with the day’s most pressing events, while Photos features improved facial-recognitio­n capability to create Memories of recently photograph­ed events.

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 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, AP ?? The HomePod speaker was WWDC’s biggest “wow” moment Monday. Apple CEO Tim Cook waited until last to announce it.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ, AP The HomePod speaker was WWDC’s biggest “wow” moment Monday. Apple CEO Tim Cook waited until last to announce it.

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