Philippine Daily Inquirer

IPhone 7, new Apple Watch unveiled

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SAN FRANCISCO—Apple Inc. unveiled an iPhone 7 with highresolu­tion cameras and no headphone jack at its annual launch event on Wednesday, although the biggest surprise was the debut of a 3-decade-old Nintendo game franchise, Super Mario Bros, on the smartphone.

While shares of Apple barely budged, Nintendo’s US-listed shares jumped 29 percent on investors’ hopes that Super Mario would be another mobile gaming hit for the Japanese company akin to the wildly popular

Pokemon Go.

Much of the presentati­on headed by CEO Tim Cook was devoted to technical details of photograph­y, wireless earphones, games from Nintendo and a new version of Apple watch—with fitness features.

The biggest iPhone technical improvemen­ts all had leaked, and Apple itself spoiled the surprise by sending out tweets of some details before Cook spoke. The company then deleted the messages.

Apple has reported declines in iPhone sales for the last two quarters, which raised the stakes for the iPhone 7. Some consumers and analysts are considerin­g waiting until 2017.

Break from past

The 3.5- millimeter analogue jack for wired headsets dates back more than a century, and it was time for someone to “break from the past and start pushing people into the future,” Creative Strategies analyst Tim Bajarin said after the event.

Apple may be setting the stage for a dramatical­ly different iPhone model to debut next year on the 10th anniversar­y of the smartphone first introduced in 2007, Bajarin said.

“It could be a first step for Apple making this completely wireless, and maybe next year a new iPhone with wireless charging,” the analyst said.

Mike Binger, senior portfolio manager at Gradient Investment­s LLC in Minneapoli­s, said the new phone encouraged him that Apple was in good shape for a new sales cycle.

“I think the iPhone 7, just from a replacemen­t basis, will be a successful launch,” he said.

Zooming camera

The world’s best-known technology company said the iPhone 7 would have one, zooming 12-megapixel camera. Starting at $649, it is the same price as the 6S predecesso­r.

The larger 7 “Plus” edition, starting at $769, would feature two cameras, including a telephoto lens.

Apple also removed the analog headphone jack from both new models, as was widely expected.

The new headphones supplied by Apple with the phone will plug into the same port as the recharging cord, mak- ing it incompatib­le with most wired headphones without an adapter. Apple includes the adapter.

The phones will also work with Apple’s new wireless headphones, called Air Pods, available in late October for $159.

The disappeara­nce of the headphone jack “will probably annoy a certain amount of people” but they would likely get over it, Binger said.

Apple described dropping the jack as an act of courage as it moved toward a wireless future with the optional Air Pods.

Getting rid of the jack also increased room for stereo speakers, and Apple sharpened the technology on most features, from the camera to a pressure-sensitive home button to a boost in memory.

The new phone will start shipping in major markets, including the United States and China, on Sept. 16.

Glossy black finish

Bob O’Donnell of research firm TECHnalysi­s said Apple’s new glossy black finish could be more popular than any tech feature, reflecting the slowdown in major tech innovation­s for smartphone­s.

“While the camera improvemen­ts for the iPhone 7 Plus are nice, they are incrementa­l for most and the lack of headphone jacks could offset that for others,” he said.

Apple typically gives its main product, which accounts for more than half of its revenue, a big makeover every other year and the last major redesign was the iPhone 6 in 2014. Many are expecting a three-year cycle this time, culminatin­g in a major redesign for 2017 to be called iPhone 8.

Apple Watch

Apple said its Apple Watch Series 2, with a swim-proof casing, will be available in more than 25 countries starting on Sept. 16.

“I predict Apple Watch sales will improve dramatical­ly,” said Tech analyst Patrick Moorhead.

“Most of the current Apple Watch owners are early adopters and the next wave could be 10 times the size of that market,” he added.

Apple also launched a new version of the device called the Apple Watch Nike+, in partnershi­p with the athletic goods manufactur­er Nike Inc., featuring GPS so athletes can track their runs.

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