Boston Herald

Apple unveils new iPhone 14

Camera, battery, and processor speed all improved, company says

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CUPERTINO, Calif. — Apple’s latest line-up of iPhones will boast better cameras, faster processors and a longer lasting battery at the same prices as last year’s model, despite the inflationa­ry pressure that has driven up the cost of many other everyday items.

That decision, revealed Wednesday during Apple’s first in-person product event in three years, came as a mild surprise.

Many analysts predicted Apple would ask its devout fans to pay as much as 15% more to help offset rising costs for many components.

The hoopla surroundin­g Apple’s new iPhone 14 models is part of a postLabor Day ritual the company has staged annually for more than a decade.

Wednesday’s event was held on the company’s Cupertino, California, campus at a theater named after company co-founder Steve Jobs.

For several years, Apple’s new iPhones have mostly featured incrementa­l upgrades to cameras and battery life, and this year’s models were no exception, Pricing for the standard iPhone 14 will start at $799; the deluxe iPhone 14 Pro Max will start at $1099.

Among the latest improvemen­ts is a 48-megapixel camera in the Pro and Pro Max models that the company said will produce especially crisp pictures. The iPhone 13 versions of the Pro and Pro Max have 12-megapixel cameras.

This year’s high-end models will also have always-on displays that stay lit even when the device is locked, a feature that has long been available on many smartphone­s powered by Google’s Android software.

Beginning in November, the iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max will be able to send

SOS messages via a new satellite feature — a safety measure intended to let users request help when in remote areas without a wireless connection.

All the iPhone 14 models will include a motion sensor capable of detecting serious car crashes and automatica­lly connecting to emergency services.

With inflation still hovering at its highest level in 40 years, consumers have curbed their spending on many discretion­ary items.

That’s likely contributi­ng to a recent decline in smartphone sales, although the iPhone has fared far better than competing Android devices.

The dimming sales outlook prompted the research firm Internatio­nal Data Corp. to predict a worldwide decline in 2022 smartphone shipments of 6.5%, almost double the 3.5% decline it had estimated a few months ago.

Despite that anticipate­d drop in sales, the average price for new smartphone­s is expected to finish this year about 6% higher than last year, IDC estimated.

Apple sold an estimated 106 million iPhones through the first half of this year, an 8% increase from the same time last year, according to Canalys, another research firm.

 ?? AP ?? CALIFORNIA: Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks at an Apple event on the campus of Apple’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, Calif., on Wednesday.
AP CALIFORNIA: Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks at an Apple event on the campus of Apple’s headquarte­rs in Cupertino, Calif., on Wednesday.

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