The Oklahoman

Apple’s next iPhone mirrors last year’s, adds more storage

Better cameras, longer battery life also promised

- Michael Liedtke

SAN RAMON, Calif. – Apple unveiled its next iPhone lineup, including a model that offers twice the storage available in earlier versions and other modest upgrades to last year’s editions that proved to be a big hit among consumers devouring the latest technology during the pandemic.

The prerecorde­d video event streamed Tuesday gave Apple a chance to present a polished story following a turbulent few weeks. The recent bumps included a hastily patched security vulnerabil­ity that could let hackers secretly take control of iPhones and other Apple devices; a backlash to the company’s plans to scan iPhones for images of child sex abuse; and a federal judge’s ruling that chipped away further at the competitiv­e barrier Apple built around its app store, which generates billions of dollars in profits each year.

As has been the case since Apple’s late co-founder unveiled the first iPhone in 2007, Apple executives talked reverently about the latest model, even though it isn’t dramatical­ly different from the version Apple released nearly a year ago.

Like last year’s model, the new iPhone 13 will come in four different designs, with prices starting from $700 to $1,100. They’re scheduled to be in stores Sept. 24.

Possibly the most notable change in the latest high-end iPhone 13 will be an option for a full terabyte of storage – that’s 1,000 gigabytes – on the device, up from its previous maximum of 512 gigabytes.

Apple is also promising better cameras on the iPhone 13, including an improved ultrawide lens, a cinematic-like video feature and technology for better nighttime pictures. (The latter mirrors a feature Google has long offered in its line of Pixel phones, which haven’t been big sellers yet.) As usual, the latest iPhones are supposed to have longer-lasting batteries, too.

“We keep making the iPhone more capable,” Apple CEO Tim Cook boasted.

These kinds of incrementa­l upgrades have become routine for Apple and other device makers in recent years as the pace of smartphone innovation slowed, even while prices for some phones have climbed above $1,000. That trend has prompted more consumers to hold on to their older smartphone­s for longer periods.

But the release of last year’s iPhone 12 unleashed one of Apple’s biggest sales spurts since 2014, possibly because the pandemic helped make homebound people realize it was time to get a newer and better model than what they had been using. Through the first six months of this year, Apple’s iPhone sales have surged by nearly 60% from the same time last year.

That boom has helped push Apple’s stock price near its all-time highs recently, giving the company a market value of about $2.5 trillion – more than twice what it was before the pandemic began 18 months ago.

Apple’s shares dipped 1% in Tuesday’s afternoon trading in a sign that investors didn’t see much to get excited about during the unveiling of the next iPhones.

 ?? APPLE INC./AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Apple’s Katie McDonald discusses the new iPad mini in an Apple event keynote video. Tuesday’s event also featured the unveiling of the new iPhone lineup.
APPLE INC./AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Apple’s Katie McDonald discusses the new iPad mini in an Apple event keynote video. Tuesday’s event also featured the unveiling of the new iPhone lineup.

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