iOS 18 brings support for call recording, RCS messaging, and more: Details

iOS 18 brings support for call recording, RCS messaging, and more: Details


Apple has unveiled its upcoming platform update for iPhones, the iOS 18. Designed with intelligence at core, iOS 18 brings the biggest updates in the history of iPhone with changes spanning across systems focusing on customisation, personalisation, and privacy. Moreover, there are new apps and the existing native apps have been updated with new features. All of it and more are detailed below:


iOS 18: What is new


Apple Intelligence


On iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, iOS 18 brings support for Apple Intelligence, which is arriving in beta later this year. Apple said its intelligence draws on personal context to give insight that is most helpful and relevant.


The Apple Intelligence introduces new writing tools, allowing users to rewrite, proofread, and summarise texts in Mail, Notes, Pages, and even third-party apps. With Image Playground, which is integrated into apps like messages and more, users can choose and generate custom images based on three styles – Animation, Illustration, or Sketch. There is also Genmoji, which allows iPhone users to generate personalised emojis that are unique to them. There are also other AI tools that leverage Apple Intelligence such as the Clean Up tool in Photos that eliminates unwanted objects from pictures or Memories that lets users create stories by typing in a description.


There is a revamped Siri, powered by Apple Intelligence, coming later this year. In its new avatar, Siri would be capable of Natural Language Processing for understanding deeper context and the tone of the user’s command. It also gets deeper integration into the system with in-app function control and more.


As for the native apps, Messages and Phone have been updated with new features. Messages now supports RCS messaging and the option to schedule texts. Moreover, there are options available for formatting and text effects. Phone app has been updated with a new recording option, which announces that the call has been recorded to the person on the other side for privacy.


Here is a round-up of everything coming to iPhones with iOS 18


  • Home Screen: Apps and widgets can now be relocated, and the home screen supports customisable colours and new app icons in dark mode.

  • Control Centre: Introduces a new group of controls accessible with a swipe-up gesture, showing connected home devices and allowing for quick control customisation. Controls are also accessible from the lock screen, and the Action Button can invoke these controls.

  • App Lock: Independent app locking, with hidden apps placed in a secure folder.

  • Messages: Includes RCS messaging support, emoji and sticker tapbacks, scheduled messages, text formatting, integrated text effects, and satellite messaging for iPhone 14 and later models.

  • Mail: On-device categorisation of emails into primary, transactions, updates, and promotions (coming later this year).

  • Game mode: Mac’s game mode is coming to the iPhone.

  • Photos: A comprehensive redesign simplifies accessing memories and organising photos, with built-in intelligence for creating collections.

  • Audio: Siri supports gestures such as nodding, voice isolation for AirPods Pro, and personalised spatial audio for gaming, with “Need for Speed Mobile” as the first title to support this feature – coming later this year.

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 1:53 PM IST



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India's proposed EU-like antitrust law to pose new challenge for tech firms

India's proposed EU-like antitrust law to pose new challenge for tech firms



India’s proposed EU-like antitrust law will pose a fresh regulatory challenge for tech firms including Apple, Google and Meta, laying out strict compliance obligations that could affect their business models.


The Indian government is currently examining a panel’s February report that proposed a new “Digital Competition Bill” to complement existing antitrust laws. A key US lobby group has already opposed the move, fearing its business impact.

 

Here are key details of India’s proposal:

Who would the law apply to?


The law would affect what it says are “systemically significant digital” companies. Those with a domestic turnover exceeding $480 million or a global turnover of over $30 billion, along with a local user base of at least 10 million for its digital services, would be covered.

 


Apple, Google, Meta, Amazon would come under the purview of the Indian law, which has yet to be approved by parliament.

 

WHY DOES INDIA WANT A NEW ANTITRUST LAW? The government panel said new regulations were needed as the digital market was “increasingly becoming concentrated”, with a few large companies wielding “immense control over the market.”

That, the panel said, meant smaller digital firms and startups need to depend on the larger companies, giving rise to “an imbalance in bargaining power”.

What would the new law require?


Companies would be required to operate in a fair and non-discriminatory manner, with the bill recommending a penalty of up to 10% of a company’s global turnover for violations – just like EU’s Digital Markets Act.

 


The big digital companies would be prohibited from exploiting non-public user data and from favouring their own products or services on their platforms.

 


The companies would also be barred from restricting the ability of users to download, install or use third-party apps in anyway. And they would have to allow users to select default settings freely.

 


The law proposal and feedback received will now be reviewed by the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, whose minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, remains in place following India’s election.

 

Which tech firms already face India’s scrutiny?

In India, Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart are being examined for promoting select sellers on their e-commerce platforms, hurting rivals.

 


Google has faced antitrust fines and is embroiled in legal battles over abusing its position in the Android mobile operating system market, including restricting users’ ability to remove pre-installed apps.

 


Google, as well as Apple, are also facing scrutiny for promoting their in-app purchase systems, which a non-profit group alleges hurts rivals.

 

All the companies deny any wrongdoing.


(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

 

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 1:01 PM IST



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Apple's AI push may boost iPhone sales as customers look to upgrade

Apple's AI push may boost iPhone sales as customers look to upgrade



Apple’s developer conference on Monday was about more than infusing its software with the latest artificial intelligence technology, including from ChatGPT.

 


It was also about selling more iPhones.

 


Facing choppy consumer spending and resurgent tech rivals, Apple has looked to AI as a way to invigorate its loyal fan base of more than 1 billion customers and to reverse a sales decline for its biggest-selling product.

 


The software, which requires at least an iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max to operate, may encourage a cascade of new purchases, several analysts said. Some predicted the biggest upgrade cycle come autumn since Apple’s release of the iPhone 12 in 2020, which drew consumers in part through 5G connectivity.

 


“What we saw today was more compelling than anything we’ve seen since,” analyst Gil Luria of D.A. Davidson said.

 


The company showcased what it called Apple Intelligence, its take on generative AI that can conjure text, images and other content on command.

 


Apple demonstrated how its AI could generate custom emojis, a cartoon to text friends or edits making an email sound more professional. Its digital aide Siri could prompt users if they wanted ChatGPT’s help too.

 


Some analysts voiced skepticism, predicting consumers would not race to Apple stores to get more AI on their phones.

 


“Perhaps there may be enough in the new and improved Siri-powered, intelligently Apple devices to stanch some of the device revenue that’s been hemorrhaging lately, but there isn’t enough to create a new band of followers,” said Forrester analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee.

 

Tejas Dessai of Global X added, “Investors clearly want a more comprehensive and ambitious strategy from Apple when it comes to AI.” The company’s stock fell 2 per cent on the news.

 Upgrade to AI


Like them or not, Apple’s AI features won’t come to every iPhone.

 


The company said smartphone customers have to upgrade to the iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max that Apple began selling in September 2023. The AI, built so it can process data privately on a user’s device, depends on chips in Apple’s newer smartphones.

 


In Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives’ view, that represents a big opportunity. He estimated some 270 million iPhones had not been upgraded in four years.

 


“We estimate 15 per cent+ of the Apple installed base will upgrade to iPhone 16 as Apple Intelligence is the killer app many have been waiting for,” Ives said.

 


The iPhone 16 release is expected sometime this autumn.

 


Gene Munster, a managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, said another feather in Apple’s cap was its easy-to-use integration with ChatGPT. “They’re really taking the friction out of using AI,” he said.

 


Apple’s iPhone revenue for its fiscal year that ended in September 2023 was $200.6 billion, down from $205.5 billion the prior year, the company’s latest annual report showed.

 


Still, AI is just a part of Apple’s draw to consumers. They may primarily want a bigger iPhone display or better camera, but the AI updates would appeal to early adopters and stand apart for their ability to take actions in and across apps, said Martin Yang of Oppenheimer & Co.

 

“That action part will make Apple an immediate leader in consumer AI,” Yang said.


(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 9:22 AM IST



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WWDC 2024 highlights and key takeaways: Summary of important announcements

WWDC 2024 highlights and key takeaways: Summary of important announcements


At WWDC 2024, Apple announced significant updates across its entire product lineup, focusing on enhancing user experience, privacy, and ecosystem integration. Moreover, the US-based technology giant revamped its digital assistant Siri with more capabilities powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning. Lastly, Apple debuted its personal intelligence system called Apple Intelligence, which leverages generative models for personalised interactions and integrates ChatGPT for advanced content generation. Here are key takeaways from Apple’s WWDC 2024 keynote address.


visionOS 2 for Vision Pro


visionOS 2 is a significant update for Apple Vision Pro, introducing several new features:


  • Spatial Photos Experience: Enhances the immersive experience with support for spatial photos.

  • New Gestures: Adds support for new gestures, improving interaction.

  • SharePlay in Photos App: Allows spatial personas to engage with shared photos.

  • Travel Mode: Includes train support for a better travel experience.

  • Higher Display Resolution: Later this year, Vision Pro will support a resolution equivalent to two 4K displays.


The new features in iOS 18 focus on customisation, communication, and security:


  • Home Screen: Apps and widgets can now be relocated, and the home screen supports customisable colours and new app icons in dark mode.

  • Control Centre: Introduces a new group of controls accessible with a swipe-up gesture, showing connected home devices and allowing for quick control customisation. Controls are also accessible from the lock screen, and the Action Button can invoke these controls.

  • App Lock: Independent app locking, with hidden apps placed in a secure folder.

  • Messages: Includes RCS messaging support, emoji and sticker tapbacks, scheduled messages, text formatting, integrated text effects, and satellite messaging for iPhone 14 and later models.

  • Mail: On-device categorisation of emails into primary, transactions, updates, and promotions (coming later this year).

  • Game mode: Mac’s game mode is coming to the iPhone.

  • Photos: A comprehensive redesign simplifies accessing memories and organising photos, with built-in intelligence for creating collections.

  • Audio: Siri supports gestures such as nodding, voice isolation for AirPods Pro, and personalised spatial audio for gaming, with “Need for Speed Mobile” as the first title to support this feature – coming later this year.

  • TV: Apple TV Plus gains an insight feature similar to Prime Video’s in-screen option and support for 21:9 format projectors.


watchOS 11 for Watch Series


watchOS 11 introduces several new features aimed at enhancing health and usability:


  • Training Load: Tailored for enthusiasts and athletes.

  • Vitals App: A new app to view vital health metrics quickly.

  • Cycle Tracking: Enhanced with pregnancy tracking features.

  • Smart Stacks: Automatically adds widgets like weather and translation.

  • Check-In: A new feature coming to the Apple Watch.


iPadOS 18 for iPad


The updates in iPadOS 18 focus on productivity and ease of use:


  • Floating Tab Bar: Customisable and movable into a sidebar.

  • SharePlay: Allows remote control of someone else’s iPad.

  • Calculator App: Finally coming to the iPad, with Apple Pencil support.

  • Smart Script in Notes App: Improves handwriting using on-device machine learning, making it smoother and more legible. Pasted text appears in handwritten notes format, with support for spell check, text wrap, and copy/paste functions.


macOS Sequoia for Macs


macOS Sequoia enhances the continuity within the Apple ecosystem:


  • Wireless iPhone Mirroring: See and control your iPhone remotely using a Mac. Notifications and audio are redirected to the Mac, with mirroring supported even when the iPhone is locked. Drag-and-drop functionality is included.

  • Tile Position: Facilitates quick placement of windows side by side, akin to Windows.

  • Background Replacements: Available for FaceTime and Zoom.

  • Passwords App: Coming to Mac, iPad, iPhone, and Windows.


Safari


Safari continues to lead with a focus on speed, privacy, and user experience:


  • Highlights Feature: Uses machine learning to detect and present interesting content.

  • Reader Mode: Now includes summaries and table of contents.

  • Viewer: Brings videos front and centre with system video controls.


Apple Intelligence


Apple introduces a new personal intelligence system:


  • Generative Models: Designed with privacy in mind, capable of prioritising notifications, summarising content, and generating images using photos from the library.

  • Personalised Actions: Across apps and Apple devices, powered by on-device intelligence available on A17 Pro and Apple Silicon from M1 chip onwards.

  • Private Cloud Compute: For specialised processing that needs cloud support.


Revamped Siri


Siri receives significant enhancements:


  • Natural Interaction: Redesigned for more natural, relevant, and personal interactions.

  • Visual Redesign: A new wake visual that glows around the device display.

  • Text Input Support: Similar to other AI chatbots, with on-screen awareness.

  • Contextual Actions: Drives context from personal content such as photos, messages, calendar events, etc.

  • Rewriting Tool: Helps write specialised content with context awareness.

  • Smart Reply: For quick replies.

  • ChatGPT Integration: For content generation, coming later this year, with user permission required to send information to ChatGPT.

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 8:00 AM IST



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Apple debuts long-awaited AI tools, including ChatGPT tie-up at WWDC

Apple debuts long-awaited AI tools, including ChatGPT tie-up at WWDC



By Mark Gurman

 


Apple Inc. took the wraps off long-awaited new artificial intelligence features, including a partnership with ChatGPT maker OpenAI, betting that a personalized and understated approach to the technology will win over customers.

 


A new AI platform called Apple Intelligence was the highlight of the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference presentation on Monday, which also included updates to the iPhone maker’s operating systems. The technology will help summarise text, create original images and retrieve the most relevant data when users need it. The push also includes a revamped version of Siri, the company’s once-pioneering digital assistant. 


Apple is making a high-stakes bid to catch up with rivals in the booming AI market. After falling behind tech peers like Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Microsoft Corp., the company is counting on a streamlined interface — and loyal customer base — to regain ground.


“This is a moment we’ve been working toward for a long time,” Senior Vice President Craig Federighi, who oversees software engineering, said at the event. He described Apple Intelligence as “AI for the rest of us,” alluding to an old slogan about the Mac computer.


The partnership with OpenAI, which Bloomberg reported on before the event, will let customers access ChatGPT via Siri at no extra cost. Apple Intelligence will begin rolling out later this year, but some features — including the ability for Siri to precisely control features within apps — won’t come until next year. Support for languages beyond English also won’t arrive until later. 


OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman was at Monday’s event and wrote on the social media site X that he was “very happy” to be teaming up with Apple. While the ChatGPT integration will be free, paid subscribers to OpenAI will get additional features over time. Apple, which has also held talks with Google about using that company’s Gemini feature, said it plans to support other services later.


Ensuring that customer data is secure was a major theme of the presentation. A system called Private Cloud Compute will help keep users’ information safe when it’s being sent to data centers, Federighi said. Apple Intelligence will also support AI-created emoji called Genmoji and automated photo editing.


Apple’s iOS 18 and iPadOS — its iPhone and iPad software — will get features that improve customization, productivity and communication. Some additions will include: 


  • An upgraded home screen will let users place icons anywhere. App icon colors can also be changed, and they can be tinted when the device is placed in dark mode.

  • A new Control Center includes support for third-party controls, multiple pages of settings and an updated look.

  • The iPhone 14 and more recent models will get support for text messaging via satellites. That was previously available in emergency situations.

  • The Messages app will have the ability to schedule a text to be sent later. The Tapbacks feature, which lets users quickly respond to texts with things like a heart or question mark, will now work with an emoji or digital sticker.

  • Customers can set up effects — such as a shaking word — for individual words and phrases, rather than entire texts. And there’s rich text support, which will make it easier for Apple customers to communicate with Android users.

  • A Passwords app will manage secure logins, passkeys and Wi-Fi account details.

  • A redesigned Photos app will use artificial intelligence to improve editing.

  • There’s the ability to lock any app behind Face ID.

  • The iPad gets the Calculator app for the first time, and it will let people solve handwritten math equations using an Apple Pencil. That app’s absence from the iPad was a longstanding issue among customers, and the new feature was announced to applause at Monday’s event.


Investors gave a tepid reaction to the event — a not-uncommon reaction when Apple debuts long-anticipated new features. The shares fell almost 2 per cent to $193.12 in New York, leaving the stock little changed for the year. 


The Cupertino, California-based company also rolled out macOS Sequoia, which includes the same Apple Intelligence features as the iPad and iPhone. 


Some of its other enhancements:


  • The ability to receive and interact with iPhone notifications.

  • The ability to drag and drop files between devices.

  • Mirroring an iPhone’s display so it can be used on a Mac’s screen.

  • The ability to organize Mac application windows as tiles that stick to different portions of the display.


And the company unveiled visionOS 2, the latest version of its software for the Vision Pro headset. That has new features for photos and handling office work, including: 


  • The ability to turn regular photos into 3D spatial pictures.

  • New hand gestures for opening the Home View and Control Center.

  • A new version of the Mac Virtual Display feature that can create a virtual wraparound screen.

  • The ability to AirPlay content from an iPhone, iPad or Mac into the Vision Pro.

     


Apple also announced plans to launch the Vision Pro internationally, with preorders beginning in China, Hong Kong, Japan and Singapore on June 13. The device will go on sale in those areas June 28. That will be followed by Australia, Canada, France, Germany and the UK. Preorders will begin in those countries June 28, and sales will start July 12.

New AirPods software, meanwhile, will make it easier to hear users’ voices during a phone call by removing background noise.

The Apple Watch will get additional health capabilities, such as enhanced pregnancy tracking and an app that shows at-a-glance vital statistics.


But the AI features were the biggest focus of the event. Those tools will also include the ability to transcribe phone calls and voice memos, solve advanced math equations, sort through email, and prioritise notifications.


Though Apple had an early lead in AI after it launched Siri in 2011, its technology was quickly overtaken by the Google Assistant and Amazon.com Inc.’s Alexa. Then AI took another giant leap forward when OpenAI’s ChatGPT arrived at the end of 2022.


That led to a flurry of other services, including ones from Google, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. Samsung Electronics Co. — Apple’s biggest smartphone rival — also integrated Google AI features into its devices earlier this year.


Apple CEO Tim Cook is now under pressure to show that the iPhone maker can lead again. The company also is contending with a broader sales slump. Revenue declined in five of the past six quarters in the face of sluggish smartphone demand and a slowdown in China.


On Monday, Cook said AI would be “the next big step for Apple.” Though the company won’t make money directly on the new features, the hope is to make users more loyal and prod them to upgrade more frequently.


“We think Apple Intelligence is going to be indispensable to the products that already play such an integral role in our lives,” he said.

First Published: Jun 11 2024 | 7:50 AM IST



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