Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Category: Mobile (Page 1 of 19)

Stocking Up on Apple

Not AAPL shares (I do that, too) — I’m talking about my fall click-and-buy ritual on Apple.com! Well, in the case of iPhone, every other fall this time around. I decided last year that I would keep my iPhone 14 Pro Max for two years — that is, I skipped the 15. Why? Two reasons: 1) I was very happy with the 14 (display, battery life, and especially the camera), and 2) I was paying for it on a 24-month installment plan — through Apple, of course… on my (you guessed it) Apple Card! So, why not pay it off first, then trade it in when I buy another one? That, and I was hearing the 16 might be offering some exciting stuff worth waiting for. Though I didn’t know it for sure a year ago, that exciting stuff turned out to be — well, you know!

Sure, we’ll have to wait till next month for some of the Apple Intelligence features to be useable on the iPhone 16, with coming software updates — but I’ll be ready with my new phone, which will likely arrive on my doorstep around October 1. Here’s an article from The Verge on the AI features that will be coming this fall, and more into early 2025.

For a look at all the goodness that comes with the iPhone 16 — in addition to Apple Intelligence — the following slide from the September 9th “Glowtime” event wraps it up. (Click on any of the images in this post to enlarge.)

And here’s more on the iPhone 16 camera features — all of which are very much important to me:

For a complete rundown on the features of the iPhone 16 Pro — including the Pro Max — the following slide tells it well. Note the new “Grade 5 Titanium,” which results in lighter weight than my 14 Pro Max, while — get this — giving me a larger screen at 6.9″!  I’ll take that combo.

But, wait — I didn’t stop with a new iPhone — oh, no! I was ready to upgrade my Apple Watch, too! Again, I’ve been happy with my Series 9, but knowing I could trade that in (it’s in great condition) to get a pretty good deal on the new Series 10, why not? Was there one overriding reason for me to upgrade? No, sleep apnea detection is not something I’m worried about. For me, it was a combination of things. In addition to an improved design and more “intelligence,” that would be longer battery life (up to 18 hours!) and faster charging. The Series 9 was pretty good in regard to those last two points, but who wouldn’t want more improvement when it comes to a wearable that’s become an indispensable part of one’s life? I wear my Watch at night, too, as many people now do, to track sleep data. So, here’s a rundown of what the Apple Watch Series 10 brings to the party:

I expect my Watch Series 10 to arrive in the next few days, along with a return box for my trade in. And I can’t wait to strap it on!

How are you planning to upgrade? I have no doubt that this upgrade cycle will be a huge one for Apple — one that will propel the stock of the largest company on the U.S. stock market even higher.

(By the way, did you know that Apple’s market cap, at $3.3+ trillion, is larger than the entire GDP of the U.K.? Blimey!!)

The Story Isn’t the iPhone Xs – It’s What’s In It: the A12 Bionic Chip

iPhone Xs

Click on image to enlarge.

Maybe you heard there was an Apple event? And a new phone, the iPhone Xs? And I’m guessing you saw a gazillion media stories, too, about how darn expensive it was, right? That’s actually a major pet peeve of mine — the lamestream media just cannot let go of that same tired old line. Who can afford these things? How will people ever pay that much for a phone? Blah, blah, blah. Well, you know how it always turn out. Um, Apple does okay.

Three things make that lame media line pathetic. First of all, it isn’t just a phone — it’s a supercomputer. (Do you know what those used to cost? Meaning the equivalent computer power, not that long ago.) Second, it’s the computer you use the most, if you’re like most people. (And for some people, it’s their only computer.) From that perspective, the iPhone is downright cheap. Have you ever paid multiple times the cost of an iPhone for a computer? One that won’t fit in your pocket. I sure have.

And, third, hardly anyone pays for an iPhone upfront, anyway. Small monthly payments make it like a utility. Less money than what many people spend monthly at Starbucks.

So, now that I’ve totally destroyed that meme, I’ll get to the point of this post… 🙂  And that is this: not only is the iPhone Xs a bargain, but it is by far the best smartphone out there, ever,  because of what powers it: the A12 Bionic chip.

Here’s what some very smart journalists say on that subject:

Stephen Shankland, CNet (“A12 chip gives Apple big advantage over rivals“):

Click on image to enlarge.

The A12 is the industry’s first chip to be built using a 7-nanometer manufacturing process. A nanometer is a billionth of a meter, so when Apple moved from the A11 chip’s 10nm process to the A12’s 7nm, it meant the company could stuff twice the number of circuit elements called transistors into the same surface area. In the case of the A12, that’s 6.9 billion transistors.

You don’t necessarily need to understand the nuances of transistor sizes or just how small a nanometer really is. The bottom line is that the advancement will let the iPhone XS and XS Max run graphics 50 percent faster than 2017’s iPhone X, while artificial intelligence software will work 8 times faster. And perhaps most important, your battery won’t get drained.

The A12 “is so far ahead of the industry that it will still be competitive with the best Android smartphones in two years, and massively more powerful than lower-end phones,” said Stratechery analyst Ben Thompson.

The real advantage of the 7nm process is that Apple can do it all without flattening your battery. “The lower power can extend battery life or allow Apple to push the performance up by 20 percent when the user needs the extra boost,” said Linley Group analyst Linley Gwennap.

The chip industry has been in a pickle for more than a decade as the previously steady progress in ever-faster processor clock speeds sputtered. That’s forced chipmakers to figure out other ways to try to make chips better, because no longer does the same software automatically run faster with each new chip generation.

5 trillion operations per second

Click on image to enlarge.

Special-purpose circuitry has been one primary coping mechanism. First came graphics processing units, or GPUs, which accelerate not just gaming effects like hazy air and gleaming chrome, but also physics calculations that make explosions look real. Apple’s A11 chip had three GPU engines called cores, but the A12 has four.

More recently, chipmakers have begun adding chip technology to accelerate artificial intelligence chores. AI — also called machine learning and neural networks these days — can let devices understand speech commands, take better photos and recognize unhealthy heartbeat patterns. The A12’s built-in AI circuitry can perform 5 trillion operations per second, an eightfold increase over the A11.

Apple is in a strong position compared to some phone rivals because it controls not only the processor but the operating system and other software like speech recognition and photo apps. The company can ensure all the parts of the system work well together.

——–

Om Malik, Partner, True Ventures, and Founder, GigaOm (a portion of his notes on the Sept 12 Apple Event)

That new shiny new A12 Bionic chip with more cores in its neural engine, ability to do way more with its GPU and CPU… seriously— this is the most impressive work…. this is some chip nerd nirvana. Here are some facts about the A12 Bionic. It has:

Click image to enlarge.

• 6.9 billion transistors.
• Two high-performance CPU cores deliver 15% more speed and 40% greater efficiency compared to the A11.
• Four other CPU cores are 50% more efficient than those on the prior chip.
• Six-core GPU designed by Apple. It is 50% faster than the block on the A11.
• New neural engine sports eight cores, versus two in the A11, giving it a nine-fold performance bump vs. A11.
• CoreML machine-learning framework can hit 5 trillion operations/sec, versus 600 billion ops/sec on the A11 using one-tenth of the energy.

What does all this mean? This is the first serious edge-computing device with more oomph than many laptops. The neural engine can now do a lot of those things Google does in the cloud — on a device. When it comes to automatic video editing and stuff such as the identification of faces, we are going to see the power of this chip. The gaming demos and the ARKit 2 demos, should be enough of a clue as to what this new chip can enable…  there is something special about the iPhone Xs. And that’s Bionic!

——–

James Vincent, The Verge (“A12 Bionic chip ‘the smartest and most powerful chip ever in a smartphone’):

The end result should be the same as ever: faster apps… More tangible, though, will be the new functionality enabled by this sort of processing muscle. Particularly apps that use the company’s machine learning framework, Core ML, which the new A12 Bionic runs nine times faster than last year’s chips.

——–

Rick Merritt, EE Times, in his report after the Apple event:

A12 Bionic chip. © Apple Inc.

Click on image to enlarge.

The (A12’s) performance will speed a variety of operations, including unlocking the phone using Apple’s facial-recognition software. It also enables a new capability to group multiple Siri functions into shortcuts.

Third-party developers showed applications using Apple’s CoreML and ARKit 2 frameworks to enable new features supported by neural nets. They included Homecourt, an app tracking six metrics of basketball performance in real time, as well as new features in mobile games using augmented reality.

“The A12 is a game changer,” said Tim Bajarin, a veteran Apple watcher and president of Creative Strategies…

The iPhone XS and XS Max include dual 12-Mpixel-wide and telephoto cameras… (which) support a variety of features, including HDR10 and adjustable depth-of-field, relying on an image processor and the neural engine in the A12. “This is a new era of computational photography,” said Phil Schiller, Apple’s vice president of marketing.

——–

I didn’t need any more convincing than that, plus what I saw with my own eyes watching the live stream of the event. I ordered up an iPhone Xs Max as soon as I could, to replace my iPhone X, which I got in late 2017. I’m on the iPhone Upgrade Program, so the process is easy. I make monthly payments for my phone, automatically deducted from my business account, and I can upgrade to the latest model once per year. The net upcharge for me this time? Only five dollars more per month! … to get all the amazing new features and performance of the iPhone Xs Max. (I also had to pay off a small balance on my previous contract, as I was two months shy of a year with the iPhone X.)

It was the No-Brainer of the Century for me! And my new iPhone arrives within about two weeks.

DoApp Has Been Acquired by Newscycle Solutions

DoApp logoDoApp has gone and done it — and, yes, it’s cool.

The highly successful Minnesota mobile startup has been acquired by Newscycle Solutions, a 500-employee Bloomington MN-based firm that “develops and delivers software technology to empower the global news media industry.” DoApp has developed more than 1,500 mobile apps for the news publishing and broadcast industries.  All DoApp employees will join Newscycle. The acquisition closed on June 10, 2016; the price was not announced.

DoApp was founded in early 2008 by former Google employee Joe Sriver and a small team. It has been entirely self-funded and profitable for six years. Newscycle Solutions is made up four merged companies and is owned by Vista Equity Partners, based in San Francisco, which was the most active firm in the M&A business last year. (Within the past two weeks alone, it acquired Marketo and Ping Identity, deals valued collectively at $2.4 billion.) Continue reading

TruScribe Summons Kickstarter to Get You ‘Talking’

TruScribe-crowdsourcingThought you’d heard it all on Kickstarter? Well, how many times have you run into a project there that’s about launching a language? You read that right. Get your credit cards out, startup and crowdfunding lovers: here’s your chance to say you were there back in ’16 when history was made.

But here’s the deal: you gotta tell a lot of your friends, because the folks at TruScribe have set a pretty hefty goal for this one: it’s $100k.  Of course, that’s befitting the ginormous implications here — I mean, how often do you get to impact the entire freaking global community, with that single audacious goal to allow everyone on the planet to communicate visually? This is big stuff, people!! What’s a lousy little 100 Grover Clevelands?

TruScribe, as you’ll recall, is a whiteboard video animation company that was cofounded in Minnesota. (I TruGlyph-logowrote about them here on Minnov8.com back in 2014.) A large part of its staff is in Madison WI, but Minneapolis became its headquarters a while back, with great new digs at International Market Square. It was named the 253rd fastest-growing company on the Inc. 5000 list in 2015, which was understandably touted far and wide. (As a point of reference, crazy-fast-growing LeadPages of Minneapolis was #220.) In February 2016, TruScribe announced the first part of its new initiative to transform into a full-fledged software business, with a new iOS app called TruGlyph. (You can download the app here.)

What’s coming next you can see in their new (and very first) Kickstarter project. Here’s an excerpt from that page on what it’s all about: Continue reading

Minnesota Startup NativeX Will Be Acquired by Chinese Mobile Ad Firm Mobvista

[Note: This post first appeared on Minnov8.com.]

Ryan (left) and Rob Weber, cofounders of NativeX.

Ryan (left) and Rob Weber, cofounders of NativeX.

Minnesota’s NativeX announced today it is being acquired by Guangzhou-based Mobvista, Asia’s largest mobile advertising company. The company said the all-cash deal is valued at 160 million yuan, or 25 million US dollars. Once the transaction is completed, NativeX will become a subsidiary of Mobvista.

NativeX was founded by Minnesota twin brothers Rob and Ryan Weber and traces its beginnings to a former company they and a third brother, Aaron, founded in St. Cloud more than 15 years ago, called Freeze.com. The firm later changed its name to W3i, then made a major transformation to mobile ad technology in early 2013, rebranding to NativeX. It specializes in monetization and advertising through proprietary native ad technology for mobile games and apps.

Mobvista also has offices in Hong Kong, Beijing, New Delhi, Singapore, and San Francisco. NativeX has offices in St. Cloud (Sartell), Minneapolis, San Francisco, and Finland.

Rob Weber will continue as CEO of NativeX, and serve as a vice president of the Mobvista Group. “We currently have 40 employees in Minnesota,” said Rob, “and we’re planning for all of our current employees to stay on. Also, as part of the growth opportunity presented in light of the merger, we plan to hire additional employees at both our Sartell and Minneapolis locations.”

Rob continued: “Ryan and I are very excited with our new partnership. Strategically, it makes sense to combine forces with a strong force in Eastern markets. We are planning to stay on board in the same roles we have now.”

The full text of the press release follows:  Continue reading

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