Having actually grown up in different cultures (spent fifteen years of my life abroad, not on military bases), I'm not sure I'm less qualified to judge when somebody's being an asshole than you are.
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
Here's a Apple Watch app that illustrates one use of force touch ...
Consider, you're in the line at a DriveThu -- In-N-Out shown here. You:
scroll the list of menu items to show those you want
tap the description to increment the quantity shown on the left
tap the quantity to decrement it
rinse and repeat, a running total is shown at the top
Then, when done, you force-touch to bring up the second screen to:
place the order
clear all items
resume
This works amazingly well on the small screen of the Apple Watch.
I have a version of the app that runs on the iPhone and uses Long-Press instead of Force-Touch.
Long-Press is inferior, in that it is less-precise (may not work at all) and takes longer to recognize -- to the point that it is clumsy to unusable.
Honestly could not differentiate lp and ft in normal use on the watch. I think I have a tendency to press hard when doing a long press so the two didn;t feel any different. They maybe should add a tiny amount of haptic feedback when a successful porce touch is registered.
Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
127
Quote:
Originally Posted by qvak
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
The one place that diversity has worked the best is....food. " src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" /> Not negating the concept of diversity just pointing out the best example where it worked well. Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
127
The one place that diversity has worked the best is....food. " src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" /> Not negating the concept of diversity just pointing out the best example where it worked well. Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
That's what your typical leftish SWPL believes. diversity is good because now we have all these different restaurants.
There is an idea of a functional multicultural society and that involves enclaves all cooperating for the good of the nation, but this forced assimilation of culturally incompatible people and the absolute refusal of socialist leftists to enforce the rule of law regardless of skin color guarantees degeneracy.
Ming Ching Chong throwing shit and seeing what sticks as usual. Why does anyone listen to him at all? (And why does AI persistently repost) Just because he hasn't heard of anything other than Force Touch (which is also a rumour and may not happen) doesn't mean Force Touch is the only thing. What an utter idiot.
Here's a project for a journalist at AI: get a list of a couple of their top cited analyist/insiders. Actually for some comparison on their "predictions" to later reality. Yes, hindsight is always 20-50, but you could do some math and statistics. Compare it based on time in advance of a release. Might lend some credibility to the reporting. That is if you can spare some time away from playing with a new drone.
I don't think average consumers work this way...most people I know buy Apple products because they are sick of the Android/Windows status quo or they are part of the cult. Most people upgrade their iPhones every two to fours years (tops). They, for the most part, won't go back to Android once they taste the forbidden fruit.
...
As an example, I think most people who bought the 5S were not aware of what TouchID was about but they bought anyway. And he forgot to mention 64 bit processing so even he doesn't fit his example.
...
Many factors to be looked at, which at least this article doesn't indicate Kuo included in report. Only a small number upgrade to latest model every year. Most hold for 2 and sometimes 3 years. They then upgrade to whatever is the latest at the time. I know many people who love their iPhones, but don't really know much about the specific features which change from year-to-year.
Still a substantial number of installed base yet to upgrade to 6 series, and of course those that would switch to a 6/6+ in October will switch in many cases to a 6s/6s+.
Finally, without knowing what the phone will include, it is pretty daft to say that Force Touch and everything else are minor, and will themselves not drive any incremental year-on-year upgrades.
Here's a project for a journalist at AI: get a list of a couple of their top cited analyist/insiders. Actually for some comparison on their "predictions" to later reality. Yes, hindsight is always 20-50, but you could do some math and statistics. Compare it based on time in advance of a release. Might lend some credibility to the reporting. That is if you can spare some time away from playing with a new drone.
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
No, I did not call you an asshole at all.
And your personal view of multiculturalism in Sweden has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with somebody using a "Ching Chong" slur to deride a Chinese analyst.
Honestly could not differentiate lp and ft in normal use on the watch. I think I have a tendency to press hard when doing a long press so the two didn;t feel any different. They maybe should add a tiny amount of haptic feedback when a successful porce touch is registered.
I'm away from my computer so I can't check. But, I think you're not able to use long press on the watch .
Grow a pair and leave your sensitivity at the door
"Grow a pair"? Cause it takes "balls" to be an anonymous racist on the internet, right? (Your post history makes it clear you fall in this category, which is why you felt the need to come to this poster's immediate defence. You can always tell the bigots/racists by the way they come to the defence of others in their camp).
So the yet-to-be-released iPhone 6s (6+s or whatever it's called) lacks a "Killer App" and thus Kuo concludes won't sell as many units as the previous generation?
If Kuo had any credibility left this just did away with it.
Kuo has some visibility into Apple's supply chain, but that only informs him of the hardware. Force Touch, if truly and deeply integrated into iOS at launch may offer new capabilities and create new user habits that will quickly make it essential. That is going to be up to the software developers, and Kuo has no track record of leaking unannounced software changes (did he leak Swift? 64-bit iOS 7?). As a result, he's judging it with an incomplete perspective, as a hardware thing.
Comments
Seriously? Force Touch would freaking rock and give me some phone envy as new apps come out that add physical texture to the UI.
What does Force Touch have to do with physical textures?
What does Touch Force have to do with physical textures?
He's mixing up Force Touch and the Taptic engine.
Clearly Kuo is out of the loop now and desperately grasping at straws.
The analyst has nailed the jello to the wall...
Here's a Apple Watch app that illustrates one use of force touch ...
Consider, you're in the line at a DriveThu -- In-N-Out shown here. You:
Then, when done, you force-touch to bring up the second screen to:
This works amazingly well on the small screen of the Apple Watch.
I have a version of the app that runs on the iPhone and uses Long-Press instead of Force-Touch.
Long-Press is inferior, in that it is less-precise (may not work at all) and takes longer to recognize -- to the point that it is clumsy to unusable.
Having actually grown up in different cultures (spent fifteen years of my life abroad, not on military bases), I'm not sure I'm less qualified to judge when somebody's being an asshole than you are.
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
Here's a Apple Watch app that illustrates one use of force touch ...
Consider, you're in the line at a DriveThu -- In-N-Out shown here. You:
Then, when done, you force-touch to bring up the second screen to:
This works amazingly well on the small screen of the Apple Watch.
I have a version of the app that runs on the iPhone and uses Long-Press instead of Force-Touch.
Long-Press is inferior, in that it is less-precise (may not work at all) and takes longer to recognize -- to the point that it is clumsy to unusable.
Honestly could not differentiate lp and ft in normal use on the watch. I think I have a tendency to press hard when doing a long press so the two didn;t feel any different. They maybe should add a tiny amount of haptic feedback when a successful porce touch is registered.
Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
The one place that diversity has worked the best is....food.
" src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" /> Not negating the concept of diversity just pointing out the best example where it worked well. Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
duplicate
Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
The one place that diversity has worked the best is....food.
" src="http://forums-files.appleinsider.com/images/smilies//lol.gif" /> Not negating the concept of diversity just pointing out the best example where it worked well. Bring your food, acclimate to my culture, we be good.
That's what your typical leftish SWPL believes. diversity is good because now we have all these different restaurants.
There is an idea of a functional multicultural society and that involves enclaves all cooperating for the good of the nation, but this forced assimilation of culturally incompatible people and the absolute refusal of socialist leftists to enforce the rule of law regardless of skin color guarantees degeneracy.
Ming Ching Chong throwing shit and seeing what sticks as usual. Why does anyone listen to him at all? (And why does AI persistently repost) Just because he hasn't heard of anything other than Force Touch (which is also a rumour and may not happen) doesn't mean Force Touch is the only thing. What an utter idiot.
Here's a project for a journalist at AI: get a list of a couple of their top cited analyist/insiders. Actually for some comparison on their "predictions" to later reality. Yes, hindsight is always 20-50, but you could do some math and statistics. Compare it based on time in advance of a release. Might lend some credibility to the reporting. That is if you can spare some time away from playing with a new drone.
I don't think average consumers work this way...most people I know buy Apple products because they are sick of the Android/Windows status quo or they are part of the cult. Most people upgrade their iPhones every two to fours years (tops). They, for the most part, won't go back to Android once they taste the forbidden fruit.
...
As an example, I think most people who bought the 5S were not aware of what TouchID was about but they bought anyway. And he forgot to mention 64 bit processing so even he doesn't fit his example.
...
Many factors to be looked at, which at least this article doesn't indicate Kuo included in report. Only a small number upgrade to latest model every year. Most hold for 2 and sometimes 3 years. They then upgrade to whatever is the latest at the time. I know many people who love their iPhones, but don't really know much about the specific features which change from year-to-year.
Still a substantial number of installed base yet to upgrade to 6 series, and of course those that would switch to a 6/6+ in October will switch in many cases to a 6s/6s+.
Finally, without knowing what the phone will include, it is pretty daft to say that Force Touch and everything else are minor, and will themselves not drive any incremental year-on-year upgrades.
Phillip Elmer DeWitt already does this.
baaaaaw some leftist called me an asshole. Get back to me when you find out about the effects of "diversity" in sweden first hand like I did.
No, I did not call you an asshole at all.
And your personal view of multiculturalism in Sweden has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with somebody using a "Ching Chong" slur to deride a Chinese analyst.
I'm away from my computer so I can't check. But, I think you're not able to use long press on the watch .
Long press on the phone performs poorly.
I'd thought it would be funny if Apple called it the iPhone 9.
Grow a pair and leave your sensitivity at the door
"Grow a pair"? Cause it takes "balls" to be an anonymous racist on the internet, right? (Your post history makes it clear you fall in this category, which is why you felt the need to come to this poster's immediate defence. You can always tell the bigots/racists by the way they come to the defence of others in their camp).
You're pathetic.
Bla,bla,bla, they always say stuff like this every year. And what happens is Apple has record sales for the quarter.
For the under 40 crowd who grew up in culturally sensitive times..... Diversity divides.....that is unspoken reality of Homo sapiens.
Back on topic....unfortunately for investors apple is destined to be valued like a utility
Kuo has some visibility into Apple's supply chain, but that only informs him of the hardware. Force Touch, if truly and deeply integrated into iOS at launch may offer new capabilities and create new user habits that will quickly make it essential. That is going to be up to the software developers, and Kuo has no track record of leaking unannounced software changes (did he leak Swift? 64-bit iOS 7?). As a result, he's judging it with an incomplete perspective, as a hardware thing.