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iOS 12 'doubles down' on performance for iPhone and iPad
charlesatlas said:larz2112 said:Or in my case, the new Photos app will attempt to predict what the user is interested in and more often than not get it wrong. It will also attempt to predict how the user wants to tag, organize, and search for photos, and more often than not get it wrong. -
macOS High Sierra 10.13.5 with Messages in iCloud support is now available
Can we assume the following... People who had iMessages in an iPad and iPhone had these backed up twice on iCloud. Now, thanks to iMessages in iCloud, those will potentially get back the half wasted space now that the messages will be stored in a single cloud repository instead of two cloud backups? I understand that it will be the case, anyone else's guess? -
Apple HomePod coming to Canada, France & Germany on June 18, gets AirPlay 2 & stereo pairi...
nunzy said:ericthehalfbee said:Lots of misconceptions about what the definition of stereo is.
Put simply, stereo sound is an attempt to create localization using two or more speakers. The reason we have two ears isn't so we can listen to "stereo" sound coming from left & right channels. We have two ears so that our brain can determine where a sound came from (localization). Is it to our left or right, in front of us or behind us, or even above or below us. Our brain is very good at taking sound arriving at both our ears, and based on slight differences in level and phase (time) it can determine where in 3D space the sound came from.
Early attempts at this involved using a pair of microphones (to simulate our ears) to record a live performance (like an orchestra). Then these two tracks were played back through a pair of stereo speakers with the intent of trying to recreate the original performance. There have been many other methods to try and recreate a soundstage for a listener (some involve processing to try and "trick" our ears while the most common method people are used to is a 5.1 or 7.1 sound system). Whatever the method, the end goal is the same - to try and create a 3D soundstage that approximates the original.
The HomePod also tries to create a wider soundstage. I haven't been able to try one yet, so I don't know how it works, but reviews say it's pretty good at this. By definition, it's impossible for the HomePod to be mono, since you can't create a soundstage with a mono speaker. You need multiple sources in order to do this, which would qualify the HomePod as a stereo speaker. The people claiming it isn't stereo are those stuck with the limited definition that "stereo" means left & right channels with left & right speakers.Monophonic != stereophonic.But you're welcome to call a mono speaker stereo if you wish. I'm not sure why, however.My understanding is that the homepod uses a multi driver system employing both direct and reflected sound which is processed according to input from its microphones.
Just kidding. -
Apple's MacBook butterfly switch keyboards target of second class action complaint
As others must have said in the 200 comments of the previous article on the subject, Apple has seriously to reconsider its thinness pursuit. Having to shell out 700$ and waste half a several K$ laptop to repair a keyboard key is pure non sense. Apple's balance between aesthetics and maintainability seems completely out of the way in this case, quite badly... -
Hands on: Tighten up the creep of Menubar apps in macOS with Bartender 3