Every year, the calculus of choosing which iPhone to get feels increasingly frustrating. Do you opt for the standard iPhone? Do you splurge for the latest and greatest Pro model, something that might take two years to pay off completely? Or should you just buy a slightly older used or refurbished model to get the best deal possible? And of course, there's always the safest bet: Save your money and keep your current phone for as long as possible.
After sitting with Apple's announcements for a day, one thing has become clear: The plain $799 iPhone 16 is a pretty solid deal, at least compared to basic iPhones from the last few years. It actually has a new processor, Apple's A18, instead of reusing an older chip. It brings over the Action button from the iPhone 15 Pro and it also has Apple's new camera button. The iPhone 16 is also relatively future-proof since it supports Apple Intelligence, something that doesn't work on the non-Pro iPhone 15 and older models.
Apple
While the $999 iPhone 16 Pro has an additional camera and supports more powerful photography and filmmaking features, the line between that device and the standard iPhone 16 is blurrier than ever before.
It certainly makes more sense to invest in the iPhone 16 today, instead of the poor, beleaguered iPhone SE. That device sports an aging A15 chip, the tiny 4.7-inch screen of yore and it still costs $429 like it did in 2022. It's rumored that we'll see a new iPhone SE sometime next year, but the current model is simply a terrible option in Apple's current lineup.
If you don't care about Apple Intelligence and you'd like to replace an older device, you can currently find a refurbished iPhone 15 on Amazon and elsewhere between $500 and $600. But really, if you're willing to shell out that much money for a used device with a limited warranty, it might make more sense to grab an iPhone 16 and pay it off over time via your carrier. Trade-in deals can also shave off a significant chunk of a new phone's price. Verizon, for example, is currently offering $800 off a Pixel 9 or iPhone 15 when you swap out an older device.
To be clear, all of the preceding advice only applies if you need to replace a trashed iPhone, or you’re excited to play with Apple Intelligence. Judging from the latest rumors, we’ll likely see an ultra-thin iPhone model next year (similar to the latest iPad Pro), so it might just make sense to hold onto your existing device. And don’t forget, Apple’s AI features won’t be immediately available at launch — you’ll have to wait until an October update for the first batch of features, and Siri won’t get all of its new smarts until the first half of 2025.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/its-a-good-year-to-buy-the-vanilla-iphone-16-and-avoid-the-se-at-all-costs-192919611.html?src=rss
In this bonus episode, Devindra and Engadget Contributing Reporter Kris Holt break down everything new (and not so new) in the iPhone 16 lineup. Is Apple Intelligence alone enough to entice iPhone owners to upgrade? Does anyone actually need the camera button? And why are we so intrigued by the Apple Watch Series 10 (which is undoubtedly the most interesting product Apple launched today)?
Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you've got suggestions or topics you'd like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcast, Engadget News!
Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Kris Holt Producer: Ben Ellman Music: Dale North and Terrence O'Brien
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/engadget-podcast-the-apple-watch-series-10-was-the-star-of-the-iphone-16-launch-222416888.html?src=rss
Apple is giving every iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro model brand new chips, instead of just using last year's hardware in its cheaper phones. The company unveiled the A18 and A18 Pro chips at the iPhone 16 launch event today, and as you'd expect, they're built with Apple Intelligence in mind. The chips offers more memory and a new 16-core Neural Engine, in addition to some incremental performance boosts over older models. More so than the past few years — where you could point to new camera lenses or hardware tweaks as a reason to get the new iPhone — the chip is the key selling point for the iPhone 16 lineup.
Other than last year's iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, older iPhones can't run Apple Intelligence features like the revamped Siri, Genmoji and integrated ChatGPT search. (Anyone who splurged for those higher end iPhones chose wisely, as there's little reason to upgrade.) AI workloads require plenty of RAM to juggle large language models, so that alone disqualifies the iPhone 15 and 15 Plus, which only had 6GB of RAM on the A16 chip (a holdover from the iPhone 14 Pro). The iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, on the other hand, featured 8GB of RAM with the A17 Pro chip.
The A18 chip, along with thermal design optimizations, helps the iPhone 16 achieve 30 percent faster sustained gaming performance, according to Apple. And just like the A17 Pro last year, the new chip supports hardware accelerated ray tracing, which helps it deliver more realistic lighting in some titles. Apple also revealed that Honor of Kings: World will be coming to iPhones next year.
Apple's A18 Pro goes a step further than the A18, delivering up to 15 percent faster speeds than the A17 Pro, as well as 2x faster hardware-accelerated ray tracing. Notably, the A18 Pro also uses 20 percent less power than the A17 Pro. All of that hardware isn't just meant for Apple Intelligence, it also powers the complex new photography features in the iPhone 16 Pro's cameras.
Apple
Apple's older strategy of using the previous year's chips on the iPhone and iPhone Plus made sense. Those devices didn't require the demanding camera processing of the Pro models, which were entirely geared towards power users. Apple could cut manufacturing costs and still deliver a solid user experience for iPhone owners with older chips. (Even though it debuted in 2022, the A16 chip in the iPhone 15 is still very capable today.)
But now that Apple is centering the iPhone experience around Apple Intelligence, a family-wide spec bump isn't too surprising. And even if you're not excited about Apple's AI offerings (which they'll never actually call AI), it's nice to have some more RAM in the base iPhone line.
What the Car? is a celebration of gaming through pure creativity, unfettered by the trappings of narrative logic. It isn't as wildly surprising as What the Golf?, and it doesn't have the VR immersion of What the Bat?, but like those previous two games, it still delivers more charm and whimsy than you'll see in most other titles. Why does the car have legs, you ask? Shut up and play.
As we learned from What the Golf?, the developers at Triband Games specialize in subverting your expectations. So while your main character is indeed a car, you won't actually be racing on four wheels over boring old tracks. Your car sprouts legs early on, and that alone teaches you to expect the unexpected. Every level you play twists the weirdness a bit further: You'll get long legs; you'll get a rocket pack and springy legs; you'll be transformed into a soccer ball.
What the Car?escalates its gameplay ideas to levels of sheer absurdity, but that's what makes it so great. After playing as a soccer ball for a bit, a few stages transformed into massive foosball tables. The game didn't need to pause and explain the changes or tell me which buttons to press. I intuited that the car's action button flipped the kickers, and my brain quickly remapped itself around foosball rules. This experience might be a little frustrating for those unfamiliar with the glory of tabletop soccer, but the game effectively uses failure as a teaching tool.
After debuting on Apple Arcade last year, What the Car? is now available to PC players on Steam. And before you ask, yes, it does make for a truly perfect portable Steam Deck experience. While it's lush with a vivacious aesthetic and cartoonish characters, the game doesn't require advanced graphics hardware. (Its minimum specs? A mere 2.6GHz Intel Quad Core chip, 2GB of RAM and an 11-year-old GeForce GT 750M mobile GPU.)
Triband
For the most part, levels in What the Car? aren't too difficult, but if you want more of a challenge you can try to get gold trophies by completing stages faster. That carrot was enough to make me replay stages multiple times. There's also a hidden collectible card in every stage, as well as other secrets.
While Triband Games claims you’ll be able to complete What the Car?’s core stages in three to five hours, it estimates it’ll take another nine to 12 to get all of the secrets and gold trophies. There are also user-generated levels to consider (most of which are truly punishing), as well as a level builder for your own creations.
Triband
These days, I'm often playing games side-by-side with my five year old daughter Sophia, who in the past few months has become absolutely Minecraft-pilled. (Is there some sort of Minecraft support group for tired parents who never got into it? Someone please hook me up.) She ended up sacrificing some of her limited gaming time just to watch me play What the Car?. She was thrilled when I was able to reach gold on particularly tough stages, and she couldn't stop laughing at the car's silly transformations and the damage it would inevitably inflict on bears populating the levels.
I could relate to her sense of awe. Through its whimsy and delirious inventiveness, What the Car? is a testament to the power of games. It's something I felt at the same age, when I first encountered Super Marios Bros. on the NES. I didn't question why mushrooms made Mario get stronger, or why I could go down pipes. My daughter never questioned why the car had legs, or why the rules of the game kept changing. She was just thrilled to be along for the ride.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/what-the-car-hits-steam-and-its-still-one-of-the-best-games-youll-play-this-year-153007118.html?src=rss
Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you've got suggestions or topics you'd like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcast, Engadget News!
Topics
Cherlynn and MrMobile review the Pixel 9 Pro Fold – 1:14
IFA News: Intel’s promising Core Ultra 200V chips, Acer’s controller-embedded laptop, and a trio of interesting devices from Honor – 38:25
Brazil blocks X entirely in an escalation of a legal fight with Elon Musk – 49:59
Former OpenAI exec Ilya Sutskever raises $1B for new AI startup – 52:49
U.S. DOJ charges Russia Today employees over Kremlin-linked influencer campaign – 54:17
reMarkable Paper Pro 3, now in glorious color – 55:19
Sony’s pulls the plug on its big swing team shooter Concord 2 weeks after launch – 56:59
Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Cherlynn Low Guest: Michael Fisher Producer: Ben Ellman Music: Dale North and Terrence O'Brien
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/engadget-podcast-pixel-9-pro-fold-review-with-mrmobile--ifa-2024-113042321.html?src=rss
If you want a new Surface Pro with 5G, you'll have to order it through Microsoft's commercial store for business customers. Today, the company announced that 5G versions of the Surface Pro 10 and Surface Pro (Copilot+) for Business will be available on September 26. Last month, Microsoft also kicked off pre-orders for the Wi-Fi Surface Pro and Surface Laptop for Business, which will both start shipping on September 10th. And before you ask, yes these are pretty much the same devices Microsoft launched for consumers in June. The difference now is that IT workers will be able to buy them in bulk via the company's enterprise resellers.
Still, the 5G news could be compelling for anyone who wants instant internet access while travelling around the US. And, at the very least, both the 5G-equipped Surface Pros for Business will be far more capable than the ill-fated Surface Pro 9. That machine was powered by a slow Qualcomm chip and also didn't have the advantage of Microsoft's recent Windows on Arm upgrades, which includes a faster emulator for older apps. It's just a shame that, once again, Microsoft is stuck with an older Intel chip — the Surface Pro 10 for Business still runs the first Core Ultra chips, not the newly-announced Core Ultra 200V.
In other Surface news, Microsoft is also launching a new full-sized Surface Keyboard with a Copilot key on October 11. Surely this will make some corporate drone happy.
The Copilot+ Surface Pro for Business system will cost $1,400 with a 10-core Snapdragon X Plus, 256GB of storage and 16GB of RAM, while the Surface Pro 10 for Business will run you $1,800 with a Core Ultra 135 and the same specs. It's a good thing those machines have 5G, because you won't be storing much video on those paltry SSDs.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/microsoft-brings-5g-to-its-latest-surface-pros-for-business-110033856.html?src=rss
The new processors sport a 48 TOPS (tera operations per second) NPU (neural processing unit) for AI tasks, as well as dramatically faster performance and efficiency cores. Intel also claims its new Xe2 GPU, which is built into the chips, is 32 percent faster than the previous Core Ultra, 16 percent faster than AMD's HX 360 and a whopping 68 percent faster than Qualcomm's 12-core X Elite chip.
And since the Core Ultra 200V is an x86 processor, it doesn't have any of the app compatibility and performance issues i saw on the Snapdragon-powered Copilot+ XPS 13. The only major downside over the previous Intel XPS 13 is that you can't upgrade the new system's memory — Intel's Core Ultra 200V chips feature built-in RAM, which isn't upgradeable at all.
Outside of the new chip, Dell says this latest XPS 13 is the first laptop to feature a tandem OLED display, a technology which basically stacks two OLED panels atop each other for better brightness. The new XPS 13 should also be able to get up to 26 hours of battery life while streaming video on its 1080p+ screen.
You can pre-order the XPS 13 with Intel's Core Ultra 200V chips today starting at $1,400.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/dells-xps-13-gets-its-third-update-in-a-year-with-intels-core-ultra-200v-160055759.html?src=rss
The race to build the most compelling AI PC processors continues with the launch of Intel's Core Ultra 200V. At Computex in June, we learned these "Lunar Lake" laptop chips would feature a powerful 48 TOPS (tera operations per second) neural processing unit for AI work, and, surprisingly enough, they'd also sport up to 32GB of built-in memory for faster performance and lower power consumption. Today at Germany's IFA trade show, Intel has given us an even closer look at its next-generation AI PC hardware.
According to Intel, the Core Ultra 200V will be "the most efficient x86 processor ever," with up to 50 percent lower on-package power consumption. In addition to bringing memory directly on the chip, Intel also doubled the cache and core count (reaching 4MB and 4 cores) for its "Low Power Island," which handles less demanding work. Performance per watt has also more than doubled across general performance and gaming, thanks tot he new Xe2 built-in GPU. (One example: Intel claims the Core Ultra 200V uses 35 percent less power than the previous generation, while also getting 32 percent faster performance.)
Intel
It's clear that Intel is gunning directly for Qualcomm, whose Arm-based Snapdragon chips have traditionally been more power efficient than x86 processors. Intel even claims it has a lead in battery life. In one test performed on the same laptop model, the Core Ultra 7 268V lasted for 20.1 hours in the UL Procyon Office Productivity benchmark, compared to 18.4 hours with a Qualcomm X Elite chip. The Snapdragon system still maintained a lead in a Microsoft Teams 3x3 test, lasting 12.7 hours compared to the Intel 268V's 10.7 hours.
Intel
In practically every way, the Core Ultra 200V is a rethinking of Intel's traditional x86 processor design. For example, the company has given up on its Hyperthreading technology, which virtually allowed a single CPU core to support multiple task threads. Instead, Intel is optimizing the new chips for single-threaded performance. The company claims the Core Ultra 200V's P-cores (performance) are 14 percent faster than the last generation, and its E-cores (efficiency) are a whopping 68 percent faster.
Unlike Qualcomm's Snapdragon chips, Intel's Core Ultra 200V processors can also run legacy x86 software without any issue. There's no emulation slowdown or Arm incompatibility to worry about. While I was impressed by the Snapdragon X Elite chips on the Surface Pro and XPS 13 Copilot+ systems, Windows on Arm performance issues remains, like their inability to play games with strong anti-cheat protection like Fortnite. If you're at all worried about running older software or games, it makes sense to stick with an x86 chip for the next few years.
While the Core Ultra 200V series tops out with 8-core 8-thread processors, Intel says it's up to three times faster than its previous chips when it comes to performance per thread. And if that's not boastful enough, Intel also claims its new Xe2 GPU is 32 percent faster than before, 68 percent speedier than Qualcomm's 12-core X Elite chip and 16 percent better than AMD's HX 370. The Xe2 also adds an additional 67 TOPS of AI compute performance, in addition to the NPU's 48 TOPS.
Intel
When it comes to AI, Intel claims the Core Ultra 9 288V's NPU is 79 percent faster denoising in Adobe Lightroom compared to its previous chip. The Snapdragon X Elite 78-100, meanwhile, was 66 percent slower than Intel's last chip. As always, we'll need to do our own testing to confirm the company's figures, but it's clearly not being shy about its potential performance leads.
Intel
The Intel Core Ultra 200V family tops out with the Ultra 9 288V, which features eight cores (4P + 4E) with up to 5.1GHz Max Turbo speeds on the P cores. That model also comes stacked with hte most powerful 8-core Xe2 Arc 140V GPU and 32GB of RAM. While all of the 200V chips feature 8-cores, their respective GPU, NPU and RAM all scale down across the line. The bottom-rung Core Ultra 226V, for example, sports a 7-core Arc GPU, 40 TOPS NPU and 16GB of RAM.
Just like Apple's M-series chips, the Core Ultra 200V's built-in memory means you won't be able to upgrade your memory down the line. That's a particular shame, as we're finally easily upgradable LPCAMM2 memory making its way to notebooks. At least Intel isn't forcing anyone to permanently live with 8GB of RAM, though.
Intel Core Ultra 200V systems will be available on September 24th from major manufacturers like Dell, ASUS and Acer.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/intels-core-ultra-200v-chips-aim-for-ai-pc-dominance-160029852.html?src=rss
Apple is gearing up to launch the iPhone 16 on September 9th, so we've brought on Bloomberg's Mark Gurman to chat about his scoops around Apple's upcoming hardware. We should expect some notable additions, like a dedicated camera button, as well as slightly larger screens on the Pro models. We'll also dive into Apple's robotics efforts — does anyone really want an Apple bot rolling around their home? Finally, we'll discuss Gurman's reporting around Meta's upcoming devices: A cheaper Quest 3 model, as well as a glimpse at prototype AR glasses.
Listen below or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you've got suggestions or topics you'd like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcast, Engadget News!
Topics
2024 iPhone event preview with Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman – 0:50
Telegram CEO Pavel Durov arrested in Paris – 37:45
Razer reveals the Wolverine V3 Pro stick drift-resistant controller – 44:23
Meet Plaud’s NotePin. Another AI wearable??? – 45:07
Y2K style goes mobile with HMD’s hot pink Barbie flip phone – 48:10
Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Cherlynn Low Guest: Mark Gurman Producer: Ben Ellman Music: Dale North and Terrence O'Brien
Transcript
Devindra: What's up, Internet, and welcome back to the Engadget Podcast. I'm Senior Editor Devindra Hardawar.
Cherlynn: I'm Deputy Editor Cherlynn Low.
Devindra: This week, it is all about the iPhone 16 rumors. Apple announced the date for their, for their event. It's going to be on a Monday, surprisingly enough. September 9th
Cherlynn: Cherlynn?
Yes, September 9th Monday for the first time, which is super exciting. It's, well, for the first time in a while, I guess.
Devindra: In a long time. Typically, it's like a Tuesday. But yes, we have a special guest on to talk about those. And yeah, we've got some news as well. But we've got a lot of rumors to dive into.
Before all that folks, if you're enjoying the show, please be sure to subscribe to us on iTunes or your podcaster of choice. Leave us a review on iTunes and drop us an email at podcast@engadget.Com. Also Thursday mornings, we typically do a live stream of the show, typically around 10 30 AM Eastern or 10 45 this week.
It's a 12 for our special guest. And that special guest is Mr. Mark Gurman from Bloomberg. Hey, Mark, how's it going?
Mark: Good. Thank you so much for having me. And for the time adjustment,
Devindra: it's all good. Thank you so much. Like we can, it's good for me. Don't worry. Good for sure. Lynn. We're in the East coast, so it's always tough when we have to get West coast guests on, but we appreciate it.
And yeah, Mark, for a bit of background, you're a chief correspondent at Bloomberg. I think people typically see a lot of iPhone and other Apple rumors throughout the year. And it turns out you're often the source of that. So. Can you just give us a quick I don't know, a quick update on how things are going on your end at Bloomberg.
Mark: Yeah, things are going great. I mean, this is busy season right now going into September. Obviously, we have the Apple launch on the 9th. There'll probably be some more announcements later in the year, particularly on the Mac side. It's been an interesting year for Apple. Obviously, the Vision Pro launch at the beginning of February.
You had WWDC where they, you know, sort of introduced their Apple intelligence, their, their AI features. But in terms of the, their news and the reporting, I'm as interested and focused on, on breaking Apple news as ever. For those not familiar, I was at nine to five Mac with Seth and Zach and, and, and chance and crew for seven years.
Through, through many of my, my early years working on this type of stuff. And then I started up Bloomberg in 2016. I've now been there eight years, actually, as of this month. And it's been terrific and I'm looking forward to the next. Eight years of reporting on Apple.
Cherlynn: Happy anniversary.
Devindra: Anniversary. Congrats. And you have not really sLowd down at all, Mark. Like here's the thing. I remember when you were at nine to five Mac and I was at other sites too, being like, who's this kid reporting all this cool stuff? You're still, you're still going. And we've actually got a lot of details around.
The upcoming phones, we're expecting the iPhone sixteens at this upcoming Apple event, can you give us a quick rundown? What do you expect? Because it doesn't sound like this is going to be a particularly, I guess, major change on any, on any of these phones.
Mark: Yeah, that's right. So the big highlights, and if you're looking for major changes, probably you're not going to find in the phone.
You're going to find more so on the AirPods and the Apple watch, but I'll start with the iPhone. So per usual four new iPhones. The big change will be on the pro models. So two major things to look out on the pro models. You're going to have slightly larger screens, right? These are not big screen size increases.
These are less than 10%. But they should be noticeable. I'm not sure they're going to be notable, but they certainly will be noticeable. The other thing is going to be a camera button. So it's a dedicated button on the right side of the phone next to the power button. And if you've ever used a DSLR, the idea is that it's going to function pretty similarly to that.
So they're taking an idea that's existed in the marketplace for decades now and bringing it to the phone as part of their idea where they want everyone to use an iPhone as their camera and try to disrupt the standalone camera market. Who knows if that will happen, but this is another push in that direction.
And the third thing is going to be Apple intelligence. Now, as I've written, I think that Apple intelligence is well integrated. It's prototypical Apple. Of course they did it this way, but they are so behind the competition in terms of the overall technology and the use cases in the implementation.
I think Apple intelligence in its first incarnation is sort of limited. The summaries and notifications are really nice and helpful. These are not things that should, or probably will drive sales to any extraordinary extent. But. I guess it's a good thing that they have it implemented to and perhaps only perhaps I wouldn't say for a certain this will set the foundation for better AI features that are more on par with the competition.
I mean, I'd say at this point, Apple is still at least two or three good years behind Google in terms of their AI. Offerings what's been most interesting to me is I think a lot of people have been hesitant to be open about that. I I've seen in terms of the coverage of apple intelligence for the most part, I mean you guys have done a good job, but for the most part i've seen So much positive commentary nothing critical about it, but Once you start using it, I think a lot of people are going to say, where is it?
What is this?
Devindra: Yeah, there's not much there. We've done a bunch of testing on it too. Sherilyn, what are, what are your thoughts on I guess where Apple intelligence is now, and also your thoughts about the camera button, which I guess is going to be the big highlight. Yeah.
Cherlynn: I was going to ask Mark, when you mentioned actually the camera button and that you think it's a you know, meant to disrupt the DSLR industry and for people to kind of ditch that and switch over to their iPhone.
I'm curious, is that where you think? Apple is You know, aiming, or not the other smartphone cameras in the game, right? Do you think Apple might be looking at Google with the Pixel line, where they have extremely good mobile photography, whether it's in hardware or, more importantly, software for them.
Is that where Apple's head's at? Well, in terms of DSLR cameras, right? People are not buying DSLR cameras for the button, they're buying it for the gigantic lenses and the incredible zoom and color and raw photography capabilities you're able to get, right? Those are cameras that could top, you know, 10, 000 a piece if you combine the body with lenses and other accessories, right?
Mark: But I think Apple is trying to bring some of that feeling down market to the thousand dollar plus phones. And I think that's what the button's going to do. I think that having that button there is going to inspire people to take more pictures and use the camera more which in turn is going to mean people are needing to buy iPhones with more storage capacity and subscribe to iCloud plans with more storage capacity.
So it's a true clear win for Apple. And I'm not saying that's why they're doing it. But that is certainly something that they are not unhappy about in terms of Apple versus Google and mobile photography. You've seen Google really take a lead here because of their deep integration of AI into taking pictures.
Apple is using, you know, machine learning when it comes to, you know, photography and stuff. They've integrated some AI into the camera app and into the photos app, but I think Apple is pretty reliant. On the hardware capabilities of their cameras in terms of the telephoto lenses and the setup there.
It's actually really amazing I saw someone take a iphone 6 That was the first iphone with a camera bump and put it in a case for a pro max right one of the latest pro max phones and the size difference between the camera array on the current phone versus the The little camera on the iphone It's hilarious, the, the, the size difference, right?
And I feel like technology has a way of going in one direction and over time going back in the other direction. So, you know, 5 10 years from now, I mean, I would be surprised if you are reversing back to, you know, a single lens or smaller lenses that have the capabilities of the large lenses today. Obviously that's a physics problem, but probably one that some people are dead set on solving.
Devindra: I think like specifically around the camera button to like, first of all, you described a really interesting, like virtuous cycle for Apple, Mark. Like basically, yes, more pictures, you need more storage, bigger iCloud, like it's all, and you're more reliant on the photos app and all the changes you're getting from that too.
But I also kind of feel like maybe more so than the 10, 000 DSLR is we are seeing. All the like hipster love right now around like pointed shoots, like 1, 500, the Fuji films, those like really cool looking retro point and shoots, but really it's, it's within the same price range of what you pay for an iPhone.
So now maybe rather than getting a standalone camera, people will have more of that feel. Let's talk about that camera button, by the way. Cause I think from your reporting, this is not like a physical button. This is a capacitive button and also may have some some aspect of like maybe zooming or something.
Mark: There's some aspect to it. That's physical. And there's some aspect to it. That's that's capacitive. So it'll push in physically, but then it has a capacitive layer on top to be able to swipe back and forth to zoom in. To use that as your zoom. That's,
Cherlynn: that's what I heard. So, so I heard that yeah, you can mimic that like half press to focus sort of feature that DSLRs get.
I'm personally really excited about this feature and that's why I kind of like, I'm engaging you a more on this. I also think that our chat seems to be interested in this feature. For example I believe someone in the chat was well, Kevin says the name Kevin says, says Sony's cameras are the best as Apple still use Sony sensors.
And Tom Rogers asked if the camera button would be a programmable camera button or is it dedicated? And I think it's dedicated to start, but can you program other features in?
Mark: So in terms of the, the camera button, so first, oh, on the Sony thing, yes, I believe Apple is still using Sony lenses. That's one, two, I believe there's going to be a way for developers to tap into it.
So if you use a third party camera app, you'll be able to use that as well. In terms of additional features, I'm sure there'll be some customization settings, but normally Apple takes a while to roll out additional customization on new hardware features. It's going to be interesting to me how many people need to change their action button from the camera to something else.
By the way, does anyone use the action button for anything other than mute? I used it for Mute,
Cherlynn: proudly. Still Mute, still
Devindra: Mute baby. Yeah.
Cherlynn: I do think the action button is like, the potential of it is powerful with the shortcuts thing. But, and I have read like every now and then I see or come across a power user describing how they use the action button.
So I think it's good that there is that functionality and that they didn't get rid of the Mute function. Let's be honest, you set
Mark: it up to some crazy shortcuts array. Nine out of 10 times, it's not going to work anyways. I've tried setting up with shortcuts. That's completely unreliable. If you ask me I think there's a lot of overlap between the new control center, the action button and the lock screen controls, and then you're going to have this camera button.
So you now are going to have a few softer components and two harder components that essentially do the same thing. So they're just throwing a lot at the user right now. I think that's probably a good
Devindra: sign. Yeah, it's probably a good sign is what I'm thinking because Apple for so long has been so like the iPhone has felt hermetically sealed, right?
While Android is this like free for all zone of do whatever the hell you want with your lock screen and your home screen and everything. And now it's well, now you're getting more customizations, but you're also getting like physical buttons that do different things. I have not met a normal human who actually uses the action button.
Aside from being the mute button. So I'm still using his mute. Like to me, that's the most convenient thing. Cause I have to do that often several times an hour. If I'm going into a call, but also I want to be available for kids stuff or my wife or anything. So that it's still the most useful. Let me give you one.
It is funny. One thing.
Mark: I use it for do not disturb. So I, I would argue that I'm still a normal human being because I would say, do not disturb and mute are in the same family. But maybe there's a little twist there.
Devindra: It is funny how we're just, we're talking about a single button on this new iPhone, right?
You mentioned slightly bigger screens, but it really is. This is kind of maybe just an off year where there really isn't that much else to look forward to. Last year kind of felt like that too, but we also got the year before titanium in the year before, and the year before, and I know from your reporting, we're expecting, we're expecting next year, maybe a little more.
But it is funny, like last year, I think the most interesting thing was the titanium case on the pro models, which is what was enough to bump me up to a pro max, like then the pro max felt lighter and easier to use all day. Whereas I hated the max phones before. A lot of incremental changes, I guess, from Apple.
Nothing huge.
Mark: Isn't it so strange? There was a time, certainly in my 9 to 5 Mac days, where you were getting pretty significant annual overhauls to the phones. At the very least you were getting pretty significant overhauls every two years. Then they went to this three year design cycle, and now it feels like they're on a four or five year design cycle.
What's the deal?
Cherlynn: Do you think, yeah, it's like a maturity point? Like we used to have obviously the S years and whatnot, but yeah, we're seeing We're seemingly at the candy bar form factor to have reached like nothing, everything's refinements. And then where they're experimenting elsewhere outside of Apple is in foldables, maybe.
Devindra: I think of a typical life cycle of a PC, like a laptop or something is four to five years. And I think phones have just gotten to that point where they are now are literally our most personal computers and the hardware is good enough. The software is good enough. Like the cameras are good enough. Like I'm, I'm not.
Can upgrade and nothing from the rumors. I've heard this year. That makes me think I should be upgrading, but that's good for everybody. I guess if the hardware can actually withstand 2 to 3 to 4 years of work. My mom is still running an iPhone 8 and she really likes it. So, you know,
Cherlynn: wait, she still has a home button.
Devindra: She still has a home button. She does. She does. And she likes it. And she also doesn't do that much with her phone. So, but it still runs. Whereas I know I've tested like Android phones after two to three years. Those things just disintegrate in your hand. So I, yeah, I don't know there. Anything else you want to add about like what you're expecting hardware wise this year, Mark?
So
Mark: I believe the camera button on the phone will be exclusive to the pro models, but then the action button was going to go from the pro models to all the models. For this year watches and air pods. So let me start with the air pods, the air pods, sort of an interesting lineup. You have three models right now of the non headphones.
You have the base, you have the mid tier, which is the third gen. And then you have the pro second gen at the top. The low end is from 2019. So it's five years ago. They're getting, they're aging a little bit for that price point compared to some of the competition. Then you have the mid tier and that's an interesting one because it's more expensive than the entry level, but really not that much better.
And then it's only a little bit cheaper than the pro model, but much worse. And so they know that the third gen has not sold as well as they had anticipated. Entry level is not as competitive as it was three years ago. So they're going to replace both and release two fourth gen models, a low end fourth gen and a high end fourth gen, both below the AirPods pro and the high end fourth gen is going to have ANC.
And a similar case to the AirPods pro with the fine, my, and the speaker and what have you, and then the low end is going to have similar features to the AirPods pro, but without ANC. And so I think that's going to give a huge boost to the AirPods line. And I think it's going to make it even more popular watches is, is, is interesting.
So you have that 10th gen or a series 10 watch coming. That will be a bigger case, a thinner design, bigger displays. So I think that is going to be a, the fan favorite of the watch line this year and whatever new health features and chip and what have you that come to the 10 are also going to come with the ultra three the ultra three looks the same as the ultra one and two, but that's still a pretty fresh design.
Devindra: The watch, just from what you're talking about, Mark, like that is the thing where I'm like, I would, I would love to have, I said, I'm still on series four. I don't use it as much as I would like to, but I would be compelled by something a little fresher, newer, thinner, certainly. Sherilyn, like any thoughts on the, these things?
Cause I want to ask about the robotics stuff too.
Cherlynn: I know I know. I mean, personally interested to hear more about the Apple watch stuff. I mean, the AirPods stuff seems. self explanatory to me. So yeah, that's really, that's the watch thing
Mark: is interesting because blood oxygen, very important. Apple is trying to get that feature back through the court system and it's already been a year. They could probably settle and get that back even pretty soon. I don't anticipate that coming back as part of these new models. So there is a scenario where these new models ship without blood oxygen. Not good.
They had been pretty far down the line of bringing blood pressure to the watch this year. I have not heard anything about that recently. And so I would say there's a chance that it didn't make the cut. I had heard there were some major issues in terms of regulatory and testing. Also, to be honest, I didn't think it was that compelling because it didn't give you an actual systolic and diastolic reading.
It gave you sort of a. Comparison and some sort of what your baseline is for the blood pressure. So it wasn't that powerful, but if you could have a watch that tells you, you know, you're in a state of hypertension, I think that would make a lot more people aware of high blood pressure and the impact of that.
The other thing is sleep apnea, which I do expect to still make the cut.
Devindra: That'd be, I feel if Apple or anybody made a device that just helped with snoring. It would save lives. It would save relationships. It's also like relate to sleep apnea too. Like there, there are some startup y gadgets that do that stuff, but also my wife would really like an Apple
Mark: CPAP machine,
Devindra: like an Apple CPAP or just something, something that like rocks you to your side.
If you're wearing your, your Apple watch and it's you're snoring. to the side, buddy. There are a couple of devices use all sorts of things like that. It is interesting. We are almost 10 years from the launch of the very first AirPods. That was 2016. So this stuff has, yeah, this stuff has been around for so long.
And I think a lot of people are thinking about what is new for Apple? Last year we got the vision of pro. I think it was really interesting device. Go check out like my coverage, your coverage, Mark. But it's not for everybody that is like more of a longterm view. Another longterm view thing you've been writing about is like robots and Apple looking into robotics potentially first off with a home pod that has like a screen that may articulate in some way.
What do you, what are your thoughts on like Apple pursuing this, especially after something like the Apple car? You know, they spent a decade on it billions of dollars and that kind of went nowhere for them.
Mark: The robotics effort is still very early. Actually the origin of the robotics effort was within the Apple car team in 2020.
And after they shut down the project, they decided to refocus much of the people who were working on. Exclusively to the robotics effort. So you have the first thing is a table. They call it a tabletop robot internally. And it's basically an iPad. A giant iPad on a robotic neck. That can, can move around.
Also, they're exploring, this is still very early a mobile robot that can roam your home like an Amazon Astro. They're trying to figure out what you do about multi floor homes. I don't know if they'll ever figure that out the bigger picture. And this is even earlier. And this is probably 10, 15 year horizon, if ever is a humanoid robot.
And so that is definitely something they're taking a look at as well. And it makes sense that this is going to be the next area for them, especially if you want a hardware sort of component to the, to the AI push, but like they need to get the AI up to snuff before you can really start thinking seriously about.
The hardware side. Now, why this makes sense, a mobile, our cars, a self driving car is essentially a gigantic robot. That's rolling itself on, on city streets, but you have to be accurate. 100 percent of the time, are you going to risk lies? If you have basically a mini car that is designed to roam through your house or your office or what have you, you're not risking killing people.
And so if that thing works 75 percent of the time, it's not maybe the most ideal, but you're not talking about any real risk here. You're not dealing with regulatory. You're not dealing with insurance. You're not dealing with human lives. So, I think that going down this road, even in an ex or even if it's just an exploratory method, I think is a positive for the company in terms of looking for longterm.
Devindra: I feel like we've all been, I mean, just from science fiction alone, but the dream of a humanoid robot, you know, that is somehow AI powered has been a thing forever. I guess it would be silly for Apple not to start taking it seriously. Do we think a an iPad essentially with an articulating arm, it does that count as a robot?
I guess the hydraulics or whatever you need for that, they consider it something
Mark: who knows when they market this thing, what they're going to consider it. From a technology standpoint, from a development standpoint, this is a robotics effort. I believe it's going to, if they move forward with it, which they are moving forward with it, if it ultimately hits the market, I would anticipate a release in 26 or 27.
They're struggling with price. They want to get down to a thousand. So I can't imagine how expensive it is right now if they shipped it. And it's amazing. They're just. Going to just come out with these multi thousand dollar products that are out of people's budgets at this point. I mean, between the Vision Pro and the tabletop robot, it's a lot of, they're going to add up to the price of what a car was.
Devindra: Yeah. Yeah. Totally. And I feel like that, that gets to like the quintessential Apple problem. I think at one point I wrote about the was it just the wheels for one of the Mac pros at one point? Or that, no, the stand for one of the studio displays costs like a thousand dollars. And there were people who were joking about the wheels too.
Like this is, this is Apple not operating in normal human world, I guess. Yeah.
Mark: Hey, I don't think this is going to happen for a number of reasons. I still think Apple should make a TV. Yeah. Totally.
Devindra: You sound like you're describing what is essentially a tabletop TV that can follow you and move around and what a lot of people don't buy TVs now, like despite TVs being so cheap.
I see people huddling around their laptops or their tablets. I know that is their movie time, their movie night. So Apple made the right decision.
Mark: Not building the tv but I think as a consumer and I think if you know, there's someone who's willing to spend on A tv for the living room. I think apple could do something just absolutely so much better than the competition from a business standpoint It makes less than zero cents.
It makes negative sense to go into the TV market and just a few profit on TVs is ridiculously low. You also have the logistics complexity of shipping TVs. You also have the upgrade cycles of TVs. Like I'm a huge tech guy, as you know, I'll buy the new iPhone, every Apple product, but when they come out my TV in my living room is the best.
Is a 2018. I don't think I've ever had a piece of technology that's six years old before. And I would guess, I would guess that I'm going to have that TV for a lifespan of the TV itself of 10 to 15 years.
Devindra: Yeah. Until it dies. Yeah. You
Mark: can't be Apple and release products that are on a 10 to 15 year upgrade cycle.
Absolutely. Well, I guess just a nightmare for them.
Devindra: But it would be really cool. It would be cool. Even Sony though. Sony, like a company that is synonymous with TVs has been trying to back out of the TV market, essentially, or how much is devoted to it. So not a great business. Yeah.
Mark: You make a good point about the way that TV not only has changed in terms of moving from the box to streaming, we could talk about more, more about that if you want, but moving from which devices you're using it on, people gathering around their laptops, their iPads. You know, I watch. TV on the, on the, on the vision pro or on your phone or whatever. And so. That way of people consume this content has moved to this, to the fact that, you know what, I mean, how often do you even power on the TVs?
So it, it does depend. I almost wonder if they would, I feel like Apple would explore, I feel like the ultimate endpoint for something like the vision of pro could be holographics. Cause that is that interface could easily apply to some sort of like holographic type of device. I don't know. But.
Devindra: Projectors are things we've reviewed and we've talked about a lot. Anker, the company Anker has like really good portable projectors. I personally have an ultra short throw, which is just a little, little box that makes a 100 inch plus image. I could see Apple like doing something like that. You know, like a little device that does not Yeah, interesting.
Yeah, I could see it. Like ultra short throws are great and Anker has stuff like their nebula projectors, which are like little, they're like 500 bucks, but they have batteries, you can move them around and make like a nice big image wherever. So there is potential to change how we, how we think of it, like our entertainment devices.
We're probably gonna be running short on time soon. Sherlin, I want to know Apple AI stuff from what you've tested, from what you've heard from Mark. Like, how are you feeling about that? And what should we expect like over the next few years? You think, or what would you like to see? I think to Mark's point earlier, that Apple isn't breaking a lot of new ground in this space at all, and the features that Apple has shown off have been things we've seen elsewhere before.
Cherlynn: I think some of the integration is interesting. We still haven't seen things like Genmoji or the image playground. But I will say what Apple has done differently, which I've already mentioned earlier when we talked about it during WWDC, is the privacy approach, right? That private compute cloud core the white paper they release for everyone to see Google knows it has to catch up on this front.
And sorry to keep bringing Google in, but that's You know, where I have a bit more insight. And I know that I think recently, Google may have published something similar with its Chrome security and bug bounty type of thing. They really want to focus on that. It seems like Chrome is really, and also alongside Google.
The Gemini AI launch and news with the Pixel phones recently. There was some mention there of how everything is supposed to be way more secure. They haven't gone as far as Apple, I don't believe, to create a whole new like infrastructure thing to communicate all the Apple intelligence requests.
But I think with Apple having focused on that and Apple proving that there is a way to do this the right way, at least with the privacy approach from the start, It gives people like Microsoft and Google, no excuse to be leaking your confidential information to the public all the time when it's processing your AI stuff.
So that's where I'm excited for Apple intelligence, like the nitty gritty, like each feature thing. I'm not super, I don't couldn't. Care less about Siri with the glowing borders. Really? It looks pretty in that, but
Devindra: have you seen, yeah. You've seen it on your device, right? That's the thing. I get a, and that's what Apple's selling with this new event.
Like a, the, the glow is on or something. It's glow time. It's glow time. Whenever I activate the new Siri and my entire phone glows up, it is just like a little pang of oh, this is good feeling. This is I love this ey. I love the way this thing feels better than the little orb that would get in the way of everything.
So it's just lipstick goodbye from it. It's just lipstick. Yeah.
Mark: And on a pig or on a
Cherlynn: whatever is underneath, you know what I mean?
Mark: I'm not going to say Siri's a pig because that would be rude. But I'm going to say that Siri is behind the times. One thing I'll say is I completely agree that the privacy thing on Apple intelligence is a huge win.
It's a huge differentiator and it's great. I care a lot about it personally. I know there's a lot of people who care about it personally, but if you look at this stuff on a global scale, what percentage of consumers care or know about privacy when it comes to AI? How many people use Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and all these services and such people who are of a younger generation just don't know, just don't care.
And so I think it's important. It's a huge marketing focus, but it's also like a real thing within Apple philosophically. But I think at the end of the day. People just want the best technology they can. They want it to do what they want it to do. And so I think people, I think consumers have shown time and time again, that they are willing to give up a bit of their privacy for better functionality, such as, you know, using Facebook, right?
You're, you're paying for that social network access that a couple billion people use. You're paying for it with your data and 2 billion people show that they're very happy to do that. And so I think the privacy stuff is great. I love it. I wouldn't want to use something that is not private. But this is not about me or you guys, right?
Or even the people watching this right now. This is about the 7 billion people on this planet who is, who ultimately at some point are hopefully the addressable market for these technologies. And what percentage of those people care? I would say it's slim.
Cherlynn: Yeah. I think it's funny, to your point, Mark, that if you, if you flip it a little bit, right?
Like the, the, the iPhone market is the exact consumer that doesn't really care as much about this, whereas the Android consumer tends to be a bit more on top of like tech trends and privacy and maybe like specs and, and all of that stuff. And then that's where maybe a privacy would be more important. a bit bigger of a concern or at least something they're aware of to start.
And it's, it's just funny for me to see that's the flip side. But again,
Devindra: there are a lot of answers is the thing too. Like a lot of Android users, the people buying the cheapest phones that they find. I will just say, I am
Cherlynn: me and my parents, like I talked in a previous episode about like my parents use face recognition everywhere to unlock the doors in Singapore.
That's what happens. And. I am one of those people that's happy to give up slight, like a slight amount of privacy in exchange for a better feature. But yeah, Mark. I
Mark: mean, what you see with the difference between Apple and Google is you have one company who doesn't build anything from the start, unless privacy is very much integrated from the very beginning.
You're building from the get go around what the privacy approaches, right? And then you have another company where you're building it and then you're going to tack on the privacy implementation after, and that I think is what the big difference that you see. And I think the age old question when it comes to AI, and when it comes to Apple in particular, is what sort of negative impact does that privacy stance have on the functionality?
If you ask Apple, they're going to tell you it doesn't have an impact, but I think it clearly does. But I would say it's having, every year when they roll out these new features, it's having less of an impact. While the privacy stuff is getting better, while the consumer features are getting better. And so my hope as a consumer is we get to a point where Apple intelligence is really good in three years and It's really really driving the way you use these phones and the privacy Story is there and there would be no way for the privacy to be as good as it is with Apple if it didn't start out this way, just
Devindra: my view.
It also requires a bunch of companies making mistakes. I feel like Microsoft is the one that wanted to just run with this as much as it could, as quickly as it could that partnership with open AI co pilot and everything key co pilot features. Let's just go guys. Let's launch it and egg on their face.
And it's something that I think they're, they're working hard to like a deal with, but also, It is weird how those were just some very obvious privacy issues that they just walked right into. Certainly big heads up to Google and to Apple and everybody like the things you should probably be looking out for, you know, Go ahead, please.
Cherlynn: No, no, no, it's fine. I feel like we're really in the zone here, right? We're like really deep in our fields, but okay, so that mine's a quick one. One. Like to your point, I think privacy may not impact people so much, but it's good that they think about it from the ground up. Similarly, Apple is Apple and maybe Microsoft too are both very like conscious of accessibility from the ground up.
Like they don't build it without having considered that it seems like, at least from my understanding of the accessibility teams, as opposed to Google seems to be like, yes, also from the ground up, but it feels less crucial to them. So anyway, I think these are even if something like accessibility may not seem outwardly to have a huge impact on the day to day billions of consumers, that is important that they still consider it from the beginning of the product creation process.
Most definitely.
Devindra: Go ahead, Mark, and I want to ask you about Meta too while we have you.
Mark: The iPhone is such a money printing machine, and that money printing machine is never going to stop, even if they, Release the same phone year after year, but just change the number. And I'm talking about actually doing so in a scenario that will never happen where they tell consumers, this is a new phone when it's not, I saw this skip.
I don't remember if it was Kimmel or store or whatever. They went around Hollywood Boulevard in LA. And they handed people the current iPhone or the iPhone from last year. And they said, Hey, you want to see the new iPhone? And they handed it to people, people looked in there, like the most amazed they've thing they've ever seen in their whole life.
And it's the same phone they have in their pocket. And they were led to believe it's a new phone. There's nothing different about it. So point being the brand is so strong. The products are so good already. And they're so relied upon that there is no need for Apple to take major risks. The downside to that is you're at a point where Apple is a company that's not evolving and reinventing itself.
And at some point they need to meet in the middle. How do you get to a place where You're reinventing yourself, you're evolving, you're innovating, but you're not risking the status quo and the popularity of your current products. And I think just for next year, and then we can move on to whatever else you want to move on to, I think they're going to thread that needle.
I don't think they're going to change the base iPhone much or the pro models to a gigantic degree, but instead of releasing that fourth iPhone model, that's the mini or the plus that nobody wants. Not nobody very few people comparatively You're going to have an ultra slim phone That's they're going to throw out a new design and try something new there And see if that sticks and eventually move it to that direction So I think what they're realizing is you gotta you gotta keep your breadwinners.
Then you can you can try your more inventive stuff See if that moves the needle and then eventually tilt the company in that direction. So I think it's, I think that's smart to some extent.
Devindra: That kind of happened with the iPhone 10, right? So there's that. Everything you described, by the way, Mark, is true innovator's dilemma stuff.
So this is the point where Apple is how does it move forward? Doesn't have a foldable, you know, insight. That ultrathin model sounds cool. The rumors around a foldable, maybe an iPad mini type of device sounds cool, but I guess we will see. Another company that's going to be having a product event soon is Meta.
They're going to have MetaConnect in a, in a couple of weeks towards the end of September. And you've reported that we're expecting a cheaper Quest 3. Model and also a glimpse at a concept device orion ar glasses Anything real quick. You just want to mention there mark because these seem it seems interesting, but not huge I have
Mark: to tell you if they're able to get to 300 on the quest 3s or even 400 That is such a compelling price point the what I will say is is that you've seen meta try those price points before You've seen them try those low end headsets before and they didn't create much market momentum.
So I think vr is I thought VR was dead four years ago, right? But it's still a market that's trying to find itself And I think that's one of the reasons that the vision pro is struggling You're in a market that is trying to find itself But then you have that thirty five hundred dollar and up price point right before tax and accessories and storage upgrades And so I think it's a hard sell and I don't think I think headgear In a compelling fashion is going to be when glasses, as everyone knows, is able to provide augmented reality.
I don't think that people are that interested in being fully immersed for long periods of time. I think they like the idea of AR glasses, and I think that's where the market's going to go. But you can't necessarily get there until you start with the VR headsets, right? Computers used to be the size of a room, now they're the size of a watch.
I
Devindra: mean, totally compelling there. We're also going to be following the meta stuff too. And I'm still, I'm certainly at that point where I'm like, I was such a big VR believer for a while. It seemed really compelling and cool. The content we saw from it was cool, but things have just cooled because I think the overall market is still trying to find yourself.
Like you're saying, Mark we'll talk more about like X real and their glasses and stuff too, because I feel like that may be, kind of part of what Meta may be looking at that is a much cheaper, almost Vision Pro alternative. All right, Mark, thank you so much for joining us. Where can people find your work online these days?
Where can they find you?
Mark: Yeah, thanks for having me. So I have my Sunday column every week, Power On. I encourage everyone to subscribe to that. It's bloomberg. com slash power on to sign up. You can find me on X at Mark Gurman threads at Mark Gurman any social that you're probably on at Mark Gurman.
And definitely stay tuned for, for more stories to come. And thank you both so much for having me. It's a pleasure to be on Engadget the site that I learned about tech from many years ago, so I'm glad you guys are still rolling and thriving. So thanks for having me. Thank you so much, Mark.
Devindra: Let's move on to some other news and thank you again to Mark for joining us. This week we, I think the biggest story was this crazy arrest. Telegram CEO Pavel Durov was arrested in France, kind of out of nowhere. Nobody expected this. It was like a big thing over the weekend. He was eventually charged with distributing CSAM, money laundering, basically the bad stuff that exists within Telegram.
And I guess we haven't really talked about Telegram much. so much. Shirlen, but it is a really unique app, right? Because it's not just a messaging app. It is also kind of a weird social network because people can create these public rooms and share anything. It's unmoderated completely.
Cherlynn: Well, I, so in that way, it's very similar to things like WeChat or like discord or, or, or even WhatsApp is borrowing these features that all the chat apps are copying these features from each other.
So yes, it is also. And it's every now and then I get. Added to a crypto group chat that has like a hundred thousand or whatever, how many members in it that I don't know why I was added to, you know what I mean? So yeah, still Graham is a strange app. And this was definitely like caught me by surprise.
Cause I'm a very loyal, extreme user of telegram. Like really? I talked to all my friends. Yeah. I've convinced my family to get on it. Like I think, I think of telegram as the best chat app actually. And this is, this was disappointing to see.
Devindra: It is. I mean, because the thing is, it is run more like a social network, right?
Like the WhatsApp, you can be pushed into WhatsApp chat, but the Telegram chats are like basically public. You can find them and join them. And it's like a big old chat room out there. That's what people are saying. I guess.
Cherlynn: Sure. And the way Discord, I guess, Discord is a little bit more of a barrier to entry, I guess.
I don't use Telegram that way though, right? Like I use Telegram mostly as a direct group chat app or direct chatting app or a group chatting app, right? I don't use it for the broadcast channels.
Devindra: And people are also pointing out like people used to conflate like Telegram and Signal and Signal is a fully encrypted, secure messaging app.
Telegram is not, because you have to like, be in a private channel with somebody and then activate the encryption. So that is another key difference. Which is how I
Cherlynn: use it, to be clear. I've never used those public rooms. I mean,
Devindra: you're not, you're not in the dark webs, Sherilyn. You're not there looking for drugs on Telegram.
I do not want to, no. Just want to point out like how, just how wild of an app telegram is because the stuff we used to talk about from like pure dark web stuff, stuff where nobody's looking and no regulators are looking and no moderators are really paying attention. That is just what telegram has just kind of become.
Latest update from last night was that he was he posted 5 million pounds or 5 million euros in bail. He's required to stay in France and undercourt monitoring and check out Check in at a police station twice a week while the investigation plays out. He's somebody who has dual citizenship, I believe, between France and where else Telegram's technically based in Saudi Arabia, so perhaps there too.
But yeah, he can't go back to Saudi Arabia. And I think it's because of just the sheer amount of awful stuff that's happening on Telegram. They're blaming him specifically for lack of moderation. How what was your reaction when you heard this news, Cherlynnn, first off?
Cherlynn: Like I said, disappointment, right?
And then my immediate second reaction was, I'm not leaving Telegram. Some of my group chats. So my group chats on Telegram are mostly like the tech people that y'all know and love. People from Wired, people from, you know, former co workers, people from the influencer space. And one of them in one of our group chats was like, so should we move to RCS?
It's
Devindra: not a great platform to be associated with, but yeah, it's sort of like, are you going to stay on Twitter because you know, Elon Musk made it all awful all of a sudden, except I think the argument here is that Telegram always sort of was enabling this stuff. And then the stuff is disgusting, like openly sharing CSAM.
A lot of like a legal activity. Our friends over at four four media have done a lot of reporting around the crazy stuff they've seen a telegram. And I think even they're wondering like, why the heck is it just telegram that all this stuff is happening in? And it's because it's a big social thing with no moderation.
So, yeah. And I see a correction here. Thank you, Ben. Do Rob has a dual French. And United Arab Emirates citizenship. Yeah, UAE, he is stuck in France, basically though. He is somebody who's used to like traveling the world and going all over the place. Not surprisingly, like right wing pundits are really decrying this move as being a move against free speech and whatnot.
But also I think the sheer lawlessness of Telegram is worth, worth like pointing at. And if it requires like arresting a CEO when he's on your, in your country, Maybe it should come to that. Did you see Mark Zuckerberg kind of out of nowhere saying, Hey man, the US government made us put all this COVID squash a lot of a weird false COVID information.
We don't feel too good about that. We did. I didn't like being pushed to do that. That was weird. I didn't see
Cherlynn: that. I want to, by the way, thank Guillaume FR in the chat for providing the, the background on Derov's citizenship info. Guillaume also said that it's just you know, French, UAE as well as Russian apparently.
And that this story, according to Guillaume, at far stays inside French jurisdiction, it is the Paris court. But yeah, the Mark Zuckerberg stuff is very weird. I guess. So, and so I think that's where, since you said the telegram is based in Saudi Arabia, the laws and the regulations around it are looser perhaps than say, Facebook or Meta since they're in the U S and therefore protection against CSAM versus free speech, that sort of thing is less come dry.
Devindra: I don't think they're thinking about free speech too much, but also
Cherlynn: exactly over in Saudi Arabia, probably. So like when, when Mark pointed that out and Zuckerberg pointed out that he had to be told that. You know, was he reacting to the telegram stuff or was he just
Devindra: not? It felt like it came out of nowhere.
It was sort of like the meme, like nobody blank, blank, blank marks. The U S government forced me to be very responsible about COVID information. And now he's also talking about he's not going to fund information around basically he and his wife used to fund something to encourage people to vote and get voting information out there.
And he doesn't want to fund that anymore. He's talking about being neutral politically, which I'm not. That's a really chicken shit thing to say. I think that's ultimately where I come down in it. I don't know if other people have other opinions, but Mark Zuckerberg with his glow up and everything, he is high on life, free of worries, apparently, and politically neutral.
Perfect and rizzing it up. Apparently, that's what the kids say. And we also want to point out a couple other things. Razer announced its first controller with Hall effect joysticks. Just conducted a great hands on with this thing. The Wolverine B3 pro it's 200 works with the Xbox and PC. Notably, it's a wireless Xbox controller, which there aren't really too many of those out there.
Just seems to like it. If you want Hall effect sticks. This seems like a good one. And what do you think? Can I ask, do you
Cherlynn: think they had to license the name Wolverine?
Devindra: I don't think you have to license the name Wolverine. No, you're not, you know, no, no, you don't. You do have to license the name Droid, apparently, like early on, remember the early Android, like the Droid had to be licensed to Lucasfilm, the Motorola Droid but not Wolverine.
Cause Wolverine is an animal that exists. What do you think of the new AI pin Trelynn? We saw Plod. I already hate this company. I hate their name. I hate everything. It's a little pin you wear and it records all your conversations. I guess without anybody's permission, another pin. Do you want to review this one?
Cherlynn: I mean, look, look, look, let's put it, let's, let's, let's clarify too. This AI pin isn't just to be like. The humane AI pin, which is like a second brain supposedly, or like there to project a screen or play music or whatever the plod. AI pin is called the plot note pin. It is a note taking device, but with some quote AI bells and whistles, I'm quoting our article by Lawrence Bonk.
It will automatically record and transcribe conversations. And that is pretty much it apparently. It can transcribe and translate 59 languages with more on the way. It'll supposedly learn to correctly name each speaker and organize your talk and assign speaker labels. It will pick up the name during the conversation if it's mentioned and then like assign.
So there is some stuff that is using AI to do that seems so. Smarter than the average AI pin. But again, we've been burned so many, literally burned in my case by AI pins so many times that it's really hard to quickly buy into it. I like the idea of an AI note taking device this way. And Ben is pointing out that that Ben has used Otter AI so much that it's supposed to learn speaker look, not only Otter, other transcription services, right?
Rev the. The the pixel recorder app, there's a Samsung's recorder app, all supposed to learn how to assign speaker labels. I mean, I will say pixel is better at assigning speaker one speaker to speaker three than most things i've seen But it hasn't been smart enough to learn the names yet, which is fine by me.
I can assign it myself anyway I am intrigued by the idea of an AI pin. I've always been right or a wearable camera, wearable recording device. I think I need to just go and buy a body cam. But anyway, yeah,
Devindra: you need a body cam. That's it. Or just like put a, put a GoPro on your head and just, that's it.
Go through life just like that. Like a pure, that's why I like
Cherlynn: the snap spectacles early on when they first launched. I liked the, I just, I love, whatever. I'm not a fan of
Devindra: people walking around with devices. They're just literally recording everything around them. That's the ultimate, that's what this thing does.
It's purely what it's meant to do. It's not clear to other people. It's not clear. Like when you're, it
Cherlynn: needs to be clear. And I will say that the look of this thing is quite different from like other AI pins we've seen is more cylindrical in shape. It kind of looks like a, a big bullet. And I don't know quite yet how Can be attached to your body, but you know, it's, I mean, good luck to this
Devindra: company, but this looks like another AI device that is about to crash and burn.
You could do the same thing if you want to transcribe conversations, you can pay for auto AI right now or a descript, which is what we use for a lot of our podcast transcription stuff. There are services you can use your phone can do it. Your computer can do it. Yeah, that's the whole thing. What is, what is more useful by the way?
This thing or the Barbie flip phone. What are you more excited by?
Cherlynn: I think so. Yeah. And fun gadget land this week. I freaking love the new pink Barbie phone. I cannot HMD the company that brought us the more recent Nokia branded phones has launched the Barbie phone. It is a device that is hot pink, a flip phone, and it's apparently sanctioned by Mattel.
But like a year after Barbie fever, I guess, which is slow. Yeah. So, so on time but they only cost 129. And I'm just like, all right, well, if I need it, like it has like a has a T nine keyboard. It's got no third party apps. Apparently it won't do like social media, but it'll. Call and syntax. Like I think HMD and, and another piece of news this week recently was that what was the GameStop was doing a retro pivot.
I think this whole like idea of retro devices that are a bit more simple being their focus right now for HMD is not dumb. It's pretty smart. Like dumb phones, aren't a dumb idea. I actually want to get one now.
Devindra: It may make sense to have another, just another device that can be not, yeah. Not as overwhelming as your smartphone.
I do take issue with some things like this thing has a five megapixel camera with flash that is set to deliver authentic Y2K style images. Let me tell you what images from your phone looked like around Y2K. It was not five megapixels. It was, it was like barely BGA. It was like
Cherlynn: 120, 320
Devindra: by 240. Like my first, like I got a really nice Sony Ericsson phone in 2003, 2004.
And even that was like a a potato camera basically is what we used to call them. I'm glad this thing exists. Although I would love to see videos of just People, just like youngs, like a Gen Z trying to figure out how do you type on a T9. Buy this for your
Cherlynn: kid! I don't know.
Devindra: Buy it for your kid.
I mean, it can actually get cell access. It can actually send texts and do things. But it's sort of like, just, yeah, throwing this thing at somebody who has never seen a T9 keyboard before. How will they survive? How will you text on this? Anybody? I
Cherlynn: know. I know. I'm actually literally copying the link right now and asking, telling people I want to review it.
Devindra: You should absolutely review it. This seems like a show in device if there is one. Let's move on to what we're working on. I want to shout out, hey, I reviewed the Dell XPS 13, the Copilot Plus version of this. This is the one with the new Snapdragon X Elite chip. It's an interesting laptop. Because we literally just reviewed the Intel version of this same exact machine.
So the screen keyboard, everything exactly the same. This one is just snapdragon powered. So it has all the issues we talked about around the surface pro app compatibility, weirdness slow down when you're emulating some apps like Evernote. Always feels a little weird to me. It won't run some games because some games don't run on ARM chips.
So it's an interesting thing. I initially decked or docked at a couple of points in our review too, because the battery benchmark came in really low, like much Lowr than I expected, it was like seven and a half hours. And then I did some updates, which came in after the review, like we're not showing up for me and windows update or whatever, after I did that update, I started getting better snapdragon performance.
So. That is weird. It's weird how all that stuff works. But anyway, now we're seeing like 17 hours and 30 ish minutes. We'll have a final number soon. I'm intrigued by this thing, but I still think if you have the choice between an Intel or AMD system versus one of these, unless you really want that super low power snapdragon life, like you, there really aren't any benefits here.
Do you see any benefits of an arm machine like this Trillian when you can get. An x86, x64 machine instead.
Cherlynn: I just, I mean, it's the same issue. I think the Surface tablets and, and laptops seem more cool. In that they seem to have gotten over the emulation issues. And so if you want extremely long battery life in exchange for that architecture, ARM based architecture with a potential of not being able to use it at an app here or there, or not gaming, for example, then that's fine.
Yeah. Yeah, but otherwise, yeah, obviously I think the Intel and AMD machines with slight AI power is better because, yeah, it's a more known Product, like it's a more, what is it when you say no? What's that saying? Known, known quantity. Known, known whatever. Known
Devindra: quantity. Sure thing. It's a, it's like, it's a sure bet.
We kinda know what those things are. Yeah. You know what to expect. Yeah. And you know what to expect. And I feel like if you're spending a thousand to $2,000 on a computer, you kind of don't wanna risk it on a new, on a fledgling platform. A MD just released their new AI chips, which are supposed, which have much better NPUs in their earlier chips.
We're expecting the new stuff from Intel very soon. So. Even then the choice is going to get a little more confusing, but hey, I also want to say, this thing has the same issues I've always had with the new redesign of the XPS 13. I don't like the invisible touchpad. Sorry. And that function, that function row is one of the dumbest things I've ever seen because it's a, it's a capacitive light up row and it disappears in sunlight because it's not a physical key.
So I am just not a fan of that. Anything else you want to mention that you've been working on Trillian?
Cherlynn: I mean, the general stuff, right? We have the Apple event date already. So now we know I'm going to be. Busy planning that and then we're still kind of in the midst of pixel reviews. Y'all just don't know.
Devindra: Okay, so more is coming. And plenty
Cherlynn: of, yeah, plenty of that background planning and, and executing stuff, not people. Jesus. Yes.
Devindra: I'm sure you would like to execute some people, but we will not talk about that on air. To our pop culture picks for the week. What do you got Trillin?
Cherlynn: Yeah. I have, so I remembered what I wanted to talk about last week cause I saw it pop up.
I, I, by the way the venture, I don't know if you'll be proud of me. I signed up for AMC late stubs or whatever it is. Not stubs, not the
Devindra: subscription. A list baby, A list.
Cherlynn: Yeah, A list. Thank you. I am an AMC A list now just because I now do watch movies so frequently to warrant it anyway. Totally worth it.
Yeah. Yesterday. Just yesterday I saw Alien Ramez. I've been dying to watch it. And I know you covered it already, so I'm not going go too much into it here, but the week before, or several weeks before whatever, I actually, what I saw was, and I can't remember if I talked about it on this show, long Legs.
Oh yeah. Do you remember this one? DI
Devindra: mean, I do, did I talk about it already? I just, I just re-watched it with my wife too. I don't know if you, I forget if you talked about it, but what did you think?
Cherlynn: Yeah, so it's, what was it? Nicholas Cage, isn't it? And was like. We know what to expect with Nicolas Cage, which is that we don't know what to expect and it's always kind of like hit or miss or whatever.
And this was one of those where he's just unhinged and his acting is W kind of like wild, but the story, I don't know. I, I thought it was interesting. Oh, I love it. I dunno if it was a winner.
Devindra: It's, it's the vibe vibe. Like it's, lot of it, it doesn't make the vibe, vibe sense, but it's so creepy. I was watching it with my wife, like we had a bit of free time and it was bright and sunny outside, but we went to the basement, turned on this movie and just like the sheer vibe of dread and fear and all that Yes.
Is in that movie. It's so good. . If you liked the long Wes by the way, I'd recommend did you ever see Cure? The Kiyoshi Kurosawa movie from like 1999 that is another very similar movie about this these murders are happening this detective is trying to figure out what's going on and there's like direct supernatural stuff.
It's really cool. That's I think you'd appreciate that movie showing. So yeah,
Cherlynn: I like I like the vibe to that to your point. Yeah.
Devindra: Okay. Check out long legs. Also Kurosawa has a new horror movie coming this year too. And I hear people really like
Cherlynn: it. I have more. I have more game picks to recommend, but but I think I'm going to save them for next time.
Devindra: Okay. Yeah. All good. I want to quickly shout out a game that has slowly like taken over my free time and my nights, and it's called Tactical Breach Wizards. If you're like me and you like tactical RPGs, stuff like I guess, Final Fantasy Tactics, but there have been a whole bunch of like PC ones too.
This is a cool one of those set in a world where it's a modern world where magic exists wizards and witches exist, and it's really cool. It's really funny. It's well written. The actual gameplay, the tactics works, I think is like really fun and always it's always changing and always like keeping your brain going.
I think you would actually have a lot of fun with this game. Sure. One, because everything,
Cherlynn: I think
Devindra: you would like it because I believe you, I believe you, the characters are fun. And I think I'm just trying to get you to push you beyond the basic, basic No, you never! The games you're going for.
Anyway, if you like I need to show everyone
Cherlynn: what I've been playing.
Devindra: Yeah, tell us. Give us one.
Cherlynn: You saw the slack that I dropped in our, in our Engadget thing. Team Slack. Y'all don't get to see Engadget's fire Slack conversations, which we may publish with them every now and then. I don't know, whatever. But we've been sharing some of the shitty games.
I've been recently hooked on this game called Fruit Merge.
Devindra: Yeah.
Cherlynn: Okay, we'll talk about that next episode or something. Next
Devindra: episode, folks. We're going to keep trying to get Trillin into real games. Hey, any game is a good game. Real games. Any game is a good game. I think some games are better than others. I don't know.
Sure, yeah. Anyway, Trillin. Anybody who checked, who likes. Tactical RPGs, check out tactical breach wizards. It's a lot of fun. And I clearly like, I think the, the creators it's developed by a suspicious developments as a developer. I think they like clearly thought about this world. So there's like an ongoing religious war.
There are people who are like using magic mana for illegal efforts. There are you're playing, basically playing a group of like rainbow six type people who breach into buildings and rescue people or get information and, but they have magic powers. I think that's really cool. This is a really cool universe that could easily be like a book series or an anime series or something eventually too.
So I love the universe. I think people would appreciate it. So that's Tactical Reach Wizards.
Cherlynn: Well, that's it for the episode this week, everyone. Thank you as always for listening. Our theme music is by game composer Dale North. Our outro music is by our former managing editor, Terrence O'Brien. The podcast is produced by Ben Elman. You can find the Vindra.
Devindra: Devindra on Twitter, Blue Sky, Masked Dawn, Your Usual Places, and a podcast about movies and TV at The Filmcast at thefilmcast.
com.
Cherlynn: If you want to just tell me, I guess, how badly you want to see our team slacks online, I guess? I don't know. Sometimes they become
Devindra: posts. You know, sometimes our ideas do become posts.
Cherlynn: They do. We you can send your requests online. To me on Twitter or X, I am at Cherlynn Low. C H E R L Y N N L O W or threads Cherlynnstagram or email C H E R L Y N N at Engadget.
com. Email us your thoughts about the show and anything else at podcast at Engadget. com. Leave us a review, please, on wherever you're listening to this podcast that helps people find us. And then subscribe on wherever you're listening.
Real games. Sorry.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/engadget-podcast-iphone-16-and-apple-rumors-with-bloombergs-mark-gurman-113100676.html?src=rss
It's only been four months since we reviewed the latest Intel version of the XPS 13, but now Dell has released a model built for Microsoft's Copilot+ AI PC initiative. It's running Qualcomm's new Snapdragon X Elite chip, making it an Arm-based laptop like the recent Surface Pro and Surface Laptop. But with that mobile-focused hardware comes new expectations: More battery efficiency than Intel's x86 chips, as well dramatically faster AI capabilities thanks to its beefier NPU (neural processing unit). As with all Arm-based Windows systems, though, there's also the potential for trouble with older x86 apps, which may run slowly through emulation or simply not launch at all.
It's undoubtedly a chaotic time for the PC industry, as chipmakers and PC companies build for an uncertain AI-powered future. For consumers, that just means confusion. That's partially why Microsoft kicked off the Copilot+ program to begin with, since it requires system makers to include at least 16GB of RAM, 256GB of storage and an NPU with at least 40 TOPS (tera-ops per second) of AI performance. If it says Copilot+ on the box, it should be a decent PC.
So does this XPS 13 live up to the Copilot+ branding? Mostly, it turns out. And it's fascinating to see how it compares to the current Intel version of the very same product.
What's new about the XPS 13 Copilot+ AI PC?
The biggest addition to this XPS 13 — and the main reason we’re reviewing it — is that Snapdragon X Elite chip. Everything else about this XPS 13 is the same as the previous iteration. There's its strikingly minimalist design, with an "invisible" touchpad that blends into the wrist rest, as well as large-capped keys running edge-to-edge. And don't forget the capacitive function row, which remains a baffling feature.
If you want a deeper take on the XPS 13's design, just take a look at my previous review. In short, though, it's a machine that basically prioritizes looks over usability. It's light, sturdy and dramatically different from every other laptop out there. But to get there, Dell made the trackpad harder to use (it's not quite as accurate as Apple's MacBooks or Microsoft’s Surface PCs), and its capacitive function row is simply a pain.
As for the XPS 13's new Snapdragon X Elite chip, it features 12 cores running up to 3.4GHz, with a dual-core boot reaching 4GHz. In comparison, the Intel variant's Core Ultra 7 155H chip offers 16 cores and reaches up to 4.8GHz. Qualcomm has the advantage with a more powerful 45 TOPS NPU, compared to Intel’s 10 TOPS, but I haven’t found that to make a huge difference with the few AI features in Windows 11 today. As the benchmarks below show, bigger chip numbers don't always lead to better performance.
PCMark 10
Geekbench 6 CPU
3DMark Wildlife Extreme
Cinebench 2024
Dell XPS 13 Copilot+ (Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite)
14,024 (Applications)
2,621/14,194
6,191
122/748
Microsoft Surface Pro (2024, Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite)
12,615 (Applications)
2,769/13,842
6,430
120/770
Dell XPS 13 (Intel Core Ultra 7 155H, Intel Arc)
6,806
2,276/11,490
4,579
90/453
Apple MacBook Air (M3)
N/A
3,190/12,102
8,310
141/490
What's good about the XPS 13 Copilot+?
In short, this XPS 13 delivers most of what you'd want from a modern ultraportable, while also preparing you for a potential future with more AI-powered apps and features. It’s attractive, fast (for most apps, anyway) and sturdy. It’s also the perfect system if you want to stand out a bit, since it looks unlike any other laptop out there.
It runs most productivity apps well, and had no problem multitasking when I had dozens of tabs open across Chrome and Edge, while video conferencing in Zoom and chatting with colleagues on Slack.
Across most benchmarks like Geekbench 6 and Cinebench 2024, this XPS 13 easily trounced its Intel sibling by several thousand points.
Qualcomm’s 45 TOPS Snapdragon X Elite NPU makes the Copilot+ XPS 13 more future-proof than the current Intel model.
Battery life was excellent, reaching an average of 17 hours and 47 minutes after running the PCMark 10 Applications battery benchmark twice. It's worth noting it took several software updates to get to this result, but our testing consistently shows it holding around that time. In comparison, the Intel XPS 13 lasted for 13 hours and 15 minutes. Microsoft’s Surface Pro Copilot+ system, meanwhile, ran for twelve hours and 15 minutes in the Applications test.
Dell's XPS 13 keyboard is lusciously wide and delivers excellent feedback. It may take a bit of getting used to though, since the spacing differs from most other notebooks.
I tested the XPS 13's base-level 1080p+ non-touchscreen display, and while it wasn't as glorious as the OLED-equipped XPS devices I've seen, it still looked sharp and colorful.
As always, Dell's thin InfinityEdge bezels also help the screen pop even more.
Photo by Devindra Hardawar/Engadget
What's bad about the XPS 13 Copilot+ AI PC?
Take most of the downsides from the Intel version of the XPS 13, as well as problems still plaguing Arm-based Windows devices like the Surface Pro, and you've got the big issues with the XPS 13 Copilot+ PC.
Some emulated x86 apps like Evernote run into noticeable slowdowns. I often encountered lag when switching between notes, as well as scrolling down long documents.
The built-in AI features in Paint and Photos are mostly useless, and it's still unclear when the long-awaited Recall feature will arrive for general users.
We also don't know when to expect any other AI features in the OS, or when other developers will start releasing more AI capabilities in their apps.
Games like Fortnite, Destiny 2 and League of Legends won't run on the XPS 13, because their anti-cheat software isn't compatible with Arm chips.
I'm still not a fan of the XPS 13's invisible trackpad. It's sometimes hard to locate and swiping around isn't as smooth as on Apple's MacBook Air.
The XPS 13 desperately needs more than two USB-C ports, otherwise many users will be stuck living the dongle life.
The capacitive function row still disappears in direct sunlight and it's impossible to use without directly looking at it. After all, it's hard to build up touch typing memory without physical keys.
Check out those disappearing function buttons!
Photo by Devindra Hardawar/Engadget
Should you buy the XPS 13 Copilot+ AI PC?
The XPS 13 typically starts at $1,300 with the Snapdragon X Elite chip, 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage. At the time of this review, it’s currently on sale for $999, but it’s unclear how long that discount will last. The Intel model also starts at $1,300 with 8GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, but you’ll have to add another $100 to get 16GB of memory. (The Intel XPS 13 was recently marked down to $1,200, so don’t be surprised if you see Dell’s prices fluctuate frequently.)
If you need a powerful 13-inch laptop right now, the XPS 13 Copilot+ is a solid choice. Just be wary of the downsides and potential software issues I mentioned above. If you're on the fence, though, it may be worth waiting until Dell refreshes the XPS 13 once again with Intel's new Lunar Lake CPU. That's expected to arrive this fall, and it'll feature an NPU that's even faster than the Snapdragon X Elite's. And since it's an x86 chip, the Lunar Lake XPS 13 won't have to emulate older software, and it will also be able to run games like Fortnite.
Update 8/30 11:10AM: After installing the latest updates from Dell and Windows, the XPS 13's battery life jumped to 17:38 in PCMark 10's benchmark. We've repeated this test twice to confirm the higher figure. For this reason, we're increasing the XPS 13's score from 80 to 84.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/laptops/dell-xps-13-copilot-review-a-capable-ai-pc-but-windows-on-arm-issues-remain-200050685.html?src=rss