Smartphones have become very very good at what they do in their current form factors. For all the effort involved now, it means yearly smartphone releases are enough.
The evidence doesn’t take long to stack up:
- OnePlus just announced that there’ll be no OnePlus 9T (or 9T Pro) this year. That comes after there was no 8T Pro either, though it did manage an 8T that was reviewed as good but confusing the lineup.
- Apple moved away from its “S” releases in the same year, and has stuck solidly to one new flagship iPhone in September/October.
- And Samsung couldn’t properly differentiate its Galaxy S and Galaxy Note series enough. In 2021, it went with just the S21 and its Galaxy Fold Z line, and left the storied Note series on the bench.
It’s not hard to see why flagships are sticking with yearly. Just as laptops and TVs only gently evolve each year, smartphones face the same maturity phase.
- Each year, phones are continuing to get better and do more, but the technology maturity level doesn’t allow for giant leaps within months.
- I saw this doing the rounds on Twitter via a wag and it’s simple but true (and replace with iPhone with any other series):
???? OnePlus CEO Pete Lau announced “OnePlus 2.0” with a major forum post detailing how, finally, Oppo and OnePlus are going to run the same OS, with OxygenOS’ head, Gary Chen, now set to lead a combined effort which will mean a shared Android 13 experience. What it means is less standalone OnePlus, more sameness across Oppo and OnePlus. It’s hard to say how this might look in 2022, 2023, and beyond.
???? OK, evidence is really mounting that October 19th will be the Pixel 6 launch date, as Techtober looks like it’ll apply once again (Android Authority).
???? Speaking of, HMD Global may reveal a Nokia branded tablet on October 6 (Android Authority).
???? And in almost Techtober news, Amazon has set a date for its 2021 hardware event: September 28. No signs of what new or updated Amazon devices it’ll show off (Android Authority).
???? US officials might put Honor on the Entity List, which has apparently divided US government bureaucrats (Android Authority).
???? iOS 15 is now out for iPhones all the way back to the iPhone 6S, so something that affects a billion people or so means lots of articles and bits and pieces on what it all means. MacStories, as usual, has the most in-depth detail of what’s new with more than 20 pages of screenshots and detail around using new things like Live Text via camera, setting focus modes, scheduling notification summaries, and so on. MacRumors also has nice and helpful detail about how to use these new features, with videos. Here’s The Verge’s review, which includes iPadOS 15 and its more minor changes, too, and suggests the iOS 15 updates are mostly quality-of-life, and the iOS 14 update remains the winner in recent times.
???? Netflix launches free plan in Kenya to boost growth, with about a quarter of its paid offerings in the free version, which I’d guess is mostly its original content? (Android Authority).
???? Tesla drivers become ‘inattentive’ when using Autopilot, MIT study finds. Which is fine when everything works well! (Engadget).
⏩ Sony’s new PS5 firmware can make your games slightly faster (Ars Technica).
???? Kena: Bridge of Spirits is a new PC and PlayStation 4 and 5 game getting great reviews (IGN).
???? It’s definitely 2021 around here: Sorare raises $680 million for its fantasy sports NFT game. Hm. Should we start an NFT game?? Here’s the idea: Buy dates you feel will be significant in tech in 2022. If you’re right, you get a lovely gold NFT star (TechCrunch).
???? Whoa: A radical new motorcycle design has hit the track for the first time (Interesting Engineering).
???? “ELIi5: Do you get the same benefits from sleep if you’ve had a nightmare?” (r/explainlikeimfive).
For all the latest Technology News Click Here
For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News.