Samsung reportedly set to supply Apple with new memory chips

Samsung has entered into an agreement with Apple to supply the company with new 20nm LPDDR4 DRAM chips. The deal would see Samsung fulfil Apple’s demand for memory chips for the next iPhone. According to the Korea Times report:

The agreement comes a few months after Samsung, the world’s biggest memory chip supplier, began mass production of the next generation memory chip ― the 8-Gigabit LPDDR4 (low power double data rate) mobile DRAM with 20 nanometers. The so-called LPDDR memory, the most used in mobile devices, is poised to enable a new technological leap for premium smartphones.

Sources familiar with the matter revealed to the publication that not only will Samsung be shipping out components to Apple, but that the company will also be installing the in-house DRAM chips inside the Galaxy S6. This deal would also join the order for Samsung to produce the A9 chipset for Apple.

Source: Korea Times



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Nya lovande spel till iPhone och iPad (vecka 8)

lovande-spel-iphone-ipad-vecka-8Ny vecka och nya spel till iPhone och iPad att titta närmare på. Vi listar…

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Toyota kommer inte att stödja Apples Carplay


Enligt Toyota kommer företaget att satsa på sitt eget underhållningssystem istället för Apples Carplay.

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Comic: Preloaded with pain

Ed: Welcome to this week’s edition of The Pixel Project: a weekly comic from Diesel Sweeties’ Rich Stevens on Apple, technology, and everything in-between. Today: Macs are free from PC bloatware, right? Read more comics from the Pixel Project on iMor…

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Apple reportedly acquires digital audio instrument maker Camel Audio [updated]

Update: Jim Dalrymple over at The Loop reached out to Apple for comment. Here’s what they said: ”Apple buys smaller technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not discuss our purpose or plans.” As Dalrymple notes, this is typically …

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Apple reportedly rolling out significant changes to Genius Bar

Apple Retail is reportedly in the process of overhauling its Genius Bar experience. In a bid to better serve customers, starting from the week of March 9, a new initiative dubbed ”Concierge” will be rolled out to replace walk-in appointments. The progr…

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Tweetbot for iPhone updated with support for viewing Twitter videos and GIFs

Popular Twitter app Tweetbot for iPhone has scored an update today, bringing it up to version 3.5.2. As far as new features are concerned, it’s a bit light, but users will gain support for playing Twitter-hosted videos and GIFs, along with the usual h…

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No, you don’t really want a thicker iPhone with a bigger battery

One of the most common misconceptions when it comes to the iPhone is that Apple could simply make it a few millimeters thicker to improve its battery life.

It then follows, under that train of thought, that Apple is deliberately sacrificing battery life for cosmetics. That the company is putting an obsession for thinness over usability. In fact, it’s the exact opposite of that. Before we get to the busting, however, here’s the myth, most recently repeated by the Wall Street Journal:

Take the latest iPhone. Let’s do a thought experiment, starting with what has changed between the iPhone 4 and the iPhone 6. In four years, Apple’s engineers made the iPhone 2.4 millimeters (0.094 inches) thinner, or about the thickness of three credit cards. Despite giving it a much larger screen, they also shaved off eight grams, or about the weight of a packet of ketchup.

Given the size of its current battery, a little back-of-the-envelope math reveals it’s more than reasonable that if the iPhone 6 were as thick as the iPhone 4, the iPhone 6 could have double its current battery life.

Except, no.

Take an iPhone 6 as thick as the iPhone 4 and imagine how heavy it would be. Apple was deliberate when they pointed out the iPhone 6 was actually lighter than the iPhone 4. They did that because, while thinness is nice and certainly improves the feel of the phone, it’s lightness that matters. Lightness is what improves usability.

The idea of a thick phone with longer battery life sounds great precisely until you actually try to hold it up for prolonged periods of time. Then it causes fatigue and eventually prevents you from using it for as long as you’d really like to. (It’s the same reason Apple’s been striving to make the iPad thinner — to make it ever lighter and more usable.)

Battery life is the currency of mobile devices. Every feature you add, you pay for in battery life. That includes screens, radios, and, yes, lightness.

An iPhone 6 or iPhone 6 Plus with the same thickness as an iPhone 4 would be too heavy for many people to read iBooks or watch movies for long periods of time in bed, for example. It would also be harder to balance and use one handed while walking around.

Also, batteries don’t just hold in power — they hold in heat. They’re insulators. Batteries are part of the reason why processor speeds need to be ramped down. They’re also not RF transparent, so they can affect how radios work as well.

With Apple’s current generation of thin-as-in-light phones, you can add a thicker, heavier battery case for those times when you want or need extra power. If Apple made a thick-as-in-heavy phone, you couldn’t tear half of it off for the times when you really didn’t need the extra boost.

This way, usability is the standard and bulk is the option, not bulk as the standard at the expense of usability.

John Gruber of Daring Fireball made another observation:

Consider laptops — for years, battery life on a laptop was somewhere around 4 or 5 hours, at best. It was a struggle to use one throughout a cross-country flight. Today, you could probably fly coast to coast roundtrip with MacBook Air on a single charge.

The change in laptops happened when Apple redesigned them to be, essentially, giant battery packs, and Intel made x86 more power-efficient with chipsets like Haswell. iOS devices are already giant battery packs, though, and ARM is already power efficient. The same kind of design and architectural advances that allowed for longer MacBook battery life are probably different than those that will eventually allow for longer iPhone battery life.

Other advances, though, are all but certain.

Chipsets and the processes used to fabricate them will improve, screen technology will evolve, and radios will get more efficient. Race-to-sleep and other power-saving techniques will also get better. As these advancements happen, Apple will end up with a light, usable phone and great battery life.

The iPhone 6 Plus, with its day-and-a-half of charge capacity, shows that strategy already at work.



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Got adware problems? Blame free software download sites

Mac adware is bad. Windows is worse. Who’s to blame? Free software download sites. Weren’t we just talking about how to get rid of Mac adware? This is a real and malevolent threat on the Mac. We have it easy compared to our Windows using colleagues wi…

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Apple’s new crash reporting service comes with latest Xcode 6.3 beta

Apple has launched their new crash reporting service with the latest beta release of Xcode 6.3. The new service is designed to make it easier to find and fix crashes quickly. Apps submitted with debug symbols to both the TestFlight beta service and th…

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