foldable iphone
Apple's foldable iPhone will have some MAJOR design changes, fresh leak reveals
We already know Apple is secretly preparing its first ever foldable iPhone. But now, keen tech fans have just got a new hint at what it may look like. According to a leak from a veteran Apple analyst, Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, the'iPhone Fold' will see some major design changes. And Mr Gurman claims that anyone who tries the new foldable device will'never want to go back'. Although it has been rumoured for years, it now looks almost certain that Apple is planning to unveil the folding iPhone in September 2026.
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Release date for Apple's first FOLDABLE iPhone leaks online - and it suggests fans don't have long to wait at all
It is one of the world's leading tech companies but, unlike its rivals, Apple is yet to reveal its own folding phone design. Now, a possible release date for the long-rumoured foldable iPhone has leaked online - and it suggests tech fans don't have long to wait. According to reports from Apple analysts, the foldable iPhone could be launched before the end of 2026. The rumours also suggest that Apple's latest innovation won't come cheap, with an expected price tag of 2,299. That would make the'iPhone Fold' almost twice the price of Apple's current most expensive smartphone, the iPhone 16 Pro Max, which starts at 1,199 (UK price 1,199).
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Is THIS what the foldable iPhone will look like? Apple's long-awaited device could feature three cameras, ultra-thin bezels and an AI chip - and insiders say it could arrive in 2025
It's one of the biggest companies in the world, but Apple is one of the few tech firms yet to unveil a foldable device. That may be soon about to change, however, because Apple is allegedly readying its first foldable iPhone – following in the footsteps of Samsung, Huawei and Motorola. Now, MailOnline has turned to AI sensation ChatGPT to imagine what the so-called'iPhone Flip' will look like. According to the chatbot, the high-end device will have a flexible OLED display with ultra-thin bezels and a polished titanium finish. Similar to rival Samsung's Galaxy Z Flip, it has a horizonal crease through the middle of the main screen and a smaller screen for use when folded.
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DeepMind and Blizzard team up, Mozilla introduces FlyWeb, and Samsung set to launch new AI digital assistant--SD Times news digest: Nov. 7, 2016 - SD Times
DeepMind and Blizzard Entertainment are collaborating to open up StarCraft II to artificial intelligence and machine learning researchers globally. According to a DeepMind blog post by research scientist Oriol Vinyais, StarCraft II continues the series' renowned eSports tradition, as the original StarCraft was played in the late 1990s yet remains popular today. StarCraft is a good testing environment to work with because it provides a "useful bridge to the messiness of the real world," and the skills needed to play in this environment could transfer easily to real-world tasks, wrote Vinyais. DeepMind is looking to work with Blizzard in order to create "curriculum" scenarios, which means researchers will be faced with complex tasks that researchers will need to complete in order to get an agent up and running. Agents will play directly from pixels, and to get DeepMind there, a new image-based interface that outputs a simplified low-resolution RGB image data for the map and minimap was created, according to Vinyais.