Month: September 2016

Apple launches series of TV Ads highlighting iPhone 7 / Apple Watch Series 2

Over the weekend, Apple had released some new TV Commercials (some could be seen during NFL Games and The Emmys) highlighting the new features for its iPhone 7 and the Apple Watch Series 2.  Below are those videos:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R27KHLQ0cIU]

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rTFPB4OUqrM]

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5t21_e7_-cQ]

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClRhvr7SK6E]

These and other Apple videos can be
seen via the company's YouTube Channel.

Some iPhone 7 owners report ‘hissing sound’ under Heavy Loads

iphone-7-and-boxSome customers of the new iPhone 7 are reporting that the device is making a 'hissing sound' whenever the iPhone is under heavy loads (such as multitasking, during games, etc.)  The problem seems to be the company's newest A10 processor.

The issue was first brought to public attention by 512 Pixels' Stephen Hackett, and has since been pointed out by a number of people online, such as TechCrunch's Darrell Etherington. Hackett commented that after calling AppleCare, support staff decided to offer a replacement unit.

To be fair, similar issues have happened with some previous iPhone models.

While some has speculated that it could be the RF transmitter or something that has to do with the iPhone's sound system, Apple has yet to say anything about the problem.

How to (Warm) Reboot the iPhone 7/iPhone 7 Plus

For those of us who have had iPhones either currently or in the past, we know that holding the HOME and POWER buttons at the same time until we see the Apple logo has been a staple since day 1.

Because Apple has reconfigured the HOME button on the iPhone 7, that's no longer an option.  Instead, do the following:

  • Hold down the [VOLUME DOWN] button while you hold the [SLEEP/WAKE] (Power) at the same time until you see the Apple logo (please see the diagram below):

iphonerebootdiagram-02

The Ratings Are in: NFL Thursday Night Football on Twitter.com

NFLLogoMid summer, Twitter and the NFL came to an agreement to broadcast some NFL Games via Twitter.

(CNN/Money): During an average minute of the game, 243,000 people were watching the stream via Twitter(TWTR, Tech30). By the same TV-style measurement, 15.4 million people were watching on CBS and the NFL Network.

Twitter's livestream of the game reached 2.1 million people, although many sampled it only briefly. That figure counts anyone who watched the game for at least three seconds.

While the numbers pale in comparison to TV viewership, there's nothing to compare them with in terms of other Twitter livestreams since these are the first such numbers that Twitter has released.

Twitter's stock price rebounded by about 4% on Friday, but the price is still down more than 17% from last year and there are still talks of a takeover.

Twitter partnered with the NFL back in April to livestream the 10 Thursday Night Football games this season. It paid millions for the right to livestream each of the games.

The NFL's motivation in making the deal with Twitter was to attract viewers who may not have cable and who use social media regularly and value mobility.

The first livestream of the Thursday Night Football game between the Jets and Bills was widely praised on Twitter by viewers.

The stream was easy to find on the Twitter app, was devoid of major glitches and seemed to be in HD.

The next Thursday night game to be livestreamed will feature the Houston Texans versus the New England Patriots.

Twitter will livestream CBS's broadcast for the first five Thursday Night games and NBC's for the final five. The games will play alongside curated tweets and Twitter's live video app, Periscope, will provide fans with sideline coverage before and after the game.

The stream is accessible in every country in which Twitter operates except Canada, which has a different TV rights deal with the NFL.

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