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News

News from Elf, a digital creative agency at the intersection of the arts and sciences.

Filtering by Category: Apple News

Apple's HomePod gets AirPlay 2, Multi-room Audio and Stereo Pairing via iOS 11.4

Elf

Apple's Much Anticipated Update to iOS 11 Addresses Prior Shortcoming for Multi-Room Support for a More Immersive and Complete Audio Experience Throughout Your Home

When Apple's smart speaker HomePod first came out, we were excited to test out its acoustic performance and  integration with existing Apple systems. HomePod has an impressive subwoofer for a clean bass sound and provides directional control to more accurately convey the original richness of sound in any audio recording. This is a massive improvement to the smart speaker space with high fidelity sound and a larger sound stage.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Play and Control Music in Any Room

By adding AirPlay 2 software to the HomePod via iOS 11.4, HomePod can now play sound in multiple rooms throughout your home. You can control music playing in any room, on HomePod, Apple TV or any iOS device. You can also increase your sound stage by adding a second HomePod for a richer acoustic experience to fill any room with sound and more accurately reproduce lower frequencies such as deeper bass extensions.

With AirPlay 2, you can play music in any room, move music from one room to another, or play the same song in multiple rooms using an iOS device through an app or Control Center, the Apple TV, the HomePod or by using Siri voice commands. You can access AirPlay 2 controls within any app and also in the Control Center on an iOS device running iOS 11.4 by swiping up. In the Control Center, you will see a list of all available AirPlay 2 devices in your home. You can send audio to a single device, to multiple devices, or switch audio between devices. 


Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Richer Sound Reproduction via HomePod Pairing

Equipped with a powerful A8 chip in each speaker, HomePod can play its own audio channel, left or right and separate out ambient and direct energy. This creates a fuller, almost  three dimensional soundstage for any room. Stereo pairing works via an Apple-designed wireless peer-to-peer direct link that enables communication between two or more HomePods and to play music in sync. The two speakers act as one when paired, and only one HomePod responds to Siri requests.

Setting up HomePod pairs is easy as you will receive a prompt with a popup interface to pair your HomePods if you have more than one. The same information is also available in the HomePod's settings in the Home app. In the Settings menu, menu, tap on Create stereo pair. Then select another HomePod,  choose your room, and assign left and right channels to each HomePod. Set up is almost instantaneous and you can benefit from a richer sound immediately. Paired HomePods offer a richer room-filling sound experience with a deeper bass and louder sound.

If the song you are playing supports stereo sound, you can distinctly hear different instruments being played on each HomePod. This experience is further enhanced if you connect to an Apple TV.


High Fidelity Audio Playback and Improved Podcast Acoustic Experience

Hayden's in London

Hayden's in London

We are thrilled to see these updates and increasing audio performance and connectivity as we get ready to launch our Hayden's podcast, Stardust this year. www.haydensm.com/podcast
 


Image via Apple

Image via Apple

AirPlay 2, Multi-Room Audio and Syncing with Other Speakers

What we are most excited about is AirPlay 2  functionality as this extends wireless use of your HomePod(s) to multiple rooms and enables connections to other speakers you may have such as Bower & Wilkins, Bang & Olufsen, Bluesound, Bose, Denon, Libratone, Marantz, Marshall, Naim, Pioneer and Sonos. You can listen to your existing music collection, stream new music and listen to podcasts anywhere in your home in sync with your speakers. 

The Control Center offers a quick view of what’s playing in every room and simple controls to adjust volume and more. When you select a single HomePod, you can play music in that room. Adding another HomePod, enables multi-room audio. When you have chosen two HomePods, each one receives its own volume slider for granular volume control. In addition, there is a master volume slider to adjust both speakers simultaneously.

You can also play music via YouTube or other streaming method. You will be prompted to choose the HomePod speaker for playback.

AirPlay 2 controls are available across iOS within any app and in Control Center for quick access to what’s playing in every room, on every speaker. Apple Music subscribers can also ask Siri to play different songs in different rooms or the same song everywhere, without ever leaving the room.

In addition, this synchronization addresses prior connection issues and lag while streaming audio and helps to ensure a better acoustic experience. You can ask Siri to play music in any room right from an iOS device or by asking Siri on HomePod.

Siri integrates well with Apple Music and with growing playlists and users, Siri's knowledge of music has increased.


Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Set Up and How to Update Your HomePod

Set up is easy as the new HomePod software is installed automatically on the HomePod after you update to iOS 11.4. to update your phone, go to the Settings app → General → Software Update.

After you update your iPhone to iOS 11.4, you can also navigate to the Home app, tap Edit and tap on HomePod > Details to go into its settings. Then tap Update Software.

If your HomePod is set up to automatically download and install new firmware, the latest version should already be installed on the device. After you have all your updates installed, Multi-room audio should just work right out of the box.

Start playing music on any iOS device and then select the HomePod. Any speakers you have that are compatible with AirPlay 2 will show up in a pop-up menu with a small checkbox next to them. You can choose multiple speakers to all play the same song from your iPhone or iPad. Apple Music integrates very well with multi-room audio via HomePods.

HomePod is available in the U.S., U.K. and Australia and will be available in Canada, France and Germany starting June 18.

We expect more coverage about the HomePod updates in WWDC this upcoming Monday June 4, 2018. You can see our prior coverage from last here on the HomePod, podcasts and more here. 

We'll be watching and covering WWDC on Monday! 

 

Apple Reinvents Key Manufacturing Process for Aluminum, A Primary Component for Its Products

Elf

Apple is transforming the way its products are manufactured by reinventing the process through which aluminum is made. Aluminum is a key component of Apple products. You can see it in everything from MacBooks to iMacs and iPhones. Altering the process of how this material is made to be more environmentally friendly will have a huge impact on manufacturing all over the world.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Conventional methods release carbon during the aluminum smelting process. A team of Apple engineers have created a new way of smelting, where oxygen instead is released. Working in close collaboration with two large aluminum companies, Alcoa Corporation and Rio Tinto Aluminum and the support of the United States and Canadian governments, the Apple team was successful in creating this new manufacturing method. The repercussions around the globe will be significant, as this removes a long-standing manufacturing process that released greenhouse gases.

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

Image via Apple

We are very excited by this as well as Apple's overall commitment to the environment. Last month, Apple announced that its facilities and offices are all powered 100 percent by renewable energy.

Apple's Patent for Foldable iPhone with Display Could Launch by 2020

Elf

Apple's recent patent filing for folding iPhone with a flexible display that clips on to clothing has sparked rumors about a foldable OLED iPhone. A financial analyst who works with Apple suppliers in Asia estimates launch by early 2020.

Hayden's concept on flexible screen 2016

Hayden's concept on flexible screen 2016

Recent Patent History

2017 Patent: Flexible section in the middle of the Smartphone allows the entire body to bend without seams or a visible hinge

Back on Oct 12, 2017, Apple filed a patent for a new application with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office called "Electronic Devices with Displays." The patent reveals Apple's interest in making devices that could be folded in half, describing a device with a 'flexible portion' that could be folded and would require having a 'flexible display' to do this without using seams or hinges. The USPTO application credits inventors Terry C. Shyu, Paul. S. Drzaic and Zhen Zhang for the flexible design and was issued to the patent office a year prior on Aug. 30, 2016.
 

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

The patent application describes a foldable display with an organic light emitting display layer (OLED) that is enclosed in a housing made from a variety of materials, ranging from plastic to glass, ceramics, fiber composites, stainless steel and/or aluminum. This latest concept could be applied to numerous devices ranging from MacBooks and iPads to Apple Watches and more.

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

Apple's patent filing also reveals that the technology can be achieved using next generation, micro LED display technology, which would also increase power savings for mobile devices. 

2016 Patent: Flexible OLED display with a Hinged Main Body

A year earlier on Nov 22, 2016, Apple was granted a patent No. 9,504,170 for 'Flexible display devices' that describe an Phone with foldable full-screen display. It's clear that Apple has been researching and experimenting with options for a hinged iPhone format with no visible hinges or seams, but instead having a flexible, OLED display with a metal backing that is capable of being folded into half. 

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

Apple's design would make it easier to fold the iPhone for easy storage similar to the clamshell cellphones that Motorola brought to mass markets in the '90s. In order to have a foldable format, Apple's design requires flexible components such as an OLED display with a metal structure for support. The patent proposes using nitinol, an alloy of nickel and titanium that is known for being elastic and having remarkable shape memory capabilities. The document also offers other options such as flexible polymers.

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

The patent goes into more detail about a device housing that has upper and lower sections, each of which is equipped with processors, sensors and smartphone circuitry. Upper housing could contain light sensors, cameras, display controllers and speaker modules. The bottom housing could hold microphones, CPU and GPU, a vibrator and other essentials. Both parts are attached via a hinge mechanism that allows for rotation and enables both parts to move together. The upper and lower housing are connected via flexible, printed circuit boards. The display is installed over the two structures and Apple documents how the flexible screen can include additional material for two or more folding options.

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

The new screen would be able to fold over itself similar to the clamshell cellphone, making it portable and also protecting the screen from weather and external elements. There is also a configuration for the display facing outward for easy operations. This second configuration allows for clipping on to a person's clothing via sawtooth detents. In order to prevent stress on the OLED part, Apple offers suggestions to ease tension with rollers to dispense and retract the OLED display when the hinge rotates. The patent describes two-hinge designs, cover glass and viewing angle details.

Image via USPTO

Image via USPTO

Apple's foldable iPhone patent was first filed in July 2014 and credits Fletcher R. Rothkopf, Andrew J. M. Janis and Teodor Dabov as its inventors.

Potential 2020 Release

The patent for this technology was first filed in July 2014, crediting Fletcher R. Rothkopf, Andrew J. M. Janis and Teodor Dabov as its inventors. While Apple has not shared any public details of its foldable smartphone concept, a financial analyst from Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, Wamsi Mohan, who works directly with Apple suppliers in Asia, suggests that the new foldable iPhone could be ready as early as 2020. Mohan also suggested that having a foldable smartphone and the trend towards larger iPhones in recent years could result in a smartphone that 'doubles up as a tablet." This device would offer the benefits of a larger iPad but the portability of a smartphone.

Collaboration with LG

Apple's newest patent filing in Oct of 2017 also overlaps with rumors about a collaboration with LG where LG was making a foldable OLED panel and a "rigid flexible printed circuit board" for a future iPhone model. LG is known for its large, rich color displays and has been working on the problem of having a cohesive display without a visible hinge mechanism for several years now. Other manufacturers like Samsung have teased out concepts, though no working flexible screen model is available yet for purchase by consumers.

Concept via Samsung

Concept via Samsung

Concept via Samsung

Concept via Samsung

Concept via Samsung

Concept via Samsung

The new technology could also find its way into other product lines like the MacBook or iPad.