Software Development + Apple Event 2021

By: Carol Vercellino, CEO & Co-Founder

On September 14th, 2021, Apple held its annual iPhone-centric event, announcing their new iPhones and iPads. If you missed it or want a quick breakdown, watch our update below. We also talk about what features might be a game-changer for companies in the healthcare and life sciences industry.

Jay, what did you think about today’s announcement?

Jay: It was interesting. In general, you’re seeing issues where the iPhone and even the watch are mature products. So, there’s nothing earth shattering they’re going to add to it. For the iPhone and iPhone Pro, I just wrote down “more better”. It’s the same stuff they do every year.

On the phone, they added the cinematic mode where they track the person, and focus on who’s in the foreground or the background, which is cool, but that’s a super niche issue.

Carol: Yeah, but I could see as a small company or startup, if you want to record a professional video, you now have this device in your hands that could make it look more professional.

Jay: Yeah, it’s crazy that now for $1,000 or $1,500 you get this movie studio in a box.

You mentioned earlier today that there’s still a lack of audio features.

Jay: Yeah, you’re still walking around with that boom mic. I don’t know if that’s a thing that’s feasible to fix from a phone – or if that’s something they care about. Professional people are still connecting external microphones and audio capture equipment. 

Some of the more complicated features that we’re building in the healthcare and life sciences industry that you have to have a server to process, we’re very quickly moving to where we can put that on the phone, right?

Yeah, they continue to update the neural engines on the devices so they’re faster, and they’re running more and more stuff on the device. They mentioned that all your Siri requests are processed on the phone where before it was on the cloud, so, if you had a flaky internet connection, Siri would have gone away. Now all of it is happening locally.

They showed a clip from a Tennis training app. They were doing real time processing of taking those high quality images off the camera and tracking where the ball lands.

I saw a demo a couple years ago for basketball, where they were doing body tracking of the shooter. If they were releasing at the top of their jump and registering if the ball went into the hoop. It’s set up off to the side, but the player is wearing AirPods. All that audio is coming back real-time and feeding them information.

Carol: That’s interesting because I remember when we first started the company, and we talked to a few prospects that had to manufacture their own devices or partner with companies to put sensors all around. So, I wonder if we’ll see consolidation in the future, where  you’re just like here’s the watch, iPhone, and AirPods – go.

Jay: Right, instead of sensors, you’re just using the super fancy phone to do that.

Anything else stand out to you?

There’s a special place in my heart for the iPad Mini because I love tiny computers. The Mini hasn’t seen an update in a couple of years, and it was a big update. It got a second generation Apple pencil, touch ID, USBC, 5G – it got everything you could want in a pocket iPad.

Why would I buy an iPad Mini over a larger iPad?

The iPad Mini is now more of a mini version of an iPad Air. It has all the features that before you’d only get on the iPad Air. 

There’s the iPad Pro, which has all the bells and whistles. The iPad Air is the middle of the road product, and then there’s the entry level iPad, which has all the basics, but is still very nice now. So, the iPad Mini is more in that middle of the road category.

All the iPads got the center stage feature. It uses the FaceTime camera and has a really wide field of view. Traditionally, we’d have robotic cameras that would face track, but now, instead of physically turning the camera, they pan different parts of that sensor. Coupled with the software with face tracking, it’s an interesting feature for FaceTime and Zoom to follow one person around or focus on the speaker when a group is using it.

If you had to buy an iPad for your Mom and Dad, which one would you get?

Oh, I’d totally buy the cheapest one! For somebody who’s just going to use it for FaceTime, solitaire, and checking emails, the entry one is great. You need to have a solid reason to get one of the other ones. Do you need the pencil? Does it need to be small like the mini? 

**The above interview has been transcribed for clarity and brevity.**

 

Building an app for the iPhone? Check out our article, 3 Steps to Create a Benefits-Oriented Mobile App Onboarding, before you start.