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2Apple Watch Interface
The Apple Watch screen is controlled by touch, arm movement and by the “crown”—the circular wheel button on the side that traditionally was used to wind a watch. The watch, which must be used with an iPhone to get full usability, can do everything a smartphone or laptop can do, just on a smaller scale. It can also do things those other devices cannot do, such as track steps, heart rate, blood pressure and other health-related metrics. They will start at $349 and become available in early 2015, CEO Tim Cook said.
3Watch Comes in Three Types
4Talking to Each Other Using NFC Apple Watches
Thanks to the watch’s embedded near-field communication capability, users can talk to each other with a touch, as well as with Short Message Service (SMS). A user can draw a simple shape (like this heart) and send it to another Apple Watch wearer with a simple nudge. This touch ability also comes in handy with the new Apple Pay app, which is explained later in this slide show.
5Lots of Functionality
There’s a long list of apps available for the Apple Watch, and the company is actively promoting outside development of news apps throughout the development communities. Basically, anything one can do on a smartphone will be made available on the watch, which will be quicker and more accessible in many situations.
6Customizable Through and Through
7Charge Up Using Magnetic Attachment
8WatchKit for Developers
Apple Vice President Kevin Lynch, head exec in charge of the Apple Watch project, introduced a new toolkit for developers who may want to join the gang expected to design and develop new apps for the Apple Watch. Examples of some apps now available: You can tweet from the watch by tapping on the top; you can unlock a hotel room door with a tap; BMW’s app will show you a map of where you left your car in a parking lot; you can control the temperature in your home; and with the Nike app, you can challenge friends to a run and chart every step.
9iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus
To the surprise of no one, Apple launched two new iPhones, the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus. Now Apple has the larger size users wanted in order to try and cut into the high sales numbers Samsung, LG and others have been putting up with their 5-inch Google Android smartphones. As one might also expect, the new phones have improved 64-bit, A8 processors, improved cameras (new 1.5µ pixels, f/2.2 aperture lens with all-new sensor; Focus Pixels; improved image stabilzation; 240 frames-per-second slo-mo in video; time-lapse video and FaceTime 1080p HD camera.
10Apple Pay
Being able to pay with just a tap from a device to a special point-of-sale station without using a credit or debit card will cut down tremendously on fraud; neither the vendor nor Apple will ever see the transaction or the buyer’s personal information, and there’s no card to lose or have stolen. Several of the largest banks in the U.S. are already making preparations for this, as are vendors such as McDonald’s, Disney properties, Whole Foods Markets, Subway and even Apple retail stores. It is expected to go mainstream in 2015.
11Keeping Info Private
12Taking Their Official Bows
Lines of Apple Watches and new iPhones are ready for their close-ups, as journalists from all over the world crowd in around them to snap photos and videos. More than 2,700 people crowded into the De Anza College Flint Center for the event; this is the same location where the Macintosh and iMac were introduced in 1984 and 1997, respectively.