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- Telegram's Premium subscription is here and it costs $4.99 / month - The Verge
- The Morning After: Google uses Drake’s ‘Texts Go Green’ to explain RCS to Apple - Engadget
- iPhone 14 displays — here's what to expect from the new iPhones - Tom's Guide
Telegram's Premium subscription is here and it costs $4.99 / month - The Verge Posted: 19 Jun 2022 03:39 PM PDT After announcing Telegram Premium earlier this month, the messaging app has finally rolled out the paid tier, which gives users access to extra features for $4.99 / month (via TechCrunch). All the features are outlined in a post on Telegram's blog, with some of its bigger draws including faster downloads and a larger maximum file upload size of 4GB (rather than the standard 2GB). Premium subscribers will also get double the limits imposed on standard users. Instead of joining up to 500 channels, subscribers are capped at 1,000 channels. The same goes for other features on Telegram — subscribers can create 20 chat folders with 200 chats each, save up to 10 stickers, pin up to 10 chats, and add a total of four accounts to Telegram instead of three. Premium users also get to have longer bios with a link. Some other perks include access to a library of Premium stickers with more obnoxious full-screen animations, exclusive emoji reactions, and animated profile pictures (sort of like the ones you see on Steam). There's also text conversion for voice messages in case you don't have headphones handy, in addition to chat management tools that allow you to change your default chat folder. Oh, and subscribing to Premium removes sponsored messages in public channels. Telegram CEO Pavel Durov's views on the platform's freemium tier have remained unchanged since he first brought up the possibility in 2020. In line with what he said previously, Durov stated last week that free features will remain free and new features won't impact the Telegram experience for non-subscribers. This means free Telegram users should be able to download larger files uploaded by subscribers, as well as view the premium reactions or emojis they use. Durov also promised that Telegram won't stop developing features for free users either, which the platform appears to be following through on so far. The latest Telegram update displays verified badges in chats (not just in profiles, search results, or chat lists), gives public groups the ability to enable join requests, and adds a few platform-specific improvements. That said, Telegram Premium comes with a lot of features, many of which will probably be attractive to the most active of Telegram's — now 700 million strong — userbase. I personally like that the majority of Premium's perks build off of Telegram's existing features. The new tier doesn't put features behind a paywall that should've been on the platform in the first place (kind of like what Twitter did with its "undo" button). |
The Morning After: Google uses Drake’s ‘Texts Go Green’ to explain RCS to Apple - Engadget Posted: 20 Jun 2022 04:17 AM PDT Google has been trying to nudge Apple into adopting the GSMA's RCS messaging protocol, from not-so-subtle jabs at I/O 2022 to lengthy Twitter threads from the head of Android. The latest tool from the makers of Android? Drake lyrics. The official Android Twitter account shared an "unofficial lyric explainer video" for "Texts Go Green," the third song from Drake's latest album. Both the title and chorus refer to what happens when an iPhone user blocks someone from contacting them through iMessage, which defaults messages to SMS and loses features like read receipts. Swiftly demolishing any cultural cachet by referencing lyrics from a recent Drake song, the Twitter account calls it "a real banger." And I close my Twitter app. — Mat Smith The biggest stories you might have missedMeta is launching an Avatars Store for digital fashion.Meta is opening an Avatars Store where you can purchase outfits for your avatar on Facebook, Instagram and Messenger. The new looks include designer duds from Balenciaga, Prada and Thom Browne, and the company expects to add more designers over time. Zuckerberg and Eva Chen, Meta's VP of fashion partnerships, announced the new store on Instagram Live, calling it the "first live avatar fashion show." The "fashion show" consisted of Chen holding up paper drawings of Zuckerberg's avatar wearing increasingly questionable, if metaverse-ready, outfits. Europe wouldn't be alone in trying to cut e-waste.US senators Ed Markey, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders have sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, calling on her department to develop a "comprehensive strategy" that would lead to a common charging standard. The EU acted in the "public interest" by settling on one port, the senators said, and the US ought to follow suit to reduce the environmental impact of chargers while improving convenience for users. A charger standard would theoretically reduce e-waste by letting people reuse existing cables and adapters for new devices. Free-to-play, license to print cash.Two weeks after release, Blizzard's Diablo Immortal has earned approximately $24 million according to Appmagic. The analytics firm said the free-to-play game had already been downloaded almost 8.5 million times. Will this inform the rest of the Diablo gaming universe? Possibly not. Diablo franchise general manager Rod Fergusson recently said Diablo IV would feature a different monetization system from Immortal. Who says greatness has to be expensive?The middle of the smartphone road has amazing options that balance price and features. These days, you still get incredible cameras, vivid screens and decent battery life. But there are so many, so where do you start? How about this guide? All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission. |
iPhone 14 displays — here's what to expect from the new iPhones - Tom's Guide Posted: 19 Jun 2022 09:00 PM PDT Just as the eyes are a window to a person's soul, a smartphone's display tells you an awful lot about the handset from the moment you fire it up. So what kind of story will the iPhone 14 displays tell this fall when Apple releases its new models to a waiting world? The screens on the iPhone 13 have turned out to be one of the many strengths of Apple's current smartphone lineup. All four iPhone feature bright, colorful screens, with the iPhone 13 Pro models standing out in particular, thanks to their adaptive 120Hz refresh rates. That means Apple's Pro phones can adjust how fast their displays refresh, ramping up to 120Hz for things like games or scrolling and scaling down to 10Hz for more static activities. Thus far, iPhone 14 rumors have painted a picture of more of the same for the upcoming phones. But dig into the rumors and you'll find some expected enhancements to the iPhone 14 displays that could translate into noticeable improvements for Apple's handsets. And the pressure's on Apple as the phone makers main rivals — particular Samsung — have focused on display upgrades for their own handsets, with an eye on knocking off Apple's offerings for the title of best phone overall. Here's what we've heard so far about the iPhone 14 displays, including what changes, if any, Apple may be planning for fast-refreshing displays on its new phones. iPhone 14 display sizesFor the most part, the screens of the different iPhone 14 models are expected to remain the same — with one big exception. The iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Pro, and iPhone 14 Pro Max should retain the screen sizes as their iPhone 13 counterparts. That means 6.1-inch panels for the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro, while the iPhone 14 Pro Max keeps the 6.7-inch screen size featured on the iPhone 13 Pro Max. That may not be the only 6.7-inch phone in Apple's lineup anymore, though. The rumor is that Apple is adding an iPhone 14 Max to this year's lineup — this would be a cheaper 6.7-inch phone that would lack some of the premium features included in Apple's Pro lineup. The idea is to give iPhone fans a lower-cost option to get one of the best big phones. That would mean the end of the line for Apple's mini iPhone model, which was introduced with the iPhone 12 releases in 2020, but never caught on, even with the 5.4-inch iPhone 13 mini. That means fans of more compact screens will either need to turn to the iPhone SE (2022) or hope that Apple keeps an older mini model in its lineup at a reduced cost. Expect one other change to the iPhone 14 Pro model displays — they're tipped to lose the notch that's been associated with the iPhone since the iPhone X's debut in 2017. Instead, the iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max look to feature two cutouts to house the front camera and Face ID sensors. That will free up a little extra screen space on both phones compared to recent Pro models. iPhone 14 refresh ratesAs noted above, the iPhone 13 Pro models added a dynamic refresh rate that allows them to scale between 10Hz and 120Hz. The standard iPhone 13 remains stuck at a more conventional 60Hz rate. Will anything change with the iPhone 14? At least one leaker thinks that the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Max could offer 90Hz refresh rates in a move similar to how Google handles its Pixel flagships. (The more expensive Pixel 6 Pro features a 120Hz screen, while the Pixel 6 offers a 90Hz display.) That would certainly be an upgrade from the fixed 60Hz refresh rate that the iPhone 13 features. The trouble is, other leakers have shot down this rumor. Instead, they tip the iPhone 14 to continue using the 60Hz panels found on current base model iPhones. An older report out of Apple's supply chain suggests that at least one iPhone 14 model is using an LTPS display with a 60Hz refresh rate, and we'd assume that means the iPhone 14. A 90Hz refresh rate would make things like scrolling appear a lot smoother on the iPhone 14 than on previous models, so it's definitely a feature we'd like to see. But until more reports emerge backing this switch in refresh rates, we have to assume the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Max will offer the same 60Hz rates found on Apple's less expensive flagships. We have better news for the iPhone 14 Pro, where the upcoming phones are likely to continue with the 120Hz displays that debuted with the iPhone 13 Pro. Those phones introduced LTPO displays — short for low-temperature Polycrystalline oxide — which allow the iPhones to adjust their refresh rate based on on-screen activity. A rumor has the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max featuring a new version of LTPO that boosts power-efficiency. The OnePlus 10 Pro got such an improvement earlier this year, and now it can scale down to 1Hz, as the Galaxy S22 Ultra can. Should the iPhone 14 Pro models get a new and improved LTPO technology, they, too, could feature the 1-120Hz refresh rate that other top flagship phones now enjoy. If that feature comes through, it could clear the way for another change to the iPhone 14 Pro's display. Apple's Pro models are rumored to be adding support for always-on displays, a feature that's been part of the best Android phones for years. The iOS 16 update coming this fall adds support for customizable lock screens and widgets that can be placed on your lock screen. Cleary, such a feature would also open the door to an always-on display for phones that can scale down their refresh rate to avoid draining their batteries. Other iPhone 14 display featuresDisplay refresh rates grab all the attention, but the battle for the best smartphone display has been fought on other fronts, too. Screen brightness has become increasingly important, and it figures to also be a key feature for iPhone 14 displays. When Apple released the iPhone 13 models last year, it touted brightness on the phones' Super Retina XDR OLED panels. The iPhone 13 peaked offered a max outdoor brightness of 800 nits, while the Pro models peaked at 1,000 nits. (We measured 795 nits and 1,024 nits, respectively on the iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro.) Since the iPhone 13's debut, Samsung rolled out its own flagship update. And the Galaxy S22 models also boast bright displays — a promised 1,300 nits of peak brightness for the S22 and 1,750 for the Galaxy S22 Plus and Galaxy S22 Ultra. We didn't record numbers hitting those maximums with our light meter, but for the most part, the screens on the S22 lineup are brighter than what you get with the iPhone 13. Will Apple respond in kind when it's time to unveil the iPhone 14? We haven't heard many rumors on that front. But given how brightness has become an area where phone makers now slug it out, we wouldn't be surprised if the iPhone 14 debuts with some improvements in that area. iPhone display outlookFrom screen sizes to refresh rates, don't expect a huge overhaul of the screens Apple uses for its upcoming iPhone 14 release. But enough significant changes appear to be in the works to make us think the displays will remain a crucial feature on Apple's next phones. And there just might be some surprises emerging as we get closer to the iPhone 14 release date. |
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