Apple drew some pointed questions this week following CEO Tim Cook's vague response to reports suggesting Apple Watch demand has plummeted.
Not exact matches
Over at AllThingsD, in outlining her three big takeaways from Nintendo's announcement, Tricia Duryee makes a great
point that the new portable screen will almost certainly compete with
Apple's iPad for face time, given its forward - facing camera, ability to browse the Internet,
draw on the screen with a stylus, play standalone games like Othello, view photos and video chat.
The Croatian community filing the current - day action felt Dylan was besmirching the whole race for the past actions of a few bad ravaging, murdering and pillaging
apples, and they may well have a
point, but if I were their legal advisor, I would've counseled them to let it just blow over (which, considering that the quote is a year old and apparently hasn't incited anyone or anything, it had), rather than
drawing attention to the whole... unfortunate situation again.
TrendForce analyst Tom Tien
points out that apart from first movers like Amazon and Google, the smart speaker market is expected to
draw more attention after
Apple joined the competition.
Meanwhile, the
Apple Pencil's latency — that slight lag you get when
drawing — has been reduced to the
point where it's virtually imperceptible;
Apple says it's just 20 milliseconds.
I actually don't really see the
point of this feature if you can't send the
drawing itself, like
Apple's sketchable messages.
I've spent a little over a week with the iPad at this
point and I can report that using the
Apple Pencil with the tablet feels nearly identical to
drawing on an iPad Pro display.