iPhone 14 Pro and Pro Max hands-on

2022-09-10 06:55:53 By : Ms. Alice Alice

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the Photos app.

The iPhone 14 Pro displaying the Engadget homepage on Safari. The notch is nowhere to be seen as the dynamic island is camouflaged into the status bar.

Side view of the iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS 16 lock screen.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page. A small icon displaying an album cover sits on the left of the pill, which is extended to take up the middle two quarters of the top row. On the right sits a small waveform icon.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page. The box is expanded and shows the song "Safe and Sound" by Capital Cities is playing, with album art next to the title. Below is a progress bar, with buttons for rewind, pause, skip and AirPlay beneath that.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page. In the dynamic island is a red waveform on the left and a timestamp on the right, indicating that a voice recording is happening.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page. In the expanded dynamic island sits a red waveform on the left and a timestamp and stop button on the right.

Off-angle view of the iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new dynamic island at the top of the iOS home page. In the expanded dynamic island sits a red waveform on the left and a timestamp and stop button on the right.

The iPhone 14 Pro held in mid-air, showing the new Always On Display with the dynamic island at the top of the dimmed iOS 16 Lock Screen. A thumb hovers in front of the phone.

The iPhone 14 Pro and the iPhone 13 Pro held fanned out in one hand, with their rears facing the camera. They do not appear significantly different.

Off-angle view of the iPhone 14 Pro and the iPhone 13 Pro held fanned out in one hand, with their rears facing the camera. The new model's cameras seem slightly bigger.

Nadine Ahn, Chief Financial Officer of Royal Bank of Canada (TSX: RY) (NYSE: RY), is scheduled to speak at the Barclays Global Financial Services Conference in New York on September 13, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. (EDT).

Rafael Gabay, a promoter and significant shareholder of IM Cannabis Corp. ("IMCC" or the "Company") (CSE: IMCC) (NASDAQ: IMCC), announces that he has acquired an aggregate of 613,496 common shares in the capital of IMCC (the "Common Shares") as part of IMCC's non-brokered private placement of 4,887,496 Common Shares at a price of USD$0.50 per Common Share for aggregate proceeds of USD$2,443,748 (the "Private Placement"). Mr. Gabay paid aggregate cash consideration of USD$306,000 ($397,279.80 bas

Compulsory masking is very hard to justify

(Reuters) -The government of Canada's main oil-producing province Alberta has filed for intervener status in a legal challenge to the federal government's move to list plastics as toxic substances, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney said on Thursday. It is the latest in a string of disputes between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government and the western province, which also brought legal cases against Ottawa's carbon price policy and legislation governing environmental assessments for major infrastructure projects. "Labelling plastics as toxic substances is already having an impact on Alberta's responsible and growing petchem (petrochemical) industry by creating uncertainty for those investors," Kenney said.

The leaders of two congressional committees want a federal probe into whether airlines used government pandemic money to fund pilot buyouts and early retirements that may have fueled current pilot shortages, according to a letter released on Friday. Congress approved $54 billion in three rounds covering much of U.S. airline payroll costs for 18 months that ended in September 2021. Airlines accepting government assistance that funded payroll costs were prohibited from furloughs or firing workers and faced limits on executive compensation and bans on stock buybacks and dividends.

TOKYO (Reuters) -Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said rapid yen moves were undesirable after a meeting with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday, joining a chorus of policymakers lobbing verbal warnings over the currency's recent sharp drop to 24-year lows. "Sharp currency moves are undesirable as they destabilise corporate business plans and heighten uncertainty," Kuroda told reporters after the meeting, which he described as an occasional catch-up by the two sides to discuss broad economic and financial matters. "When the yen is moving 2 to 3 yen per day, that's a rapid move," Kuroda said, when asked about the Japanese currency's recent fluctuations.

Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences (KISS), Bhubaneswar has won the prestigious UNESCO King Sejong Literacy Prize 2022 for its outstanding literacy programme based on the recommendations of an international jury.

SAN DIEGO (AP) — The U.S. government posted a $40,000 reward Friday for information leading to the arrest of the Malaysian defense contractor nicknamed “Fat Leonard," who disappeared weeks before he was set to be sentenced for one of the largest bribery scandals in the nation’s military history. Leonard Glenn Francis cut off his ankle monitoring bracelet around 7:35 a.m. Sunday at a San Diego home where he was being held, according to the U.S. Marshals Service. Neighbors reported seeing U-Haul t

Dollar slides as investors balance positions ahead of U.S. inflation data

DALLAS (AP) — United Airlines thinks that in a few years, plenty of big-city customers will pay $100 or more for a one-way ride to the airport in a four-seat, electric-powered air taxi. The Chicago-based airline said Thursday that it invested $15 million in a startup manufacturer, and signed a “conditional” agreement to buy 200 of the tiny aircraft with options for 200 more. United said it expects to receive the first taxis — which will take off and land vertically, like helicopters — from Eve A

Credit Suisse said on Thursday it had struck a deal to buy out its local partner in a Chinese securities joint venture, reaffirming its commitment to the world's second-biggest economy amid doubts about the scandal-hit Swiss bank's plans. The bank reached an agreement to buy Founder Securities' 49% stake in the Credit Suisse Securities (China) venture for 1.14 billion yuan ($163.92 million), according to a Founder filing on the Shanghai Stock Exchange, starting the process of turning the venture into a fully-owned operation. "China is a key part of our Asia Pacific and global strategy," Carsten Stoehr, CEO of Greater China at Credit Suisse, said in a statement.

Former miners were forced to inhale an aluminum powder in Ontario between 1943 and 1979 that is now linked with Parkinson's disease

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The leaders of two congressional committees want a federal probe into whether airlines used government pandemic money to fund pilot buyouts and early retirements that may have fueled current pilot shortages, according to a letter released on Friday. Congress approved $54 billion in three rounds covering much of U.S. airline payroll costs for 18 months that ended in September 2021. Airlines accepting government assistance that funded payroll costs were prohibited from furloughs or firing workers and faced limits on executive compensation and bans on stock buybacks and dividends.

(Reuters) -California officials on Thursday said Amplify Energy Corp agreed to plead no contest to six criminal charges and pay nearly $5 million in penalties and fines in connection with a crude oil spill last year that killed birds and fouled beaches. The announcement was the latest legal effort to hold the Texas-based oil company accountable for a subsea pipeline leak that released some 558 barrels (25,000 gallons) of crude oil into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Huntington Beach in southern California in October of last year. At a news conference broadcast live on the internet, California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said the company had repeatedly turned off and on the 17-mile-long pipeline when it was alerted to the leak.

Japan's government on Friday unveiled near-term stimulus steps to soften the economic blow of high food and energy prices on low-income households, businesses and farmers. The move by the government to roll out new and extend existing policies highlights Fumio Kishida's resolve to tackle the impact of rising cost pressures by providing support to firms and consumers. "Protecting the lives of people and activity of businesses in the midst of surging global prices is one of the top priorities of the Kishida administration," Kishida said on Friday at a meeting of a panel tasked with rising prices and wage issues.

PARIS/BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union's executive body will launch a consultation early next year on whether tech giants should bear some of the costs of Europe's telecoms network, EU industry chief Thierry Breton said on Friday. Europe's telecoms operators have long lobbied for a financial contribution from U.S. tech firm's such as Alphabet's Google, Meta's Facebook and Netflix, saying that they use a huge part of the internet traffic.

TOKYO (Reuters) -Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said rapid yen moves were undesirable after a meeting with Prime Minister Fumio Kishida on Friday, joining a chorus of policymakers lobbing verbal warnings over the currency's recent sharp drop to 24-year lows. "Sharp currency moves are undesirable as they destabilise corporate business plans and heighten uncertainty," Kuroda told reporters after the meeting, which he described as an occasional catch-up by the two sides to discuss broad economic and financial matters. "When the yen is moving 2 to 3 yen per day, that's a rapid move," Kuroda said, when asked about the Japanese currency's recent fluctuations.

Elon Musk contended that Twitter Inc's decision to pay millions of dollars to a whistleblower it had fired gives the world's richest person another justification for terminating his $44 billion agreement to buy the social media company. In a Friday letter to Twitter, lawyers for Musk said Twitter's failure to seek his consent before paying $7.75 million to Peiter Zatko and his lawyers violated the merger agreement, which restricted when Twitter could make such payments. Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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