Tag: Taptic

  • iFixit posts teardown of M4 iPad Pro, Apple Pencil Pro, discusses components and assembly

    iFixit posts teardown of M4 iPad Pro, Apple Pencil Pro, discusses components and assembly

    If you’re looking to get to the components of the new Apple Pencil Pro, it’ll take time, patience, and an ultrasonic cutter. Apple’s new M4-based iPad Pro, on the other hand, got quite a bit easier to repair.

    Per a new video teardown posted by the cool cats at iFixit, the Apple Pencil Pro required quite a bit of work and what the outfit called “destruction” of the stylus. The video shows significant changes to the design of the iPad Pro that make it more repairable, but the new Apple Pencil Pro’s design is quite the opposite.

    The video cites a “massive improvement” in replacing the battery of the new iPad Pro over previous versions of the tablet, as it no longer requires removing all the other components first.

    Following the iPad Pro teardown, the focus shifts to a teardown of the new Apple Pencil Pro. After trying to remove the “eraser” top of the Pencil Pro by cutting it off, the host is forced to use an ultrasonic cutter to slice open the plastic body of the stylus, rendering it un-restorable.

    The device’s components are eventually removed for closer examination, and include two sets of magnets as well as an inductive charging coil.

    The screws to separate the main circuit board are extremely difficult to find and remove. The taptic engine that provides the feedback on the device, however, is able to be separated from the rest of the electronics by simply breaking the micro-weld points.

    Where the Apple Pencil Pro’s repairability comes into question, the video cites a “slight” improvement over the first-generation Apple Pencil, which had all its parts epoxied into the body of the device. Still, the video cites the new Apple Pencil Pro as “an unrepairable pile of e-waste” once it is disassembled. iFixit, however, does praise Apple for its general “baby steps” towards more consumer repairability overall in its recent devices.

    If you’ve gotten your hands on the new Apple Pencil Pro and/or the new M4 iPad Pro, please let us know about your experience in the comments.

    Via AppleInsider and iFixit

  • Apple removes 3D Touch feature, transitions to Haptic Touch on iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro handsets

    As predicted, Apple has removed the 3D Touch feature from its 2019 model iPhones, transitioning to a less hardware-intensive Haptic Touch solution that debuted with iPhone XR last year. 

    The change was not mentioned during the company’s media event on Tuesday, Apple describing the change in sections of the product’s dedicated webpage.

    “Haptic Touch lets you do things faster, like take selfies without launching the Camera app,” Apple says. 

    The technical specifications for both the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro mention the Haptic Touch feature, while there remains no mention of the 3D Touch feature.

    Introduced alongside iPhone XR in 2018, Haptic Touch does without 3D Touch hardware, specifically a capacitive sensing layer, by delivering a similar user experience through software. Instead of pressing firmly on a 3D Touch display, users touch and hold UI elements to invoke secondary commands like app Quick Actions and contextual “Peek and Pop” views. 

    Apple introduced the 3D Touch feature in 2015 with the launch of the iPhone 6S, bringing the pressure-sensitive input to Apple’s handset. Unfortunately, the feature was rarely utilized by third-party developers. Pressure sensitivity is arguably more useful on iPad which does support the feature thanks to Apple Pencil. 

    It was also rumored that a conversion away from 3D Touch technology would increase internal headroom inside the handset as well as help save on production costs.

    It was also rumored that Apple would upgrade the Taptic Engine chip, which serves as the underlying hardware for all haptic feedback-related functions within the iPhone.

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

    Via AppleInsider and Apple

  • Apple Watch announced at media event, device to be available in early 2015

    This definitely fit into the category of “one last thing…” that Apple historically concluded its keynote speeches with, but it might be worth the hype and anticipation.

    On Tuesday, Apple announced its long-awaited Apple Watch, a device that the company said will define the emerging wearable devices market.

    Per AppleInsider, the device uses a “digital crown”, a physical dial that rests on the right side of the device. Using this, users can interact with the device without a need to touch the screen, which would obscure it.

    iwatchface

    The crown button also acts as the home button, and can be pressed to return a user to the main screen. A button located below the crown allows users to quickly access contacts.

    The face is also an input, with unique “tap” and “force press” gestures enabled by special electrodes capable of sensing pressure.

    (more…)