Tag Archives: 14s

Final Fantasy 14’s ‘Dawntrail’ Gets A Release Date, Moved Because Of ‘Elden Ring’ – Forbes

  1. Final Fantasy 14’s ‘Dawntrail’ Gets A Release Date, Moved Because Of ‘Elden Ring’ Forbes
  2. Our FF14 Dawntrail adventure now has a date, along with pre-order and collector’s edition details PCGamesN
  3. Final Fantasy 14’s Yoshi-P adds fuel to the Final Fantasy 9 remake rumors, teases that the reason for all the Dawntrail references is “a secret” Gamesradar
  4. Final Fantasy XIV: Dawntrail To Be Released on July 2, 2024 crunchyroll.com
  5. Final Fantasy XIV Dawntrail’s release date gets announced along with new Digital and Collector’s editions Windows Central

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Skipping Final Fantasy 14’s “globally acclaimed” 10-year story could diminish the MMO’s value, so Yoshi-P says the ever-divisive catch-up idea is back on the shelf – Gamesradar

  1. Skipping Final Fantasy 14’s “globally acclaimed” 10-year story could diminish the MMO’s value, so Yoshi-P says the ever-divisive catch-up idea is back on the shelf Gamesradar
  2. Final Fantasy 14 Director Says the Game’s Become Too Relaxed, Will Increase the Challenge Going Forward IGN
  3. Need to catch up with FF14 before Dawntrail? Best start now: there won’t be a free way to skip its story soon Rock Paper Shotgun
  4. Final Fantasy 14 Director Wants To Make The Game More Stressful Kotaku
  5. Final Fantasy 14’s Yoshi-P regrets making the MMO as stress-free as it is Gamesradar

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The iPhone 14’s Prize Feature Kicked Off 2023’s Biggest Phone Trend

The next time you find yourself needing to send a text while stuck in the middle of nowhere, you may be able to look to the sky, where low-Earth satellites can help send an SOS, no matter what device you have.

Last year, Apple became the first tech company to offer new satellite texting capabilities to its devices, introducing it with the iPhone 14 as a system to call for help in emergencies. The idea is easy enough: Point your phone at the sky, line it up with a satellite passing overhead and send a text to authorities. You can even send GPS data too.

Now, other companies are poised to jump on board, making satellite texting a new frontier for the phone world.

“I think 2023 is certainly shaping up to be the year of mobile satellite connectivity,” said Avi Greengart, an analyst at research firm Techsponential. “Everyone’s doing it. Everyone is doing it differently.”

Sadly, it’s not as easy as adding a satellite texting app and an extra satellite radio to the phone. Low Earth-orbiting satellite systems cost money to run and maintain, just like cellular internet and phone systems do. Apple has said it’ll give iPhone owners free access to emergency services for two years after they buy their device, but it hasn’t said what happens after. Other satellite texting systems haven’t launched yet and seem likely to charge users for the privilege.

There’s no debate about whether this technology can be useful. We’ve already heard stories of people’s lives being saved because of it. The question is whether people are willing to pay for it. And if not, will satellite texting be just another fad, like 3D TV?

Currently, satellite tech on our phones is only for emergencies and only in expensive smartphones like Apple’s iPhone 14, which starts at $799. That makes the technology a nice-to-have feature that the broader population of phone owners won’t have access to for some time. Those that do may never end up in a dire situation without signal when the feature would come in handy — a group that IDC research director Nabila Popal counts herself among. “I can’t remember the last time I didn’t have cell service,” Popal said. 

Given satellite texting’s niche use, Popal doesn’t believe having it will sway consumers into buying one phone over another. It will certainly appeal to backcountry hikers, desert drag racers and remote truckers who plan to head beyond cell networks. But, for everyone else, it’s not an important enough feature to rush out to buy. 

Instead, it’s more like one more feather in the cap of modern smartphones, which have already bundled together so many other technologies we used to have to carry separately in our bags, like cameras and handheld video games. 

https://www.cnet.com/a/img/resize/18460903eb92eaca784be60c20969e9ba93e06a4/hub/2023/01/05/b50b8d12-59ba-487a-b1fa-bac8c93d0477/iridium-constellation-with-spotbeams.gif?auto=webp&format=mp4&width=1200

For its Snapdragon Satellite feature, Qualcomm went with satellite communications provider Iridium, which has a constellation of 66 orbiting satellites with global coverage.


Iridium

The current state of satellite texting

Satellite phones have been around for decades, showing up in films as far back as Steven Seagal’s 1992 classic military thriller Under Siege whenever someone needs to make calls from the middle of the ocean. A satellite phone also played a critical role in getting people off dinosaur-infested island in 2001’s Jurassic Park III.

“Where’s the phone? Get the phone!” yells veteran dino survivor Alan Grant as it nearly slides off a boat and into a river during a Spinosaurus attack. (Spoilers, he grabs it at the last minute and is able to signal for help.)

The real-life versions aren’t as exciting, but they can be just as helpful. They use networks of dozens of satellites orbiting the Earth every 90 minutes or so to relay phone signals to the ground. The first of these systems was Iridium, which launched its service in 1998 and a dozen other satellite networks have survived by offering connectivity to frequent travelers, but the prospect became popular recently after Elon Musk’s rocket startup SpaceX borrowed the idea to surround the globe with internet coverage through its Starlink program.

You can still get satellite phone coverage by purchasing a bulky, nearly $900 feature phone and paying a premium of at least $50 for 5 minutes of call time for service from companies that own a private network of satellites. But phone makers are building in the capability to use those orbital networks to send emergency texts because smartphone radios have gotten good enough to communicate with satellites directly, instead of relying on a separate — and often large — antenna.

Phone radios have “gotten so good now that you can build satellite connectivity into a phone without needing an external antenna,” said Anshel Sag, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy.


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I Tried Emergency SOS via Satellite on the iPhone 14



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Among mainstream smartphone makers, Apple was the first with its iPhone 14 line. The company partnered with GlobalStar, which has limited coverage of the US, Europe, Australia and limited parts of South America. Apple only activates this feature in a handful of countries in those continents, and it only works for emergency text messages made outside (it won’t reach deep within buildings), but the company pledged that new iPhone 14 owners get two years of service included when they buy the phone.

Earlier this month, Qualcomm revealed a new feature coming in Android phones that will let users send and receive text messages through satellites. It uses the Iridium network and Qualcomm says it will have global coverage, which is more than Apple’s services says. 

The service, called Snapdragon Satellite, will only be for emergencies to start but will eventually be able to exchange messages socially and even use data, likely as part of a premium service. It’s not available yet and will come in phones launching in the second half of 2023 that use Qualcomm’s latest premium chips, though the company is leaving it up to phonemakers whether to have the service at all in their phones or if they should charge for the privilege. That leaves lots of unknowns.

And there are smaller players with their own niche devices, like Bullitt, which announced its Motorola-branded rugged phone powered by a MediaTek chipset at CES 2023 that will launch in the first quarter of 2023 for an undisclosed price tag. Bullitt promises two-way satellite texting through connectivity partner Skylo, which leases time on existing satellite constellations. Huawei actually launched its Mate 50 series of phones with satellite texting through China’s BeiDou satellite network a day ahead of Apple’s iPhone 14 debuted, though Huawei’s reach has diminished over the years.

More individual phones coming out with their own ideas of satellite texting will likely follow, and the big US carriers have all selected their own satellite partners to eventually offer mobile service beyond their networks’ edges, though none has a firm launch date yet.

Everyone’s in on the race because they can see the potential value of providing satellite safety nets as a service, analysts say. Apple could easily add it alongside its subscription services, like the $7 per month Apple TV Plus, $10 per month Apple Music Plus or $17 Apple One bundle. Carriers could use it to sweeten the deal for the priciest subscription plans, betting that the risk-averse among us are willing to pay extra for peace of mind. “It’s hard to overstate how important telling someone you’re out of gas in the middle of the Gobi Desert or Death Valley or the Adirondacks is,” Techsponential’s Greengart said.

The text message interface of Apple’s Emergency SOS feature.


Kevin Heinz/CNET

Is it a bad thing to be the new phone trend?

Of course, the phone industry doesn’t have the best track record with new technologies. Analysts broadly consider the last couple years of transition to 5G wireless to have been a letdown, particularly because coverage has been spotty and speeds are sometimes as slow as the 4G LTE service we’ve had for years. 

Satellite texting could be even more finicky than 5G was, particularly because it depends on the availability of satellites and the yet-untested strain of having many people relaying help requests through them.

Still, early signs seem promising. At CES 2023, Qualcomm took journalists outside Las Vegas to test its Snapdragon Satellite feature, and it worked. CNET phone editor Patrick Holland tested Apple’s Emergency SOS feature on his iPhone 14 and found that it worked — in fact, anyone can try it out without sending an emergency message thanks to a demo mode in the phone’s settings.

This seems like the next frontier — to use satellites to bolster mobile networks and keep people in contact. Even if most people will never have the misfortune to need it, the feature still acts as a safety net, helping the more adventurous phone users who wander beyond cell towers or disaster survivors after mobile networks fail.

Some iPhone 14 owners have reportedly been saved already thanks to the feature, including one man stranded when traveling by snow machine in Alaska above the Arctic Circle. In another case, a couple tumbled down into a deep canyon in a Los Angeles forest and used an iPhone to send for help. In less than 30 minutes, they were rescued. Without the iPhone’s satellite texting feature, emergency services wouldn’t have been contacted, and “nobody would have known to look for them,” Los Angeles County Sheriff Sgt. John Gilbert told The Los Angeles Times.

We’ve come a long way from needing to buy big, clunky satellite phones if we want to venture safely beyond the range of cell networks. Pretty soon, many smartphones will be able to call for help, whether you’ve taken a wrong turn in the wilderness or been attacked by dinosaurs on a remote island that you should have just stayed away from.

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Why wireless carriers are able to give out iPhone 14s for free

All three of the major US carriers have announced deals that allow qualifying customers to get the latest Apple smartphone for free, under certain conditions, which often include trading-in an older iPhone model. AT&T and T-Mobile, for example, are both offering up to $1,000 credits, after trade-ins, for buying the iPhone 14 or iPhone 14 Pro. Verizon is offering up to an $800 credit after a trade-in for the iPhone 14 or iPhone 14 Pro, per some of the offers rounded up and touted by Apple.

While Apple managed to keep the base price for the latest iPhone the same as it was for the previous generation, the iPhone 14 still starts at a hefty $799, and $899 for the 14 Plus model. Meanwhile, the higher-end 14 Pro model starts at $999 and the 14 Pro Max at $1,099. At a time when inflation is pinching consumers from all sides, deals from carriers can help make the latest iPhone more affordable.

Wireless carriers that have built extensive 5G infrastructure may also be offering these steep discounts as they seek customers to upgrade to 5G-enabled devices, according to Tom Forte, senior research analyst at D.A. Davidson. “They’ve invested billions of dollars in their own 5G networks and they’re trying to get a return on their investments,” Forte told CNN Business.

The iPhone has been capable of using 5G networks since the iPhone 12, released in 2020.

“The other reason, though, I think they’re able to do it is that the iPhones historically hold their values well,” he added, noting that many of the offers include trading-in an older iPhone model to qualify for the discounts or freebies of the latest devices. Many of these carriers then sell pre-owned and refurbished iPhones.

The latest iPhone 14 lineup, in the United States at least, has also ditched the SIM card tray and gone entirely eSIM. By doing this, Apple is “essentially making it easier for consumers to switch services,” Forte said. “That might be another reason that the carriers are being more aggressive, or at least as aggressive as they’ve been since the 12, to get consumers to sign up.”

Still, it’s important to read the fine print, as these deals often come in the form of contracts, a practice that’s been common since cellphones became ubiquitous. Forte noted that if you were to take advantage of some of these iPhone 14 promotions but then try to cancel the service after a month or two, you will likely be responsible for “a lot more than the purchase price” of the new phone.

Apple and carriers may also be capitalizing on the rise in popularity of buy-now-pay-later plans among consumers in recent years, according to Julie Ask, vice president and principal analyst at Forrester. So more people seeking options to pay for a new iPhone over time might be especially drawn to carrier deals that end up including discounts on the device and cell plans, even if they carry a longer commitment.

“There’s been a bit of an uptick in consumers’ willingness and interest to pay over time,” she told CNN Business. Still, she said carriers are often looking to “lock people in for at least a couple years, so that’s the fine print I would be looking for.”

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iPhone 14’s Success Depends on One Unexpected Thing

This story is part of Focal Point iPhone 2022, CNET’s collection of news, tips and advice around Apple’s most popular product.

When Apple executives step onto the stage at the company’s Steve Jobs Theater in California next week to show off the iPhone 14, as is widely expected, you probably won’t notice many changes to the phone. Rumors suggest the notch where the selfie camera sits may be smaller, and Apple will likely tout camera improvements or newly introduced always-on screen technology. But the feature the company will be betting on most to attract customers will be the one introduced two years ago: 5G wireless.

Sure, for some people, 5G is yesterday’s news. For others, it’s just a bigger number than 4G that came before. But increasingly, data is piling up that indicates 5G wireless is becoming nearly as important in today’s iPhones as battery life and storage, the two features people watch out most for when buying their phones. The current wireless standard, which has been available for several years now from all of the major US carriers, is also the second-most cited reason people told researchers at the consultancy Deloitte that they’d switched mobile providers, behind “better value for the money.”

This is a far cry from how 5G was perceived at launch and in the early years, when the service switched on with lots of fanfare but little actual coverage. But the carriers have poured billions of dollars into the infrastructure and airwaves to support it, which has resulted in better service in many places. 

Apple CEO Tim Cook is one of 5G’s biggest boosters, citing it nearly every time he’s discussed iPhones in public since first offering the technology with the iPhone 12 in 2020. “5G has been an accelerant,” he said in July when discussing future prospects for his company’s handset, despite rising inflation and a looming recession. “I think there’s reason to be optimistic.”

Read more: How to Watch the iPhone 14, Apple Watch Series 8 Launch Event

Every year seems to be a test of the iPhone’s continued popularity, and that’ll continue with good reason this year too. The iPhone is the company’s singular most important product by nearly any measure. Apple rang up more than $191.97 billion in iPhone sales last year, which was more than half of its overall revenue. Much of the iPhone’s technology has seeped into the rest of its business as well, with related products like the Apple WatchAirPods headphones and iPad tablet becoming multibillion dollar businesses unto themselves. 

It’s also helped to push Apple’s value to more than $2.5 trillion, up from the $60.7 billion Wall Street valued the company at just before the device was first announced 15 years ago. Now, Apple is the most valued company on the planet, followed by oil giant Saudi Aramco, Microsoft, Alphabet (Google), Amazon and electric car maker Tesla.

The big picture

The economy’s become a key issue for many people since inflation began its rapid rise last year.


James Martin/CNET

This year, though, the iPhone’s success won’t just be a measure of sales that add to Apple’s profits. It’ll also be a bellwether for the larger economy, giving some sense of whether people are willing to spend at a time when our collective confidence in the economy has fallen to its lowest point in decades. Businesses large and small have slowed new hiring or begun to lay off staff, as Snap, the smaller social networking competitor to Facebook, did last week.

Yet 5G, as yawn-worthy as it is within the tech industry, may be Apple’s key to success navigating the souring economy we all seem to be facing. Wedbush Securities estimates about 240 million of the 1 billion iPhones being used worldwide haven’t been upgraded in the past three-and-a-half years and thus aren’t running on 5G networks.

Those owners of older iPhones will likely upgrade at some point, particularly as wireless carriers pack on perks like free subscription movie and TV services to entice people to upgrade. “The stickiness of the iPhone upgrade cycle is still being underestimated,” Wedbush analysts wrote in a message to investors earlier this summer. “This continues to remain Apple’s unique advantage over other technology stalwarts.”

Dream a little 5G dream

Though 5G wireless networks were available before Apple introduced its first 5G-capable iPhone in 2020, many people saw it as one of the most important launches for the service.


Apple

An odd aspect of the 5G upgrade cycle may be that while people are buying in — as in, they don’t want to buy new non-5G phones — 73% of respondents to Deloitte’s surveys said they wanted a “better understanding” of what 5G offers, and 30% said they’re disappointed by “a perceived lack of innovative apps and services that leverage 5G.”

When carriers began promoting 5G several years ago, they talked of next-generation wireless technology that could usher in a new sci-fi-device-laden future. The promise of 5G showed up everywhere, from self-driving cars to remote medical care to smart cities.

Read moreEverything We Know So Far About the iPhone 14

So far, 5G has largely delivered on its promises of higher speed and increased reliability, but that’s about it.

Carriers, meanwhile, have convinced people 5G is necessary in part by turning off older 3G service, effectively pushing some people to upgrade and indirectly putting 4G users on notice that they, eventually, will be next.

Now, with economic uncertainty on the horizon, people are having to think more carefully about device purchases they may not upgrade again for several years.

“If you’re going to buy a smartphone, you’re going to buy the best you can at a certain price point,” Maribel Lopez, longtime industry watcher and head of Lopez Research. “People have to make serious choices when they’re looking at 30% increases in food costs and doubled gasoline prices.”

“No one, unless you need a value phone, would buy a 4G phone today,” she added.

Shiny Apple

Apple notched its highest sales in profits ever after releasing the iPhone 13 last year.


Lexy Savvides/CNET

All these trends don’t mean Apple’s iPhone is a guaranteed hit, with or without an unfolding economic catastrophe happening around the world.

To sweeten the iPhone 14’s introduction, Apple’s teams are working hard to offer software updates with its iOS 16 software update, like a new “widgets” to add info to the lock screen, undo-send in Mail and heightened security

They’re also rumored to be polishing new features like the always-on display, which would allow iPhones to show limited information on the screen even when it’d be typically turned off, and emergency satellite texting, which could come in handy if you’re stranded on a desert highway or in the middle of the ocean.

Read more: Every iPhone 14 Feature I Want to See at Apple’s Next Event 

For some people, that all may seem like unnecessary features just to have something new on the box this year. But Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi said Apple has to be careful to introduce features that matter to early-first adopters and premium purchasers, who are “critical to the brand perception.”

“You can’t leave that high-end user feeling left out or forgotten,” she said. And for everyone else, she’s expecting carriers to offer subsidies and other give-aways to convince people that the real big changes will be to the value they get out of the phone. 



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iPhone 14’s OLED displays tipped to come from rival Samsung

When it comes to the shortlist of suppliers providing Apple with displays destined for this year’s iPhone 14 series, Samsung has reportedly just found itself to be the top pick through its Display arm.

According to a report from South Korean news publication ETNews (opens in new tab), “industry insiders” are claiming that Apple has formally approached Samsung Display with an order for approximately 80 million screens, to be supplied in Q3 (July-September) of this year; ahead of the iPhone 14’s expected release this September.

Details of the order corroborate reports that this year’s crop of devices won’t play host to an iPhone 14 Mini (as has featured in the past two generations of iPhone), with only two display sizes intended to serve across four discrete models.

Based on the device lineup previously suggested by reputable leaker Ming-Chi Kuo, the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro will make use of a 6.1-inch panel, meanwhile just under half of the total order is intended to serve the larger iPhone 14 Max and top-end iPhone 14 Pro Max, both of which will feature a 6.7-inch display as Apple seeks to create it best iPhone ever in 2022.

Samsung Display will use two different manufacturing methods for the OLED displays that form this order: LTPS-TFT and LTPO-TFT, with the latter offering greater power efficiency over the former, thought to be headed to the two Pro models in the iPhone 14 family.

The standard iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Max will likely use more modest LTPS-TFT technology, which offers lower display refresh rates and a mildly lower quality of display.


Analysis: screening the competition

While 80 million units to a single supplier would mark a huge win for Samsung Display, it’s not a great sign for Apple fans hoping for more affordable iPhones this year.

The more manufacturers there are able to meet Apple’s demands and quality standards, the greater the competition, meaning lower component prices and, in turn, savings that – theoretically – can be passed onto consumers.

In the past, fellow South Korean manufacturer LG Display has often supported Samsung in providing Apple with displays for its iPhones. More recently, however, the two were joined by Chinese supplier, BOE Technology.

BOE has been making displays for Apple since the iPhone 12, although whether or not the California-based company places any orders with BOE for the iPhone 14 is still up in the air.

Apple only recently resumed iPhone 13 display production with BOE, after the Chinese company was found to have cut corners on its manufacturing processes (as reported by 9to5Mac (opens in new tab)) in order to reduce costs, without telling the iPhone maker ahead of time.

While BOE’s reinstated position as a parts supplier for the iPhone 13 doesn’t guarantee any involvement in the iPhone 14’s production, according to GSMArena (opens in new tab), Apple is re-evaluating their validity as a potential supplier this week, which could lead to greater competition for Samsung Display’s order total and, again, the potential for a more affordable iPhone.

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