iPhone beats Samsung in court, but Apple has to pay you $50
A separate lawsuit is keeping Apple lawyers busy. Turns out "Bendgate" from way back in 2014 was totally a thing. Public documents revealed that Apple knew that the iPhone 6 Plus was a whole 7.2 times more likely to bend than the iPhone 5S. The iPhone 6 was 3.3 times more susceptible. But Apple shipped the phones anyway, giving me one more reason to hate my iPhone 6.
But, you may get a chance at vindication. If you paid $79 to replace your iPhone battery last year, then Apple owes you 50 bucks. Apple is finally taking responsibility for intentionally slowing down the performance of older phones in order to keep up with declining battery life, and refunding customers who paid for an out-of-warranty replacement before Apple slashed those rates to $29.
Your juiciest iPhone news this week.
The iPhone won a huge -- and lucrative -- legal battle against Samsung Galaxyphones, but will wind up giving some of it back to pissed-off iPhone owners, and next-gen iPhone chips might already be underway. Here's what happened in the world of iPhone this week.
After a major seven-year litigation between the two biggest phone makers in the world, a jury decided that Samsung must pay Apple a mind-boggling $539 millionfor infringing on five patents with its Android phones, proving that iPhone design patents count for more than the combined movie budgets of Iron Man, the Incredible Hulk and Doctor Strange. But it's not over yet -- Samsung plans to fight the verdict. Hey Samsung, it could be worse. Apple wanted a cool billion.
Looking ahead, Apple may already be working on the processor for its next iPhone. The A12 chip is said to be made with 7-nanometer technology that could make future iPhones faster and more efficient than the iPhone X, whose A11 chip uses a 10-nanometer process.
And while we don't expect to see the 2018 iPhone as early as Apple's WWDC, you should definitely be on the lookout for upgraded processors, iOS 12, smarter Apple TVs and HomePods, changes to the Apple Watch's functionality and much more.
/ Source: cnet
Comments