Showing posts with label Featured. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured. Show all posts

iPhone 17 Air: Thickness & Price Revealed

iPhone 17 Air: Thickness & Price Revealed

Apple is reportedly gearing up to launch an ultra-slim iPhone 17 model later this year, with new reports revealing some intriguing details.

South Korea's Sisa Diary today detailed that Apple is holding back nothing called "iPhone 17 Air" to be 6.25mm thick. Assuming that estimation turns out to be precise, the gadget would turn into the most slender iPhone ever, besting the ongoing 6.9mm record set by the iPhone 6. It additionally implies the gadget would be around 20% more slender than the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Or more, and around 25% more slender than the iPhone 16 Genius and iPhone 16 Star Max.

Most tales appear to concur that the "iPhone 17 Air" will be some place in the 6mm thickness range, with one talk going as low as 5mm.

The report said the super dainty iPhone 17's cost will be like that of the iPhone 16 Or more, what begins at $899 in the US. Apple isn't supposed to deliver an iPhone 17 Or more, and the "iPhone 17 Air" will actually be its substitution.

Samsung is likewise wanting to deliver a considerably more slender cell phone this year, as indicated by the report. Like the "iPhone 17 Air," the purported "Cosmic system S25 Thin" will clearly have a thickness during the 6mm territory.

There have been clashing bits of hearsay about "iPhone 17 Air" plan subtleties and details, yet most sources have concurred that the gadget will have around a 6.6-inch show. Apple store network investigator Ming-Chi Kuo said he anticipates that the gadget should have a standard A19 chip, a Powerful Island, a solitary back camera, and an Apple-planned 5G modem. The gadget is supposed to be outfitted with 8GB of Slam for Apple Insight support.

In general, the gadget would have a few trade offs contrasted with the Genius models to accomplish a lot more slender and lighter plan.

Apple ought to deliver all iPhone 17 models in September, and extra tales will probably surface about the "iPhone 17 Air" among occasionally.

India's Historic Space Docking Mission: A New Era in Space Exploration

 

India's Historic Space Docking Mission: A New Era in Space Exploration

NEW DELHI — 

India launched a two small spacecraft Monday in the first step toward it's goal of manning the moon and building a space station.

The launch was broadcast live by India's space research organization on the island of Sriharikota, and ISRO said it was 'vital for India's future space ambitions.'

Last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced plans to send a man to the moon by 2040.

Two 220-kilogram (485 pound) satellites were on the PSLV-C60 rocket that blasted off Monday evening at Sriharikota's launch site, with shooting flames as it soared into the night sky.

The mission is being dubbed by ISRO as SpaDeX, for Space Docking Experiment.

"On this success flight, PSLV-C60 has launched SpaDeX and 24 payloads," it said in a statement.

It intends to 'develop and demonstrate the technology to rendezvous, dock and undock two small spacecraft,' according to the mission.

The technology is "crucial" to India's moon plans, it added, describing it as "a key technology for future human space flight and satellite servicing missions."

The maneuver will be a 'precision rendezvous' between the satellites occupied the Earth at 28,800 kilometers per hour (17,895 miles per hour).

ISRO said their velocity would be lowered to '0.036 kph (0.22 mph), to merge in Space to form a Single Unit.

The world’s most populous nation has a relatively inexpensive aerospace program that is on pace to meet milestones set by the world’s leading space powers.

After Russia, the United States and China, 'This mission is taking Indian to become 4th country in the world to have space docking technology,' ISRO said in an a press release.

In the last decade India has flexed its space faring ambitions with its space program growing larger, but also faster, commensurate with the limbs countries of Asia but at a much cheaper price tag.

It became just the fourth nation to land an unmanned craft on the moon after Russia, China and the United States in August 2023.

Emergency Safety Inspections Ordered in South Korea Following Jeju Air Crash

 

Emergency Safety Inspections Ordered in South Korea Following Jeju Air Crash

Authorities plan a separate check of all Boeing 737-800s and South Korea’s acting president has ordered an emergency safety inspection of the country’s entire airline operations, after 179 people died in a Jeju Air crash involving the aircraft on Sunday.


Flags flew at half mast as shocked citizens began a second day of official mourning while the government said it will conduct a full audit of all 101 domestic aircraft in service, with help from US investigators, possibly including Boeing.


But two days before the disaster, Choi Sang-mok, who was appointed president, said the aviation safety system needed to be overhauled in an 'exhaustive' inspection so the Republic of Korea could 'move toward a safer Republic of Korea'.


Reports emerged that soon after taking off on Monday, a passenger jet run by Jeju Air was forced to return to Gimpo airport in Seoul following an unspecified problem with its landing gear — which he was speaking about.


Among the issues being investigated after the crash was a landing gear malfunction, after Sunday’s crash in which the plane skidded along the runway in what the aviation industry describes as a 'belly landing'.


It was confirmed by officials that of the 181 passengers and crew on the Jeju Air plane that crashed into a wall at Muan international airport when it came down short and without the landing gear deployed, 179 died. The accident is the country’s worst domestic civil aviation disaster.


A man and a woman were rescued from the tail of the aircraft which burst into flames and broke apart as it hit the wall, two flight attendants. The Yonhap news agency said they had been taken to hospital in Seoul after being transferred from hospitals close to the airport.


They were being treated for fractures of his ribs, shoulder blade and upper spine, according to Ju Woong, director of Ewha Womans University Seoul Hospital. The man, whose name has not been released, told doctors he 'woke up and found (himself) being rescued', Ju said. There were no immediate details available about the female survivor.


Though he wouldn't say what the cause was, eventually, officials said it could have been a bird strike or weather conditions – or a combination of the two and other things – but that it wasn't known yet.


A damaged flight data recorder could delay attempts to determine the cause of the accident as it is brought to the surface from the wreckage of the plane, media reports said.


The cause of a major air disaster usually only emerges months later, and damage to the recorder was expected to prolong that process, a land ministry official told Yonhap.


Choi declared a seven day mourning period starting Sunday as he tries to make sense of a major disaster shortly after he replaced an ousted predecessor, Han Duck Soo.


Yoon also was impeached in mid-December over his disastrous, and short lived, declaration of martial law earlier in the month and, like Han, had been made interim leader.


Senior politicians from both ruling and opposition parties came together to try to comfort a country in mourning after the animosity of the past month seemed to have been put to one side.


The accident investigation, however, will look into the model of aircraft, and questions will inevitably be for Jeju Air, the flight’s operator.


The low-cost carrier said it would 'do everything it can to support the families of the victims,' including financially. Kim E-bae, its chief executive, told a televised news conference he took 'full responsibility' — regardless of the cause — and apologized for the crash with his senior company officials, who bowed deeply. The company had not found any mechanical problems with the aircraft during regular checkups, he said, and waited on the results of government investigations.


But Kim was greeted with an angry response when he reached Muan airport to visit grieving relatives in person.


The land ministry said in a statement that investigators have identified 141 of the 179 victims using DNA or fingerprint analysis.


Special tents were put up in the airport lounge for the long day in hot weather in the hope that they would hear news about their loved ones, who had still not been found. An elderly man waiting in the airport lounge who asked not to be named said he had a son on board that plane and his body was the one that the authorities had not identified.


A bird strike warning was issued to the plane by the control tower at Muan, 300 km south-west of Seoul, just before the flight wanted to land and its pilot was allowed to do so in another area. Just before the plane flew past the runway, then slid across a buffer zone and struck the wall, the pilot sent out a distress signal.


It was the worst crash on South Korean soil and one of the deadliest in its aviation history. South Korea last suffered a large scale air disaster in 1997 when a Korean Air jet crashed in Guam killing 228 people on board. Back in 2013, an Asiana Airlines plane crash landed in San Francisco, killing three people and injuring 200. The bulk of the 175 passengers were South Korean and two women of Thailand. From three to 78 years old, of the total 175, 82 were men and 93 were women. Nearly all were in their 40s to 60s and were back from winter holidays in Thailand when the accident happened. The father of one of the Thai passengers, Boonchuay Duangmanee, told the Associated Press that Jongluk had been working in a South Korea factory for more than two years before returning to Thailand to visit her family. He said he didn’t think that this will be his last time seeing her forever.






Samsung at CES 2025: How to Stream the Press Conference Live

 

Samsung at CES 2025: How to Stream the Press Conference Live


Every year Samsung’s CES presser is an odd duck. Of course the Korean electronics giant tends to keep its powder dry in the consumer electronics space. After all, there’s no question it’s going to announce its latest flagship handset, the Galaxy S25, sometime near the end of January.

The company is going to continue to stick with its tradition of TVs and appliances at CES 2025. On the consumer end, there are odds and ends like consumer robots that won't likely see the light at all. Samsung has adopted the tagline “AI for All: For the presentation, which will run January 6 starting at 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET, every day, everywhere” will read.


That alone doesn’t give us much to work with. But what company isn’t prone to mention a killer feature like AI when addressing the media? Any one that didn’t feel the need to mention AI, will be eaten by the sharks at Mandalay Bay. But the good news is that we have it on good authority that the company has plans for being hardnosed on the AI refrigerator front come January.

The presentation is being streamed live from Samsung's news room.




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