iPhone 11 ProWITH THE INDUSTRY looking up to Apple for its new iPhones, the Cupertino giant has taken the experience a notch higher. The new iPhone 11 Pro's frosted matte finish makes it stand out of the clutter of glossy smartphones of today. With IP68 certification, the phone can withstand water up to four metres for 30 minutes. The near bezel-less OLED screen with a wide notch at the top is super bright, reproduces sharp and natural-looking colours, and with spatial audio (for immersive, theatre-like surround sound experience) tops the gaming and video streaming experience. The imaging proficiency is quite high. The wide, ultra-wide and telephoto camera each uses a 12MP sensor and using smart HDR along with machine learning results in sharp, detailed and natural-looking images. Apple has used A13 Bionic chip with Neural Engine that handles everything from video and image editing to gaming flawlessly. The all-new iOS 13 is a little buggy but has features such as system-wide dark mode, support for more Indian languages, and more. A single charge lasts a heavy day usage with a couple of hours of imaging and video capture, gaming, emails, social networking and more with still over 30 per cent charge left. WHAT IT COSTS: iPhone 11 Pro Max with 5.8-inch display costs `1,31,900 for 512 GB
Apple Watch has been lauded by most to be the best smartwatch out there. This is not only because of how well it works but also because of the sheer health and wellness features it brings to the table. Now, Cardiogram - a heart health application for Apple Watch - is introducing a new feature that will give users more information on how their body is responding to a COVID-19/flu. The new feature called Sleeping BPM revolves around how our body reacts while we're fighting an infection like COVID-19."Cardiogram's new Sleeping BPM feature can help users become more aware of how their body is responding to symptoms of the flu or other illnesses including COVID-19," said Johnson Hsieh, Cardiogram's co-founder to Apple Insider . He further went on to explain how this feature works. When we're sick, cells in our immune system release small proteins called histamines which cause inflammation and expansion of blood cells. This process sends signals to our brain to in...
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