Limitless: An AI Podcast - The Sad Reality of Apple’s iPhone 17 Announcement
Episode Date: September 11, 2025In this episode, we explore Apple's much-anticipated hardware event, highlighting key announcements like the iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods. Our hosts discuss the innovative features of the... AirPods Pro 3, the sleek design of the iPhone Air, and the impressive camera of the iPhone 17 Pro, while questioning battery life compromises. They also critique the minimal updates for the Apple Watch Series 11 and speculate on Apple's future in AI with the new A19 Pro chip. Join us as we unpack the excitement and shortcomings of this year's hardware showcase.------🌌 LIMITLESS HQ: LISTEN & FOLLOW HERE ⬇️https://limitless.bankless.com/https://x.com/LimitlessFT------TIMESTAMPS0:00 Apple Unveils Flagship Devices0:47 AI Features in AirPods Pro 33:33 Exciting iPhone Air Innovations4:49 The iPhone 17 Pro Unveiled11:54 Cooling Technology Breakthroughs19:29 Camera Upgrades and Features21:24 AI Potential in New Devices24:25 Speculations on Apple's Future AI25:49 Additional Hardware Announcements28:32 Recap and Final Thoughts------RESOURCESJosh: https://x.com/Josh_KaleEjaaz: https://x.com/cryptopunk7213------Not financial or tax advice. See our investment disclosures here:https://www.bankless.com/disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Apple just concluded the Super Bowl of hardware events for the year.
This is their biggest event of the year.
They unveiled their new flagship devices,
being the iPhone, the watches, and the AirPods.
It just concluded there was a lot of very cool tech that I think I'm pretty stoked about.
EGES, we might be going to war on a few topics on things you might find interesting or not.
But before we do, I mean, I want to talk about the thing that they notably didn't really announce
or excluded a lot from this event, which is AI.
It felt like this was, and granted, this is a very hardware-focused episode, a very hardware-focused announcement.
But last week when we covered Google's announcement, it was a mostly hardware unveiling,
but all of the software on top of it was enabled by AI.
And Apple really didn't seem to have a lot of the AI, but they did have some interesting
features.
So I kind of want to jump in with those.
What was Apple's AI presence like IJAS during this hardware unveiling episode?
They released a new pair of AirPods Pro 3s, which do live AI translation.
So you could be speaking Spanish right now, Josh, and I'd be hearing English in my
In fact, there's a really cool demo that I want you to see right here.
When both people are wearing AirPods Promissues.
I agree, yeah.
Let's include the key.
Yes.
We'll include the principal discoveries in the presentation of
Sexta Feira.
With certainty, the client will love that.
I'll let the strategy team know to prepare that immediately.
So what you're watching here is basically.
It's basically two people having a conversation.
They're both wearing maybe kind of dystopianly their iPod Pro 3s,
but they're able to like communicate and converse with each other
in a completely different setting, environment and language,
which I thought was just super cool.
We saw Google really something similar to this,
but that was over something more formal like Google meets, right?
So you have to set up a call and do this.
This seems much more casual.
And I also know, Josh, that you could,
wear the Airports Pro 3
and speak to someone who isn't wearing this
and the live translation will occur on your iPhone
so you can kind of show them a kind of transcript
of what you're trying to say and converse that way.
But, Josh, do you find this as cool as I did?
Yeah, okay, I found it cool
when I saw it first unveiled by Google
like six months ago.
But I do find this cool because it's built
into the ecosystem that I use.
So in that extent, I'm very excited.
AirPods, I think, are the device that I do not leave home with.
Like, people always say phone wallet keys.
for me, it's phone and AirPods. I adore them. I bring them everywhere. Having an upgraded version
that includes this live translation seems very cool. I think it's important to note they were both
wearing AirPods. In the wild, most times when you converse with someone, it's going to be one-sided
AirPods. So they did have a feature where you can actually speak and it will listen and then
share the words on a screen so someone who's outside of the conversation without AirPods can hear.
For me, Apple has largely lost my trust when it comes to software delivery. So in this case,
I need to see it to believe it. If it does work with low late.
and see like they demoed.
This is incredible.
This would be such a cool feature
where you can talk in near real time
with anyone in the world in any language.
And that's like a pretty remarkable thing
from something so small that just sits in your ears.
I fear that that will not be the case
and that this live demo is in a very controlled environment
and it is optimized for a perfect experience.
Noticeably, AirPods, I mean,
even the microphone quality of AirPods,
if you've ever tried to talk someone,
each guys on the phone has been horrendous.
So it leaves, it's amazing.
It's an incredible demo
for an incredible product. These AirPods are awesome, and I will absolutely be buying them. But again,
we'll test it. I'll believe it when I see it. Josh, buddy, did you have your coffee this morning?
You've got your Duma hat on? You're meant to be the fanboy of this show. Okay, let me step into
your shoes for a second and just say that it comes at the same price, which is a very un-apple-like thing.
Normally, they hike the price up hundreds of dollars for every single new model, but it's the same price.
99 cents. They've just kept it rendered off there. Eight hours of battery life,
a built-in heart rate sensor, which is something new, Josh. I don't know. Do,
does airport pros two have a heart rate sensor? It's basically where my head is going here is
I think they're starting to build a new kind of smart device and it's kind of starting with
the AirPods, this live AI translation feature. Maybe they stick a camera on it in future versions.
Maybe I'm being too much of a moonboy about this. But I found that pretty cool and maybe I'm being too
hopeful, but yeah. Yeah, health will be important. I think if you're interested in the AirPods,
the only things that you care about are active noise cancellation is better. It has live translation
and it can read your pulse in the case that you don't have a tracker like an Apple Watcher
or an Aurora Ring. And that's pretty much the only thing there. So what are you excited about,
Josh? Yeah, there's a ton of stuff. I'm actually stoked for. And it is all hardware related
stuff. They released a bunch in the iPhone department, which I think we can get into right now,
starting with the iPhone Air. The iPhone Air is awesome. We have this really beautiful designed
that shows the thinnest iPhone they've ever made.
And I just, one of the things that I got really excited about is for me, this was the first
time in a long time that Apple felt like they released a very Apple-esque device.
It's new, it's innovative, it's different, it's beautiful.
I think we see it from the marketing video.
They tried to do like a knockoff Johnny Ive promo video where they had some designer with
the European accent started talking about it.
But I think the most remarkable thing about this phone is the design.
And the reason why I believe they made this phone, which I'm not sure, I'm not sure,
you will agree with nor know about you, Jess, but I do want to get into it in a second.
First, the actual hardware of the phone, I think, what, 85% of this phone is battery.
So the entire backside of the phone is basically a slab of glass with a battery behind it and a
back shell. And all of the hardware, all of the compute, all of the camera sensors, the microphones,
the speakers, they are all found in this single array that exists on top of the phone that
they call the plateau. The actual limitation of what made this as thin as it could be is the USBC port.
the USBC port is actually the thickest part of the phone.
And they've kind of run up against this natural limitation of thinness.
And I just found this really inspiring to me because it's a new form factor of a device
that we've come to know and love for so long.
But they've really done an interesting job of stacking it all in this tiny, tiny little
thing and creating something that feels new.
They use this polished titanium.
And then as I'm watching this, I'm thinking, well, why would they do this?
What's the reasoning to make a thin phone?
Like no one really asked for a thin phone.
I'm stoked they did it.
I think it's beautiful.
it's amazing, but I mean, if you ask the average person what they want in a new iPhone,
they're going to tell you, well, I just kind of want better battery life, maybe a little bit better
cameras. And in fact, this battery is 48% less than the iPhone 17 Pro Max. So it's a significant hit
to battery life. But what's interesting is this very much feels like it was a product made for the
manufacturers more than it was made for the consumers. Because there was a link a few weeks ago
where Apple was looking to make the iPhone fold next year. And in order to make it,
make the iPhone fold next year. It requires a series of very thin components, a very small
components, a very compact tech to be able to squeeze two very thin displays into a single
piece of hardware that fits in your pocket. So to me, this feels like this was a drive run,
a short production run to get the supply chain and manufacturer set up to create this next
generation of thinner devices. And when I also think about what we talk about frequently,
which is this next level of compute through augmented reality and ambient intelligence, where
computers kind of exist on your face in the form of glasses or the Vision Pro goggles,
I think you really need smaller components. And this very much feels like a test for manufacturers
to create smaller components to fit in smaller, more confined spaces. Because if you look at the
video on the screen right now, it's gorgeous. It's this tiny, thin little sliver. And then at the
top, it has all the compute in one. And to me, it's remarkable phone. Really beautiful. If I didn't
care so much about cameras, this would be a no-brainer for me to buy. I think it is an awesome show
of Apple manufacturing strength, of design capability.
This is super cool.
And if anyone asked me what they should buy,
if they don't care about photography, get this phone.
It's awesome.
Did you have any takes when you watch this
about what you thought about it?
Okay, listen, as a professional Apple hater,
I was super impressed by the engineering behind this.
I mean, like, what we're showing on the screen here
is nothing short of genius, right?
So you've got the entire brain,
body limbs of a phone in the tiny little camera component of the top section of your phone.
I would say that this is probably like, what, not more than 15% of the actual phone body,
and the rest is just clean, smooth, slick glass, as you said.
And I kind of want to pick up on the point that you're making, which is, I think over decades
since the mobile phone was created, it's kind of been on a trend towards getting smaller,
thinner, right? Being able to fit into your pocket, being able to kind of like slide into your
bag or handbag or whatever that might be. And I think this is like the first major leap that we've
seen in a while where we're kind of like taking a very aggressive move, right? You mentioned
folded phones, right? Samsung's been doing that for God knows how long. But this is like,
this feels like a net new thing. It feels like, as this tweet says, practice for whatever future
hardware comes next. And you and I, Josh, have spoken about, or hypothesized rather, about
what the new AI consumer hardware device is going to look like. Is it going to be a puck
that sits in your pocket or on your table? Is it going to be a necklace? Is it going to be
air pods with cameras in it, with sensors in it? We don't know, or is it going to be glasses?
We don't know exactly what it's going to be. But I feel like this is kind of like a hint
towards that future. And my personal take is, I love that it's small. I love that it's tiny.
and I love that it's going to be kind of like hidden in the background
so that I can just continue doing what I do.
Ironically, tech permeates so much of our life,
but I kind of want a breather from it.
I kind of want it to be subtle in the background.
And I love the engineering that went into this.
But like I said, I'm a professional Apple hater, Josh.
So I kind of want to bring up two images for you.
And, uh, okay.
I don't know.
Just, just get your take on this, right?
Does this look familiar to you, Josh?
Uh, yeah, that was actually one of my favorite phones.
I had this in college.
This was the iPhone 5S.
Gorgeous, gorgeous device.
Why, what's your point?
What do you want to say about this?
Listen, listen, I'll just highlight, you know, these little words here, you know,
33% lighter than the 17.
You know, I'm just, I just want to point out, I'll point out.
But listen, what's better than a picture?
What's better than a picture is a video demo?
Look at this.
Look at the iPhone 6, Josh, compared to your fancy air device.
That's, you know, whatever, half glass or blah, blah, blah.
It's dinner.
It's sneaker.
It's cooler.
But obviously I'm jesting here.
The phone that we're talking about in question of the iPhone air
is so much more functioning performance than these phones.
But I just want to point out,
it's not the thinest or smallest phone that Apple's ever created.
So, yeah, I just rest my case.
It is the thinnest.
But perhaps not the smallest.
And, yeah, I mean, to your point,
the hardware they're packing into this thing,
the capability of this phone is equivalent to 100 iPhone 6ers.
I mean, this thing is a monster.
And it all fits very neatly in this tiny little package.
So actually, when you look at the arrangement,
of compute between these two phones.
The iPhone 6 has this whole system on chip architecture that expands through the entire
vertical length of the phone and it expands horizontally at the top and bottom, leaving a small
rectangular section for the battery.
This actually fits all of the compute, which is probably, I mean, I'm not even exaggerating,
at least 50 times the processing power of an iPhone 6 into a tiny plateau that is a fraction of
the size of the iPhone 6.
So, I mean, it's pretty, but this new phone is, it's running laps around the old iPhone 6 and
the iPhone 5. So one thing I keep hearing about, Josh, is this new kind of venting architecture
that comes either through the chip or the phone device. Let's talk about this. Can you tell me a bit more
about that? Okay. So before we do that, let's introduce the phone that it's involved in, which is actually
the iPhone 17 Pro. This is the new flagship device. This is the new guy. And before we do anything,
EJazz, oh my God, I actually had a meltdown last night. I have to confess to you and the listeners,
I had a mental breakdown halfway through this announcement episode because I saw them unveiled
this phone and I saw it unveiled in three colorways, none of which are black. If you know me,
I have all black, everything. The blackest of blacks for everything I own is my default. And in the
case of Apple, actually, black has been the default color of pro. Whenever there's a MacBook Pro,
they offer the black. The Apple Watch Ultra, they offer the black. The pro models always get black.
And for this time, for some reason, they wanted to go with orange, navy, and silver. So I'm having an existential
a crisis, but that's not here nor there. Whoever did that, you should be fired. Anyways,
let's get into what makes this so special. So one of the things you mentioned is the cooling,
right? So the cooling is really, really interesting. This is something I found super fascinating.
It's called vapor chamber cooling. And basically the way vapor chamber cooling works is it has a small
amount of liquid. It's some sort of water that is tightly sealed inside of a metal ceramic packaging.
And what it does is the water actually just kind of sits there. And it's absorbed by this
this porous thing that kind of holds it right near the processor. So if you're imagining kind of like
a sponge in a water bottle is a good way that I could describe this. And the sponge holds the water
and as the chip heats up the sponge, it kind of evaporates the water a little bit. And because
water particles have way more surface area than solid metal, it allows it to dissipate the heat
quite a bit. So as this water evaporates from your sponge in your bottle, it moves to the far end
of the bottle and it cools down. So the further it gets away from the heat source, which in this case is
the chip, the cooler it gets. And then when it cools down, it turns back into a liquid and it gets
reabsorbed by the sponge. So it's this kind of closed circuit system made for cooling hot devices.
They've recreated the rain system in a phone. That's insane. So this is not novel technology,
but it is novel in the sense that they were able to package this in incredibly, in a super small form
factor and squeeze it into a phone without really increasing the thickness very much at all.
And I mean, frequently, I have problems with overheating because I do a lot.
of graphic intensive work on my phone. I do some video editing. I do a lot of photo editing.
The phone frequently gets very, very hot and it overheats if I'm charging while I'm also working.
They did two things to help with thermal cooling here. One is that vapor chamber that I just
described. But the second one is actually moving away from titanium to aluminum, which is interesting
because, EJAS, if you remember just two years ago with the iPhone 15 pro announcement,
the leading headline for the phone was titanium. They were so proud of this new metal. It was
very lightweight. It was very apple, very difficult to work with. And it turns out, I,
It actually just sucks a thermal insulation, and it is not as durable as aluminum, and it's just expensive.
And yeah, okay, it's a little light, but it's not that impressive.
So what they did with this phone is they went back to aluminum.
Aluminum, I believe, has either a six or a ten times multiple in its ability to dissipate heat.
So this combined with the vapor chamber will allow the phone to run hot for a very long time without actually getting hot.
I think another thing that I noticed about this phone that we're kind of seeing in this little demo here is you'll notice that it's two tone on the back.
So what they did here is they made a unibody aluminum casting.
So it's actually one solid piece, the entire phone, instead of multiple pieces.
And they placed this ceramic glass on the back to allow for wireless charging and wireless communication that wouldn't work for aluminum.
So we're getting kind of the best of both worlds where we have aluminum, which is more durable.
It's better heat resistance, but it's not titanium.
And we also get the glass back.
These were two interesting things.
Did you have any other interesting things that were noteworthy to you about the flag.
flagship phone? Well, what interesting is questionable, but I kind of think it looks uglier than the
previous phones that they've launched. Don't love the design. That might be a controversial take. I don't like
the two-tonedness. I kind of like hide that stuff away. Like I like the wireless charging, but like
hide it away maybe. Also, orange is like such a bold color to go for. But one of the main things that is
ugly, but I know contributes quite well to this phone success, Josh, is that big camera hunk, which
If I hold up my current phone right now
has just kind of expanded
across the top of the phone
Tell me what I'm getting in exchange for that
because I'm expecting a sick camera.
Yeah, this is the reason why
I'm actually going to be upgrading
because I love taking photos with my iPhone
and I need the flagship camera.
Otherwise, I would absolutely buy a iPhone error
with no questions asked.
The cameras are better slightly,
particularly with the telephoto and wide angle lens.
Now, what's cool is it has 348 megapixel camera arrays,
which is the same as Google now.
And what that means is you're going to get really high quality on the wide angle lens
in low light.
You're going to get amazing quality as you always do on the 1x lens.
And for the telephoto lens, you actually get two lenses in one, which is pretty cool.
So for the wide angle, you get the 0.5 and the macro.
With the 1x zoom, you get 1X, 1.25 and 1.5.
Now you get 2x.
And you get 4x and 8x optical zoom with digital zoom up to 40 times.
So what this gives basically is you get another camera built into your phone.
So in the previous iPhones, you get a 0.5, 1.25, 1.5, 2, and 5.
Now all of those you keep, but in addition, you get a 8-times telephoto lens, which is pretty
cool.
So you can reach out further.
You have better optical abilities in low light because the sensors are a bit larger.
They're a bit higher megapixel count.
And overall, it's a solid upgrade.
There's a lot of pro features that are good.
They shoot in pro res.
It has really good color grading capabilities.
A lot of people aren't going to take advantage of that.
I think if you are going from a 16 pro to a 7.
The advantage is marginal.
I think the big upgrade really is that optical zoom out to eight times.
But when we're speaking of cameras, there is something that I really want to mention because
this to me feels like the most exciting upgrade in terms of cameras.
And that's on the front of the iPhone.
So the front of the iPhone got an upgrade in camera sensors.
And what they did is they actually changed the shape of the camera sensor from rectangular
to square.
Why is this important?
Well, it is when you're holding a phone sideways, you could picture kind of like a 16 by
nine aspect ratio rectangular box.
So that means it's seeing the world through basically what you're looking at right now,
which is a display, and it's showing it horizontally.
If you were to extend that screen upwards and turn it into a square, well, then it doesn't
quite matter the orientation you're holding your phone app because the sensor array is the same
orientation regardless of the way that you tilt your phone.
So if you hold your phone vertically, it's the same as holding it horizontally because
the sensor is a square.
It's not a rectangle.
And this is a big unlock because it allows you to shoot horizontal content while holding
the phone vertically. And I think, I mean, this is kind of a, just, it's a cute thing for people who
like to take selfies or who like to take vlogs and videos. But I did find this interesting for
just consumer applications because you never really have to turn your phone again to shoot anything
forward facing. And what I love to say, not only increase the resolution of the camera, but they
included stability in the front facing camera as well. So if you ever did want to record a video or
take a selfie or whatever, it will not only be stable, but it can be captured while
holding your phone vertically. So that was a nice, cute little feature. I'm like, okay, I like that.
I never have to turn my phone to take a wide angle selfie because actually here's another instance where there's AI.
It will detect where the people are in the image and it will automatically create a wide angle version if it detects people are on the sides of you that don't quite fit in the frame.
And this is also true in their FaceTime feature where it will track the location of your head and kind of follow your head so you don't really lose the framing.
So I thought that was interesting in terms of camera upgrades for the phone.
And I mean, not enough really to get someone to upgrade, but just fun upgrades that you would kind of expect from a new flagship device like this.
Yeah, I mean, that's what I was about to say.
I love the engineering feats that they've achieved with this new phone,
but I don't think it's good enough to convince me at least to upgrade or to buy a new phone.
What I'm noticing here, Josh, and I'm curious if you think otherwise,
in this flagship new phone, iPhone 17 Pro, it is a photographer's dream pretty much, right?
It's fully functional, 48 megapixels is insane.
I kind of think about the first cell phone I had
and the camera that I had on that looked like a potato, basically,
and it was so funky and large.
This is probably the best engineered mobile phone
that is out there today.
And I think that is super cool.
And like you said, a lot of people who take selfies,
which is a ton of people today, right,
will benefit from this quite a bit.
And it's performant as well for the price that you're paying.
I think there's this adage of like Apple,
like increasing the prices of all their devices
just kind of like inanely.
all the time, but you're kind of getting bang for your buck here,
given that what this phone does,
kind of stepping back for a second and kind of maybe putting my AI back on in a way.
I feel like they are kind of running out of ideas here, right?
I would love to see some kind of Steve Jobs-esque type device creation
or design applicability.
And that could come either at the hardware level or that could come at the app
design layer, right? Like, we saw Google kind of like release a similar type of phone with 48
megapixels as well, as you said, but they had 20 different AI apps that kind of came on top of
this. And not to make this all about like an AI thing, but I would love to see some of the
ingenuity that they're spending and effort and money that they're spending on the hardware
design to apply to the app layer as well. Otherwise, I think we're just going to end up plateauing,
which I think we've kind of been doing over the last couple of years. I don't know. What do you think?
Yeah, there's definitely, there's a discrepancy at Apple currently between the software and
hardware stack. I think the iPhone Air is a very respectable and really wonderful device. It's something
that I would rarely say that Steve would probably appreciate this, but it really is, it's a remarkable
feat of engineering and it's beautiful. And I think the last time we really saw this was actually for the
chips, the M-series chips, which really created a huge unlock in terms of what types of devices were
able to be made with Apple. So Apple Silicon as a technology is remarkable. On the topic of Silicon,
there is actually one other thing that I wanted to mention to EGES, which I thought was interesting.
with the new pro phone. And that's their new, the A19 Pro chip. And what I heard, they snuck this in there.
And it said that it features these new neural accelerators, what they call the neural engine.
And it's a series of cores inside of this new processor that is built specifically for handling AI tasks.
Now, they mentioned that in passing. They didn't mention any uses of these new neural cores.
But they did mention that they're investing a lot of energy and, I mean, space on this tiny little chip in these neural
engines, which are optimized for AI. So you could kind of think of it. If you have a mental model to think
of these, we have the CPUs, which is, you can think of it maybe like a chef. The CPU is like the master
chef. It does everything. It kind of can attack any problem you have. And then the GPU is kind of like a line
of sous chefs, right? Like they're all kind of there to help that CPU do a lot of the hard compute.
So they'll do the prep work. They'll chop up the vegetables and they'll hand it off to the CPU and it'll
take care of everything. And then you can imagine the neural engine kind of like a robotic slicer,
where it's really good at one thing.
So those vegetables that I mentioned,
it'll just slice, slice, slice, slice, slice, slice, and it's amazing at that.
And that's what the neural core is for the A19 Pro chip.
So it's super efficient because it uses this on-device S-RAM,
which is not slow, but it's very fast and it's very power-efficient.
And they use lower precision math.
So EJAS, we talk about quantized models sometimes here,
where they're kind of models that they lower the,
they're lower precision math, which is kind of like 8-bit or 16-bit,
meaning they don't go all the way, but they get most of the efficiency at a much smaller rate.
They lower the intelligence of the models.
Exactly.
And that's what they've kind of done here with these chips where they use 8-bit, 16-bit low precision math
in order to do a lot more computing.
That's maybe 80% as good if they used a lot more data, but also significantly more efficient.
So they have now this infrastructure on device using these neural engines that is significantly
better than it was last year and like 10 times better than it was two years ago with nothing
to run on it.
And the fact that they're investing so much, I mean, they have to.
kind of have to, but it leads me to wonder what type of AI are they planning to run on these
devices? Because now they're juiced up and these phones can run local inference like really freaking
good. But they have no local inference currently to run. So it leaves me with the question, who's
going to fill that slot? Because it's become apparent to me that Apple is not the company that is
likely going to do it. They're probably going to outsource this to someone or maybe we'll get a miracle
at WWDC next year. But that is one thing I want to mention. It's just the yeah, I don't know if I
agree with you on that, Josh. So in my moon boy thesis,
which is tucked away in a dusty closet somewhere
for Apple to win this AI race,
I think they're going to come in hard right at the end
by having the most hyper-performance small device
that fits into your hand or on your head
or whatever it might look like
and runs super-performance models locally, privately.
I pray that you're right.
And I think they might pull it off, dude,
because again, I want to hate on them,
but they have so much cash that an outlandish acquisition isn't beneath them or isn't going to be
surprising, I would say. I just think they're waiting patiently to see what kind of hardware companies
kind of pop up with the actual gizmo or the architecture that they need or the model that they require
and then they're just going to come in and swoop in and get them. I hope they do. I really hope you're
right because they have all the infrastructure now built to run local inference on these devices.
And like we mentioned, this is significant because the price per token,
drops down to zero dollars.
When you could run inference locally on a phone,
the cost to serve that AI to a consumer
dropped to zero because you don't have to interface
with any cloud server.
So it's a really big deal in terms of cost, efficiency.
And like we always talk about with Jevon's paradox,
the more tokens you have,
the more tokens we will generate.
And I think it's a win-win for everyone
if Apple can figure this to F out.
I am praying for you, please do it.
You have it now in the chip.
Make something happen.
Deliver us some awesome AI hardware
that can run locally on our phone.
I think for me, it was a great upgrade.
This is what I'll be buying.
EJ.
Do you have any...
Are you going to be buying anything?
If you do, what are you picking?
So I'm tempted to go for the air just because it looks so cool.
I want to kind of like see what that device looks like.
I want to feel it in my hands, like it being kind of top heavy and just kind of like, how is that going to feel?
I just think it's a really cool piece of engineering.
And I kind of want to own the first type of device that's like that.
Oh, and I'm going to get the airports.
The AirPods three.
Because I want to be able to communicate with my Uber drivers and the bodega guys.
because they always crack jokes
and I have no idea what they're saying.
Are they making fun of me
or are they laughing with me?
I have no idea.
Nice.
Yeah.
I want the AirPods just because
they're a remarkable little
pocket device that I take everywhere
and two times the act of noise cancellation.
That's all I want.
Just block more of the world.
That's great.
I think great job.
I will be a purchaser.
So outside of the phones,
there were a few other hardware announcements.
I mean,
we did have the iPhone 17,
which we didn't talk about.
It's another wonderful phone.
They upgraded the display to 120 hertz,
which is a really nice refresh rate.
It's a great phone.
you're on a budget and you want to buy something that's a little less expensive, amazing device.
In terms of watches, they were the most disappointing watch upgrades to date, which really
hurts my soul because I have none on my wrist and I was hoping to get one. And they cannot convince
me to shell out $800 for this behemoth of an Apple Watch Ultra. What they did with the Apple Watch
Ultra is they extended the displays slightly. They added the battery life a little bit better.
They added, I believe they added a 5G chip that has direct-to-sell connectivity. Also noted, if you
listen to our last episode about Starlink, this device now will work with Starlink satellites,
where if you're in the middle of nowhere and you have an Apple Watch 11 or Apple Watch Ultra,
you can actually get data right to your wrist from anywhere in the world. So that's a pretty
interesting thing that these watches now enable. It's been there for a little while, but the chip
has just been approved a little bit. I mean, the Apple Watch Series 11, this is actually a devastating
upgrade. They did not even upgrade the chip this year, EJAS. It is just the same exact hardware
with a slightly more scratch resistance screen. So now, you're
Supreme is now twice as scratch resistant as last year,
which is the most underwhelming Apple Watch upgrade to date.
They have hypertension,
which seems interesting.
I think it remains to be seen if it's actually accurate.
They included sleep scores to compete with companies like Woop, ORA, and AteSleep.
And I think that's kind of interesting to Game of High Sleep.
I would like to see them move more into that space.
But that's pretty much everything they announced last night.
They had some fun accessories.
They had a battery pack for the iPhone Air because the battery is a little smaller,
so it extends it.
They added a side leash to clamp onto your phone and walk it around as a fashion accessory.
But I think that's pretty much it.
In terms of AI, to recap, I think live translation, it's been around, but it's Apple-Fied.
It's cool.
We like that.
They added a ton of neural cores to the new phone with no real use of them yet.
So hopefully we'll get a use case soon.
And the new hardware, pretty good.
I mean, I'm excited to get a new phone with the new cameras, the new vertical, the square sensing camera on the front.
And then I think the iPhone air is, it's a lovely phone.
It's a gorgeous phone.
And I loved it.
And I think if no one's even interested, just go watch the release video because they did a really great job.
It's just a really cool feat of engineering that I think is a testament to where will we be heading.
And it's a dry run for manufacturers to actually figure it out and create smaller devices.
I doubt we'll get an iPhone air too.
It's probably just a transitionary piece to get the market at the manufacturing up to speed.
But I think that covers it.
That is the Apple event.
It was a big event that was slightly underwhelming on the AI front.
But again, it's Apple.
We will be patient.
We will be suckers in their closed wall ecosystem for at least one more year.
And I think that's a wrap.
So, I mean, thank you guys for watching.
I hope you enjoyed.
I am curious.
I would actually love, I want the comment section for this one if we could just chat about the phones.
Are you going to get one?
If so, what are you going to get?
If so, what color are you going to get?
I have no idea what color iPhone 17 pro I'm going to get because there's no black and I'm devastated.
So this is a serious point of contention in my life.
You just, what would you pick?
If you had to pick a color, the navy orange or silver.
Navy, I think it's probably going to be Navy.
That's so lame.
And you can't even cover the back because the freaking camera array is so big.
It's not even matte.
Give me a matte option, at least.
Come on.
Brutal.
Frudal.
Okay, but that's the event.
I hope everyone enjoyed.
Let us know what your take.
Are you going to be upgrading, downgrading, leaving the ecosystem,
happy, sad, upset that AI doesn't exist on this freaking ecosystem,
even though the most valuable company in the world.
But whatever.
whatever it may be. But I mean,
each guys will probably get in the iPhone Air
on 17 Pro Gang. By next Friday, we should
have them in our pockets. So maybe we could chat a little
bit more to then. But that is a wrap. Thank you so much
for watching. If you have a friend that is also interested
in this technology who didn't know about vapor chambers
or who didn't know about neural engine cores, maybe you learned something.
Share it with them. Let them know about it. It's pretty interesting.
I think it's pretty cool. And yeah,
that's a wrap for this episode. So thank you guys so much
for watching. I really appreciate it. Don't forget.
Like, subscribe. All the good things. And we will see you guys
in the next episode.
