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IOS Operating Systems Software Apple Technology

iOS 13.2 Released With Deep Fusion, Siri Privacy Settings (9to5mac.com) 23

Apple has released iOS 13.2 today, bringing over 60 new emoji, new Siri privacy settings, and Apple's new Deep Fusion camera technology. 9to5Mac reports: There are over 60 new emoji and emoji variations in iOS 13.2. Apple first previewed these emoji over the summer, and they are now available for everyone. In total, the new 2019 emoji set includes 59 new characters that make up for 75 total variations when gender options are taken into account, and 230 options when skin tone options are included. iOS 13.2 also includes the Announce Messages with Siri feature that was originally meant for iOS 13. This feature allows Siri to read messages back to you when connected to AirPods or other headphones with Apple's H1 chip.

Perhaps most notably, especially for iPhone 11 users, iOS 13.2 includes Apple's new Deep Fusion camera technology. Deep Fusion is Apple's new image processing technology that works in the background to improve image quality for iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro users. iOS 13.2 also includes new Siri privacy settings that allow you to opt in or opt out of sharing your Siri interactions with Apple. You'll see a new splash screen the first time you boot into iOS 13.2 asking your preference. Last but not least, iOS 13.2 also includes support for the just-announced AirPods Pro. This includes settings for Transparency and Active Noise Cancellation modes.

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iOS 13.2 Released With Deep Fusion, Siri Privacy Settings

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  • Forget fixing Mail. But there are 60 new emojis. Yay!
  • So, I'm seeing a lot more emojis in source code directly. Okay, I can live with that. We had graphics characters before.

    What I don't get is, why does Apple get to decide what the Unicode code points are and the corresponding glyphs?

    Wasn't that settled? You know, by the Unicode Consortium as a whole, rathery than Apple unilaterally?

    • Because Apple is special, like how the browser makers decide how they want the web standards to work whether we like it or not.

      I'm out of the loop for almost ten years now, are they in strings which is understandable, or in variable and function names? If the latter, I will just roll my eyes and move on. 255 chars should be enough for anybody.
      • In strings is what I've seen, so I'm not really nonplussed by that.

        I don't actually think there's anything preventing you from having them in variable names in the current crop of dynamic scripting languages (where I've noticed it), except perhaps it being asinine. It's a side effect of internationalization, so that's fine, but people probably should stick to actual words in whatever language they speak.

        OTOH, I don't speak a language that uses ideograms, so maybe this is actually saner for some cultures.

    • by _xeno_ ( 155264 )

      Wasn't that settled? You know, by the Unicode Consortium as a whole, rathery than Apple unilaterally?

      They are. Android 10 included all the same emojis Apple just added, but Android 10 was released nearly two months ago. (Yes, make your jokes about Android and upgrades here, no one cares.) Windows 10's latest version also contains a number of the new emojis, although it's missing the gender neutral stuff. (The "gender neutral" emojis are just the Unicode Consortium clarifying that "no gender specified" doesn't mean "female" like Apple had done.)

      There's nothing really new or special in iOS 13, it's basically

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Who said innovation has died under Tim Cook?
    • by swell ( 195815 )

      Even more with 'gender options'! Now the pedophiles can really impress the preschool audience they are trying to reach.

      Really, do grownups (people with enough income to buy an Apple product) ever use these things?

      • Yes. 90% of my friends and I use emojis on a regular basis. On twitter and in texts. My mother does, too. So that spans an age range of people from about 20 years old to almost 70. I'm in my 40s. My one friend that doesn't use emoji doesn't use emoticons of any kind, and I find communication with her slightly harder, because it's always hard to tell if she's unhappy or not.

        I use the default yellowish skin tone because I'm half Chinese. I have a friend who is ethnically East Indian, and he's changed his to b

  • 120% more bugs.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday October 28, 2019 @07:17PM (#59356494)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • What the ??? Iphones have had 24bit 48khz playback from the jack since the iphone 4. I had to convert it to ALAC and down convert the sample rate from my hi-res masters but 24bit 48khz sounded great. My iPhone 6 was packed with 24bit and i was furious when they removed the jack. but even then The lightning dongles do 24bit rather well. If you are gonna bitch, bitch about BT and no APT-X HD or LDAC codecs ... that situation is ridiculous especially since they removed the jack
      • More bits In aptX does not mean higher quality. It has a higher bitrate because it's a first generation lossy compression codec and *requires* a high bitrate to produce the same quality. Being a first generation codec also means its computational requirements are low, but more data has to be transmitted, so power savings are questionable vs SBC or AAC.

        Ultimately, AAC over Bluetooth (which has roughly the same device support, though far less advertising than aptX) provides better sound, and is fully supporte

    • 24-bit is really only useful for scientific research, which is rarely done on iOS. More information: https://people.xiph.org/~xiphm... [xiph.org]
  • by phalse phace ( 454635 ) on Monday October 28, 2019 @09:43PM (#59356806)

    ability to brick HomePods

    New 13.2 Update Bricking Some HomePods [macrumors.com]

    Another quality release from Apple.

  • Just asking. I mean, emojis, woohoo. At least emojies don't have bugs. Maybe.

  • by antdude ( 79039 ) on Monday October 28, 2019 @11:39PM (#59357104) Homepage Journal

    Apple still supports older iDevices (e.g., iPhone 6+ and iPad air 1G). The two (lat/new)est generations of AppleTV got newer tvOS v13.2. https://support.apple.com/en-u... [apple.com] doesn't list their security details yet.

  • Apple pulled the (buggy) iOS 13.2 update.

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