Apple's smart home products are about to become a lot more futuristic.
This is according to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, who detailed the company's plans for the smart home market over the weekend. Apple is reportedly working on a new operating system called homeOS, as well as two smart displays.
The more advanced of these will have a robotic limb, Gurman claims, and a large, "iPad-like" display. It might cost $1,000 or more, and it probably won't be ready very soon.
SEE ALSO: Apple reportedly backs out of OpenAI funding roundBut Apple is also reportedly working on a cheaper smart home display, which won't have the robotic arm, and will be intended mainly for controlling home appliances and using FaceTime. That one might arrive as early as 2025.
Ultimately, the cheaper display might be a sort of a companion to the more advanced device, though details on how this could work are scarce.
Of course, these devices will run Apple Intelligence, as Apple's idea is to bring AI features into the home. Apple's current lineup of smart home devices, such as HomePod and Apple TV, does not pack the necessary hardware to run AI.
Apple recently launched its new flagship smartphones, the iPhone 16 and 16 Pro, with a strong emphasis on Apple Intelligence features. However, those features are mostly delayed while Apple irons out the kinks, and works out how they'll work in Europe and China, countries which have more stringent AI rules than the U.S.
As far as homeOS goes, it will reportedly be based on the already existing tvOS, and the two operating system will ultimately be merged to become the operating system that powers all of Apple's smart home devices.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Apple is working on a smart display with robotic arm, report says-美玉无瑕网
sitemap
文章
48277
浏览
7599
获赞
946
Facebook has put warning labels on 180 million posts since March
The numbers Facebook is and is not willing to share say a lot about its ability to stop election misThe 'pondering the orb' meme, explained
Confused as to why everyone is "pondering the orb" on Twitter?The phrase "pondering the orb" is currGoogle parent company Alphabet to cut 12,000 jobs
Alphabet, Google's parent company, is cutting 12,000 jobs in the company's largest ever layoffs. AffApple's M2 MacBook Pro and Mac mini reportedly delayed until 2023
The rumor mill about Apple launching M2-powered Macs this November was churning, but now it seems weFour generations of British royalty pose for Christmas pudding photos
This Christmas season, the royal family is bonding over pudding. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge pDelta Airlines to offer free WiFi on most domestic flights by February
Wordle without having to pay for WiFi at 20,000 feet? Sounds pretty great.Delta announcedat CES it iThe 13 Twitter memes that defined 2021.
It was a long disjointed year, but amid the chaos memes thrived.2020 was particularly bleak, in globMake Twitter less toxic by fixing your notifications
Essentials Week spotlights unexpected items that make our daily lives just a little bit better.I&rsqFacebook won't share the data needed to solve its far
It's not exactly breaking news that far-right misinformation — better known to most as "lies"Instagram users are reporting mass suspensions, crashes, and loading issues
UPDATE: Nov. 1, 2022, 9:32 a.m. EDT Instagram said this issue has since been resolved and provided tDictionary.com selects allyship as word of the year
"Allyship" is Dictionary.com's Word of the Year— a defining term for a period marked by communHow to use Facebook Dating
Facebook Datinglaunched in 2019 and while not that many people are using it, it is a decent option &LG wants to put transparent OLEDs in restaurants and subways
LG's got a transparent OLED display, and if you're wondering how such a device could be useful, theSteve from 'Blue's Clues' returned and fans are coming to terms with growing up
Steve Burns from the Nick Jr. show Blue's Cluesreturned in a now-viral video that's making millenniaChatGPT can open directly from your Mac's desktop
Are you hooked on ChatGPT? Are you, like so many others, testing the limits of what an artificial in