Friday
Jun092023

Apple's Journal app brings a new way to capture your memories

Image: Apple

Apple is launching a new journaling app on iOS 17. This app helps you reflect and appreciate your life through journaling, a practice that can boost your well-being. It uses on-device machine learning to give personalized suggestions based on your recent activity, such as photos, people, places, workouts, and more. You can easily add these moments to your journal entries, along with photos, audio recordings, and music. You can also set goals and reminders to keep up with your journaling habit.

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Thursday
Jun082023

Meta Quest users can now watch Reels in virtual reality

GIF: Meta

Reels, the short-form video feature Instagram launched to compete with TikTok, is now coming to Meta Quest, the company’s VR headset. Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced the news on Instagram with a Reel from influencer Austin Sprinz, who explored the world’s deepest pool. The immersive video showcases how Reels can offer a different viewing experience on VR than on mobile or the web.

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Thursday
Jun082023

iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 leave behind older iPhones and iPad

Photo: Apple

Apple has discontinued support for iPhones X, 8, and 8 Plus in iOS 17, ending the hopes of many users who wanted to keep their 2017 models updated for another year. While iOS 16 dropped all devices older than the iPhone 7 and the first-gen iPhone SE, this is the latest crop of older iPhone devices to get the boot. Similarly, iPadOS 17 will no longer support the first-gen iPad Pro and fifth-gen iPad from its support list.

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Thursday
Jun082023

A pill-shaped camera can be steered for digestive diagnosis

New technology could revolutionize the way doctors examine the digestive system. It is a pill-shaped capsule with a tiny camera inside called the NaviCam. You can remotely controll it by an external magnet and a joystick. Unlike conventional video capsule endoscopes that rely on gravity and the digestive system for movement, the NaviCam can be steered to any part of the stomach to capture images and videos of potential problems.

The NaviCam could offer a less invasive and more convenient alternative to the traditional endoscopy, which requires anesthesia and time off work. “Magnetically controlled capsules could be used as a quick and easy way to screen for health problems in the upper GI tract such as ulcers or stomach cancer,” said Andrew Meltzer, a professor of Emergency Medicine at the GW School of Medicine & Health Sciences, in GW's press release.

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