Post by samsparrow74 on Feb 15, 2024 5:03:51 GMT -7
Everyone who has an iPhone knows first-hand where the Apple logo is placed - on the back of the device. No, it is not centered. The apple is located on the back of the mobile. Now this could change with the launch of the iPhone 11 next week . Apparently, according to 9to5Mac , the back of the new device (and its different versions) will have a novelty. And it's not exactly the camera, that too: the Apple logo will finally be centered. There are several sources that point out this change due to a leak of information, presumably from a casing manufacturer . The company's information expert, Ben Geskin, also told it through his Twitter profile: This is the new iPhones, if case makers are right about Apple logo placement. If you think that this looks wrong, trust me, this is just a matter of habit. Ben Geskin (@bengeskin) August 29, 2019 The famous apple has always been located in the same place, since 2007.
It seems that in this new version of the device, both the logo and the name will change places . A minimal but giant alteration for a brand like this in which everything is measured to the smallest detail. This means Romania Phone Number List that the triple camera that the new smartphone incorporates , quite 'apparatus', makes -visually- the mobile phone look heavy. For this reason, the brand has decided to move the logo a few millimeters so that there is a white space between the camera and the apple that provides visual balance. As Fast Company points out , the camera is so important to Cupertino that it is becoming its most prominent feature . The media points out that, already in 2015, Apple had 800 engineers working on the iPhone camera alone. A statement of intent in the era of photography on social networks. Fake news, fast-moving news and the filter bubble are great challenges in today's media landscape.
All of them create a narrower and more twisted vision of our world and that is why many researches warn against the prejudices that grow in our societies. The solution, they say, is impartial and well-researched journalism. In order to raise awareness about the growing prejudice in our society and the polarization it inevitably leads to, Swedish media group Stampen Media has carried out a social experiment called Visible Thoughts in the city of Gothenburg. During the experiment, people from the street were invited to sit on a chair placed in the center of a shop window, exposed to both passers-by and people following the event online. People could then tag the person in the window by answering a series of questions, without knowing anything about them, just based on their appearance. The responses were projected in real time both in the showcase and online.
It seems that in this new version of the device, both the logo and the name will change places . A minimal but giant alteration for a brand like this in which everything is measured to the smallest detail. This means Romania Phone Number List that the triple camera that the new smartphone incorporates , quite 'apparatus', makes -visually- the mobile phone look heavy. For this reason, the brand has decided to move the logo a few millimeters so that there is a white space between the camera and the apple that provides visual balance. As Fast Company points out , the camera is so important to Cupertino that it is becoming its most prominent feature . The media points out that, already in 2015, Apple had 800 engineers working on the iPhone camera alone. A statement of intent in the era of photography on social networks. Fake news, fast-moving news and the filter bubble are great challenges in today's media landscape.
All of them create a narrower and more twisted vision of our world and that is why many researches warn against the prejudices that grow in our societies. The solution, they say, is impartial and well-researched journalism. In order to raise awareness about the growing prejudice in our society and the polarization it inevitably leads to, Swedish media group Stampen Media has carried out a social experiment called Visible Thoughts in the city of Gothenburg. During the experiment, people from the street were invited to sit on a chair placed in the center of a shop window, exposed to both passers-by and people following the event online. People could then tag the person in the window by answering a series of questions, without knowing anything about them, just based on their appearance. The responses were projected in real time both in the showcase and online.