I recently got to visit some Apple labs where they durability test new iPhones before they come out, and learned a few things (🧵THREAD)
#1: Have you actually seen how they water test phones for IP ratings? (video)
#2: There's an entire room of machines for water and ingress testing
Level 1: A drip tray simulating rain, no real pressure. IPX4
Level 2: A sustained, low-pressure jet spray from any angle. IPX5
Level 3: High pressure spray from a literal firehose. IPX6
Level 4: Locking the phone underwater + added pressure to simulate depth for an extended time. IPX8
#3: Apparently Apple has also bought and programmed and industrial robot to be their own drop test machine - to simulate hundreds of different drop angles onto different materials
Then they hit it with some ultra bright lights and a high speed camera to watch them back in incredibly slow motion. You can literally see the titanium frame wobble on ground impact
#4 Ok this one was hard to capture on camera - it's literally shaking everything at computer-controlled frequencies. They can program in the frequency of a certain motorcycle engine or subway car to simulate how well a device will hold up to sustained exposure to that frequency over time
$5 - Talked to John Ternus - Head of Hardware Engineering at Apple, and it was interesting hearing straight from the top why the iPhone is harder to repair. Take a listen
#6 Thankfully Apple is still softening their stance on repair - basically sliding slightly on that durability vs repairability spectrum
#7: Connecting the durability test machines the real world: They may test 10,000+ pre-release phones while testing before the phone comes out
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The rumors are true - SORA, OpenAI's AI video generator, is launching for the public today...
I've been using it for about a week now, and have reviewed it:
THE BELOW VIDEO IS 100% AI GENERATED
I've learned a lot testing this, here are some new learnings. Thread 🧵
This video has a bunch of garbled text, the telltale signs of AI generated videos. But the cutaways, the moving text ticker, the news-style shots... those were all things SORA decided to do on its own, and those news anchors looked very... real
It's still a prodcut though, with pros and cons - and one of the cons is physics is still hard. Without an "understanding" of the objects in the video, the model is still prone to "hallucinations" in the form of movements that don't make sense, and lack of object permanence. Here's a few examples
I got a rare opportunity to ask OpenAI's video generation model Sora for some videos this week! I had 3 prompts. Here's the videos with my prompts and what I learned 🧵
Prompt 1: A medium sized friendly looking dog walks through an industrial parking lot. The environment is foggy and cloudy. Shot on 35mm film, vivid colors.
Prompt 2: A timelapse closeup of a 3D printer printing a small red cube in an office with dim lighting.
The MKBHD Smartphone Awards 2023! (SPOILER) Thread
Full video:
Best Big Phone: Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra
✅ Huge Flagship display
✅ Huge Quad camera array
✅ 5000mAh battery
Somehow still has room for a stylus
Software multitasking features you could ever need
Runner-ups: OnePlus Open
Honorable mentions: Oppo Find X6 Pro, Asus ROG Phone 7
Best Compact Phone: Asus Zenfone 10
Not even close. This is the only true flagship with an under 6-inch display. Awesome performance. Physics-defying battery life. Surprisingly good cameras. Added wireless charging. A truly rare breed
Alright so yesterday Apple revealed that yesterday's event was shot on the iPhone (15 Pro/Pro Max)
They've also now published some BTS, and as expected there's a LOT of gear alongside that iPhone... but there's still a lot to learn here. Here's my biggest takeaways (Thread)
The fact they're able to swap out an iPhone is part a compliment to the iPhone, but also a huge compliment to the production itself
They use a lot of gear for every keynote video - For this one, they just replaced the usual cameras with the iPhone + BlackMagic Camera app
There are 3 main factors to achieving the Apple keynote "look" ... stabilization, set design and lighting
YouTube has had its problems over the years, but then you look around at Twitter, Instagram, FB, Google+ etc and realize it's been one of the most stable, consistent platforms for creators for the better part of a decade
The ez take on Susan leaving is "Yay the source of all our problems is gone" but if we're honest the CEO of YouTube (often unfairly) becomes the scapegoat for literally everything that goes wrong at the company, no matter what actually happens
(this won't change for the new CEO)
The truth is YouTube will continue to grow and change and have problems and fix problems... and will probably continue to be the most stable, reasonable place to exist as a creator, as long as they keep listening to creators like they have
I’ve put 30,000 miles on Tesla’s flagship Model S PLAID in a year and a half. There are some things that I love, and some that I hate 🧵🧵🧵
Full review:
I wanted to give myself a chance to get used to some of the quirks and features. Shoutout to Doug.
So the top 3 things to love are:
1 - Acceleration (never gets old)
2 - Supercharger network (ole reliable)
3 - Storage (Thee's tons in this hatchback. I've fit bikes in the trunk)
Top 3 things to hate:
1 - The complete lack of buttons. ESPECIALLY on the steering "wheel"
2 - The brakes. They're ok for normal diving. But the second you pass that (which is unbelievably easy in this car) the brakes can be dangerously weak
3 - The overall build quality