Blog

Short blog posts, journal entries, and random thoughts. Topics include a mix of personal and the world at large. 

September Apple

A happy Fall Apple event day to you all. Under normal times, we’d be highly anticipating this annual tradition of the next iPhone release, so eager to give Apple ever more of our monies. High-end smartphones have gotten so expensive that I would not be surprised if soon people would be able to finance the purchase of one for longer terms than the typical two years. Think expensive pickup trucks and the often absurd seven or eight years payment plans that go along with those. Would we soon be doing the relative same with buying our beloved iPhones?

I mean, if interest is zero…

Anyways, 2020 is definitely not normal times, and by most accounts, this typical September Apple event will not be about the annual iPhone release at all. Instead, it will be focused on the Apple Watch and the iPad, plus surely various news on when we can expect to download the the latest major releases of iOS and macOS software. Can the tech-buying audience get excited about a keynote without the singular most important product in Apple’s portfolio? We’re about to find out in less than two hours as of this typing.

I won’t be tuning in, not because I don’t want to, but because I have work during the livestream.

Would I even upgrade my iPhone this year - whenever the new one comes out? I’ve done the yearly upgrade like clockwork since way back to the iPhone 6S, and in this year of the pandemic, I’m not sure there’s incentive to do so. My main reason for spending so extravagantly to get a new smartphone every year is because of the camera: when traveling it’s nice to have a phone with a capable camera system so I’m not relying on the big DSLR setup the whole time. Break news: I’m not doing any traveling anytime soon due to COVID, so perhaps my current iPhone 11 Pro will be just fine for one more rotation of the calendar.

Of course, that’s counting on Apple only giving the new iPhone incremental improvements. Should it wow me with, say, a 120Hz display, then what I said in the previous paragraph can be considered moot.

The show must go on.