FreshRSS

🔒
❌ About FreshRSS
There are new available articles, click to refresh the page.
Before yesterdayYour RSS feeds

iPhone 15 Lineup Rumored to Feature Significantly Larger Batteries

The iPhone 15 lineup will feature significantly larger batteries across the board, according to an alleged Foxconn worker speaking to ITHome.

iPhone 15 lineup dummy models.

The information claims that the iPhone 15 will feature an 18% larger battery, iPhone 15 Plus and iPhone 15 Pro a 14% larger battery, and the iPhone 15 Pro Max a 12% larger battery. The exact capacity changes are said to be as follows:



























2021 2022 2023
iPhone 13: 3,227mAh iPhone 14: 3,279mAh iPhone 15: 3,877mAh
iPhone 13 mini: 2,406mAh iPhone 14 Plus: 4,325mAh iPhone 15 Plus: 4,912mAh
iPhone 13 Pro: 3,095mAh iPhone 14 Pro: 3,200mAh iPhone 15 Pro: 3,650mAh
iPhone 13 Pro Max: 4,352mAh iPhone 14 Pro Max: 4,323mAh iPhone 15 Pro Max: 4,852mAh



If correct, the changes would mean that the 15 Plus would increase its battery capacity lead over the Pro Max model even further, while the 15 Pro would remain the iPhone with the smallest battery. The source is without a proven track record, but the alleged capacities seem plausible, especially given the fact that this year's iPhone models are expected to get slightly thicker, providing more internal space for larger batteries. With the efficiency improvements of the A16 and A17 Bionic chips, it seems highly likely that the entire iPhone lineup could boast battery life improvements this year.

ITHome also highlighted separate information purportedly coming out of Foxconn that is circulating on Weibo saying that the iPhone 15 Pro will begin with 256GB of storage as standard, doubling the current 128GB base storage configuration. This would also be a key differentiator between the Pro and non-Pro models, since the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus are still expected to start with 128GB of storage.
Related Roundups: iPhone 15, iPhone 15 Pro
Tag: Foxconn
Related Forum: iPhone

This article, "iPhone 15 Lineup Rumored to Feature Significantly Larger Batteries" first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

Tucker Carlson’s Firing by Fox News

In this episode, Niki, Natalia, and Neil discuss Tucker Carlson’s dismissal from Fox News....

Read More

Michael J. Fox shares his story in the first trailer for Apple TV's STILL


They say that health is a halo that only the sick can see. Grappling with the randomness of existence is one of the most challenging aspects of being a person. At a moment's notice, life has a strange way of reshuffling the proverbial deck in a way that throws your plans, stability, and mental state into utter chaos. — Read the rest

Fox News' election fraud source was a completely unbelievable scapegoat

Meet Minnesota artist Marlene Bourne. Bourne thinks she may be a ghost and finds messages hidden in movies, song lyrics, and overheard conversations. Fox News found Bourne credible enough to base its election fraud claims on a letter Bourne sent to notoriously unreliable Trump lawyer Sidney Powell. — Read the rest

Apple, Foxconn convince Indian state to loosen labor laws

iPhone factory floor

Enlarge / Employees work on an assembly line in the mobile phone plant of Rising Stars Mobile India Pvt., a unit of Foxconn Technology Co., in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu, India, on Friday, July 12, 2019. (credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Apple and its manufacturing partner Foxconn were among the companies behind a landmark liberalization of labor laws in the Indian state of Karnataka last month, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Their successful lobbying for new legislation means two-shift production can take place in India, akin to the two companies’ practices in China, their primary manufacturing base. The law gives the southern state one of the most flexible working regimes in India as the country aims to become an alternative manufacturing base to China.

Karnataka’s move is an attempt to seize the opportunity created by companies that are seeking to end an over reliance on Chinese manufacturing, following months of COVID-19 disruption that has shaken global supply chains.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Video montage of Tucker Carlson's adorable laugh

In recent years, Tucker Carlson has developed a unique laugh as a way to let his viewers know that something on the show is funny. It's a curious combination of a short bark and a high-pitch giggle, accompanied by an abrupt upward tilt of the head. — Read the rest

SeaMonkey as an I2P Suite

I2P is one of the many darknets floating around (running over?) the internet and I’ve been playing around with it since, like, high school. It’s peer-to-peer, censorship resistant, and overall just super cool. And by peer-to-peer I mean that you can share files over the network (using torrents) while both remaining anonymous and not being a nuisance to other users (unlike Tor).

Also unlike Tor it doesn’t have its own “browser bundle”.

I mean, it did at one point. But then it got discontinued.

Before the browser bundle I had to rely on a manually configured secondary browser, which I am now back to doing. It’s not a majorly inconvenient process, but wow was that browser bundle very convenient.


I’ve been a die hard user of Firefox (and browsers based on/related to Firefox, like Camino or pre-Chromium Flock) since the early/mid 2000s and I have no plans to ever switch over to Chrome or its ilk. Even though the browser wars are over, I will forever continue the struggle as part of the dissident Firefox-users campaign. Sure, I have to rely on Google for plenty of other things (like my phone, calendar, contacts, cloud storage, captcha protection for this site, and so on), but they’ll never get my browser! Or email! Or web searches (mostly)!

You can have my Gecko layout engine when you uninstall it from my cold, bricked, SSD.

So obviously, I’d use something Firefox-ish for my manually configured secondary browser. And the Firefox-ish browser I’m using here is SeaMonkey; the direct descendant of the original Mozilla Application Suite which Firefox, as well as Thunderbird (which I still use as a desktop mail/RSS client), were spun off of from.

In addition to a browser, SeaMonkey includes an email (and newsgroup) client, an IRC client, an HTML editor, and an email address book.

So, why SeaMonkey? And not, like… a separate Firefox profile or container tab or something.

Well, for all their similarities (both being darknet-proxy-software things and all), I2P and Tor are different. They fill different niches, I guess. While they both have hidden services and out-proxies to the clearweb, Tor’s focus is definitely on the latter, while I2P seems to focus more on the former. And I2P’s hidden services aren’t all websites (I’m not saying all of Tor’s are though); I2P also has email, and IRC, and torrents too!

And also I’m already comfortable doing things this way. Leave me alone.


Installing I2P and SeaMonkey

The first thing I did here was actually getting the software. I did a manual download/installation rather than relying on my machine’s package manager, because I didn’t want to have to build possibly outdated versions from the AUR that may overwrite whatever changes I made after an update. Links to download both SeaMonkey and I2P are below.

Download SeaMonkeyhttps://www.seamonkey-project.org/releases/

Download I2Phttps://geti2p.net/en/download

Configuring the browser

Like I said before, I2P hidden services aren’t all websites, but that is a large part of them, so configuring SeaMonkey’s browser was going to be necessary.

Configuring the browser is pretty straightforward. The process for SeaMonkey is more-or-less the same as the process for Firefox, the only difference being the location of where the changes needed to be made. In SeaMonkey, the Preferences are in the Edit menu, and the proxy settings will be in Proxies under the Advanced section.

And once that’s configured (and once I2P is running) the router homepage can be found here: http://127.0.0.1:7657

I will admit that it has been a bit painful when I have to run updates for SeaMonkey, as I’ve had to temporarily disable the proxy. Updates to I2P, however, are done entirely within I2P! Via torrents!

I love torrents.

Configuring the mail client

Thanks to the mysterious and venerable postman, getting an I2P email address is super easy. And it works like any other email address; messages can be sent to whoever! And that ain’t just limited to other folks with I2P email addresses. It works Clearnet-to-I2P (and vice versa) as well!

I don’t really make use of the email service, because I’d really only be sending encrypted emails talking about encryption (relevant xkcd), but it’s still a useful tool for folks that need it. And by default, I2P actually has a pre-configured browser-integrated mail client that works great.

But sometimes having a dedicated(-ish) mail client is good. It’s not something I need, but still, I can do it with SeaMonkey.

If you can set up a mail client for a normal email account then you can do the same for an I2P mail account. Only POP3 works though, so that’s what I had to use; no IMAP. Also, I didn’t have to select any encryption/connection security settings because all packets being sent through I2P are encrypted anyways.

I used 127.0.0.1 as the host for both POP and SMTP over ports 7660 and 7659 respectively (as mentioned in I2P’s list of used ports). By default, these ports are tunneled to/from the mail service that postman runs, but if I wanted to use another service I can change them in the I2P tunnel settings.

Configuring the IRC client

I was able to configure the IRC client, Chatzilla, pretty quickly as well. It was just the matter of adding a network named irc2p, and then adding a server under that network, with the actual “server” being 127.0.0.1 and the port being 6668.

And again, no encryption/connection security settings were necessary here either because everything’s encrypted anyways.

I2P has some documentation on configuring other IRC clients that’s definitely worth a read.

Like the email service, the mentioned port (6668) is also set to tunnel to/from the a service run by postman, but I can always change this if I want (same way as the email stuff).

Configuring a desktop shortcut

Since I did a manual install of both SeaMonkey and I2P, I had to do some manual work to actually set up a shortcut. I installed both pieces of software in the same directory (i2p-browser) and then wrote a bash script to, first, start the I2P router (in headless mode) and, then, start SeaMonkey. After SeaMonkey exits, I then stop the router.

#!/bin/bash

/path/to/my/i2p-browser/i2p/i2prouter start && wait
/path/to/my/i2p-browser/seamonkey/seamonkey && wait
/path/to/my/i2p-browser/i2p/i2prouter stop

I then created a .desktop file to point at this script, and stuck it where all of those custom .desktop files go in GNOME (~/.local/share/applications/). That way a shortcut will be in my applications menu, and I can start the whole thing with one click.

[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Name=i2p Browser
Comment=
Categories=Network;WebBrowser;Security;
Exec=bash /path/to/my/i2p-browser/i2p_browser_start.sh
Icon=/path/to/my/i2p-browser/i2p/docs/console.ico

Yeah, I use GNOME. Fight me.

By default, when I2P starts, it will open the router console in the default browser. Since I didn’t want this, and wanted to use SeaMonkey, I unchecked that settings in the router config.


A web browser, mail client, and IRC client. That pretty much covers everything that’s part of SeaMonkey. And once it’s all configured, it’s on to browsing the invisible internet.

But what about torrents? I’ve mentioned torrents a few times here. How am I going to start using those? Well I could try configuring my normal torrent client, Deluge, to proxy traffic through I2P using a SAM Bridge and…


I2P actually includes, by default, a browser-accessible torrent client called I2PSnark! And, because of how I2P works, it’s totally anonymous! Since, like, everything is encrypted. And also I2P is a darknet.

I2P has plenty of other cool features that I really need to explore, like anonymous git hosting. Maybe after I play around with (finally) setting up my own hidden service on I2P (they’re called eepsites) like I did with Tor I can finally do that.

Fox insiders admit even Fox viewers don’t trust Fox

Emails reveal hosts and executives admitting their own viewers wouldn't believe Fox if it reported the truth

Kevin McCarthy offers his first sacrifice to the MAGA cult

His gift to Tucker Carlson is one of many capitulations to the far-right extremists in the party for Kevin McCarthy

Court documents reveal that Fox hosts think their MAGA guests are "crazy," "lunatics," "nutcases," and "idiots"

Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Lauren Ingraham coddle Big Lie fanatics like Rudy Giuliani, Mike Lindell, and Sidney Powell in their disinfotainment programs. But in private, they show nothing but disdain for the unhinged, bottom-feeding Trump sycophants.

Court documents from Dominion System's defamation lawsuit against Fox include private messages between Fox hosts and their producers that show just how poorly they think of them:

On Rudy Giuliani:

  • Rupert Murdoch: Subject Line: "Watching Giuliani!"
Read the rest
❌