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JOURNAL

After months of rumours, Apple has finally announced the iPhone13, succeeding the iPhone 12 series released last year.


A light update from last year’s iPhone 12, the new devices feature upgraded cameras and the company’s latest A15 chip, which it says is up to 50% faster than the competition.


The iPhone 13 family includes four models: iPhone 13, iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max – all feature the new processor, which Apple said would help users “absolutely fly through demanding workloads smoothly and efficiently”.

As far as battery life goes, all four phones also feature larger batteries, which the company says combined with the more power-efficient chip offers between 1.5 and 2.5 hours more use each day.

“iPhone 13 has a faster chip, faster 5G speeds, a brighter OLED display and the most advanced dual camera system ever in an iPhone, and with all these upgrades the iPhone 13 has a better battery life,” Apple’s vice-president Kaiann Drance said.

The upgraded cameras have enabled a reduction in the “notch” on the front of the devices, shrinking the black bar by 20%, and as for video, Apple is making a big deal out of its Cinematic mode that lets you selectively adjust focus and depth of field when post-processing, like Portrait mode for photos. The 13 Pro, meanwhile, lets you record and edit video in Apple’s ProRes codec on the phone itself, or you can export the ProRes file to Final Cut Pro on a Mac.


The iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max contain three cameras and what Apple calls "its most advanced camera system yet".

Its premium models include a Super Retina XDR display and ProMotion - which delivers adaptive refresh rates of up to 120Hz. This allows for smoother scrolling, animations, and gameplay.


The iPhone 13 mini starts at £679, with the iPhone 13 starting at £779. The iPhone 13 Pro starts at £949, and the larger Pro Max £1,049.


The iPhone 13 was one of many reveals as part of Apple's "California Streaming" event.


FAQs
Q: Do the Apple iPhone 13 devices have fingerprint sensors? A: No. This was rumoured for a few months but it didn’t come to be. The lone biometric security system of these phones is Face ID.

Q: Are the iPhone 13 phones water-resistant? A: Yes, all four models are IP68-rated against water and dust.

Q: Will cases for the iPhone 12 series fit the iPhone 13 series? A: No. Although the phones are about the same size as last year, the rear camera modules have been slightly redesigned. Therefore, cases from last year’s models won’t fit correctly.

 
 
 

Despite what most might think, a university degree doesn’t always equate to success – and not having one doesn’t mean you’re a failure either. As these businessmen show, their lack of a degree didn’t hinder them from becoming some of the most successful entrepreneurs in history.


Matt Mullenweg

Matt Mullenweg started WordPress, which now powers around 35% of the web, despite having dropped out of the University of Houston in favour of working at CNET Networks. Two year later he founded Automattic, the business behind WordPress.com, Akismet, Gravatar, Tumblr and more household internet brands. He currently manages the WordPress Foundation.


Mark Zuckerberg

Mark Zuckerberg, one of the most recognised names in tech, built Facebook into the world’s largest social network. Zuckerberg dropped out of Harvard in 2004, during his sophomore year, to work on Facebook full-time and remains its CEO to this day. He is now worth an estimated $86.3 billion.


David Karp

David Karp created Tumblr (which at its peak gained more than 500 million monthly users) despite never even graduating high school. He dropped out of Bronx Science high school in 2001 to be home schooled, and never received a high school diploma, instead working his way up through various tech firms until launching Tumblr in 2007. The platform was sold to Yahoo! in 2013 for a reported $800 million,


Pete Cashmore

At just 19, Pete Cashmore founded the hugely popular blog Mashable, but never attended college. Not having a college degree didn’t seem to affect this Scottish businessman though – Mashable was sold to Ziff Davis in 2017 for $50 million and, having left the company in 2018, Cashmore is estimated to be worth around £90 million.


Daniel Ek

At just 21, Daniel Ek co-founded Spotify after abandoning his degree in engineering at the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden after just eight weeks. The company now has more than 217 million users worldwide and Ek, often referred to as the most powerful person in the music industry, is worth £4.5 billion.


Evan Williams

Co-founder and former CEO of Twitter, Evan Williams went to the University of Nebraska for only a year and a half before leaving to pursue a career in information systems. In 2006 he co-founded Twitter and later went on to start publishing platforms Blogger and Medium – he is now worth $2.2 billion.


Bill Gates

The billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, Bill Gates, dropped out of Harvard to focus on building his company. Proving that degrees aren’t always necessary, Bill Gates was consistently named the world’s richest man between 1995 and 2017, when he was overtaken by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.


Richard Branson

Another example of a billionaire ‘drop-out’, Sir Richard Branson is one of the world’s most famous businessmen. The owner of Virgin dropped out of school at just 16 to start Student magazine, his first successful business venture. He bought his own Caribbean island when he was 24, was knighted in 1999 and is now said to be worth $4.1 billion.


Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs is another household name that will always wave the flag for college drop-outs. The late billionaire co-founder of Apple Inc. and Pixar dropped out of Reed College to start Apple after just 6 months – and we don’t need to tell you how well that worked out for him.


Steve Wozniak

Like his Apple co-founder (above), Steve Wozniak isn’t the proud owner of university degree. In fact he was expelled from his first college, the University of Colorado Boulder, for hacking the college’s computer system and later dropped out of Berkeley to work at Hewlett-Packard. He now sits on an estimated net worth of $100 million.


Walt Disney

Founder of the Walt Disney Company, Walt Disney (centre) himself dropped out of high school at 16 to join the war effort, eventually gaining his first job as a commercial illustrator at 18. He remains the record holder for most Academy Awards won by an individual – holding 22 from 59 nominations.

 
 
 
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