Apple is secretly working with multiple foldable iPhones

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 New rumors have spread in the technology product market; Top technology giant Apple at the center of rumors. Rumor has it that iPhone manufacturers are working on multiple prototypes of foldable phones. Apple launched the first iPhone on January 9, 2007. Shortly afterwards, the company took over the position of the world's top smartphone maker. But Apple has never made a foldable smartphone.                  Picture Courtesy: Google Apple is working on a prototype of multiple foldable smartphones - the news came from a reliable data leaker, according to the 9 to 5 Mac. However, due to the complexity of the display technology, it is not clear whether Apple will market commercial versions of the foldable prototypes at all. However, the prototype that is being tested is certain - the leaked claim of the information. Apple is skeptical about whether there will be a demand for foldable phones in the technology market, or whether it will be lost in the crowd of other products. That'

New name of facebook

Facebook new name change

Facebook has recently been renamed as Meta, but privacy will still be its biggest obstacle


      The evolution of facebook


Facebook has changed its name to Meta, introducing a new operandi approach focused on building metaverse. He'll have to get the privacy first, though.

In its October 28 'Facebook Connect 2021' event, Facebook announced the aspiring vision of a connected utopia: one who seamlessly connects the physical and physical world, bringing people together geographically in the same place - either through land-building games, co-operatives or in the visible home.

It's all part of its great metaverse plans - which is why the company will now call itself Meta.

Facebook sees the metaverse as a "mobile internet follower", where the interaction of products and technologies extends beyond the 2D screen to live, virtual or virtual reality.

The essence of bringing this experience is Facebook VR headsets and AR mirrors, which currently include the popular Oculus Quest 2 and Ray-Ban Stories-enabled Instagram specifications. Mark Zuckerberg also mocked the state-of-the-art VR headset currently under development called 'Project Cambria', to be paid for next year.

The metaverse will take years to come to light, and many Facebook events simply paint what that dream could be. The biggest challenge before Facebook (or Meta) will not be to build technology, but to build a system that can live with international privacy and consumer protection regulations.

At the event, Nick Clegg, VP of Global Affairs and Communications at Facebook (and former UK Deputy Prime Minister) said "there are still years left before we can fully realize what we are thinking", which should give legislators time to respond and respond. - the point Clegg and Zuckerberg mentioned (albeit briefly) in the introduction.

While the privacy segment took only a few minutes, Zuckerberg stressed the importance of building a foundation for "privacy, security and installation before the product came into being". The transparency of how metaverse uses and collects data can also be a major factor, as well as easy-to-use security controls.

Those are great company promises. Facebook is aware of controversial legal battles over privacy and the company's public trust is dwindling - as revealed in a Facebook internal survey leaked by spokeswoman Frances Haugen earlier this month.

If the damage is permanent, it is unlikely that Facebook, despite the name change, will build the world it thinks.

Check out Facebook Connect 2021

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