With the long-awaited iPhone X now official and The Naughty New Mom Is My First Love Teacher (2025)set for release in November, tech conversation will be saturated in the weeks to come on how good the phone will be, what it brings to the table (or doesn't), how will it compare to the best of Android, whether people will fork over $1,000 for a new phone, and the list goes on.
But those questions aside, on September 12 Apple confirmed that more than a tech icon, it's become a cultural phenomenon. The company's message extends beyond the boundaries of tech in a way very few in the history of the industry have achieved. It starts with the anticipation and the showmanship, a trait Apple has been known for for over two decades. This year the company was also debuting its amazing new campus, which went swimmingly along the usual gimmicky yet effective delivery of product message.
The term 'reality distortion field' was coined as far back as 1981 to describe how Steve Jobs' keynotes had a convincing effect on those developing for the original Macintosh. Today, in his absence, the show has suffered but Apple's effect is still felt throughout the most diverse groups of people worldwide, creating buzz and conversations even in the most unimaginable non-tech circles.
With such potential for truth bending, we've put together a short list of our thoughts and implications now that Apple's latest is out of the bag, not in their words but ours:
Jill Stein is now blasting Hillary Clinton and Twitter is very confusedPlease do not give your pets alcohol these holidays, or like everPeople are mad at this prank video making fun of Thai people's EnglishThe novel that predicted the sinking of the Titanic, 14 years before it happenedWhat you need to know about the Lyft, Uber driver strikeWhy you can't escape air pollution in national parksProtests in South Korea just keep getting biggerHow Uber and other digital platforms could trick us using behavioral science – unless we act fastWaymo's selfThousands of people to Trump on Twitter: 'We can't just get along'Just because you got an Uber doesn't mean the driver strike was a bustInstagram cracks down on antiGoogle I/O 2019 had no foldable phones and it was all Samsung's faultGoogle Maps augmented reality directions are hereHow Donald Trump profits by keeping his home base in Trump TowerInstagram cracks down on anti7 ways 'The Simpsons' predicted the chaos of Donald Trump's presidencySamsung to announce Galaxy Fold launch date in a few daysWhat you need to know about the Lyft, Uber driver strike7 ways 'The Simpsons' predicted the chaos of Donald Trump's presidency Anthe: On Translating Kannada by Deepa Bhasthi Le Bloc: An Account of a Squat in Paris by Jacqueline Feldman You Are a Muppet by Jane Breakell The American Sentence: On Gertrude Stein’s Melanctha by Edwin Frank Of Unicorns: On My Little Pony by Lucy Ives The Ringo Starr of the Haiku Pantheon by Srikanth Reddy The Measure of Intensities: On Luc Tuymans by Joshua Cohen Letters to James Schuyler by Joe Brainard Portrait of the Philosopher as a Young Dog: Kafka’s Philosophical Investigations by Aaron Schuster Sad People Who Smoke: On Mary Robison by Adam Wilson On the Distinctiveness of Writing in China by Yan Lianke Pokémon Is All About Reading by Joseph Earl Thomas Making of a Poem: Maureen N. McLane on "Haptographic Interface" by Maureen N. McLane Tobias Wolff Will Receive Our 2024 Hadada Award by The Paris Review Inner Light by Jack Hanson Hannah Arendt, Poet by Srikanth Reddy Feral Goblin: Hospital Diary by Kate Riley Televised Music Is a Pointless Rigmarole by Theodor W. Adorno The Dreams and Specters of Scholastique Mukasonga by Marta Figlerowicz Hearing from Helen Vendler by Christopher Bollas
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