Wednesday, August 13, 2014

These New iPhone 6 Photos Are '100% The Real Deal,' According To Leaker Sonny Dickson

Sonny Dickson, the prolific Apple product leaker from Australia, posted some new alleged photos of the next-generation iPhone on Twitter Tuesday morning.
He said these photos are "100% the real deal. Just wait and see." See for yourself.

The photo shows the back panel for what is likely the iPhone 6, even though it's been scuffed and dented to a severe extent. As Apple Insider's Neil Hughes points out, the new iPhone model appears to feature a new antenna design, hopefully to allow for better reception through the phone's aluminum shell. 
In the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5S, Apple used glass cutouts for its antennas, but the alleged iPhone 6 appears to use a different kind of material for the antenna cutouts. We've reached out to Dickson to learn more about the material's composition and we'll update this story if we hear back.

The alleged part also shows one other design change from the iPhone 5S: The pill-shaped flash appears to have returned back into a normal circle, which means Apple may have figured out how to create a "True Tone" flash in a smaller module, likely to allow more room for other camera components.
Since this alleged part doesn't have any branding or regulatory information printed on the phone's exterior, it's possible this is an older prototype. And if that's the case, the final iPhone 6 may look a bit different than the damaged model Dickson is showing off here. We'll know for sure on September 9, which is when Re/code says Apple will unveil its eighth-generation iPhone. 

iPhone 6: Leaked Details About Apple's HealthKit Rollout

Apple is expected to unveil its iPhone 6 and iOS 8 in less than a month, and more details about the signature health care software—Apple’s new HealthKit—are beginning to leak.
For example, Mayo Clinic is testing a service to alert patients when their Apple apps detect abnormal health results, and help schedule them for follow-up visits, Christina Farr reports for Reuters.
And major health systems like Cleveland Clinic and Kaiser Permanente are currently testing apps in the HealthKit beta, too. (Kaiser also reportedly wants to strike a partnership with Apple.)

And HealthKit, which is a new developer framework that Apple has created for iOS 8, is a “lynchpin” of Apple’s strategy, Farr reports. The software is being positioned as an opportunity for entrepreneurs to take advantage of sensors in the iPhone 6 and the company’s anticipated “iWatch,” which is likely to be unveiled this fall, too.When Apple announced its big push into health care this summer, industry watchers expected that this kind of innovation—and these name-brand partnerships—would quickly follow.
Apple is counting on HealthKit to help it grab a major foothold in the $9 billion-plus mobile health care market — a business opportunity that company leaders think they have a “moral obligation” to pursue.
How Apple is positioning HealthKit.
How Apple is positioning HealthKit.
Perhaps the most important details in Farr’s report are related to Apple’s plan to sync its apps with providers’ electronic health care records: Apple is telling health systems that HealthKit will soon automatically integrate its data with MyChart, Epic’s personal health record portal that’s used by millions of patients.
If it works, that could be transformative for mobile health strategy. The Apple-Epic partnership, which also was announced this summer, brought together two titans in different industries: Epic already commands more than 40% of the hospital EHR market, and Apple’s iPhones are roughly as ubiquitous in the smartphone market.
And as Modern Healthcare‘s Darius Tahir has observed, bringing together two market movers could set Apple’s strategy apart from previous, failed attempts to capture health care data, centralize it, and share it with providers.
Specifically, if Apple can solve the “data collection problem“—if HealthKit, Epic, and an iWatch sensor can seamlessly integrate—the mobile health market would be dramatically changed, and Apple likely ends up as a hub for health care data.
(And Apple may not be boxing itself in to a partnership with Epic, either: The company is reportedly in talks with Allscripts, one of Epic’s chief competitors.)
More health care transformation: Are you ready for Walmart to be your doctor?

But Farr hints that Apple’s rollout of HealthKit might be a little more bumpy than some of the company’s other product launches.
“Everybody is knocking on the door,” said Morgan Reed, who leads a lobbying organization for mobile health developers called ACT. “But I doubt that HealthKit will merge with all the existing systems.”
And importantly, any health care-oriented deal opens Apple up to health care’s complex regulatory environment.
  • Partnering with Nike to collect running data doesn’t mean Apple needs to abide by HIPAA rules, a former top official at HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT tells Farr.
  • But an arrangement where Apple is storing clinical information on behalf of hospitals does, and that raises new challenges for the company, perhaps on a partnership-by-partnership basis.
Meanwhile, another Apple alliance—the company’s recent deal with its former archrival IBM—could lead to an influx of health care mobile apps. That’saccording to my colleague Meg Aranow, who helps lead the Advisory Board’s research into health IT and wrote on this a few weeks ago.
“The announcement indicates that IBM will develop more than 100 applications for iPad and iPhone,” Aranow suggested. “This bodes well for health care, as it’s one of several vertical markets the partnership is targeting for ‘industry-specific solutions.’”