iPhone SE 2 RumorsĪccording to a report by Focus Taiwan, Apple has apparently tapped Wistron to begin development of a new generation of iPhone SE at the company’s Bengaluru, India-based plant, where it currently produces local versions of the iPhone SE.īased on current information from local tech media in India, the iPhone SE 2 seems to be an incremental upgrade to the current generation of 4-inch iPhone. Of course, since we haven’t heard anything about an iPhone XSE out of the supply chain, these rumors probably better represent Apple’s next 4-inch iPhone. It’s worth noting that the renders seem to be based on available information for Apple’s recently rumored iPhone SE 2, rather than any sort of potential iPhone “XSE” device. They show off Apple’s potential second generation of iPhone SE - a device that’s rumored to be released in India in the first quarter of next year. The renders were mocked up by iDesigner (the creator of the iOS 10 Jailbreak Noctis tweak that allows for a systemwide dark mode) and posted to Twitter in the last few days. Tools like Pat Murray’s Apple Music Analyser make it useful.A newly released set of 3D renders imagine what Apple’s iPhone SE 2 could look like. If you ever downloaded GDPR-mandated info from one of the online services you use, you will likely have discovered how interesting that data is, to you at least. csv file that collects all your data into one place is fine and all, and legally compliant, but it’s also pretty much useless without some work. ![]() While Apple Music Analyser is a lot of fun to use, it also shows the value of having tools that let you visualize your data. ![]() Your iTunes library may go back many years before Apple Music even existed. This view is a lot like the browse view in iTunes, except it’s just for Apple Music. Below that is a table that lets you dig deep into the details of your listening habits, per song. Here you see a summary of your stats for why songs finished playing. If you like statistics - and if you’re following this tutorial, then you almost certainly do - you’ll really dig this part: The tool gives all kinds of deep stats on your listening habits. Pretty cool, right? You can see your most-played songs, and even see how long you’ve spent listening to them. ![]() The result will look something like this: The Apple Music Analyser in action. If you want to be sure of that, just take your Mac offline before opening your file. The tool, says Murray, runs locally on your computer, not on his servers. This will open in the visualizer tool, populated with your data. Head to the Apple Music Analyser site, and click Choose a file. The next step is the visualization, which is done in the browser. Then, locate the Apple Music Play Activity.csv file inside it. Then, download this file: Grab the media section of your Apple data dump. After a while - this could take days - you’ll get a notification telling you that the data is ready. Luckily, we have a how to about just that. Your first step is to request your data from Apple.
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