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Apple has introduced its first new product of 2025: the iPhone 16E. The new iPhone replaces the iPhone SE from Apples lineupthe companys entry-level, budget iPhone. But the iPhone 16E is more than just a minor spec update to the existing third-generation iPhone SE, which debuted nearly three years ago. As its name suggests, Apples new entry-level device has more in common with its flagship iPhone 16 series, introduced last year, than the now-discontinued iPhone SE of old. Here are five major changes Apple has made and who, exactly, the new iPhone 16E is for. [Photo: Apple] A new design with a 6.1-inch display The most noticeable thing about the iPhone 16E is that in design, it more closely resembles modern-day iPhones, such as the iPhone 15 and iPhone 16, the latter from which it derives its name. The iPhone SE that the iPhone 16E replaced retained the same design as the iPhone 8 back in 2017. That design included a thick forehead and chin squeezing the tiny, 4.7-inch display from the top and bottom. With the elimination of the top and bottom bumpers around the display, Apple has been able to grow the size of the 16E’s screen by 1.4 inches. Yet, because Apple has done this by eliminating those ugly bumpers, Apple managed to only grow the physical size of the entire device by a few millimeters on all sides. But most importantly about the iPhone 16Es new design is that Apples entry-level iPhone now more closely resembles all other modern-day, entry-level phonesincluding Android ones. Consumers are used to smartphones having near edge-to-edge displays and the fact that the iPhone SE never had this turned many off the device. Face ID replaces Touch ID Another big change with the iPhone 16E is that it adopts Face ID, Apples biometric authentication system. This means that with the introduction of the iPhone 16E, Apple no longer sells a phone with the companys groundbreaking Touch ID biometric authentication system it first introduced in 2013. Not only does the elimination of Touch ID mean the iPhones once-iconic physical home button is now a thing of the past, but it also means that the iPhone 16E is more secure than the iPhone SE ever was. Thats because Face ID has a false-positive rate of one in a million, whereas Touch ID has a false-positive rate of just one in 50,000. Thats a 20x improvement in biometric security. Bye-bye Lightning port, hello USB-C But for many people with multiple modern devices, the most welcome change to the iPhone 16E is that Apple has finally replaced the archaic Lightning port on its entry-level iPhone. Instead of Lightning, the iPhone 16E now features a universal USB-C port, which means that you no longer need to rely on proprietary cables to charge your iPhone. The iPhone 16E, like other modern iPhones and Android phones, can now be charged with any USB-C cable, even if that cable is the one that came with your MacBook Pro or your Samsung Galaxy device. A18 chip and an Apple-built 5G modem Internally, Apple has given the iPhone 16E a massive performance boost over the iPhone SE it replaces. The new iPhone 16E now features the same A18 chip that is found in the iPhone 16 (a huge improvement over the A15 in the previous iPhone SE). Additionally, the iPhone 16E has also received a RAM boost to 8GB (from the 4GB found in the SE). Theres a reason for the generous chip and RAM upgrades, which Ill get to next. But first, it’s also worth mentioning that the iPhone 16E has a first for any iPhone: Its the first Apple device to use Apples new custom 5G modem. Apple didnt give many details about its new custom cellular modem, dubbed the Apple C1, beyond saying that the modem is the most power-efficient modem ever on an iPhone. [Photo: Apple] Apple Intelligence built-in But getting back to that A18 chips boost and doubling of the RAM to 8GB. Theres a reason Apple has done that. It allows the new iPhone 16E to run Apple Intelligence, Apples new AI platform introduced with iOS 18.1. Apple sees Apple Intelligence as a potential major driver of iPhone sales in the short and long term. Given that Apple usually only updates its entry-level iPhone once every three or so years, the company wants to make sure that the iPhone 16E will be able to run Apple Intelligence for the foreseeable futuremaking it appealing to cost-conscious and AI-curious consumers, no matter if they buy the device this year or next. Who is the iPhone 16E for? Apple is positioning the iPhone 16E as the companys new low-cost iPhone. However, in some regards, the iPhone 16E is a better choice than the iPhone 15, which Apple continues to sell. To be sure, the iPhone 15 still offers some better features, including a dual-lens rear camera setup (versus the single-lens camera found on the iPhone 16E). But the iPhone 15 lacks the necessary chipset and RA to run Apple Intelligence. Thats why if you are looking for the lowest-cost iPhone that is built for today’s AI world, the iPhone 16E is a better choice than the iPhone 15. However, if you are looking for the lowest-cost iPhone with a more modern camera system, the iPhone 15, with its dual-lens setup, is better than the iPhone 16E. The iPhone 15 also sports the Dynamic Island, which the iPhone 16E lacks (yes, the iPhone 16E has the notch). Another minus for the iPhone 16E is its lack of MagSafe, the iPhone feature that lets you magnetically attach devices like power banks to your iPhone to charge the device. But while the iPhone 16E offers several benefits over the iPhone SE it replaces, there is one drawback the device has gaineda price rise. The previous iPhone SE started at just $429. The new iPhone 16E starts at $599a staggering $170 more than the SE. This high price means it’s debatable as to whether Apple actually offers a budget iPhone any longer. Preorders for the iPhone 16E begin this Friday, February 21. The device will go on sale to the public a week later on Friday, February 28.
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With a new streamlined application, its easier than ever to apply to Fast Companys Best Workplaces for Innovators. Here are six reasons why you should apply to our seventh annual BWFI program. 6 reasons to apply 1. Brand exposure. Every company ranked in the top 100 or earning honoree status in a category will appear in the fall (September) issue of the magazine and on fastcompany.com. 2. Talent retention. Public recognition as a Best Workplace for Innovators honoree provides powerful third-party validation that enhances your ability to recruit and retain top talent. 3. Editorial access. Fast Company editors will review all applications; the application represents an opportunity to highlight individuals and projects that showcase your company’s innovative prowess. The insight Fast Company editors glean from judging applications informs our ongoing coverage, often leading to stories. 4. Credibility. Fast Company’s reputation for writing about innovation is unparalleled in business media. Inclusion on the Best Workplaces for Innovators list is a powerful stamp of approval of your company’s efforts. 5. Employee recognition. The program honors an Innovative Team of the Year as well as an Innovative Leader of the Year, along with finalists in each category. 6. A level playing field. Every company is unique, so the application is structured to allow your company to focus on whatever particular initiatives and programs youve established to cultivate innovative work across your organization. There are different categories for different size companies, as well as companies from different regions and those with a particular focus on AI, automation, and machine learning. Outstanding achievement in business innovation For more than 15 years, Fast Company has been recognizing outstanding achievement in business innovation with its annual awards programs. In addition to Best Workplaces for Innovators, Fast Company’s Most Innovative Companies, Innovation by Design, World Changing Ideas, Brands That Matter, and the Next Big Thing in Tech lists have celebrated thousands of organizations transforming industries and shaping society through paradigm-shifting products, insights, or services. What differentiates Best Workplaces for Innovators from existing best-places-to-work lists is that it goes beyond benefits, competitive compensation, and collegiality (mere table stakes in today’s competitive talent marketplace) to identify which companies are actively creating and sustaining the kinds of innovative cultures that many top employees value even more than money. These are the places where people can do the best work of their careers and improve the lives of hundreds, thousands, even millions of people around the world. Best Workplaces for Innovators is the most authoritative list of companies cultivating an organization-wide commitment to innovation. We hope you’ll submit your company today. For more information on applying, see the FAQs. But don’t delaythe final deadline is March 28.
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Winson Lau has always had contingency plans. But he wasn’t prepared for data centers.Lau relies on water and electricity to operate his thriving export business in Malaysia’s Johor province, where he raises a kaleidoscope of tropical fish in rows of aquariums, including albino fish with red spots that can fetch up to $10,000 from collectors. His contingency plans in the event of an outage involve an intricate system of purifying wastewater through friendly bacteria and an alarm system to quickly switch to backup power.But these measures can’t compete with the gigantic, power-guzzling and thirsty data centers being built in Johor. The province is on track to have at least 1.6 gigawatts of data centers at any given moment from nearly nothing in 2019, making it the fastest-growing data center market in Southeast Asia, according to a report published in April.Data centers are large, windowless buildings filled with racks of computers that need lots of electricity. To prevent overheating, they rely on energy-intensive air conditioning systems using pumped water. Increasingly used by tech companies for running artificial intelligence systems, the power demand from future facilities in Malaysia may rise to over 5 gigawatts by 2035, according to researchers at Malaysia’s Kenanga Investment Bank. This is more than half of Malaysia’s entire renewable capacity in 2023.Over 95% of the energy available to Malaysia in 2022 was from fossil fuels, according to the International Energy Agency. The country is now fifth-largest exporter of liquefied natural gas globally. And with planned renewable projects, Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said in September that the country was “confident of a surplus of energy” to fuel large projects and keep exporting.But Lau doesn’t fancy the chances of his homegrown business competing against the foreign-funded behemoths for energy. Even without data centers, Malaysia is susceptible to power interruptions because of storms, including one that lasted 30 minutes last year and killed 300,000 fish, costing Lau over $1 million. He worries that data centers would result in longer outages.To survive, he is moving to Thailand and already scouting potential locations for a new fish farm.“Big data center is coming and there is shortage of power,” he said. “It’ll be crazy.” Costs versus benefits Malaysia is betting that potential economic growth from data centers justifies the risk. Once touted as an Asian tiger on the cusp of becoming rich, its industries shrunk in the late 1990s after the Asian financial crisis. It has since languished in the middle-income trap. Data centers, the government hopes, will modernize its economy and indirectly create thousands of high-paying jobs.But experts worry that Malaysia, and others like Vietnam, Indonesia and India vying for billion-dollar investments from tech giants, may be overstating data centers’ transformative capabilities that also come at a price: Data centers gobble up land, water and electricity while creating far fewer jobs than they promise. Most data centers provide 30 to 50 permanent jobs while the larger ones create 200 jobs at most, according to a report by the American nonprofit Good Jobs First.Add to this the rapid increase in power and water use and some experts like Sofia Scasserra, who researches digital economies at the Amsterdam-based think tank Transnational Institute, said that tech companies exploiting resources in poorer countries while extracting data from their populations to get rich is akin to “digital colonialism.” She compared data extraction to silver mining in Bolivia, which enriched colonial Spain but left nothing behind for Latin America.“They are extracting data in the same way. Data doesn’t even leave (behind) taxes,” she said.Indeed, only a small portion of Malaysia’s data center capacity is actually for Malaysian users. Through a network of submarine cables that fans out into the world, they service East Asia, China, and Europe. And the data centers themselves are run by foreign companies like America’s Equinix and Microsoft as well as Chinese competitor GDS Holdings that works with tech giants like Alibaba.These data centers are also on the front lines of AI competition between the U.S. and China. Shortly before he left office, U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration proposed new rules that would limit exports of advanced AI chips made by U.S. companies like Nvidia, part of a strategy to deprive China and other U.S. adversaries from gaining access to AI technology through data centers in places likes Southeast Asia and the Middle East. Although it’s unclear if the Trump administration will retain the policy, which hasn’t yet taken effect, GDS Holdings saw its stock drop more than 18% on the day of the announcement. Filling the void For now, artificial intelligence is driving the hunger for even more data centers, with tech companies seeking out biggerand cheapersites worldwide as a part of a “global strategy,” said Rangu Salgame, chairman and CEO of Singapore’s Princeton Digital Group, which is building a 170-megawatt site in Johor. Data centers larger than 40 megawatt typically need land the size of seven football fieldsabout enough power for 36,000 American homes, according to data center service provider Stream Data Centers.That’s costly to build in rich nations like the U.S., which over time has built more data centers than any other country but where land comes at a high price. Enter Malaysia, with its inexpensive land, excess power capacity and tax incentives. The country was the fastest growing data center market in Asia Pacific in the first half of 2024, according to global real estate firm Cushman and Wakefield. This makes Malaysia the eighth-largest data center market in terms of operations and the fifth-largest behind China, India, Japan and Australia when accounting for projects already in the pipeline.Globally Malaysia ranks 14th in terms of operational capacitystill smaller than Frankfurt, London, Amsterdam, Paris, and Dublinbut it is on track to be among the top 10 markets in five to seven years, according to Pritesh Swamy, who heads research on data centers in Asia for the real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield.“We are talking about a region that really grew at a pace that nowhere in the world has seen,” Salgame said.Next door to Malaysia is Singapore, which paused the construction of new data centers in 2019. The moratorium was over concerns that the energy-guzzling infrastructure was straining the tiny country’s limited resources. In 2019, data centers consumed 7% of the total electricity in the city-state that imports both power and water while aiming to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. They have been trying to build data centers sustainably since 2022, when the moratorium ended.In the meantime, Malaysia has stepped in to fill the void, attracting investments of over $31 billionthree times the investments for 2023in the first 10 months of 2024, according to research by real estate firm Knight Frank. Johor already has 22 mostly foreign data centers spanning over 21 hectares, according to the research firm Baxtel. That’s the equivalent of nearly 40 football fields, although not all of the daa centers are operational. Concerns over power and water shortages The data centers that are running look anonymous from the outside. But they can be identified by the telltale signs of barbed wire fences, CCTV cameras, and patrolling security guards. Elsewhere, a thicket of cranes and workers operating construction machinery is transforming the landscape in the sleepy province.Salgame said that he hoped data centers could accelerate clean energy growth and experts like Putra Adhiguna of the Jakarta-based think tank Energy Shift Institute agreed that this could happen, but warned that the sheer volume of unforeseen, future demand complicates the transition.“Add data centers on top of that, it just becomes much more challenging,” he said.Tropical Malaysia is warmer than the countries that were initially preferred by data centers, including Ireland, and would require more water and power for cooling, said Alex de Vries, the founder of Digiconomist, a research company studying the unintended consequences of digital trends. He said that these companies are moving to new countries after their promises of economic growth were found to be “empty.” And while new solar or wind farms can be built faster than other forms of energy, data centers need a lot of electricity from the get-go.“These big tech companies are trying to distract you from the really simple math,” he said.Malaysia acknowledges that the energy demand from data centers is “substantial” but believes that Johor’s rise as a “data center powerhouse” will make it a “key player in Southeast Asia’s digital ecosystem,” said Malaysian Investment, Trade and Industry minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz in an email. He added that Malaysia was writing efficiency guidelines for data centers and has a policy to let them buy clean energy directly from producers.But concerns are rising among residents about potential water shortages in the futureechoing the concerns of other developing countries like Chile. Malaysia, like much of Southeast Asia, is at risk of extreme weather including drought, according to a 2022 U.N. climate change report. Francis Hutchinson, an analyst at Singapore’s ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, said that Johor has faced recent disruptions and new stressors, like a growing population and water parks to boost tourism, could exacerbate the crisis.“Water, more than power, is a potential issue,” he said. AP writer Eileen Ng contributed from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Matt O’Brien in Providence, Rhode Island contributed to this report.. The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org. Anirruddha Ghoshal and Vincent Thian, Associated Press
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