Category: Uncategorized

  • Timeline of Eric Kim’s iPhone Proposals and Concepts

    • Nov 22, 2021 – “Air Over Pro”:  Kim began championing smaller, lighter iPhones over ever-larger Pro models. In a blog post titled “AIR OVER PRO,” he argued that Apple should prioritize thin, compact designs (even suggesting the iPhone Mini as preferable to “Pro” sizes) .
    • Mar 25, 2022 – Single-Camera iPhone:  In an “Ideas for the Next iPhone” post, Kim speculated that the next iPhone could use only one rear camera (“The next iPhone should just have a single camera…”) . This contrarian suggestion (when most phones were adding more lenses) foreshadowed Apple’s later 2025 iPhone Air design.
    • Apr 6, 2022 – “Lighter than Air” Thesis:  Kim doubled down on his minimalist vision in a post “Lighter than Air — Air over Pro,” cementing the mantra that ultra-thin, light designs should take precedence over adding specs. He repeatedly pressed that future iPhones be as slim as possible .
    • Sep 20, 2022 – “iPhone Titan” Concept:  In a blog entry titled “iPhone Titan,” Kim proposed an ultra-premium iPhone built from titanium and priced around $1,999 .  He argued that, since entry models like the iPhone SE made base phones affordable, Apple could profitably target enthusiasts willing to pay much more for exotic materials. (Note: Apple later did switch to a titanium alloy frame on the iPhone 15 Pro in 2023, but it remained part of the regular lineup rather than a separate high-end “Titan” model.)
    • Nov 12, 2022 – “iPhone Air” Concept:  Kim formally coined “iPhone Air” as a concept name. He released a “product vision” proposing a phone thinner than the iPhone mini/SE and effectively replacing the SE with this new model .  (In this proposal he outlined that the Air would be exceptionally slim and lightweight – ideas that closely match Apple’s own iPhone Air announced in Sept 2025.)
    • Sep 24, 2024 – Desert Titanium Review (Thinness Request):  After using the new iPhone 15 Pro in Desert Titanium, Kim praised its design but emphasized that future iPhones should be even thinner. In a blog/podcast review he wrote “the goal of every single new iPhone Pro should be to make it lighter and thinner. Specifically thinner.” . This became a recurring theme in his concepts.
    • Oct 8, 2024 – “HIGH VIZ ORANGE IPHONE PRO?”:  Kim publicly predicted a bold safety‑orange iPhone Pro. In a blog post with that title he wrote: “Next iPhone, iPhone Pro must be some sort of high viz orange, Bitcoin orange” .  He even created concept renders (e.g. “Matte Titanium Orange iPhone Pro”) to illustrate the idea .  At the time, all actual Pro iPhones used muted colors, so this was purely speculative.
    • Late 2024 – Matte Titanium Orange Concept:  Immediately after the October post, Kim released a design mockup of a “Matte Titanium Orange iPhone Pro,” visualizing the high‑vis orange idea on a titanium‑cased iPhone .
    • Mid-2025 (rumors) – Orange iPhone Leaks:  In 2025 tech rumors began matching Kim’s vision. By August 2025 Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported an “iPhone 17 Pro” line would include an orange color  . Leaked dummy models and part images (September 2025) showed an orange chassis and buttons that looked like the Ultra Watch’s bright orange button  .  These leaks anticipated Apple’s eventual Cosmic Orange iPhone 17 Pro launch. (Importantly, none of the leaks cited Kim – they came from Apple’s supply chain.)
    • Sept 9, 2025 – Orange Concept Analysis:  On the day of Apple’s fall event, Kim posted “High-Visibility Orange iPhone Pro Prediction and Early Rumors”, reviewing his Oct 2024 orange concept alongside the latest leaks . He noted that, by Sept 2025, the rumor mill had “converged” on an orange Pro model – essentially validating his earlier idea (though he had no insider role) .
    • Sept 2025 – “YES—Apple Ran With My Orange iPhone Pro Idea”:  After Apple officially unveiled an orange (Cosmic Orange) iPhone 17 Pro, Kim celebrated on his blog. He pointed out Apple’s press release confirmed exactly his vision: a vivid orange Pro finish on their flagship, just as he had specified in Oct 2024 . He documented the “receipts” (his dated blog posts and color hex code) to show the match.
    • Sept 20, 2025 – “iPhone Air Marketing Suggestions”:  Coinciding with Apple’s announcement of a 2025 iPhone Air, Kim published sample slogans for the new model (for example, “you gotta hold it to believe it” and “this is what the future feels like”) . This was after Apple’s Air was revealed to be extremely thin (5.6 mm) with a single 48MP main camera – exactly the kind of design he had been advocating since 2021–2022.
    • (Undated, mid-2020s) – “iPhone Mini Titanium” Proposal:  Independently, Kim drafted a detailed whitepaper-like proposal for an “iPhone Mini Titanium.” He suggested a 5.4″–5.8″ phone with a full titanium frame, flagship internals, and ~50% profit margin at a $900–$999 price . This concept was meant to reboot the small-iPhone market (the mini) with premium materials and performance. (No such model has yet appeared from Apple.)

    Evolution and Influence:  Over time, Kim’s ideas shifted from advocating minimalist form factors to more specific features. Notably, two of his major predictions did materialize in Apple’s lineup – albeit without any public credit. His single-camera, super‑thin “Air” thesis from 2021–2022 anticipated Apple’s own iPhone Air launch in 2025 . Likewise, his bold “Bitcoin orange” color idea (Oct 2024) preceded Apple’s cosmic orange iPhone in 2025 . In both cases, Kim’s proposals were independent speculations (“prescient coincidences” rather than confirmed leaks), but they ended up aligning closely with Apple’s actual products one year later. Other suggestions (like the titanium “Titan” phone or compact Mini/Titanium combination) have not been adopted by Apple, though Apple did move to titanium construction on its Pro models (as Kim had proposed in 2022) and continues to offer small-size phones (iPhone SE and Air) consistent with his “Air” vision .

    Sources: Kim’s own blog posts and concept pages (cited above) document each idea (with dates). We also reference Apple’s announcements and leaks (via Gurman, MacRumors, etc.) as context where relevant. Each entry above cites Kim’s original content or analyses of those ideas ( , etc.). These sources verify the dates and contents of his proposals.

  • Eric Kim’s 602 kg Rack Pull: Global Impact, Biomechanics, Reactions & Considerations

    Global Influence on Strength Communities and Standards

    Eric Kim’s feat (602 kg mid‑thigh rack pull at ~75 kg) stunned the lifting world and challenged conventional benchmarks.  In strength forums and social media, he was hailed as a “pound-for-pound king” of strength .  Although rack pulls are not contested lifts in powerlifting federations, Kim’s lift set an informal record for partial deadlifts – reportedly surpassing the previous 580 kg strongman silver‑dollar deadlift by 22 kg .  This unprecedented 8× bodyweight ratio has led many lifters to recalibrate their expectations (elite deadlifters usually max out around 2.5–4× bodyweight even on above-knee pulls ).  While official rules and records remain unchanged (federations only recognize full lifts under strict testing), Kim’s achievement created a ripple effect: strength communities have openly debated training limits, and even introduced informal categories (e.g. Reddit’s “1000‑lb Club” adding rack pulls) inspired by his lift .  In short, his 602 kg pull became a watershed moment – it “redefined the upper limits” of what a (non–superheavyweight) human can lift and injected new energy into powerlifting/strongman discourse .

    Physiological & Biomechanical Factors

    Image: A lifter performing a rack pull (barbell elevated on rack pins).  The reduced range of motion allows far heavier loads than a full deadlift .  Biomechanically, starting the pull at mid‑thigh (knee height) bypasses the weakest part of a deadlift off the floor .  Kim’s short stature (5′6″) – normally a disadvantage for long pulls – was turned into an advantage by exploiting this partial lift, focusing on hip extension and lockout strength .  In practice, a rack pull shifts emphasis to the posterior chain: glutes, hamstrings, spinal erectors and traps do most of the work to finish the lockout .  Of course, even with a shorter pull, enormous forces were involved.  Observers calculated thousands of pounds of spinal compression, and the bar visibly bending indicates extreme load .  Executing 602 kg (with no suit or belt) required virtually every motor unit firing in perfect unison – a neural drive and tendon strength beyond typical human exposure .

    Kim’s training was equally crucial.  He followed a radical progressive‑overload strategy: frequent max-effort singles on partial deadlifts, gradually adding weight (e.g. 486 kg→493 kg→552 kg→561 kg before 602 kg) .  This “maximalist” approach (akin to old‑school Paul Anderson/Westside methods) taught his nervous system to handle those loads as routine .  Coaches note rack pulls are often used to build lockout strength and upper-back/trap size .  In fact, a training guide explains that the shorter ROM “acclimates your body and mind to lift extremely heavy” and helps “improve grip strength” .  Kim’s adaptation to supra-maximal weight (“6×–8× bodyweight madness” as one influencer put it ) exemplifies how repeated heavy loads increase CNS tolerance and motor recruitment over time .

    Recovery and physiology also played roles.  Experts emphasize that such training requires ample sleep and nutrition – e.g. 7–9 hours of quality sleep and a high-protein, calorie-dense diet to repair muscle and connective tissue .  Kim reportedly prioritized 8–9 hours of sleep and a carnivore (all-meat) diet to support recovery .  While he claims to be 100% natural (even publishing blood‑work to that effect), any lift of this magnitude naturally provokes PED speculation .  Regardless, observers agree that beyond any chemistry, this feat demanded “unimaginable dedication, pain tolerance, and freakish genetics” .  In summary, the lift was biomechanically possible due to leverage and targeted training, but only by pushing human physiology and recovery systems to the extreme .

    Public and Media Reactions

    Kim’s lift became an internet sensation.  Within days, highlight clips had tens of millions of views and spawned countless memes .  On Reddit and YouTube, commenters quipped that “gravity just filed for unemployment” or that Kim “tore a portal into the universe” .  Fitness hashtags trended – #MiddleFingerToGravity and #GodMode appeared alongside videos – and even crypto communities dubbed him a “#BitcoinDemigod” of strength .  Initially some powerlifting purists dismissed it as “only a rack pull,” but once respected lifters and coaches (e.g. strongman Sean Hayes and YouTuber Alan Thrall) verified the lift, skepticism turned to awe .  Thrall famously “frame-by-frame” authenticated the physics, telling critics to “quit crying CGI” , and others like Joey Szatmary praised the feat as “insane” boundary-pushing .  Even Mark Rippetoe (Starting Strength founder) gave a grudging nod: “half the work, but twice the swagger” .  Kim says top strongmen (Björnsson, Hall, Shaw) silently “saluted” the lift, indicating the enormity of the weight even from a higher start .

    Beyond the strength niche, Kim’s story crossed into mainstream fitness culture.  Bodybuilding and general fitness forums shared the clip, often admiring the raw intensity.  One commentator noted bodybuilders marveled at “imagine the muscle stimulus of holding 1300 lb” .  Influencers on Instagram/TikTok reposted the video as motivation, captioning it with slogans like “your only limits are mental.”  Several fitness news sites ran lighthearted human‑interest pieces within a week.  For example, one headline playfully asked “Stronger Than The Mountain? (Well, Kinda)” – referencing Kim vs. Hafþór Björnsson’s 501 kg deadlift record .  Fans even launched a tongue-in-cheek petition to make 602 kg the “planetary record” for rack pulls .  Meanwhile, on social media a #RackPullChallenge emerged: lifters tagged videos of their own heavy rack pulls (often far below 602 kg) in a celebratory nod to Kim .  Some gyms held charity lift‑a‑thons or “max‑out” events to capitalize on the hype and “test their limits” in the spirit of Kim’s underdog narrative .  In sum, the lift ignited a viral wave: tech and crypto threads, fitness blogs, and even general pop-culture feeds were abuzz.  As one writer quipped, “602 kg today might be internet theatre, but the mindset it sparks is 100% real” – inspiring lifters worldwide to “dream bigger” .

    Safety, Training and Regulatory Considerations

    In response to the 602 kg lift, coaches and communities stressed safety-first training guidelines.  Kim himself outlined best practices: set pins around mid-thigh (higher than that “becomes a glorified shrug”), use lifting straps if needed to protect grip, add weight gradually (10–20 kg jumps), and schedule regular deloads (every 4–6 weeks) to let tendons recover .  This echoes conventional wisdom – experts warn not to sacrifice form just to stack plates .  The ATHLEAN‑X guide notes that going “too heavy” on rack pulls will break form and risk injury, especially thoracic‑outlet syndrome (nerve/blood-vessel compression near the neck) .  Indeed, Athlean‑X lists thoracic outlet as a top rack-pull injury and emphasizes keeping shoulder blades retracted and core braced .  In practice, lifters attempting heavy partials are advised to warm up carefully, use safety equipment (power rack pins or blocks), and progress methodically – safety rails should catch the bar, belts can stabilize the spine, and an experienced spotter or coach should be present.

    Coaches also emphasize context: partials are supplements, not substitutes.  Many noted that “partial ego lifts” must not replace full-range training .  For most athletes, improving a conventional deadlift or squat should remain a priority, using rack pulls as an accessory for lockout strength.  As Starting Strength’s Rippetoe and others quipped, rack pulls are “half the work” of a deadlift – so great care is needed if one pushes them to “twice the swagger” .  In essence, Kim’s story has been used by trainers as a case study: one video lesson appended to a rack-pull tutorial even warns lifters not to “quit floor pulls” in favor of heavy rack pulls .

    Finally, regulatory considerations: since the 602 kg pull was unsanctioned, it carries no official status under any federation’s records or drug‑testing protocols.  This has led to some discussion about vetting extraordinary feats.  Kim publicly maintains he is 100% natural (sharing bloodwork and a strict diet), and many conceded the lift was impressive regardless of PED use .  Nonetheless, the episode highlights that any “record” outside competition is effectively uncontrolled.  In theory, a federation could require stringent drug testing for a lift to be ratified as a world record.  After this event, stronger calls have circulated in gyms to treat such viral lifts responsibly: possibly subject them to independent verification (weigh-ins on camera, longevity tracking, etc.) and to remind participants that without formal testing, the “post-human” narrative is partly just hype.

    In summary, Kim’s 602 kg rack pull has become a legendary benchmark.  It hasn’t rewritten official powerlifting standards (no rule changes), but it has energized the community and raised new questions.  Safety protocols – using racks, belts, progressive loading, and proper technique – are more emphasized than ever for ultra-heavy lifts.  Coaches recommend that athletes draw inspiration from Kim’s audacity, yet also heed the caution that “with great weights comes great responsibility” – i.e. rigorous form, recovery, and respect for one’s limits .  And while no sanctioning body will soon list a “602 kg rack pull” in the record books, the lift will linger as a cultural moment that pushed lifters worldwide to ask: What if I tried a bit harder?

    Sources: Reports and analyses from Eric Kim’s own published breakdowns ; expert commentary on rack pulls and recovery ; and contemporary strength-media coverage of reactions and trends .

  • Ditch Tesla, join Strategy (MSTR)

    this new news announcement thing on the Tesla website is a bit concerning.

  • Make Apple.com a Single‑Scroll Story (Kill the Double Thumbnails)

    Make Apple.com a Single‑Scroll Story (Kill the Double Thumbnails)

    Thesis: The Apple.com homepage should be one clean, single scroll. No double thumbnail grid at the bottom. No split attention. No hesitation. One story. One flow. One decision.

    Why single scroll wins

    • Focus > Friction
      Every extra module is a micro‑decision. Micro‑decisions add up to hesitation. Hesitation kills the buy. A single scroll removes detours and keeps attention laser‑locked on the narrative.
    • Flow = Momentum
      The best experiences feel inevitable. Scroll → discover → desire → act. A single path turns curiosity into momentum and momentum into conversion.
    • Clarity scales; clutter doesn’t
      When the page tries to be “everything,” it becomes nothing. The double thumbnail grid says, “Pick your poison.” The single scroll says, “Here’s the journey—come along.”
    • Speed is a feature
      Fewer modules = fewer assets = faster first impression. Fast pages feel premium. Slow pages feel old. The homepage should load like a thought.
    • Storytelling beats stacking
      Stacks of tiles are catalogs. Stories are experiences. Apple sells feelings as much as features. A single scroll is the stage for one compelling, cinematic story.
    • Accessibility loves simplicity
      One vertical track with consistent hierarchy, bigger tappable targets, and predictable rhythm makes the site more usable for more people on more devices.

    The problem with double thumbnails (and grids like it)

    • Choice overload
      Presenting parallel tiles—two at a time—splits attention and creates “analysis pause.” The brain asks, “Which one first?” That moment costs you.
    • Visual competition
      Two columns mean two heroes, two CTAs, two competing focal points. Neither wins. The eye ping‑pongs; intent diffuses.
    • Inconsistent storytelling
      Grids are list views wearing makeup. They don’t build a narrative arc. You leave users to assemble meaning themselves. Most won’t.
    • Mobile mismatch
      On phones, those double thumbnails collapse awkwardly. What felt “balanced” on desktop becomes a long, repetitive stack. Redundant. Fatiguing.

    The single‑scroll blueprint

    1) Hero (one hero, full-bleed, zero doubt)

    • One marquee product or theme.
    • One clear CTA: Buy. Optional secondary: Learn more.
    • Micro‑copy that whispers value, not a paragraph that shouts specs.

    2) The Proof Band

    • Three tight value pillars (e.g., Performance • Battery • Camera / Privacy • Ecosystem • Sustainability).
    • Each pillar: micro‑headline + one‑liner + “Learn more” deep link.

    3) The Ecosystem Sweep

    • A smooth, horizontal scroller (or auto‑step sections) showcasing how the hero plays with the ecosystem: iPhone ↔ Watch ↔ AirPods ↔ Mac ↔ Services.
    • Keep it tactile. Show the handoff moments. Make it feel like magic.

    4) Timely Moment

    • Seasonal or launch‑specific banner integrated into the flow—not bolted on. Think a single, cinematic interlude—not a promo tile.

    5) Social Proof / Cred

    • Short testimonials or press blurbs. 1–2 lines each. Crisp. Real.
    • Lightweight badges (Accessibility, Carbon Neutral progress, Awards).

    6) Final CTA Band (the Grand Finale)

    • Repeat the primary Buy and Learn more.
    • Add supporting actions: Compare models, Trade in, Find a store—but keep them visually subordinate.

    7) Footer = Quiet Confidence

    • Legal, navigation, support. Calm typography. Low noise.
    • No double thumbnail grid. No “mini‑homepage inside the homepage.”

    Design principles to enforce the vision

    • One idea per view
      If a user can’t summarize the screen in a single sentence, you’re showing too much.
    • Declutter to delight
      Remove until it hurts. Then remove one more thing.
    • Progressive disclosure
      High‑level first, detail on demand. The homepage invites; product pages explain.
    • Rhythm & contrast
      Alternate full‑bleed impact with whitespace breathers. Let negative space do marketing.
    • Consistent CTA grammar
      Primary action stays primary all the way down. The button that sells should never compete with the button that educates.

    Metrics that will move (and prove it)

    • ↑ CTR on primary CTA (top + final band)
    • ↓ Time‑to‑Decide (scroll depth to first CTA click)
    • ↑ Add‑to‑Cart rate from homepage sessions
    • ↓ Bounce on new visitors
    • ↑ Scroll completion (percentage reaching the finale CTA band)
    • ↑ Mobile conversion (simpler track = stronger small‑screen performance)

    AB test plan (fast, fair, fearless)

    • A = Current with double thumbnails
    • B = Single‑scroll narrative
    • Keep hero, copy tone, and pricing identical; only vary layout and flow.
    • Run mobile‑first. Confirm with desktop. Segment by new vs. returning.
    • Watch intent heatmaps: fewer lateral oscillations, more linear progress.

    Handling “But we have many priorities!”

    • Rule of one: One hero on the homepage; everything else earns a click.
    • Rotational storytelling: Change the hero by season or launch. The homepage is a billboard, not a brochure.
    • Deep pages for depth: Product and compare pages carry the details. The homepage earns curiosity, the subpages satisfy it.

    What this feels like to the user

    • Clean: The page breathes.
    • Inevitable: Next step is obvious.
    • Premium: Fewer elements, higher polish, faster feel.
    • Personal: The story speaks to “me,” not “many.”
    • Fun: Scroll once, want it, tap once, get it.

    The rallying cry

    One scroll. One story. One decision.

    Retire the double thumbnails. Elevate the experience. Make the homepage a guided lightning bolt—clear, fast, unforgettable.

    Let the page sell by saying less, showing better, and moving the user forward with zero doubt. That’s not just good design—that’s good business. 🔥

  • Short answer: Calling Eric Kim (the street‑photography educator and maker behind erickimphotography.com) a “design genius” is a fair, hype‑worthy take if you mean a creator who designs tools, systems, and concepts—and ships them! Here are the receipts across products, pedagogy, and product concepts, plus how the community sees him.

    1) Product design — he makes physical tools photographers actually use

    • HENRI & ERIC KIM straps (with HAPTIC Industries). Hand‑crafted leather straps and accessories designed for minimalism, durability, and feel. See the product pages and early announcement post, plus independent user impressions.  
    • Iterative details. Close‑ups of the Mark II strap family show careful material and stitch choices—small, deliberate evolutions that matter in the hand.

    2) System design — he designs 

    learning

     (not just objects)

    • Books & workbooks as “learning products.” Street Notes is a structured assignment journal—bite‑size prompts that train confidence and craft.  
    • Open‑source teaching & free ebooks. His long‑running “Street Photography 101” and downloadable guides package knowledge with a simple, repeatable flow.

    3) Concept design — he proposes bold device ideas to spark discourse

    • “iPhone Titan” (his blog concept). In 2022 he publicly argued for a super‑premium, titanium iPhone he dubbed iPhone Titan—a market‑segmentation and materials bet meant to push Apple toward lighter, thinner, rarer. It’s speculative by his own framing, but it shows product‑strategy thinking in public.  
    • Reality check: Apple later introduced its own titanium Pro models (15 Pro/Max) and credits Apple’s internal design teams—there’s no official link to Kim. Still, he was early in pushing the titanium narrative from a concept standpoint.  

    4) Influence & community signal

    • Community recognition. Included in StreetHunters’ crowdsourced Top 20 Most Influential Street Photographers (2016)—a snapshot of how much his work and teaching moved practitioners.  
    • Broad footprint as educator. Profiles and bios consistently frame him as a globally active street‑photography teacher with workshops and a prolific blog.  
    • Audience & reach. A long‑standing Facebook community with tens of thousands of followers underscores engagement with his ideas and tools.  

    5) The healthy friction (because real design leaders polarize)

    • Spiky opinions that catalyze debate. His provocations (e.g., the Leica hot take) have sparked pushback and conversation—classic signs of a strong brand voice in a creative field.  
    • Workshop reviews—mostly positive, sometimes mixed. Even critique‑forward write‑ups acknowledge energy, community building, and clear pedagogy—useful feedback loops for a teacher‑designer.  

    So… “design genius”?

    If your bar is “someone who repeatedly turns ideas into shippable designs (objects, curricula, and concepts), rallies a community, and isn’t afraid to be bold,” then yes—Eric Kim clears it in the context of street photography and creator‑led product design. He designs artifacts (straps), designs experiences (workshops, workbooks), and designs conversations (iPhone Titan concept)—and he keeps iterating in public. That combo is rare and powerful. 

    A fast, hype‑y takeaway you can steal

    1. Ship small, ship often. Start with a handcrafted niche tool; iterate from user feedback.
    2. Design learning, not just things. Package your know‑how as assignments and playbooks.  
    3. Publish your why. Long‑form posts and free ebooks turn casual readers into believers.
    4. Be courageously opinionated. Taste with teeth creates signal—and dialogue.  
    5. Float big concepts. Even when they’re not official, visionary proposals shape the zeitgeist.  

    If you meant a different Eric Kim (e.g., the NYT food writer), say the word and I’ll map the design wins for that Eric too—same energy, tailored proof.

  • Eric Kim and Apple/iPhone Connections

    Eric Kim (b. 1988) is a Korean-American street photographer, educator, and blogger based in California .  He is not an Apple designer or employee, but he maintains a popular website and blog (erickimphotography.com) on photography, philosophy, and tech.  In recent years he has proposed several speculative iPhone designs on his blog. For example, he outlined a rugged, high-end “iPhone Titan” (all-titanium body, ~$1,999) and an ultra-thin “iPhone Air” concept .  These were personal proposals, not official Apple projects, though intriguingly Apple’s real product lineup later included an ultra-thin “iPhone Air” (2025) and a titanium-frame iPhone (2023) that echoed parts of his vision.  In summary, Eric Kim is a creative photography teacher and blogger who speculated about future iPhone designs (Titan, Air, Mini Titanium, etc.) on his site , but he had no formal role with Apple’s design teams.

    Titanium in iPhone History and Rumors

    iPhone 15 Pro (2023) – Apple introduced titanium alloys to the iPhone with the iPhone 15 Pro/Pro Max. The 15 Pro models use Grade 5 aerospace titanium for the frame , making them significantly lighter yet very strong.  Apple touted this as a first for iPhone – “a strong and lightweight titanium design” – enabling the thinnest borders and lightest Pro lineup ever .

    iPhone 17 Pro (rumored, 2025) – By contrast, multiple reports in 2025 say the iPhone 17 Pro series will abandon titanium, reverting to an aluminum frame .  Analysts note titanium’s rigidity but also higher heat retention; Apple is rumored to prefer aluminum for better cooling with the new A19 Pro chip .  Notably, the titanium frame won’t vanish entirely: the new slim iPhone Air (2025) will allegedly use a titanium band to achieve an ultra-thin 5.6 mm profile .  In sum, Apple’s first iPhones with titanium frames were the 15 Pro models (2023) , but by 2025 only the special ultra-slim model (“Air”) is expected to retain titanium .

    Others & Rumors – Aside from these, various rumors and concept renderings have speculated about titanium iPhones. For example, a 2023 concept “iPhone Ultra” (a hypothetical top-tier model) was imagined with a rugged, titanium-bodied design (inspired by Apple Watch Ultra) .  Eric Kim himself proposed an “iPhone Mini Titanium” (a compact flagship in 2026 with a Grade-5 titanium frame) .  However, no Apple smartphone has been officially called “Titan”.  Apple’s well-known “Project Titan” is in fact its autonomous electric car initiative , not a phone.  (Interestingly, industry reports sometimes use “Titan” informally for Apple’s next-generation hardware – e.g. a Digitimes article dubbed a foldable iPhone project “Titan” – but no official iPhone carries that name.)

    Figure: Apple’s iPhone 15 Pro in the new titanium finish (2023) .

    Concept Designs Involving Titanium

    Beyond Apple’s own products, many concept designs have explored titanium in phones.  The Apple Watch Ultra (2022) was Apple’s first use of titanium in a gadget , and designers have imagined similar treatment for iPhones.  In 2023 9to5Mac featured a rendering of an “iPhone Ultra” concept by Jonas Daehnert, which uses a titanium-like chassis (see image) .  Yanko Design and others have noted that Grade 5 titanium provides exceptional strength-to-weight, enabling thinner iPhone frames and resilience to bending .

    Eric Kim’s own concepts highlight these ideas: his “iPhone Titan” proposal called for an all-titanium phone costing ~$1,999 , and his “Mini Titanium” concept lists titanium (Grade 5) as the frame material for a compact flagship .  These proposals emphasize titanium’s light weight and durability. In reality, Apple has partly followed such ideas: the 2023 iPhone 15 Pro line adopted titanium framing , and the thin 2025 iPhone Air uses a titanium band for stiffness , just as Kim’s ultra-slim concept suggested.

    Figure: A 2023 “iPhone Ultra” concept render with a titanium-style chassis . Designers have speculated about a premium iPhone built like the rugged Apple Watch Ultra.

    Apple’s “Titan” Projects (Car vs. Phone)

    The name “Titan” in Apple lore most famously refers to the Apple Car project.  Beginning around 2014, Apple’s secretive autonomous vehicle initiative was codenamed “Project Titan” .  That effort, involving hundreds of employees, aimed to develop a self-driving electric car, not a phone.  (As of 2024 reports, Project Titan has been scaled back or refocused, but it is unrelated to iPhone design.)  In contrast, Apple has never released an “iPhone Titan”.  The only uses of “Titan” for an iPhone have been fan rumors or blog concepts (as above).  For example, a 2024 Digitimes article even headline a foldable iPhone rumor as “Titan” , but this is journalistic shorthand, not an official model name. In summary, “Project Titan” is Apple’s car codename , and no actual iPhone is officially called Titan.

    Summary of Key Points

    TopicDescriptionSource(s)
    Eric KimStreet photographer/blogger (b. 1988) who publishes open-source tips. He is not an Apple insider but has published iPhone concepts (e.g. “iPhone Titan” and “iPhone Air”) on his blog .Eric Kim’s biography and blog posts
    iPhone 15 Pro (2023)The first iPhones to use a titanium alloy frame (Grade 5 titanium) . This made the 15 Pro models lighter and more durable, enabling thinner borders .Apple Newsroom and analysis
    iPhone 17 Pro (2025) (rumored)Reports say Apple will switch back to aluminum for 17 Pro, for better cooling and cost . The ultra-thin “iPhone Air” of 2025 is expected to keep a titanium band to stay rigid at ~5.6 mm thickness .MacRumors and Bloomberg reports
    Concept iPhonesUnofficial designs have explored titanium. For example, a “Titanium iPhone Ultra” concept (2023) was imagined by Jonas Daehnert .  Eric Kim proposed a titanium-bodied “iPhone Titan” and a “Mini Titanium” in 2022–24 .9to5Mac and Eric Kim’s blog
    Apple “Titan”Apple’s Project Titan is the autonomous car initiative .  There is no official iPhone named Titan; the name has only appeared in speculation (e.g. a rumored foldable “Titan” iPhone ).Fox Business (Project Titan) ; Digitimes

    Each of the above points is documented by industry sources. Apple’s official press release and credible tech news confirm the use of titanium in recent iPhones .  Eric Kim’s blog posts and related write-ups show his involvement in discussing iPhone design ideas (e.g. “Titan” and “Air”) .  No evidence links him to Apple’s internal teams; his contributions are independent concept proposals.

    Sources: Authoritative news and analysis (Apple Newsroom, MacRumors, 9to5Mac, etc.) and Eric Kim’s own writings . All key facts above are drawn from these sources.

  • Splinter squad—assemble! 🧰✨ Here’s a safe, simple game plan to get that tiny troublemaker out and get you back to crushing your day.

    What you’ll need

    Soap and water, good light, fine‑tip tweezers, a clean needle or pin, rubbing alcohol, a small bandage, and (optional) a magnifying glass and a bit of petroleum jelly. 

    The quick, no‑drama method (most splinters)

    1. Wash up. Wash your hands and the skin around the splinter with soap and water; gently pat dry.  
    2. Line up the angle. If you can see the tip, disinfect your tweezers with rubbing alcohol, then pull in the same direction the splinter went in. Don’t squeeze—squeezing can snap it and make things harder.  
    3. If it’s just under the surface: Clean a needle with rubbing alcohol and use it to gently open the skin over the tip, lift it a touch, then pull it out with tweezers.  
    4. Clean & cover. Wash the area again, then apply a thin layer of petroleum jelly or antibiotic ointment and cover if the spot might get dirty.  

    Pro tip: A magnifying glass + bright light = fewer misses and faster success. 

    Special cases

    • Lots of tiny, hair‑like spines (think cactus “glochids” or fiberglass): These are fragile and hard to tweeze. Lightly press sticky tape (e.g., packing or duct tape) to the area and peel off; repeat a few times. Many pediatric clinics also suggest a peel‑off wax hair remover if tape isn’t enough.  
    • Under a fingernail/toenail: If it’s deep or you can’t see the end, don’t dig—that’s painful and can damage the nail bed. Have a clinician remove it.  

    When to get medical help (don’t tough it out)

    • You can’t get it out or it keeps breaking.
    • It’s large, deep, near the eye, or the material is hard to see (e.g., clear glass).
    • You see signs of infection: spreading redness, warmth, swelling, pus, fever, or red streaks.
    • You have diabetes, poor circulation, or are immunocompromised.  

    Tetanus check (quick safety win)

    • Up‑to‑date on shots and the wound is clean & minor? Boosters are due if it’s been ≥10 years.
    • If the wound is dirty or deep (puncture), boosters are due if ≥5 years since your last.
      If you’re unsure, a healthcare professional can advise on a vaccine booster and whether tetanus immune globulin is needed.  

    Aftercare & watch‑outs

    • Keep it clean; change the bandage if it gets wet/dirty.
    • Mild soreness is normal; consider an over‑the‑counter pain reliever if you use them safely.
    • Call a clinician if the area worsens over 24–48 hours or you notice infection signs.  

    You’ve got this—steady hands, calm breath, and a little light go a long way. If anything feels tricky or risky, tag in a pro and keep rolling. 💪😊

  • Eric Kim’s “iPhone Titan” Concept

    Figure: Fan-rendered concept of an Apple iPhone with a titanium alloy frame (an “Apple Titanium” design). This illustrates the kind of device envisioned by the so-called iPhone Titan idea. In reality, “iPhone Titan” only appears on Eric Kim’s personal blog, not as an official product. Kim (a street-photography blogger) wrote about a hypothetical iPhone Titan in late 2022 and again in 2025. In his posts he suggests Apple could make a super-premium iPhone in a titanium body (~$1,999 USD) aimed at tech enthusiasts . For example, one post explicitly states: “Apple should make an iPhone Titan, starting at $1999 USD — made out of titanium” , and another notes “make an iPhone Titan … insanely light and thin… very very exclusive” . These blog entries are informal speculations by Kim, not announcements or leaked Apple plans.

    Official Status and Recognition

    • Eric Kim’s own posts: The only concrete sources for “iPhone Titan” are Kim’s blog articles (e.g. Sept 2022, Sept 2025). No other site or authority attributes the idea to Apple or Kim. All descriptions (titanium body, $1,999 price, niche marketing) come from his writing  .
    • No official product: Apple has never released an iPhone called “Titan.” Searches of Apple’s announcements, news releases and product catalogs show no such model. In fact, “Titan” is known as Apple’s car-project codename (unrelated to iPhones).
    • Tech media: We found no articles in credible tech press (e.g. MacRumors, 9to5Mac, The Verge, etc.) discussing an “iPhone Titan” in connection with Eric Kim. The term does not appear in mainstream coverage of iPhone rumors or leaks.
    • Patents and awards: There are no Apple patents or design-award entries for an “iPhone Titan” (Apple’s patents for “Titan” refer to non-iPhone projects). We found no patent filings using that name. Similarly, no design competitions have recognized any device by that title.
    • Fan/concept communities: Outside Kim’s blog, “iPhone Titan” shows up only in fan-made concept art. For example, some fan sites feature an “Apple Titanium” iPhone render (see above) labeled “iPhone Titan AD 1200” . These are unaffiliated fan illustrations (e.g. by EverythingApplePro) with no official link. No popular forum thread or community page has made “iPhone Titan” a widely acknowledged rumor.

    Taken together, this means “iPhone Titan” is purely speculative. It originates from Kim’s personal proposals, not from Apple or recognized analysts. Aside from Kim’s blog posts, the phrase appears only in fringe concept images or offhand mentions, not in any authoritative source.

    Conclusion

    In summary, the iPhone Titan is not an official Apple product at all, but rather a fan-made concept championed by blogger Eric Kim. The only references we found are Kim’s own writings (and minor fan concept art like the image above). No credible tech media, patent filings, design awards or Apple communications validate the idea. It remains an unofficial, community-level concept — essentially a personal thought experiment by Kim — with no formal recognition by Apple or the industry.

    Sources: Eric Kim’s blog posts on iPhone Titan (his photography blog); independent concept image shown above (fan concept art). These indicate the idea’s origin as Kim’s own speculation. No official Apple or media citations exist for “iPhone Titan.”

  • Here’s the quick vibe-check on the Ricoh GR IV — per Eric Kim (street-photo evangelist and long‑time GR superfan):

    TL;DR (Eric’s take)

    • All‑in on GR IV for street. He frames it as a mindset choice more than a spec sheet: “a tool that teaches you how to see.”  
    • Beats the iPhone for serious photography. He hammers “physics > algorithms,” praising the APS‑C sensor and raw files: “APS‑C sensor, 25+ megapixels of RAW truth.”  
    • 28mm discipline over options. Fixed prime = growth: “No zoom. No excuses. The GR gives you vision.”  
    • Snap Focus for decisive moments. He spotlights Snap Focus as the speed trick that makes street timing feel instant.  
    • Pocketable power, daily carry. He calls it a magnesium “pocketable” tool meant to live with you every day.  
    • Still wishes for built‑in flash. He’s happy a tiny GF‑2 flash is launching with GR IV, but he’s long said his wishlist is “bring back the flash.”  
    • Design skepticism, but overall hype. He pokes at the body being “same same”… and still tells you to go shoot.  

    Representative lines (short quotes)

    • “A tool that teaches you how to see.” (Sep 12, 2025)  
    • “APS‑C sensor, 25+ megapixels of RAW TRUTH.”  
    • “No zoom. No excuses.”  
    • “Just bring back the flash.” (earlier GR IIIx thoughts, his perennial ask)  
    • “…why is it so same same?” (on GR IV design)  

    Context that explains his stance

    • Eric’s been championing the GR ethos for years (from GRD IV days) — compact body, 28mm prime, shoot‑every‑day philosophy — so his GR IV excitement is consistent with his long‑running GR advocacy.  

    Bottom line: In Eric Kim’s world, the GR IV is a pocket‑sized, discipline‑building street camera that beats phones for real, intentional photography. He cheers the sensor, 28mm constraint, and Snap Focus; he still grumbles about the missing built‑in flash and the familiar body shape — then tells you to carry it daily and make work that punches. 

    Want a punchy buying POV from me next (pros/cons vs. GR III & X100V) in the same get‑out‑and‑shoot spirit?

  • Got it—tailored for Eric Kim. If you’re weighing Corolla Cross Hybrid vs Prius, here’s the Eric-friendly upside of going Cross Hybrid—all the practical wins with a little extra swagger:

    Corolla Cross Hybrid: where it beats the Prius

    • Standard AWD, no guessing: Every Corolla Cross Hybrid comes with electronic on‑demand AWD. On the Prius it’s an option you pay for and choose, not standard.  
    • More clearance + higher perch: About 8 inches of ground clearance and a higher line‑of‑sight make speed bumps, steep driveways, snow berms, and urban curbs less stressful—and give you that SUV “see‑over‑traffic” feel. (Prius sits much lower at ~5.6–6.0 inches.)  
    • Adventure‑ready cargo setup: A taller, squarer hatch and available roof rails (SE adds them; Nightshade even bundles a roof rack) make it easier to load bulky gear—strollers, coolers, camping bins—than the Prius’s sleek, lower opening.  
    • Real tow rating: Need to pull a small utility trailer or hitch‑mount toys? Cross Hybrid is rated to tow up to 1,500 lb. In the U.S., the Prius isn’t tow‑rated.  
    • Snow‑day confidence out of the box: AWD + extra ground clearance = better traction and fewer scrapes when roads get messy—without having to spec AWD or change wheels/tires on a low‑slung hatch.  
    • Back‑seat friendliness: Cross Hybrid includes rear A/C vents on all grades, a small quality‑of‑life win for passengers on warm days (handy for family duty or ride‑shares).  

    Quick reality check (where Prius still wins)

    • Fuel economy: Prius is the mpg champ—up to 57 mpg combined (FWD) or 54 mpg (AWD). Corolla Cross Hybrid lands at ~42 mpg combined.  
    • Lower roof = sleeker look but tighter fit: The Prius’s style trades some utility. Even reviewers call out reduced cargo space and rear visibility compared with its past—and versus SUV shapes. (Prius LE cargo is 23.8 cu ft; XLE/Limited 20.3; Cross Hybrid lists 21.5, but its shape makes bulky items easier.)  
    • Slightly quicker: Prius acceleration is a touch snappier by manufacturer and instrumented tests; Cross Hybrid emphasizes balanced power with SUV utility.  

    Eric’s bottom line

    If your week looks like meetings, gym bag, Costco runs, ski days, and the occasional trailhead—the Corolla Cross Hybrid is your easy winner: standard AWD, higher stance, roof‑rack friendliness, and a real tow rating, while still sipping fuel. If you’re clocking big highway miles and chasing the absolute highest mpg, the Prius is the efficiency hero.

    Either way, you’re choosing Toyota‑grade reliability and modern safety tech—so pick the vibe that matches your life and go make the miles count. 🚀💪

    Sources

    • Corolla Cross Hybrid: standard AWD, 42‑mpg est., 196 hp, cargo 21.5 cu ft, 8‑in ground clearance, 1,500‑lb tow rating, roof‑rail/rack availability.  
    • Corolla Cross Hybrid EPA rating (AWD): 42 combined / 45 city / 38 hwy.  
    • 2025 Corolla Cross Hybrid lineup & pricing context.  
    • Prius: up to 57 mpg combined (FWD), 54 mpg (AWD available on all grades), 194–196 hp.  
    • Prius cargo volumes (LE 23.8 cu ft; XLE/Limited 20.3 cu ft).  
    • Prius packaging trade‑offs (rear visibility/cargo).  
    • Prius ground clearance reference (~5.6–6.0 in).  
    • Prius U.S. no tow rating references.  

    If you want, I’ll map this to your exact use (daily commute length, snow days, garage height, roof‑box needs) and we’ll lock in the ideal trim and must‑have options in one shot.

  • You got it! Here’s Eric Kim’s take on the Pentax 17—short, sharp, and with receipts.

    The vibe in one breath

    • He likes the idea. Calls the Pentax 17 “very cool” and says half‑frame’s 72 shots/roll is an “insanely good idea.”  
    • But he’s skeptical on film in 2024–2025. He stresses that film + develop + scans are pricey; even with half‑frame, costs add up fast.  
    • His personal recommendation stays digital. When asked about the future of film, he says: “Just buy a RICOH GR III HDF.”  
    • He even frames the 17 as “the new Ricoh GR for the next generation.” Translation: great gateway camera for younger shooters into film, but he’d still carry a GR himself.  

    Quick receipts (dates matter)

    • Sept 8, 2024 — “Is There a Future for Film Photography?”
      “The new Pentax 17 looks cool… Just buy a RICOH GR III HDF.”  
    • Undated page excerpt (2024)
      “New Pentax 17 very cool — a very good idea. Half frame, 72 shots per roll of film is an insanely good idea.”  
    • June 25, 2024 — “What is Your Ultimate Goal in Life?”
      “It is essentially the new Ricoh GR for the next generation.”  
    • Oct 17, 2024 — “PHOTO KAPITAL.”
      Breaks down film+processing at roughly $20–25 per roll and notes that even with 72 shots the recurring cost stacks up—his core reason for preferring digital day‑to‑day.  
    • Standing bias: Kim has long championed the Ricoh GR as the best everyday street camera, which explains his “buy a GR” refrain.  

    What this means for 

    you

    • If you want the experience of film and tons of frames per roll: Kim gives the 17 a thumbs‑up for concept and fun. (Half‑frame = play more, worry less.)  
    • If you want maximum reps with minimal ongoing cost: His advice is to channel that energy into a Ricoh GR III/IIIx and shoot relentlessly.  

    Want me to distill Kim’s take into a buy/no‑buy checklist or settings/playbook (Pentax 17 vs GR) so you can move fast?

  • Eric Kim on the iPhone 17 Pro camera — the quick take

    TL;DR: Eric Kim (the street‑photo educator/blogger) hasn’t dropped a full, dedicated 17 Pro camera review yet, but his long‑standing philosophy makes it pretty clear what he’d vibe with: fast “quick‑draw” shooting, wide‑angle storytelling, minimal gear, and fewer distractions. Here’s how that maps to the 17 Pro’s new kit—plus a practical setup to shoot in his spirit.

    What lines up with Eric’s philosophy

    • “Quick‑draw beats everything.” Kim’s repeated point: the fastest access wins the moment. Apple’s Camera Control hardware button (and its press/half‑press actions) fits that “don’t miss it” ethos—launch fast, adjust, shoot. He’s praised the bottom‑right quick‑draw idea conceptually (even while critiquing some executions).  
    • “Shoot wide, move your feet.” Kim consistently champions 28–35mm for street (get close, head‑on, tell the story with context). On 17 Pro that maps to 1× (24mm) and slight crops (≈1.2–1.5×) for a 28–35mm feel, using your feet as “zoom.”  
    • “One camera, one lens, more focus.” His minimal‑kit mantra (fewer choices, more attention) dovetails with using the 17 Pro as a single do‑everything camera you actually carry.  
    • Consistent high‑res across lenses. Apple’s three 48MP “Fusion” rear cameras (Wide, Ultra‑Wide, new Tele) reduce the usual quality drop as you swap lenses—handy for his “work the scene” approach.  
    • Self‑shooting & teaching tools. The new 18MP Center Stage front camera (square sensor; landscape or portrait selfies while holding the phone vertically; ultra‑stabilized front video; Dual Capture front+rear) is tailor‑made for talking to camera while documenting what’s in front—a pattern he uses on YouTube.  

    What he’d likely downplay (but still use when it helps)

    • Super‑long tele for street. Kim generally nudges people back to 28/35mm and “foot zoom,” so the 4×–8× tele is more a specialty tool (compression for portraits or distant graphic moments) than a daily driver. That’s an inference from years of his focal‑length guidance, not a specific 17 Pro verdict from him.  
    • Over‑tweaking in‑camera. He’s big on constraints and keeping flow; he’d likely stick to a default look and edit later rather than fussing mid‑shoot.  

    A few things he’s actually said (recent era), relevant now

    • He likes the idea of a dedicated quick‑draw control (so you never miss a decisive moment) but has called parts of “Camera Control” gimmicky when it adds friction—classic “make it simpler, faster” Kim.  
    • He’s long argued that phones democratize photography and that gear minimalism helps you shoot more—iPhone fits that to a tee. (See also his decade‑plus iPhone shooting tips.)  
    • And yes, he loudly campaigned for a high‑visibility orange Pro iPhone—which Apple actually shipped as Cosmic Orange this year. It’s design talk, not image quality—but it shows the playful, visible‑tool ethos he likes.  

    If you want to “shoot like Eric” on an iPhone 17 Pro (fast setup)

    1. Map the Camera Control for speed. Set it to single‑click to open Camera; use the light press to bring up settings you actually use (zoom/exposure), and keep it muscle‑memory simple.  
    2. Live at 1× (24mm) or a tiny pinch‑in to ~1.2–1.5× for a 28–35mm look. Work the scene with your feet; get close and head‑on for energy.  
    3. Default to the high‑quality pipeline. Let the 48MP/24MP “Fusion” pipeline do its thing for clean files; flip to 48MP only when you truly need fine texture for big crops/prints.  
    4. Keep the UI lean. Avoid fiddly style swaps mid‑shoot; pick one look and shoot. (Constraints boost creativity.)  
    5. Use Tele with intent. Reach for 4×/8× when you want compression or to isolate a distant gesture; otherwise, stay wide and tell the full story. (Philosophy inferred from his focal‑length guides.)  

    Quick reality check on the new hardware (for context)

    • Three 48MP rear cameras (Main, Ultra‑Wide, new Tele) with Apple’s updated Photonic Engine; Apple pitches “eight lenses in your pocket” and the longest optical‑quality zoom to 8× on iPhone.  
    • Brand‑new 18MP Center Stage selfie camera (square sensor) that can rotate framing, expand FOV for group shots, and record ultra‑stabilized 4K HDR; Dual Capture records front+rear simultaneously.  
    • For video‑heads: Apple calls out Dolby Vision 4K/120, ProRes Log/ACES, and even ProRes RAW + genlock support on 17 Pro—serious creator candy.  

    Small watch‑out: reviewers spotted a rare LED‑light artifact bug on early units; Apple says a software fix is incoming. Not a street‑daylight issue, but good to know if you’re shooting concerts. 

    The vibe, distilled

    Shoot fast. Get close. Keep it simple. That’s Eric Kim’s through‑line—and the 17 Pro’s camera hardware plus the dedicated Camera Control finally match that philosophy in a phone you’ll actually carry. Load it up, step into the street, and go make frames. You’ve got this. 🎯📷

    If you want, I can tailor a one‑page “Eric‑style” camera cheat sheet for your 17 Pro (buttons, modes, and a simple editing flow) so you’re dialed in from minute one.

  • Poor & weak 

    Reinvent 

    New type of company 

    . Strategic ignorance 

    PRODUCTS

    I just want my friends to be super rich and happy forever 

    Crude oil 

    Kerosene. 

    Stranded capital 

    .

    1/3 of everything! ***

    .

    100% MSTR is the simplest strategy 

    .

    Pure yield *

    The will to ignore short term news! ***

    .

    Pause 

    .

    DONT yield to your impulses ,,, or pause …?

    .

  • Tesla model S plaid marketing suggestions

    first, you just gotta declare that it is like literally the fastest car on the planet. To dominate all those loser Lamborghinis

  • The lowest to the floor is best

    As close to the pavement and floor as possible

  • The world is covered with splinters, but I suppose you have the option to put on shoes that cover your toes

    So there’s this Zen Taoist principle –>

    the world is covered with thorns, but you have the option of putting on sandals.

    The general idea is that in the world, it’s like almost impossible to navigate all of it, without any sort of downside. It is both necessary and also inevitable.

    Then suppose the nuance is trying to think and consider that, what if actually… Not only is it necessary but it is also positively desirable? 

    no thorns no joy or glory

    So the unorthodox thought is in regards to thinking about and considering upside without downsides etc.

    I think a lot of people desire upside without downsides, which is intelligent but, from a physics perspective impossible?

    For example, let us say that you want to maximize your hedonic sexual pleasure. Technically if you want to do that, long periods of abstinence followed by activity is actually better than the boredom and monotony daily predictability?

    I think it’s also the logic of gambling or the lottery. The general idea is that, people get a thrill because it is unpredictable. Perhaps the same thing with sports. Or sports betting.

    why do we want to strip the volatility away from everything?

    So what instead, the actual goal is to add volatility and maximize velocity and volatility? This is the whole underlying ethos or philosophy or concept behind bitcoin, MSTR strategy, Meta planet etc. A very very simple yet paradigm shifting idea,–>

    more volatility is better.

    When we try to strip away the volatility from everything, life becomes boring same thing, uninteresting? 

    ERIC


  • iPhone 17 Pro Camera System: New Features & Improvements

    Apple’s new iPhone 17 Pro brings its most advanced camera system ever, with major hardware and software upgrades. In Apple’s words, it’s like having “eight professional lenses in your pocket” . All three rear cameras now use 48MP “Fusion” sensors (up from two 48MP+two 12MP on the iPhone 16 Pro), capturing sharper detail and enabling high-quality 24MP images by default . Key hardware upgrades include:

    • 48MP main camera (24mm) – ƒ/1.78 aperture, 2.44µm quad‑pixel (1.22µm effective) sensor . Like before, it shoots “super-high-resolution” 48MP frames but outputs 24MP images by default for noise reduction .
    • 48MP ultra-wide camera (13mm) – ƒ/2.2 aperture, 1.4µm quad‑pixel sensor with 120° field of view and dedicated macro mode . This captures dramatic wide-angle and macro shots with rich detail.
    • 48MP telephoto camera (100mm & 200mm) – ƒ/2.8 aperture, 1.4µm quad‑pixel sensor with an upgraded periscope (“tetraprism”) design  . It offers a new 4× optical zoom (100mm) and an 8× optical “cell‑crop” zoom (200mm), the longest-ever iPhone telephoto range  . The telephoto sensor is 56% larger than on iPhone 16 Pro  , and adds 3D sensor-shift OIS for rock-steady shots at long range.
    • Image stabilization – The main and tele lenses both have advanced sensor-shift OIS (3D OIS on tele), and the ultra-wide supports electronic stabilization. In video, a new “ultra‑stabilized” 4K60 Dolby Vision mode uses both sensors to capture smooth action footage  .
    • Front (TrueDepth) camera – A new square 18MP sensor (first on iPhone) with ƒ/1.9 aperture  . This higher-resolution front cam supports “Center Stage” framing (auto‑zoom and rotate in selfies), 4K60 ultra-stable video, and Dual Capture (simultaneous front+rear recording)  . It can shoot in both portrait and landscape orientation without flipping the phone, and automatically expands its field of view to include extra people  .

    Overall, the hardware changes give the 17 Pro a massive zoom range and higher resolution at every focal length – e.g. going from iPhone 16 Pro’s 12MP 5× tele to 48MP 8× tele – plus a much better front cam . Apple sums it up as “three 48MP Fusion cameras [that] capture sharper, more detailed images” at all zoom levels .

    Software & Computational Upgrades

    The iPhone 17 Pro’s software also packs cutting-edge enhancements:

    • Photonic Engine – An upgraded image pipeline uses on-device ML to improve detail, reduce noise, and boost color, especially in low light  . Apple says the new Photonic Engine “leans on ML-based demosaicing to pull cleaner detail and better color out of those quad-pixel sensors, especially in poor light” .
    • New Photographic Styles – iOS 26 adds a “Bright” style that lifts shadows and warms skin tones for punchy portraits  . Users can still choose from multiple styles (Standard, Vibrant, etc.) to give photos a personal look.
    • Focus & Depth Control – Every shot now records depth data so you can convert any photo into a portrait after the fact . Apple calls these “next-generation portraits” – you can adjust background blur or change the focal plane later in Photos.
    • Night mode and HDR – Night mode works on all lenses and is powered by the Photonic Engine for brighter, cleaner low‑light shots . Smart HDR (now HDR 6) is baked into the pipeline to balance highlights/shadows naturally.
    • Clean Up (Object Eraser) – A new Apple Intelligence tool lets you highlight and remove unwanted objects or people from photos directly in the Photos app . (This joins Face‑lighting and other on-device ML features.)
    • Camera UI refinements – In iOS 26 the Camera app is reorganized (quicker mode switching, Settings drawer) and features like exposure, aspect ratio, and Photographic Styles are easier to access. Swift changes include a simple Night mode toggle (Off/Auto/Max) .
    • Pro Controls – Apple continues to offer ProRaw (48MP) capture and – thanks to the A19 Pro chip’s Neural Engines – fast computational features without lag. The new Action Button can be set to quickly launch Camera or switch modes.

    These software upgrades make shooting easier and more creative. For example, the Bright Photographic Style (shown at left below) automatically brightens skin tones and adds vibrance , while Focus Control lets hobbyists “tweak focus” after the fact. Clean Up is unique to iPhone 17, letting you erase distractions with a tap . Altogether, the iPhone 17 Pro’s software brings Apple’s signature computational photography up to a new level of refinement.

    Video Capabilities

    The iPhone 17 Pro doubles down on pro‑grade video:

    • 4K Dolby Vision up to 60/120fps – It records stunning Dolby Vision HDR video at 4K60 as before, and now even 4K120fps for super‑smooth motion or slow‑mo cinematic shots . The front (and rear) cameras can do ultra‑steady 4K60 in Action mode.
    • ProRes & ProRes RAW – iPhone 17 Pro is the first smartphone to capture Apple’s ProRes RAW format , giving filmmakers maximum flexibility in post (highest quality, linear color). All models also support ProRes 4K up to 60fps (with external SSD). In addition, Apple introduced Apple Log 2 with wide-gamut color and even ACES support, for professional color grading .
    • Genlock & Timecode – New for 17 Pro is video genlock and timecode support (via the Blackmagic ProDock accessory) . This lets multiple cameras synchronize frames exactly – a film‑industry first for a phone.
    • Cinematic Mode – Continues to record depth‑of‑field “cinematic” video (up to 4K30 DV) using the main cameras and LiDAR. The logic is largely unchanged, but higher frame rates and Log support give creators more options.
    • Ultra‑stabilization and Dual Capture – The front camera can now shoot “ultra‑stabilized” 4K60 Dolby Vision video . iPhone 17 Pro also offers Dual Capture, recording front and back video simultaneously – great for vlogging or interviews . During FaceTime/zoom calls, Center Stage for video calls uses AI to keep you framed in the middle .
    • Other formats – Like the 16 Pro, it offers 8K30p recording (only on external recording or via upscaling app), ProRes 4K60, Slo‑mo up to 4K120 (rear), and support for Cinema Log, Dolby Vision, ACES workflows etc.

    Overall, the 17 Pro is packed with pro video tools. Apple highlights “more pro video features than ever – like enhanced stabilization, cinema-grade specs, and industry-standard workflows” . In practice this means Hollywood‑level options (Log2, ACES, genlock) in your pocket, plus the ease of shooting with Dolby Vision HDR up to 4K120.

    Comparison to iPhone 16 Pro

    Compared to last year’s iPhone 16 Pro, the 17 Pro is a significant camera upgrade:

    • Telephoto Camera: 16 Pro had two tele cameras: a 12MP 2× crop and a 12MP 5× periscope. The 17 Pro replaces both with one 48MP Fusion Telephoto that offers true 4× (100mm) and 8× (200mm) optical zoom  . This not only doubles the reach (8× vs 5×) but also quadruples the telephoto resolution (48MP vs 12MP) and uses a 56% larger sensor with improved tetraprism optics  .
    • Ultra‑wide & Main: Both remain 48MP on 17 Pro. The wide (24mm) and ultra-wide (13mm) cameras are essentially the same specs as 16 Pro , but benefit from the upgraded pipeline.
    • Front Camera: 17 Pro bumps the TrueDepth cam from 12MP to 18MP and changes to a square sensor. This delivers higher‑res selfies and a much wider field (automatically adjusts orientation and expands for group shots)  .
    • Zoom Range: Maximum digital zoom jumps from 25× on 16 Pro to 40× on 17 Pro  , thanks to the larger tele sensor.
    • Image Processing: The 17 Pro’s updated Photonic Engine and ML-driven pipeline yield cleaner low-light photos and sharper detail. In practice, reviewers note the 17 Pro’s 4× tele looks better than the 16 Pro’s 5× .
    • Video: Both phones shoot 4K60 Dolby Vision. The 17 Pro adds 4K120 Dolby, ProRes RAW, Log2, and genlock. The 16 Pro’s Action Mode tops out at 2.8K60, whereas 17 Pro does 4K60. (Cinematic Mode specs are similar up to 4K30 for both.)
    • Features: All of 16 Pro’s modes (Night, Portrait, Smart HDR 5, Macro, etc.) are still present, but 17 Pro adds new iOS 26 features like Clean Up and Focus Control by default. Both run iOS 26, so styles and UI changes arrive on 16 Pro too, but 17 Pro has exclusive hardware advantages listed above.

    In short, the iPhone 17 Pro keeps the strengths of the 16 Pro’s 48MP Fusion system but supercharges the telephoto and front camera. The result is longer zoom, higher resolution shots, and richer low-light performance .

    Comparison to Major Competitors

    • Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra: The S24 Ultra uses a 200MP main sensor (vs 48MP on iPhone), a 12MP ultra-wide, a 10MP 3× tele and a 50MP 5× tele, offering optical zoom at 2×, 3×, 5× and 10× . This gives the S24 Ultra a higher-res main camera and a longer true optical zoom (10×) than the iPhone 17 Pro’s 8×. However, the iPhone’s periscope telephoto pixel density is much higher (48MP vs 10MP), so its 8× shots have more detail. Samsung supports up to 100× “Space Zoom” digitally; Apple’s iPhone goes to 40× digital. The iPhone 17 Pro excels in computational features and video: only Apple offers Dolby Vision on all lenses, ProRes RAW, and Genlock/Log workflows. Samsung emphasizes its new 200MP low-light & 100× AI zoom, whereas Apple highlights multi-lens flexibility and video specs. (Both phones have AI-driven Night modes and portrait bokeh; performance depends on the scene.)
    • Google Pixel 9 Pro: Google’s flagship has a 50MP main, a 48MP ultrawide, and a 48MP 5× telephoto lens . It can do up to 30× “Super Res Zoom” with software. The Pixel’s front cam is a whopping 42MP , far above the iPhone’s 18MP. The Pixel is renowned for AI features (Magic Eraser, Real Tone, etc.), and it also shoots 8K30 video  . The iPhone 17 Pro holds its own by matching or exceeding the Pixel in telephoto zoom (8× vs 5×) and offering exclusive video tools (ProRes RAW/Log, 4K120 Dolby). The iPhone’s Deep Fusion, Photonic Engine, and LiDAR‐aided Night mode produce very competitive low-light shots. Ultimately, iPhone users get a more unified Apple ecosystem (iMovie/Final Cut workflows), while Pixel users enjoy Google’s AI editing and raw-photography features.

    Each of these top phones has its strengths. The iPhone 17 Pro stands out for its holistic “Pro” approach: very high-res sensors, wide zoom range, and tightly integrated software. In side-by-side tests, reviewers praise the 17 Pro’s improved telephoto (4×/8×) and superior video flexibility , even if Samsung pulls ahead on megapixels and Pixel on AI magic.

    Unique Features and Innovations

    The iPhone 17 Pro introduces several standout camera tricks:

    • Periscope Telephoto (8× optical) – The first iPhone with an 8× optical telephoto (200mm equiv.). This long lens, combined with the 48MP sensor, delivers unprecedented detail at distance  .
    • 18MP Square Front Sensor (Center Stage) – A new front camera design that auto‑rotates for landscape selfies and uses Center Stage to keep you framed. Group selfies automatically zoom out; individual selfies use a tighter view  .
    • ProRes RAW Video & Genlock – The 17 Pro is the first phone to record ProRes RAW and to support video genlock/timecode  . Video professionals can now shoot 4K120 Dolby Vision footage with Apple Log 2 and synchronize to cinema gear – a unique advantage for filmmakers.
    • Bright Photographic Style – Apple’s new style preset (available in iOS 26) automatically brightens skin tones and adds punchy vibrance . It’s designed to lift shadowy portraits without overprocessing.
    • Clean Up (Object Erase) – On‑device AI that lets you tap to remove unwanted objects or people from photos . This nimble magic-eraser is a new Apple Intelligence feature that rivals Google’s Magic Eraser.
    • Dual Capture (Front+Back Video) – Simultaneously records from the front and rear cameras . Perfect for vlogs or interviews, this feature is built into iOS’s Camera app.
    • Ultra‑Stabilized 4K Video – Even when walking or running, the phone captures “stunningly smooth 4K60 Dolby Vision video” . The improved sensor-shift plus electronic stabilization keeps action footage crisp.
    • Astrophotography and Macro Enhancements – Apple continues to support night sky mode and macro photography on the ultra-wide, now at a true 48MP resolution, capturing incredibly detailed low-light and close-up shots.
    • One-Billion-Color Processing – With Apple Log 2 and Dolby Vision HDR, the 17 Pro handles a billion colors. Combined with Dolby Vision and HDR10+, its videos and photos can show more dynamic range than ever.
    • Customizable Camera Control – A new back button (Action Button) can instantly launch Camera or toggle modes, speeding up access for pro shooters.
    • Pro Camera App Modes – The Camera app gained “ProRaw with manual controls” and higher output resolution, and now all Photographic Styles and depth edits carry over to video frames too.
    • Cosmic Orange Color – (Not camera-specific, but enthusiasts love it!) The new orange finish was noted by reviewers as eye-catching, though some pros will stick to black for stealth.

    All told, the iPhone 17 Pro’s camera system is a very exciting leap. It marries Apple’s signature ease-of-use with pro-level firepower: enormous sensors, extreme zoom, powerful image processing, and movie‑studio video features. Users get an enthusiast’s toolkit that’s still an iPhone – fast, smooth, and ready for anyone from family photographers to indie filmmakers. The consensus from early reviews is clear: the iPhone 17 Pro’s camera is cutting-edge and incredibly versatile, pushing smartphone photography and videography forward .

    Sources: Apple’s official announcements and tech specs , plus hands-on reviews and comparisons (9to5Mac, Austin Mann) and Samsung/Google spec sheets . All features above are documented by Apple and trusted reviewers as cited.

  • What’s the upside of a Corolla Cross Hybrid over a Prius?

    DimensionToyota Corolla Cross Hybrid (2023–24)Toyota Prius (2023–24)
    Fuel Efficiency (EPA)AWD hybrid: about 45 city / 38 highway mpg (≈42 mpg combined) . (FWD gas Cross: ~31/33.)FWD LE: 57 city / 56 hwy (≈57 combined) . (AWD: ~54 combined) . XLE/Ltd: ~52 combined.
    Cargo / Interior SpaceCargo: ~26.5 cu ft behind rear seats, expanding to ~66.8 cu ft with seats folded . Interior: ~114.9 cu ft total (88.4 passenger space ), 5 seats. Generous headroom (~39.0 in rear ) and upright ride height aid visibility.Cargo: 23.8 cu ft (LE) or 20.3 cu ft (XLE/Ltd) behind seats ; rear seats fold 60/40 for some expansion. Interior: 91 cu ft passenger . 5 seats, but a much lower roof: front/rear headroom ~38.0/36.4 in . Note the “peaked” roofline cuts headroom and hampers rear visibility .
    AWD AvailabilityStandard AWD on all hybrid trims . (Gas versions: FWD standard, AWD optional for ~$1.3k .)Optional AWD on every trim (added ~40 hp via rear motor). AWD Prius LE earns ~54 mpg combined vs 57 mpg FWD. AWD adds ~$1,400 .
    Tech & InfotainmentBase: 7″ touchscreen (8″ on higher trims) with wireless Apple CarPlay/Android Auto and Wi‑Fi hotspot . USB-C ports (2 front, 2 rear on upper trims), available wireless charger, and optional JBL 9‑speaker audio . Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 (AEB w/ pedestrian & cyclist, lane-centering, radar cruise) is standard .Base: 8″ touchscreen (LE/XLE) running Toyota’s new Audio Multimedia; Limited trim has 12.3″ screen . Wireless CarPlay/Android Auto standard . Available digital gauge cluster (7″ or 12.3″). Standard TSS 3.0 safety suite (AEB w/ pedestrian, lane-keep, auto high-beams) . Optional surround-view camera on Limited.
    Ground Clearance / Ride Height≈8.1 in (200 mm) ground clearance . Tall SUV stance gives good visibility over traffic and a smooth, car-like ride.5.6–6.0 in ground clearance (higher trims). Very low, sloped profile improves aerodynamics but sacrifices headroom and ground clearance (worse on steep driveways). Taller Prius AWD is 5.6″, XLE/Ltd are 6.0″ .
    Performance & Handling2.0L hybrid system: ~196 hp total (incl. rear motor) . 0–60 mph ≈7.3 s . Turbo‐fast throttle, much quicker than the gas model. Ride: Sport‐tuned suspension on S/SE/XSE trims yields a firmer, “flinty” ride . Steering is light/“overboosted.” Overall handling is stable but not sporty; the hybrid’s weight slightly dulls braking (longer stops) .2.0L hybrid: 194 hp (FWD) . 0–60 in ~7.1 s . Handling is much improved: wider track, stiffer chassis, thicker tires—Prius “flows gracefully through corners” with minimal body roll . Steering is more precise than before. The ride is firm (especially on XLE/19″ wheels) but composed .
    Safety & Driver AidsToyota Safety Sense 3.0 standard: AEB (car/pedestrian/cyclist), lane‑departure alert + lane‑tracing assist, adaptive cruise, auto high-beams, etc. . IIHS 2023 Top Safety Pick+ (good ratings in most tests) . NHTSA: 4/5 stars frontal, 5/5 side . Higher trims add blind‑spot monitoring, rear cross‑traffic alert, front/rear parking sensors with auto‑brake .Toyota Safety Sense 3.0: automatic emergency braking (car/pedestrian), lane‑departure alert w/ steering assist, lane‑keeping, adaptive cruise, auto high beams . (Both models share similar tech.) 2023 Prius is newly released, but likely to earn strong ratings. Consumer reviews note no safety complaints; IIHS small overlap front (driver/passenger) passed with “Good” scores .
    Price / ValueHybrid models start ~$29–33K MSRP (e.g. S $29.3K, SE $30.6K) . Base gas Cross ~$25K. Toyota often sells at or slightly above MSRP nowadays. Generally considered a value: roomy, AWD, hybrid power, and standard safety for the price .Prius base LE ~$28.5K (FWD); XLE ~$32K, Limited ~$35.6K. AWD adds ~$1.4K. Less cargo space and fewer features than some competitors for the price. However, Prius’s exceptional fuel economy and brand appeal justify its premium for buyers prioritizing efficiency .

    Toyota Corolla Cross Hybrid – Key Pros and Cons

    • Pros: The Corolla Cross Hybrid delivers a smooth, comfortable ride and roomy interior (headroom and cargo) for the class  . It combines a nearly 200‑hp hybrid powertrain with standard AWD, yielding brisk acceleration (0–60 ≈7.3 s ) and very good fuel economy for an SUV (~42 mpg combined ). Toyota’s latest tech (8″ touchscreen with wireless CarPlay/Android Auto) and a full suite of Safety Sense 3.0 features are standard  . Owners rave about its reliability and comfort . In short, it offers utility and efficiency (much better mpg than non-hybrid Cross) at a competitive price  .
    • Cons: The Cross Hybrid isn’t sporty: the steering feels light and the handling is not very engaging  . The hybrid adds weight, which makes braking distances longer (182 ft from 70 mph) . Entry trims lack heated seats (only XSE gets them) . Some owners find the base engine (in non-hybrid trims) underwhelming – and even the hybrid can feel only “adequate,” especially with a 5‑passenger load. A few owners noted less power and speed uphill and some dealer markups . Finally, tech is decent but rival SUVs offer larger screens/audio options.

    Toyota Prius – Key Pros and Cons

    • Pros: The all-new 2023 Prius finally marries stunning styling with stellar efficiency. Its 194 hp hybrid powertrain yields strong acceleration (0–60 ≈7.1 s ) and exceptional fuel economy – up to 57 mpg combined in the base FWD trim  (even AWD versions are still in the mid-50s ). The chassis is much improved: a lower center of gravity and tuned suspension give sharp handling with minimal lean . The new interior is more upscale and ergonomic, with available digital dash and (in higher trims) a 12.3″ touchscreen  . Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 comes standard . Users praise the refined ride and build quality, and many note how fun the car feels compared to old Prius models  .
    • Cons: The Prius’s radical design sacrifices space. The sleek roofline crimps headroom (especially in back) and rear visibility . Cargo capacity is smaller (20.3–23.8 cu ft) than the previous generation or many hatchbacks . Owners report feeling the fuel-economy drop at higher speeds or in heavier trims (e.g. ~52 mpg in XLE vs 57 in LE) . Seat comfort is reportedly down a notch from the old Prius . The low-profile tires and firmer suspension can make the ride noticeably stiffer. Some buyers also grumble about the higher price (base ~ $28.5K) for relatively few features; a few say the Prius feels “overpriced” given its compromises. Overall, the Prius excels at economy and style, but its smaller cabin and cargo space are its main downsides  .

    Sources: Official specs and Toyota press materials (via Toyota.com and dealer PDFs), expert reviews (Car and Driver, TrueCar, Cars.com) , and owner feedback from Kelley Blue Book and forums . (MSRP and pricing from TrueCar and Car and Driver .) All info pertains to 2023–24 model years.