What is new on the iOS7 redesigned user interface (UI) ?
Airdrop
Sending a photo or a document to someone via text or email is fine. But if that someone is right next to you, a text or an email suddenly feels like too many steps. Enter AirDrop for iOS. It lets you quickly and easily share photos, videos, contacts — and anything else from any app with a Share button. Just tap Share, then select the person you want to share with. AirDrop does the rest using Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. No setup required. And transfers are encrypted, so what you share is highly secure.3
Share one to one. Or one to many.
With AirDrop, you can share, say, a photo or a video with a specific person or multiple people. Just tap the Share icon, select who you want to share with, and let AirDrop do its thing.
Make yourself available. Or not.
You’re automatically visible in AirDrop to your contacts running iOS 7. But you can also make yourself visible to anyone nearby using iOS 7 or to no one at all. One tap in Control Center is all it takes.
File received.
Recipients can choose to save whatever you send. When they do, the content is saved right where it should be — a photo in Photos, a pass in Passbook, a contact in Contacts, and so on.
Control Center
Control Center gives you quick access to the controls and apps you always seem to need right this second. Just swipe up from any screen — including the Lock screen — to do things like switch to Airplane mode, turn Wi-Fi on or off, or adjust the brightness of your display. You can even shine a light on things with a new flashlight. Never has one swipe given you so much control.
Do what you need to do. Quick.
Turn on or off Airplane mode, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Do Not Disturb. Lock your screen’s orientation or adjust its brightness. Play, pause, or skip a song. Connect to AirPlay-enabled devices. And quickly access your flashlight, timer, calculator, and camera.
Camera
Camera in iOS 7 puts all your shooting formats — still, video, panorama, and now square — front and center. With a swipe, you can capture what you want the way you want.1 Fast. And new filters let you do even more with each image. Give it a retro feel. Dial up the contrast.
Or go black and white. Artistic license is all yours. Video,panorama,still, square options and more.
iTunes Radio
iTunes Radio features streaming radio stations you’ll love from day one — from the best selection of music. The more you listen, the more personalized it becomes. And it’s available on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, Mac, PC, and Apple TV for free. It’s radio re-imagined.
Go from your music to more music.
You can access Featured Stations, stations inspired by music you choose or already listen to, and more than 200 genre‑based stations.
Edit on the fly.
Build new stations while you listen, and control the balance between playing the hits and discovering less familiar songs.
See what you’ve heard.
View the History of everything you’ve heard or added to your Wish List. Then tap to download the songs you want from iTunes.
iTunes Radio is available only in the U.S.
Mail
Messages
Multitasking
Multitasking has always been a smart way to switch between apps. Now it’s even smarter. Because iOS 7 learns when you like to use your apps and can update your content before you launch them. So if you tend to check your favorite social app at 9:00 a.m. every day, your feed will be ready and waiting for you. That’s multitasking in iOS 7. It knows what you want to do before you do.
A smarter way to multitask.
Press the Home button twice to see preview screens of the apps you have open. To quit an app, just swipe it up and out of preview.
Intelligently scheduled updates.
iOS schedules updates during power-efficient times. Like when your device is on and connected to Wi-Fi. So your battery isn’t drained unnecessarily.
Notification Center
Notification Center lets you know about new mail, missed calls, to-dos that need doing, and more. And a new feature called Today gives you a convenient summary of, well, today. One glance at your iPhone and you’ll know if it’s a certain someone’s birthday, if you’ll need an umbrella, or if traffic will slow down your commute. You’ll even get a heads-up on tomorrow. You can access Notification Center from any screen, including the Lock screen. Just swipe down. And get up to speed.
What’s your day like?Today view gives you a summary of what you need to know about for the day. And a peek at tomorrow.
See what you missed.
The new All and Missed views let you see all your alerts or just those you haven’t addressed in the last 24 hours.
Photos
Now there are faster, easier, and more delightful ways to scroll down memory lane. Introducing Collections, Moments, and Years — smart groupings of your photos and videos based on time and place. Tap Years and all your shots fill the screen. Each year holds Collections, like your trip to San Francisco. And in that Collection are distinct Moments — photos from Union Square, videos from AT&T Park. So you can find a shot from whenever, wherever, in no time.
Inside a Collection.
Tap a Collection, like “Hawaii,” and see photos from your trip organized into Moments according to date and location.
A year — or years — in review.
Tap the Year view and prepare to be amazed. Every photo and video you’ve ever taken appears onscreen, almost like artwork.
iCloud Photo Sharing.
With iCloud, you can share your favorite moments with your favorite people by creating a shared photo stream. They can post photos, videos, and comments to your stream, and it all appears on everyone’s iOS devices — automatically. The new Activity view lets you see the latest updates from all your shared streams in one place.
Safari
Browsing is bigger, better, and more beautiful with Safari in iOS 7. Buttons and bars — like the unified smart search field — stay hidden until you scroll to reveal them. So you see more content than ever on your screen. And with a swipe, you can go back or forward a page. It’s all designed so nothing gets in your way or slows you down.
Unified smart search field.
Type a URL or search term in the unified smart search field, and Safari automatically suggests the closest match to what you’re looking for. So you find the right web page fast.
New tab view.
See your open web pages in a consolidated view that lets you scroll effortlessly from tab to tab. To close a page, just swipe it offscreen.
Shared Links.
See all the URLs in your Twitter timeline, who posted them, and what they had to say about them.
Reading List.
Reading through the articles in your Reading List is quick and easy. Simply scroll seamlessly from one to the next.
iCloud Keychain.
Lots of things you do on the web require passwords. Now iCloud can remember your account names, passwords, and credit card numbers for you. And Safari will enter them automatically whenever you need to sign in to a site or shop online. It works on all your approved iOS 7 devices and Mac computers running OS X Mavericks. And with 256-bit AES encryption, it’s highly secure.
Password Generator.
Every time you create an account, you can have Safari generate a unique, hard‑to‑guess password. And remember it for you.
Siri
Siri in iOS 7 gets a new look, a new sound, and new capabilities. It features a redesigned interface that fades into view — on top of whatever’s on your screen. A clearer, more natural-sounding female or male voice makes Siri even easier to understand. It’s faster at answering questions and it checks more sources, such as Bing, Wikipedia, and Twitter. And Siri takes on extra tasks, like returning calls, playing voicemail, controlling iTunes Radio, and more.4
Siri knows you’re talking.
Now when you ask Siri something, audio waves move across your screen, letting you know Siri is listening and processing your request.
Start in Siri. Stay in Siri.
If you have questions, Siri has answers. And you’ll see them right on the screen. Even web search results from Bing. So you won’t be pulled out of Siri and into Safari just to see the same list.
Siri searches Wikipedia.
Siri now references Wikipedia to answer your questions.
Siri searches Twitter, too.
Want to know what people are tweeting about a certain topic? Just ask.
Watch Apple iPhone 5S Press Event Live Streaming September 10, 2013
EVENT WILL START SOON IN 30 MINUTES MORE OR LESS PLS STAND BY
We are about 2 hours more or less to watch here live the Apple`s launch event of 2 new iPhones version the iPhone 5S and the iPhone 5C, this last is said to come up in a colorful range and with plastic back cover as a lower price option to the 5S that will come with the traditional strong aluminium or at least a better quality hardware and frame.
Rumours have said the 5C will cost around $400.- the unlocked version , maybe it is for the 16GB memory in option.
The star of this event as we can see, is the user interface iOS7 it looks renewed translucent with much better performance, multitasking is just more simple ( same as Palm webOS detachable cards were at the beginning before making cards with stacks on)
About new iPad versions are not expected for this event. Meanwhile you can check the iPhone 5 Amazon unlocked option on this banner:
Intel ships Haswell processors for fanless tablets and laptop-tablet hybrids.
After promising to bring power-efficient Haswell processors to tablets, Intel is now shipping new low-power, fourth-generation Core i3 processors, including one that draws as little as 4.5 watts of power in specific usage scenarios.
The dual-core Core i3-4012Y processor is part of a batch of new Haswell processors that could go into fanless tablets and laptop-tablet hybrids, bringing longer battery life to the devices.
Tablets like Microsoft’s Surface Pro that run on Core processors offer great performance but poor battery life. Intel claims that, depending on usage, Haswell dual-core chips will offer up to 50 percent more battery life compared to previous Core chips, code-named Ivy Bridge. Intel also claims Haswell chips also offer better multimedia performance, but the quality of graphics on the 4.5-watt chip may not be comparable to the more power-hungry chips, which are capable of running more features.
The Core i3-4012Y draws as little as 4.5 watts in specific tablet or mobile usage scenarios, according to Intel’s measurements. The measurement comes from what Intel calls SDP (Scenario Design Power), which tracks the usage of power when heat is dissipated in mobile usage scenarios.
The new chip can also be used for laptops, where it may draw 11.5 watts of power. That measurement is based on the universally accepted TDP (Thermal Design Power), which is widely used to measure power draw on laptops, desktops, servers, and other hardware.
Intel says the SDP measurement is appropriate in the case of devices like tablets, which have a fundamentally different design and usage compared to regular laptops.
However, the SDP measurement has been panned by critics, who said the measurement is more a marketing gimmick than a true benchmark.
The 4.5-watt chip runs at a clock speed of 1.5GHz. Intel has also started shipping the 1.5GHz Core i3-4020Y and the 1.3GHz Core i3-4010Y, which are dual-core processors and draw as little as 6 watts of power under the SDP measurement. All the low-power processors have a TDP of 11.5 watts.
All the new chips have 3MB of cache, 4200-series integrated graphics processors, and support low-power DDR3 memory.
The new chips started shipping ahead of the Intel Developer Forum starting Tuesday in San Francisco, where the chip maker will focus on mobile products. The company is expected to launch new Atom chips code-named Bay Trail for tablets at the show.
Jonathan Ives Apple`s Senior Vicepresident Design explains how getting simplicity makes everything looks much better and gives iOS7 on the iPhone a new colors pallete as new icons design. In simples words the redesigned interface is really looking better with translucent screen shots. Multitasking has now cards and are detached (as Palm webOS did before.) and much more you can watch on the video below: