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Highlights from Apple's developers conference

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Another year, another Apple (AAPL) Worldwide Developers Conference rife with news for Apple aficionados and Wall Street analysts to froth over.

At this year’s WWDC, which kicked off on Monday in San Jose, California, the Cupertino-based tech giant unveiled a number of announcements during the opening keynote — all focused on software. (Those hoping Apple would unveil a long-awaited MacBook Air update will likely have to wait a few months more.)

Here are the highlights from Monday’s keynote:

iOS 12 will be faster for new and old iPhones

IOS 12 may not knock your socks off, but that’s not the point with this year’s mobile operating system upgrade, which includes some major performance improvements.

Apple Senior Vice President of Engineering Craig Federighi emphasized that with iOS 12, improving speed on devices was paramount — a declaration likely in response to previous criticism that older iPhones get slower with software updates. Even owners of the iPhone 6S, which launched in 2015, should benefit. To that end, Federighi said iPhone users can generally expect apps to get 40% faster, with the Camera launching up to 70% faster.

FaceTime gets its ‘group’ on

Meet Group FaceTime, which lets up to 30 people participate in one video chat.
Meet Group FaceTime, which lets up to 30 people participate in one video chat.

Group FaceTime, which works on iPhone, iPad, Mac, with audio available for the Apple Watch, takes the idea of group video chat to another level for iOS users by letting up to 30 people all participate in the same FaceTime. Federighi demonstrated how group FaceTime works, with a row of tiles at the bottom displaying all the FaceTime participants. As someone speaks, a video window above that row of that speaker enlarges.

“I can’t wait to use group FaceTime every Sunday with the leadership team,” Apple CEO Tim Cook quipped during the onstage demonstration.

Siri gets smarter

In an effort to catch up somewhat with Amazon’s Alexa and Google Assistant, Apple announced a new Siri app called Shortcuts that lets users create verbal commands that will have Siri perform a number of functions they can pre-program.

Augmented reality goes multiplayer

Source: Apple
Source: Apple

Other iOS 12 updates, as my colleague Dan Howley predicted, include updates to Apple’s augmented reality software tools. Dubbed ARKit 2.0, the upgrades add the ability for multiplayer AR games on separate devices. In other words, both players will see the same scenario through their phones’ displays.

Google, in comparison, already takes it one step further with software that can bring both Android and iPhone players in the same AR space using so-called “Cloud Anchors,” which syncs up users’ positions across different devices.

Super-powered Photos and search

Photos and search for iOS 12 also received updates. Now, the Photos app recognizes faces in photos you’ve taken and suggests you potentially share those with that contact. Want to quickly find the photos you took at a concert or sports event? Now you can search for the name of the band or sports team to pull those up. Also, Photos will now recommend key moments or places it thinks are important to you.