Following new details on the 2021 MacBook Pro refresh, Bloombergnow reports that Apple is also planning to release its first redesign of the iMac since 2012 later this year, as well as a lower-priced external monitor. There is also a new Mac Pro lineup in the works, the report says.
- All iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro models purportedly have a hidden reverse wireless charging feature, according to an FCC filing. The feature has not yet been activated, but could yet be unlocked.
- Select Faculty Grade Entry link. Select the Final Grades tab. Enter All Grades via FGE. Select any course in the My Courses block where Grading Status is “Not Started” or “In Progress”. Faculty can search for a specific section to enter final grades. They can search and filter by CRN, Course Title, Course Number or Term Code.
Bloomberg describes the new iMac as having smaller bezels with a design similar to the Pro Display XDR. This will include removing the “chin area” from the bottom, as well as a flat back rather than the current curved design. Apple is reportedly planning to versions to replace the existing 21.5 and 27-inch models “later this year.”
Gifts only available while supplies last. When making a Qualifying Purchase on Samsung.com or the App, you must either use the Gift at check-out or (ii) not use any of the Gift at check-out and receive Gift by email approximately 35 days after the delivery of your Qualifying Purchase; any value not used is lost. Additional restrictions apply. Download macOS Big Sur. If you’re using macOS Mojave or later, choose Apple menu System Preferences, then click Software Update. If you’re using an earlier macOS, use the App Store instead. It was a good App, but the new update screwed it. Grade pro was a really simple, easy to use app, but then this update came and now it’s a bit confusing and every single time I get out of the app it logs me out. Grade pro also got a lot slower like recently I’ve been checking my grades, but some of my grades on the grade pro app were completely off and wrong and I’d go to my teachers.
The new models will slim down the thick black borders around the screen and do away with the sizable metal chin area in favor of a design similar to Apple’s Pro Display XDR monitor. These iMacs will have a flat back, moving away from the curved rear of the current iMac. Apple is planning to launch two versions — codenamed J456 and J457 — to replace the existing 21.5-inch and 27-inch models later this year, the people said, asking not to be identified because the products are not yet announced.
“The iMac redesign will be one of the biggest visual updates to any Apple product this year,” the report says while citing people familiar with Apple’s roadmap.
Past reports have indicated that Apple is developing a 24-inch iMac, which would theoretically serve as a replacement to the 21.5-inch model. Bloomberg doesn’t specifically mention the screen sizes of the new iMac design, instead only saying that there will be two versions to “replace” the existing 21.5-inch and 27-inch options.
Mac Pro
Apple is also reportedly planning two new versions of the Mac Pro, one version with the same design as the current Mac Pro and one version that is “less than half the size” of the current design. The smaller Mac Pro could “invoke nostalgia for the Power Mac G4 Cube,” Bloomberg reports.
Interestingly, the report says that the version with the same design as the current Mac Pro could continue using Intel processors for now, but the redesigned version will use Apple Silicon.
One version is a direct update to the current Mac Pro and will continue to use the same design as the version launched in 2019. Apple has discussed continuing to use Intel processors for that model rather than moving to its own chips.
The second version, however, will use Apple’s own processors and be less than half the size of the current Mac Pro. The design will feature a mostly aluminum exterior and could invoke nostalgia for the Power Mac G4 Cube, a short-lived smaller version of the Power Mac, an earlier iteration of the Mac Pro.
New external display
As part of the work on the iMac, Apple has also started “early development” of a lower-priced external display. This model would serve as a successor to the Thunderbolt Display that Apple sold for $999, but ended up discontinuing in 2016.
Not Yet Activatedmr. Mac's 6th Grade Language Arts
The Pro Display XDR is priced at $4999 (not including the Pro Stand) and features a variety of high-end display technologies for professional users. The lower-priced model would be more similar to the panel Apple uses in the iMac rather than the one in the Pro Display XDR.
The cheaper monitor would feature a screen geared more for consumer than professional use and wouldn’t have the brightness and contrast ratio of the top-tier offering. Apple last launched a consumer-grade monitor called the Thunderbolt Display in 2011 for $999 but discontinued it in 2016.
No details on a release timeframe for the new external display are provided in the Bloomberg report, but the project being in the “early development” stage suggests that a release could come after 2021.
Read the full report over at Bloomberg.
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Home > CUNY Graduate Center > Publications and Research > 435
Publications and Research
Title
Authors
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
Two central forces re-shaping education in the 21st century in the United States are the increasingly diverse and rich multilingual practices of students, as well as our growing use of digital technologies to communicate and make meaning (Deumert, 2014; García, Bartlett & Kleifgen, 2007; Jewitt, 2008; New London Group, 1996). Even if much scholarship has focused on the trends of multilingualism and multimodalities as separate entities, there are many intersections. Digital tools like machine translation software are being used in schools by multilingual students, and their often-monolingual teachers. Frameworks for multilingual teaching and learning involving intentional use of machine translation tools, however, are not yet fully incorporated into curriculum, school policies and practice. In this chapter, we analyse a case study of how an emergent bilingual who had arrived recently in the United States from China used machine translation software (Google Translate) in a sixth-grade general education classroom during writing activities.
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Not Yet Activatedmr. Mac's 6th Graders
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