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I Can’t Wait for Apple’s F1 Movie. Its Haptic iPhone Trailer Has Me Even More Excited

Feel the F1 cars rumble and buzz with the magic of the iPhone’s Taptic Engine.

I first experienced the sensory overload of being close to a Formula 1 car going full speed during a test day for the British Grand Prix last summer. The rumbles from the cars as they pull out of the pits feel like they’re shaking your bones loose, and each crescendoing shriek as the vehicles streak through your field of vision is like the shrill fizz of a firework that’s almost grazed your ear.

In releasing the trailer for its upcoming film, F1 The Movie, Apple has tried to recreate some of this sensory experience in miniature for anyone with an iPhone. The trailer taps into the device’s Taptic Engine to vibrate at different frequencies during the scenes featuring the F1 cars. Is it a little gimmicky? Sure. But it’s also clever and fun, and the perfect way to build excitement among F1 fans such as myself who are also suckers for immersive experiences.

To try out the experience, you’ll need an iPhone running iOS 18.4 or later. You can find the trailer with the Apple TV app on your phone.

F1 The Movie will debut in UK theaters from June 25 and head to US theaters on June 27, and I’m excited for a few different reasons. I’m a huge Drive to Survive fan, for a start, and last year, during that same test day when I was at Silverstone, the movie’s cast and crew were on site shooting a couple of scenes. While I didn’t see Brad Pitt, I got to observe his car and the inside of the fake garage the team had set up while wandering down the pit lane.

There would be no way to make a truly convincing movie about F1 without fully immersing the shooting within the existing traveling circus that is the F1 world. I was impressed with the level of detail I observed — if you didn’t know any better, you wouldn’t have been able to pick out the fictional F1 team from the real teams in the pit.

This movie is a big-budget, star-studded effort from Apple. Its main challenge will be bringing the same tension and drama that F1 fans are used to seeing from the races and drivers in real life.

Technologies

Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Tuesday, June 17

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for June 17.

Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? The clues are kind of upper-crusty, with Boston Brahmins, the stock market and upscale magazines among the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.

The Mini Crossword is just one of many games in the Times’ games collection. If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword

Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Boston Brahmin types
Answer: WASPS

6A clue: Look forward to
Answer: AWAIT

7A clue: Stock market bounceback
Answer: RALLY

8A clue: Whimsically amusing
Answer: DROLL

9A clue: Hearing or sight
Answer: SENSE

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Voting districts
Answer: WARDS

2D clue: «Oh, I’m well ___!»
Answer: AWARE

3D clue: Establishment offering chemical treatments
Answer: SALON

4D clue: Contents of a box labeled SMTWTFS
Answer: PILLS

5D clue: Focus of Vogue and Elle
Answer: STYLE

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Technologies

How Did ChatGPT Get ‘Absolutely Wrecked’ at Chess by an 1970s-Era Atari 2600?

The console Gen Xers used to play Pac-Man and Pitfall on apparently was better than anyone knew.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT has some major AI chatbot competitors in the market: Gemini, Copilot, Claude. Now add to that list the Atari 2600. The OG video game console, which was first released in 1977, was used in an engineer’s experiment to see how it would fare playing chess against the AI chatbot.

By using a software emulator to run Atari’s 1979 game Video Chess, Citrix engineer Robert Caruso said he was able to set up a match between ChatGPT and the 46-year-old game. The matchup did not go well for ChatGPT.

«ChatGPT confused rooks for bishops, missed pawn forks and repeatedly lost track of where pieces were — first blaming the Atari icons as too abstract, then faring no better even after switching to standard chess notations,» Caruso wrote in a LinkedIn post.

«It made enough blunders to get laughed out of a 3rd-grade chess club,» Caruso said. «ChatGPT got absolutely wrecked at the beginner level.»

Caruso wrote that the 90-minute match continued badly and that the AI chatbot repeatedly requested that the match start over.

For decades, the ability for computers to defeat humans at chess has been a measure of their power. In 1997, IBM made headlines when its Deep Blue technology defeated chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov in a series of matches.

Caruso’s experiment doesn’t mean ChatGPT is useless for chess, but because it’s more of a language model than a supercomputer, it’s less likely to serve that purpose well. A few years ago, a developer created a ChatGPT plugin called ChessGPT. But it may be better to discuss chess with OpenAI’s chatbot than to try to play against it.

A representative for OpenAI did not immediately return a request for comment.

(Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET’s parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.)

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Technologies

Your 2018 iPhone XS Is Now a ‘Vintage’ Device: Here’s What That Means

The device will still get updates for the rest of the year, but Apple is otherwise ceasing support for the 2018 iPhone.

Things don’t last forever, and in the tech world, they rarely even last five years. Apple lists older products on what it calls the vintage list, which consists of products the company stopped selling five to seven years ago. And if you bought your iPhone in 2018, the iPhone XS, your phone is now officially vintage.

The iPhone XS launched in 2018 and was officially discontinued in 2020 once all of its stock ran out. The phone joins the iPhone 7 Plus, two iPhone 8 models, the iPhone XS Max, and the iPhone 6S Plus, all of which have been added to the list since the calendar flipped to 2025. 

Now that it’s there, the iPhone XS, along with the other iPhones listed above, will spend the next two years as a vintage device on Apple’s roster. Once they hit the seven-year mark, these phones will be moved to the obsolete list. The most recent device to be rendered obsolete by Apple is the 5th-generation iPad. 

You have a vintage phone, so what now?

The good news is that having a vintage phone doesn’t mean much in the immediate short term, but it will before the end of the year. 

Apple products continue to have repair support for up to five years after they leave store shelves, but can still be repaired after the five-year mark, provided that there are still parts available. That means that the iPhone XS and the other models listed are no longer officially supported, but repair techs can still order parts as long as Apple has them. 

Such parts are likely in abundance since the phone just entered the vintage list. However, over the next two years, it’ll become harder and harder for repair shops to find official parts for the iPhone XS. So, if your phone breaks next year, there is no guarantee that a repair shop will be able to find official parts to fix it. 

In terms of software, it’s much the same story. Apple is still releasing iOS 18 updates and will continue to do so until iOS 26 comes out. After that, Apple tends to stop supporting the prior generation of iOS. Since the iPhone XS is not included on the list of iOS 26-compatible devices, software support will mostly end later this year once the new version comes out. 

Apple did this last year as well, with the final iOS 17 update releasing on Nov. 19, 2024. Apple typically guarantees support for devices for up to five years, and since the iPhone XS came out in 2018, it has long since surpassed the mark. 

Being put on the vintage list can be construed as a light warning from Apple that your phone will no longer be supported very soon. If you own an iPhone XS, you’ll have software support until November when iOS 26 launches, and you’ll have repair support as long as the parts hold out. You don’t need a new phone today, but it’s something you may want to look into sooner rather than later.

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