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Boy:top, efficient, convenient and holy Girl: intelligent, novel, flexible and objective Boy: Welcome to the column of technology information. I'm Johnny. Girl: I'm ........ . Let's look at the brief. Boy: iPhone 6s and 6s Plus review: more than just a refresh Girl: IOS9 for iPad now supports iOS 9's multitasking features Boy: Now let's look at the first.iPhone 6s and 6s Plus review. Boy: SUMMARY A device's worth isn't just tied up in one feature: It's about how all those moving parts work together. The iPhone 6s keeps the same design as the iPhone 6, but packs better cameras, a snappier processor and 3D Touch, a smart new way to get things done in fewer steps. Beyond that, the combination of iOS 9 and some well-built hardware help makes the 6s one of the best iPhones ever made... even if we wish it had some of the 6s Plus' niceties. The iPhone 6s Plus has 3D Touch, iOS 9, a pair of improved cameras and the powerful A9 chipset, just like its smaller sibling. A long-lasting battery and optical image stabilization for its 12-megapixel rear camera help give the iPhone 6s Plus a slight edge over the regular 6s, although we wish it were a little easier to hold. Girl: A new display, and a new way to touch it 3D Touch, and it's the biggest change in how we interact with iPhones since Siri.Let's start with the broad strokes: If you press your finger down on, say, an app icon, you'll get a small menu of quick actions that you'd usually have to be inside the app to use. You'll also feel a brief vibration from the Taptic Engine as a sort of tactile "thumbs up." Like any new behavior, applying force to your iPhone's screen will take getting used to. The whole thing is made a little trickier by the fact that it's initially easy to mix up a 3D Touch and a long-press (like the one used to rearrange your app icons). Those 3D Touch sensors can also take precise measurements as you push down and release. Imagine, for instance, playing a racing game and being able to press the screen to accelerate past the chump who just whiffed while taking a corner. If that's the future of smartphones, bring it on. Boy: Camera and Live Photos iPhones account for a huge chunk of the photos taken every day, so it's no surprise that Apple takes this camera business seriously. Thankfully, after several years, Apple finally traded in its 8-megapixel sensor in favor of a 12-megapixel main camera. Naturally, it's actually not so much the higher resolution that matters; it's all the other, more technical bits that should help improve photo quality. As for video, the 6s and 6s Plus can shoot in 4K -- not that most people have 4K-ready screens in their homes yet. The resulting footage is remarkably sharp, with colors that were more or less true to life. Of course, all of this comes at a price: 4K video will eat up your free space in a hurry if you let it, which is why Apple didn't bother setting it as the default recording quality. What is enabled by default, however, is the Live Photos feature. You've probably seen the demos already; when you snap a photo, the camera captures just a little audio and video before and after the shot is taken -- much like the Living Images feature found on recent Lumia phones And remember, Live Photos are shareable between anyone running Apple's latest phone, watch or computer operating systems, so they need not languish alone on your 6s. Girl: Change our sight to IOS9 for iPad, which now supports iOS 9's multitasking features. With iOS 9, Apple introduced a handful of new multitasking features for the iPad, like the ability to run two apps side by side. Now Google's Chrome browser is ready to take advantage of these, thanks to an refreshed version of its universal iOS application. Aside from being able to use the Split View mode mentioned earlier, Chrome on iPad also supports Slide Over, as shown above; and Picture-in-Picture, which lets you browse websites and watch a pop-up video simultaneously. That said, Split View only works on iPad Air 2, iPad mini 4 and the soon-to-be-released iPad Pro, but the other tidbits are compatible with any tablet running Apple's latest mobile OS. Girl: Slide Over When you have an app open, either built-in or third-party, you can now “slide over” a second app into view as a sidebar that takes up about one-third of the screen. Simply swipe from right to left on the righthand side of your iPad and ta-da! You can select and switch to a different app to slide over by swiping from the top down. And Slide Over works whether your iPad is positioned horizontally or vertically. Because Slide Over freezes the app you originally had open in the background, this feature is hardly about multitasking and more about quickly replying to a message or peeking at your Facebook News Feed. Boy: Split View When you have a second app open as a Slide Over, you can press and hold on to the divider in between the two apps, and drag it all the way to the center of the screen. This will automatically activate a split-screen feature called Split View, the most significant multitasking feature coming in iOS 9, but only for the iPad Air 2, unfortunately. In Split View you can simultaneous use two apps to their full potential: browse travel guides in Safari while you make a bucket-list in Notes, for example. Girl: Picture in Picture While watching a video in fullscreen, click on the Home button (or a new button on a lower right corner of the video) to scale down the video seamlessly without pausing or skipping. The floating video continues to play as an overlay and you can open and navigate other apps. You can even move the floating video screen to different corners of the iPad or move it slightly offscreen if you only want to listen to the audio. Boy: That's all. thank you for listening, see you next week. Girl: See you next week.