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Apr 12, 2001
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Apple today shared a new ad that focuses on the recently introduced Group FaceTime feature, designed to allow iOS and Mac users to chat with up to 32 people at one time.

The video, entitled "A Little Company," features a bunch of different Elvis impersonators on a Group FaceTime call singing the song "There's Always Me" by Elvis Presley.


The video shows off the tiled interface that's used with Group FaceTime, designed to highlight the person who is speaking at the current time.

Group FaceTime also has a feature that lets you use Animoji, Memoji, and filters during your video chats, but that option is not shown off in today's video.

Group FaceTime was introduced as a main feature in the iOS 12 beta, but it was not ready for iOS 12's September launch so Apple temporarily removed it. Group FaceTime was re-released in iOS 12.1, which Apple launched in late October.

Article Link: Apple Shares New Ad Highlighting Group FaceTime
 
Hands up (by FaceTime obviously) who remembers face to face contact!
*raises hand*

facetoface.jpg
 
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I just want regular FaceTime to work. “Poor connection” each and every time. And before you chime in, NO it’s not the connection. Device A can talk to B, B to C, but A and C cannot connect. Apple has no clue... “reinstall”.
 
Liked the ad. Real talk: How did they all have their phones standing up on the tables without them sliding forward?

Things you’ll never see on an Apple commercial:
  1. Cases
  2. Caseless iPhones/iPads wobbling/teeter-tottering when placed on tabletops.
  3. Caseless slippery iPhones slipping out of grip.
  4. Tape/bandaid keeping a cracked screen corner together
  5. A frayed cable
  6. Dongles
  7. USB hubs
  8. Dongle and USB hub accessory purses/cases
  9. Users with their still-numerous and super convenient wired earbuds and headphones
  10. Someone using the AppleTV siri remote and not looking frazzled and frustrated
  11. Workarounds to prevent propped-up super slippery phones without any grip aid whatsoever from sliding.
Just like beer commercials showing happy co-workers celebrating beachside after work, or supermodel husbands/wives working their $$$$ Peloton exercise bike in an Architectire Digest-winning home with a gift-wrapped Lexus parked outside on Christmas, don’t count on Apple commercials to reflect anything close to real-life usage examples. Not even most current Apple products themselves are set up for real world usefulness, now that I think about it. But they look good on film.
 
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I just want regular FaceTime to work. “Poor connection” each and every time. And before you chime in, NO it’s not the connection. Device A can talk to B, B to C, but A and C cannot connect. Apple has no clue... “reinstall”.

You are quick to conclude that FaceTime is the problem. Where are A, B and C located geographically? The internet is a giant, decentralized network, and routers are responsible for sending packets from A to C through what they figure are the best channels. Each router along the path joins together "hops".

Use the `traceroute`tool to observe the hops between A, B and C respectively. You might find that A-C are having timeout issues, and that has nothing to do with FaceTime.
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The worst ad i have ever seen...

You are just trying to stir the pot, be a rebel, etc... or you would have explained *why* you think that. :rolleyes:
 
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