How to Watch Apple’s ‘Far Out’ September Event: iPhone 14, Apple Watch Series 8 Expected


    


    Apple
    


    This story is part of Focal Point iPhone 2022, CNET’s collection of news, tips and advice around Apple’s most popular product.
    


    September is here, and alongside the kids going back to school and leaves turning brown,?Apple’s getting ready to release its next iPhone. The company’s announced an event for Sept. 7, which it’s calling “far out” and which will likely serve as the launch for the company’s newest version, expected?to be called the iPhone 14.
    The new iPhone is rumored to include an always-on display similar to what’s on the Apple Watch now, allowing for constant glanceable information without ruining battery life.
    


    
    


    
    Apple hasn’t really said what it plans to announce at its event, only sending out a cryptic invitation to the press, with an Apple logo seemingly set in a night sky, suggesting potential camera improvements or last year’s?rumored satellite emergency calling. The image looks like something we might see from the James Webb Space Telescope, whose stunning photos have already begun changing how we view the cosmos since first being released earlier this summer. In its announcement, Apple included the teaser words “Far out.”?
    Read more: The iPhone 14’s Satellite Texts Sound Cool, but 5G Is Still What Matters
    


    The iPhone 14 launch will also mark the 15th year since the original iPhone’s debut, in June of 2007. Back then, the device wasn’t the sure hit?it is today. Many tech industry watchers were enthusiastic about Apple’s prospects of course, but it hadn’t proven it can build reliable phone technology before then. It was also up against massive competitors such as Microsoft, Palm and Research in Motion, whose Blackberry devices ruled the business world at the time. Within a decade though, Apple — as well as Google’s popular Android software — had bested?all three companies.
    

Far out. September 7. #AppleEvent ?? pic.twitter.com/bw5Lxf3eQ9
    — Greg Joswiak (@gregjoz) August 24, 2022


    While the iPhone will be a key product we see at Apple’s event this year, and likely what most people focus their attention on, the company’s expected to hold other events later this year with other devices to show off. Those include new Mac computers with upgraded chips and new iPads.
    Read more:?Everything We Know So Far About the iPhone 14
    When is the Apple event?
    Apple’s online-only event will be Sept. 7 at 10 a.m. PT, which is 1 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. BST and 3 a.m. AEST. (Sorry, Australia.) Here’s a handy time zone converter to help find what time it’ll be where you are.
    Where can I watch Apple’s livestream?
    You’ll be able to stream Apple’s event straight from the?company’s website. Meanwhile, we’ll be reporting on the event live here at CNET.
    What can we expect, besides the iPhone 14 launch?
    Apple’s digital events are fast paced and slickly produced. And even though Apple’s now trying its hand at in-person events again as coronavirus pandemic-era health concerns?slowly recede, the company still seems to be applying what it’s learned about how to make its events more compelling. During its last event, the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June, Apple held a livestream but then offered in-person demos for the press afterward.?