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Showing posts with label iPhone Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone Review. Show all posts
Monday, 22 October 2012
Tuesday, 16 October 2012
Apple iPhone 5 review: Laws of attraction
Introduction
The iPhone 5. As in five million units sold over the course of a … weekend. Can't say no to that. This is the latest installment in the smartphone series that changed the mobile phone industry and we can understand people couldn't wait. Now, what is it they couldn't wait for?
The Apple iPhone 5 brings the long anticipated larger screen and more capable internals that we already know are ready to trade blows with the most powerful chipsets out there.
There's also the new slender, slimmer body that no photos really do justice to. If all of Apple's claims are true then the iPhone 5 is a real engineering masterpiece - double the performance in a more compact package without sacrificing anything in terms of battery life.
They could've done worse. A lot worse. But this is Apple telling you to prepare to be wowed. So you have every right to play hard-to-please.
Key features
- Quad-band GSM and quad-band 3G support with 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA
- LTE support where carriers support it and CDMA support when sold by CDMA carriers
- 4" 16M-color LED-backlit IPS TFT capacitive touchscreen of 640 x 1136px resolution
- Scratch-resistant screen glass, fingerprint-resistant coating
- 1.2GHz dual-core custom-designed CPU, PowerVR SGX543MP3 GPU, 1GB of RAM, Apple A6 SoC
- iOS 6 and iCloud integration
- 8 MP autofocus camera with LED flash and touch focus
- 1080p video recording at 30fps
- 1.2MP secondary front-facing camera
- Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot
- GPS with A-GPS connectivity; digital compass
- 16/32/64GB storage options
- Accelerometer, proximity sensor and a three-axis gyro sensor
- Active noise cancellation with a dedicated secondary microphone
- Standard 3.5 mm audio jack, stereo Bluetooth v4.0
- Excellent audio output quality (though worse than 4S)
- Apple Maps with free voice-guided navigation in 56 countries
- Voice recognition, Siri virtual assistant
- Supports HD Voice (needs carrier support too)
- FaceTime video calls over Wi-Fi and cellular
- Impressively slim and light
- Great battery life
Main disadvantages
- Aluminum body looks cool but is easy to scratch
- Proprietary connector, incompatible with previous-gen accessories (needs adapter)
- The new display is not proportionally bigger, but only taller
- Unadapted apps run letterboxed due to the unusual resolution
- nano-SIM support only
- Apple Maps app not up to scratch
- No USB Mass Storage mode
- No FM radio
- No stereo speakers
- No microSD card slot
- No NFC connectivity (though that may be nitpicking)
- Stuck with iTunes for loading content
- Mono audio recording in videos
Should the iPhone 5 be worried about not doing quite enough in terms of new design and features? That question sounds ridiculous considering the sales numbers. But there's a long-term perspective that goes beyond a record-breaking opening weekend.
People who thought the iPhone 4S was a half-hearted effort, are rightfully expecting the iPhone 5 to be the real upgrade of the brilliant iPhone 4. In the end, though, there's more to a smartphone's real worth than dry specs. Apple has, on multiple occasions, been able to produce devices that are better than the sum of their parts and few will be surprised at the iPhone 5 pulling off a similar trick.
There's no time to waste, so follow us to the next page for the unboxing and hardware inspection of Apple's latest. We'll also take a close look at that sweet new display and see whether the claims about it being the most advanced in business hold water.
Labels:
apple,
iphone 5,
iPhone Review,
samsung,
smart phone
Monday, 15 October 2012
The iPad Mini Apple Event May Focus More On iBooks [Rumor]
As you know, the upcoming media event for Apple’s smaller, thinner, and less expensive tablet, the as-yet-named iPad Air iPad mini, is being widely reported as happening on October 23,2012.
While the invites haven’t gone out yet, we’re seeing a rumor that the event will focus on iBooks, which makes a ton of sense considering that a smaller iPad is in the same market category as a device like the Amazon Kindle Fire, which is kind of like a souped-up eReader, with media consumption its main purpose, at least from Amazon’s perspective.
While this seems like a plausible rumor, I’m not ready to fully embrace it yet.
While iBooks is indeed in competition with Amazon and, to a lesser extent, Google and Barnes & Noble as an eReader device, I can’t help but see the iPad ecosystem in general as much bigger. Yes, a smaller iPad mini will be a fantastic form factor for reading and purchasing electronic books, magazines, and even textbooks. The new iPad is successful in this area as well.
It’s also fairly plausible that both iBooks and iBooks Author will get an update, as The Next Web is reporting, as they’re both overdue for some Apple tinkering. They’ll also most likely be some updates that are specifically due to the iPad mini, or whatever it will be called, simply because it makes sense to do so.
I don’t see how the event will “mostly” be about anything except the new, smaller iPad. Of course, time will tell, but there’s a lot more to be announced about such a cool new product than it’s eReader capabilities. What makes the iPad tablet so fantastic, and so much better–in my opinion–than the other tablets on the market, is the app ecosystem. The incredible wealth of apps available for an iPad of any size make it an ideal device for creation and consumption, gaming and productivity, reading and writing. It’s simply magical, to borrow a Jobsism.
I’d love to see a new iBooks, and of course can’t wait to see a new iPad Air, but this rumor, to me, is a bit on the airy side itself.
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