Smartphones

Apple Unveils Trio of New iPhones

Apple on Wednesday unveiled three new iPhones at an event held in the Steve Jobs Theatre on its Cupertino, California, campus. Along with the iPhone Xs, iPhone Xs Max and iPhone XR, Apple introduced the Apple Watch 4.

“Our mission started with personalizing technology for the desktop,” CEO Tim Cook told the audience, and it’s “now personalizing it for every aspect of our lives.”

Apple aims “to put the customer at the center of everything we do,” he added. The iPhone X is “the No. 1 smartphone in the world,” and has “an amazing 98 percent customer satisfaction [rating].”

The Apple Watch is “not only the No. 1 smartwatch in the world, it’s the No. 1 watch,” Cook noted. “Period.”


Apple Watch Series 4

Apple Watch Series 4

All three new X series iPhones come with 64 GB, 256 GB or 512 GB of storage.

The XR starts at US$750, the Xs at $1,000, and the Xs Max at $1,100.

The XR can be preordered starting Oct. 19, and it will begin shipping on Oct. 26.

The Xs and Xs Max can be preordered starting Friday and will begin shipping Sept. 21.

The New iPhones

Screens in all the new iPhones extend top to bottom and edge to edge, allowing Apple to use a smaller form factor. The screens are rounded at the edges.

The Xs and Xs Max have a Super Retina screen, and the XR an LCD display, which Phil Schiller, Apple’s SVP of worldwide marketing, called “the most advanced LCD display ever in a smartphone.”


iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max

Apple SVP Phil Schiller introduces iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max.

All three have cases that are water and dust resistant, to IP 68 for the Xs and Xs Max, and IP 67 for the XR.

“If you hang by the pool and drop the iPhone Xs into the water,” Schiller said, “get it out, rinse it, let it dry, and you’ll be fine. We tested it in orange juice … tea, wine and even beer.”

All three have 12-MP rear cameras with portrait mode, depth control, portrait lighting, Smart HDR, adjustable bokeh, and 4K video up to 60fps. The Xs and Xs Max have two of these cameras, and the XR has one.

All three also have a 7-MP TrueDepth front camera with the same features as the rear cameras except for video capability.

“You’re going to be blown away with the photos you can take with the iPhone Xs camera,” Schiller said. The Xs and Xs Max have one 12-MP wide-angle camera and one 12-MP telephoto camera in the rear, both with optics image stabilization.

The phones run on a 7nm A12 Bionic System on a Chip, with next-generation neural engine dedicated neural network hardware.

The SoC’s image signal processor, working in conjunction with the CPU, automatically sets exposure, white balance, focus, and other photographic features.

The Smart HDR feature takes a four-frame buffer for each shot and merges them into one perfect photo. It also lets users shoot photos while facing the sun.

“The HDR screen is key,” said Gerritt Schneeman, senior research analyst at IHS Markit.

It’s a “premium feature [that] plays into a key aspect of Apple’s existing UX focus — camera experience,” he told TechNewsWorld.

The new cameras’ sound capabilities also drew praise.

“We can use stereo rewinding on the iPhone,” noted Todd Howard, game director at Bethesda Game Studios, when demonstrating Blades, the new Elder Scrolls game coming to iOS this fall.

“This experience used to be available only on consoles in the living room,” he said.

The stereo audio recording offered in the new iPhones “enhances existing content and is clearly different than before,” observed Schneeman.

“Content creation — and consumption — is getting richer on these new devices,” Schneeman remarked. “The competition is not following along with this as quickly, if at all.”

The new iPhones have a longer battery life than their predecessors, and have a dual SIM card capability, using eSIM.

“The dual SIM capability is a smart move and needs to be done,” said Ramon Llamas, a research director at IDC.

“They’re responding to the Chinese market and the needs of the enterprise market here in the United States,” he told TechNewsWorld.

The Bionic SoC and Neural Engine

The bionic SoC runs Core ML apps up to nine times faster, with one-tenth the power consumption, said Kaiann Drance, senior director of iPhone product marketing.

It also enables augmented reality experiences, she noted. Apple’s developer system has been building AR apps with ARKit 2 and iOS 12.

The A12 has an “8-core machine learning engine with a smart compute system that can analyze neural network data and figure out on the fly whether to run it on the CPU, GPU or the neural engine,” Schiller said. “It can process 5 trillion operations a second.”

Incremental Improvements

“The newest iPhones are iterative upgrades, and in the case of the XR, an upgrade/downgrade over the iPhone X,” said Ken Hyers, research director at Strategy Analytics.


iPhone XR

Apple SVP Phil Schiller reveals the iPhone XR, which features an all-screen glass and aluminum design in six new color finishes.

None of the upgrades “are earth-shattering improvements, but for someone with an iPhone 7 Plus or 8 Plus who’s looking to move on after a year or two, these improvements may be enough to get them into the store and part with the better part of a thousand dollars — or more,” Hyers told TechNewsWorld.

The specs are good, noted IDC’s Llamas. “I think they’re pushing in the right direction with the XS and Xs Max.”

However, the differentiation among the three new models is unclear, he pointed out.

“It used to be that when you went to get an iPhone, the only issue was how much memory you wanted,” Llamas said. “Now you have the XR that’s between the size of the S and the S Max. If you go for a 128-GB XR, you’re only a couple of hundred dollars away from the entry-level Xs, and now you have to figure in not just the memory, but also the screen size and various other features as well.”

Richard Adhikari

Richard Adhikari has been an ECT News Network reporter since 2008. His areas of focus include cybersecurity, mobile technologies, CRM, databases, software development, mainframe and mid-range computing, and application development. He has written and edited for numerous publications, including Information Week and Computerworld. He is the author of two books on client/server technology. Email Richard.

1 Comment

  • Apple used to be interesting, now all this zombie rubbish with iZombies paying 1000 plus for a PHONE, stupid straps for zombie watches etc… Honestly, how sad are people to even be interested in this crap? Would have been interesting to see a new mac mini, a "PRO" laptop that actually has ports on it, signs of improvements in build quality, not soldering RAM and hard disks to motherboards etc… Maybe to release a reliable OS like OS X 10.6.8 or 10.12.6, and not buggy beta rubbish like "High" sierra. No, those days are long gone, now its all relentless banker greed and products for mindless consumers who actually believe the propaganda that a phone or a watch will make their lives better. SO SO SAD!

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