Apple’s next iPhone is official, and despite being the sixth iPhone model (technically), we know it’s officially the iPhone 5.
Over the last year, we've heard
a ton of rumors
about what it might deliver with LTE, a taller display, and a
redesigned connector being the most likely tidbits. Fortunately, we now
can put all that speculation to rest as Apple spilled the secrets.
Taller, thinner, and a metal back
As expected, the new iPhone is 18 percent thinner (0.30 inch vs. 0.37
inch thick) than the iPhone 4S. Apple says it's the thinnest handset
around, but that's a race that changes often. That means it's also 20
percent lighter for a total of 3.95 ounces. The Retina Display expands
from 3.5 inches (its size since the original iPhone) to 4 inches. The
total resolution remains the same, though, at 326 pixels per inch. The
total pixel count is 1,136x640, and we now have a 16:9 aspect ratio.
To the user, that means a fifth row of icons on the home screen. That's
pretty nice since it will let you cut down on the number of home
screens. You'll also get a full five-day week view in the calendar, the
calendar will show more events, and all iWork apps will take advantage
of the bigger display. Third-party apps that haven't been updated will
continue to work, but you'll see black borders on each side (so they
won't be stretched or scaled). Apple also promises that wide-screen
movies will look better, with 44 percent more color saturation than on
the iPhone 4S.
Touch sensors are now built into the display itself, which makes it 30 percent thinner as a result and less prone to glare.
The iPhone 5 also fixes a design flaw that we first saw in the iPhone 4.
Apple replaced the glass back with one that's mostly metal. Too many
people (us included) cracked an
iPhone 4 or
4S
after dropping it accidentally. We don't think the change negatively
affects the iPhone's aesthetics. In fact, many might see it as an
improvement. A return to a metal back reminds one of the original
iPhone, and the crisp, clean-cut back has a bit of the feel of other
Apple devices like the iPad.
All of the design changes result in a new iPhone that's surprisingly
light to hold. Think 20 percent lighter isn't a big deal? Pick one of
these up and you'll feel the difference: the iPhone 4 may have been
dense, but the iPhone 5 is a featherweight.
The screen is big, bright, and crisp, too, not shockingly so, but a
subtly improved experience. It's akin to being the extrawide comfy chair
of iPhone screens. Stay tuned for more, but this new iPhone has a good
hand feel.
LTE and carriers
Not a shocker either, but the iPhone 5 will support 4G LTE networks.
That's in addition to the current support for GPRS, EDGE, EV-DO, and
HSPA data networks. LTE has a single chip for voice and data, a single
radio chip, and a "dynamic antenna" that will switch connections between
different networks automatically.
So which carriers will support an LTE iPhone 5? Well, in the United
States that means AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon Wireless. So again,
T-Mobile loses out. In Canada it's Bell, Telus, Fido, Virgin, and Kudo.
In Asia the providers will be SoftBank, SmarTone, SingTel, and SK
Telecom. For Australia there's Telstra, Optus, and Virgin Mobile, and in
Europe it will go to Deutsche Telekom and EE. On carriers without LTE,
the iPhone 5 will run on dual-band 3.5G HDPA+.
A faster chip
The iPhone 5 will offer an A6 chip, which is two times faster than the
current A5 chip. Graphics will get faster speeds, as well. Yet, despite
the speedier performance, the new chip will be 22 percent smaller than
the A5. According to Apple's specs, users will see Web pages load 2.1
times faster, and the Music app with songs will load 1.9 times faster.
More battery life
LTE tends to be a power hog, but the iPhone 5 is set to deliver
respectable battery life. Of course, the real story may differ, but
here's what Apple is promising for now. We're supposed to get 8 hours of
3G talk time, 8 hours of 3G browsing, 8 hours of LTE browsing, 10 hours
of Wi-Fi browsing, 10 hours of video playback, 40 hours of music
playback, and 225 hours of standby time. You can be sure that CNET will
put these promises to the test when we get a device in our hands.
Apple promises respectable battery life, though the iPhone 5 has a larger display and LTE.
(Credit:
James Martin/CNET)
Camera
The main shooter, or the "iSight" camera, stays at 8 megapixels (with
the best resolution being 3,264x2,448 pixels) with a feature list that
includes backside illumination, a hybrid IR filter, a five-element lens,
and a f2.4 aperture. A dynamic light mode is new, and you should be
able to launch photography apps up to 2.1 times faster. Another addition
is an image signal processor in the A6 chip. That will bring spatial
noise reduction and a "smart filter" that produces better low-light
performance and captures photos faster. Finally, there's a built-in
panorama mode that stitches shots together for one large 28-megapixel
photo.
The secondary front camera now can shoot 720p HD video and it gets a
backside illuminated sensor. And as we heard at the announcement of iOS 6
back in June, FaceTime will work over 3G cellular networks. Some
carriers like AT&T have already announced restrictions for that
feature, so be sure to check with your provider first.
Video resolution remains at 1080p HD, though image stabilization has
been improved and face detection is now available in clips for up to 10
people. And in a nice move, you can take photos while you're shooting
video.
Audio
The iPhone 5 gets an additional microphone for a total of three. You'll
find one on the bottom, one on the handset's front face, and one on its
rear side. What's more, the speaker now has five magnets (so up from
two), which is apparently better and it's supposed to use 20 percent
less space. The noise-canceling feature should be improved, as well, and
there's a new wideband audio feature that promises
more-natural-sounding voices. Twenty percent of carriers will support
wideband audio, but so far we only know that Orange in the United
Kingdom will be among them.
Smaller dock connector, smaller SIM card
On the bottom of the iPhone 5, there's that new and long-anticipated
smaller dock connector. Called "Lightning," it has an all-digital,
eight-signal design and an "adaptive interface" (we're not quite sure
what that means yet). It's 80 percent smaller, and since it's
reversible, both ends will be the same (that's kind of nice).
Apple says the iPhone 5 is the thinnest smartphone around. We'll see how long that record lasts.
(Credit:
James Martin/CNET)
By all means, it's bound to annoy owners of current speaker docks,
accessories, and charger/syncing cables since it will render them
obsolete. Apple will offer an adapter and adapter cables (of
course
it will), which range from $19 to $39. We imagine, though, that the
adapter may be awkward to use with some current accessories like a
bedside alarm clock/music player. For new accessories, Apple says that
manufacturers like Bose, JBL, and Bowers are working on new products.
Though we welcome the idea of a smaller connector, we're miffed that
Apple couldn't just adopt the semi-industry standard of Micro-USB. That
would make things easier for smartphone users across the globe. Yet,
even so, the smaller connector may be a smart move for the future. The
30-pin connector has been around since 2003, long before the iPhone even
existed: frankly, it's a dust magnet. A smaller connector helps shave
extra space to achieve a smaller phone with perhaps a bigger battery.
The new connector cable will mainly be used for syncing and charging by
most people who own an Apple TV or Bluetooth/AirPlay accessories.
The smaller dock and cable connector is in the usual place on the phone's bottom.
(Credit:
James Martin/CNET)
iOS 6
Inside, the iPhone 5 will debut with iOS 6 already onboard. Highlights
include the new Apple Maps app, Passbook, shared photo streams, Siri
updates, and the aforementioned FaceTime over 3G. For more on Apple's
newest mobile OS update, check out our
iOS 6 First Take. iOS 6 will be available for download next Wednesday, September 19.
Release date and pricing
The iPhone 5 will be available in three capacity models, all of which
will come in black and white versions. The 16GB is $199, the 32GB $299,
and the 64GB $399. On September 21, it will go on sale in nine
countries: the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany,
France, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Anyone in that first
batch of countries can preorder starting September 14. More countries
will follow by the end of this month, and by the end of the year, the
iPhone 5 will land at 240 carriers in 100 countries. As a reminder, the
U.S. carriers are the Big Three: Verizon, AT&T, and Sprint.
Is this the iPhone you've been looking for?
During very brief hands-on time with the iPhone 5, this much is clear:
it's the weight you'll remember more than its thinner profile. The
iPhone 4S is already a svelte device: most people probably won't spot
the difference if they see the new iPhone from the side.
The
screen size, also, is more of a subtle improvement. This isn't a
jaw-dropping leap from the iPhone 4S: it's a gradual increase, done
almost so cleverly that the front face of the iPhone 5 might, with the
screen turned off, look very much like the iPhone 4S. The proof will be
in the pudding for how app developers and iOS 6 take full advantage of
that extra screen real estate, but the bottom line is this: more screen
size and more pixels are good things.
The real killer app on this
phone -- no surprise -- might be the iPhone's 4G LTE, as well as the
promised battery life. If data speeds and battery life can live up to
the promises, those alone will make many want to upgrade.
VIA : news.cnet.com