The Timaru Herald

IPhone 11 Pro Max

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Yes, it’s a dreadful name. But the phone itself is incredible. I’d even go as far as to say it’s the best smartphone that the world has ever seen. That’s how highly I rate it.

Let’s start with something easy. Its design. The 6.5-inch 11 Pro Max is a big phone – 158mm x 77.8mm x 8.1mm big to be exact. And this won’t be to everyone’s taste. Nor will the trypophobi­a-inducing arrangemen­t of its three cameras. But inside its stainless steel and (strongest-ever) glass body is top-ofthe-range hardware.

For me, the phone’s three cameras are where Apple has made its biggest advancemen­ts this year.

Onboard the iPhone 11 Pro Max is a standard camera, an ultra-wide camera, and a telephoto camera. The iPhone 11, by comparison, only has two cameras (not the telephoto lens).

Apple has worked on some cool new photograph­y features, too. The headline of these is the phone’s performanc­e in ultra low-light settings. All new iPhone 11s can take a photo in a near-lightless setting and produce images that are full of colour and vibrancy.

Of course, this feature isn’t new to the smartphone industry. Huawei, Google, Samsung, and Oppo all debuted smartphone­s with a Night Mode this past year.

But, as per, Apple has perfected the feature and, in my opinion, the iPhone 11 cameras do a better job of capturing real detail in low-light settings than its rivals.

How does Apple achieve this? It’s complicate­d. The iPhone 11 doesn’t magically create more light than its rivals. Instead, it uses its advanced image-processing technology to achieve better results.

It does a similar thing with its regular HDR images. Users will notice a big improvemen­t with ‘‘regular’’ photos on this year’s iPhones as well.

This is because the phone will start capturing images as soon as the camera app is open. This allows it to instantly attach four underexpos­ed images and one overexpose­d image to your regular photo.

The iPhone then uses smart HDR and a technique reported as ‘‘symantec rendering’’ to recognise certain attributes of a photo. A human face, hair, hands, a pet, a car, a tree, the sky. You get the idea.

The iPhone 11 then applies different rules to each of these attributes – reducing the noise of the sky while sharpening aspects of the face, for example. Finally, it combines all after-effects into one, ultra-detailed photo that looks amazing. And it does all of this instantly, without you even knowing.

That provides a nice segue into the A13 Bionic Processor, as this is what makes it all possible.

In fact, the A13 chip is so good that Apple even boasted about it on stage at the iPhone launch event, trash-talking rivals with the A13’s benchmark results (which are way ahead of its competitio­n).

This is nothing new for iPhones, of course. The self-designed and self-made chips are what gives Apple’s smartphone­s their unmistakab­le speed and smoothness. But the added power here makes things like 4K video (on all three cameras), AR and higherend gaming less taxing on the device.

It’s also been suggested that Apple has worked hard on the A13 to ensure that it still performs well at the end of the iPhone’s lifespan – even after several iOS updates. These added years of (promised) service makes the iPhone 11 Pro’s $1949 and Pro Max’s $2149 price tags look a little more affordable.

Last but not least on this year’s big iPhone improvemen­ts, there’s the battery life. Apple has done something it rarely does with its phones. It has compromise­d the design to accommodat­e a bigger battery.

The iPhone 11 Pro boasts an extra four hours battery life over last year’s XS, while the iPhone 11 Pro Max jumps to a whopping fivehour improvemen­t.

I’d argue that the extra 0.4mm thickness and 11 grams of weight is a fair compromise for this benefit. This is the iPhone that most people should be looking to buy (if they want a new iPhone).

It’s a massive $600 cheaper than the 11 Pro and $800 cheaper than the 11 Pro Max. And it’s largely the same device.

By not paying that 600+ bucks for a Pro, you’re only missing out on a slightly better screen, the telelens camera and improved battery performanc­e. Oh and the finish is aluminium and glass. That’s it.

The iPhone 11 is also $50 cheaper than last year’s equivalent, the iPhone XR.

How Apple has managed to shave any money off the price of a significan­tly improved (middleweig­ht) iPhone, I have no idea.

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