iPad&iPhone user

Hands- on with new iPhones and Apple Watch

Jason Cross gets hands-on with the new iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, iPhone XR, and Apple Watch Series 4

-

Sure, there’s ample undergroun­d parking and free food, but the biggest attraction at any Apple media event is the chance to get your hands on new Apple products more than a week before they go on sale to the general public. I was there at Apple Park to see (and use) Apple’s latest iPhones and Apple Watch. Here’s what I learned.

iPhone X, everywhere

A year ago, Apple declared the iPhone X the future of the smartphone. From the perspectiv­e of September

2017, this is the future – and the biggest story out of the event is that all of Apple’s new iPhones are a part of the iPhone X family. Every single one of them has glass front and back, with edge-to-edge screens and Face ID. If you buy a 2018-model iPhone, you will be buying an iPhone X – and flipping up from the bottom of the screen with your thumb to unlock rather than pressing a home button.

The iPhone XS itself is pretty much the iPhone X on the outside, though it now comes in a Gold option. On the inside, of course, it’s upgraded – with the faster A12 Bionic processor, including an improved Neural Engine for faster machine-learning-augmented features. On the outside, though, you’d be hard pressed to tell an iPhone XS from an iPhone X, unless it’s a Gold model.

There’s no mistaking the iPhone XS Max model, though. It’s like a scaled-up iPhone X, with the same design and style – just larger. After a year getting used to the iPhone X, I have to admit that the iPhone XS Max didn’t seem enormous in my hand at all. (As opposed to the iPhone Plus models, all of which have seemed huge to me.) Maybe it’s the giant screen, with an utter lack of bezels. People who loved the iPhone Plus are going to love the iPhone XS Max...if they choose it over the other big iPhone Apple introduced at the event.

iPhone XR adds more colour

Leave it to the company formerly defined by a six-colour logo to release an iPhone in six colours. The new iPhone XR comes in Blue, Yellow, Coral, Red, Black, and White. It’s an interestin­g design, with an anodized aluminium band around its edge, and a glass back.

Individual­ly, the two design elements are really eye-catching. When you’re using the phone, enough of the aluminium ring shows around the edges for you to know what colour phone you’re using. And the back sides are gorgeous, all glossy and brightly coloured. My only hesitation is that I’m not sure how well the two materials mesh with one another. The back of the yellow iPhone XR is gorgeous, bright as a banana, but its aluminium ring looked... gold. It’s a materials mismatch that didn’t really work for me, but maybe most people won’t care.

The most important feature of the iPhone XR is its £749 price tag. That’s the traditiona­l price of the iPhone Plus models – at least, until last year, when Apple raised prices across the board. So this isn’t a revolution­arily

cheap product, but it’s the cheapest iPhone X model ever, at £250 less than the iPhone X (and now, the iPhone XS).

To make an iPhone with a large 6.1in diagonal screen at that price, Apple has definitely cut some corners. The screen is LCD rather than OLED, which means it won’t offer the kind of dynamic range (vibrant colours, blacker blacks) as the iPhone XS models – but it’s still a really good-looking screen. I did not look at the iPhone XR’s screen and notice anything off-putting about the quality. Apple’s serious when it says this is the best LCD screen it’s ever put in an iPhone.

Size matters?

With the removal of the iPhone SE from the product line, and the lack of any update to the iPhone 8 size class, this is a perplexing collection of products from a size standpoint. If you’re a fan of larger iPhones, you’ve got a great couple of choices – a £749 model that compromise­s on a few features and an £1,099 model that doesn’t. If you’re a fan of smaller phones, though, all you’ve got is the £999 iPhone XS – which is itself larger than the iPhone 6/7/8 series, let alone the SE. As someone who has never liked larger phones, I adapted to the iPhone X easily and have been very happy with it – but I understand that for people with smaller hands (or pockets) it might be a bridge too far. And it’s also much more expensive. These three new phones are here, but what’s missing is a £699 iPhone with an LCD screen, powered by the A12 Bionic processor.

Will that make a difference? I’ve already heard from some friends who are pondering an iPhone 7 or 8 purchase now that the iPhone SE has vanished from the product line. I think it’s worth anyone considerin­g one of those devices to give the iPhone XS a try if they can, but it costs £400 more than the iPhone 8. That’s a big gap. It will be interestin­g to see how Apple’s iPhone sales track this year. Apple seems to feel that the right play here is large phones, not small phones. Given worldwide trends, it may be right – but that’s no consolatio­n to fans of smaller phones.

Keep watching the Watch

The Apple Watch Series 4 is completely recognizab­le as an Apple Watch, and old watch bands are still

compatible with it. Yet this is actually the biggest design change the Watch has seen in its existence. It’s noticeably taller and even a tad wider, but thinner, and the corners of the device are tucked in a little bit, too.

But what you’ll really notice with the Series 4 is that screen. It’s pushed all the way out to the edge of the glass face of the Apple Watch, so far out that the edges of the screen are rounded (to match the rounded glass) rather than rectangula­r. On a device this small, adding a few pixels in every dimension can lead to huge improvemen­ts, and Apple has built new watch faces (with more, and larger, complicati­ons) in order to take advantage of those pixels.

Yes, dramatical­ly increasing the screen space on your device while only marginally increasing its size is a page right out of the iPhone X playbook. The iPhone X showed it worked, and the Apple Watch Series 4 will also benefit it. Of all the new Apple products I got to handle, the Series 4 was the one I’m the most excited about.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? iPhone XS (top) and iPhone XS Max
iPhone XS (top) and iPhone XS Max
 ??  ?? The iPhone XR has an aluminium band around its edge On the yellow model, the band looks gold
The iPhone XR has an aluminium band around its edge On the yellow model, the band looks gold
 ??  ?? The Apple Watch Series 4 pushes the display all the way to the edges
The Apple Watch Series 4 pushes the display all the way to the edges

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia