iPad&iPhone user

Should you buy an iPhone SE or wait for iPhone 12?

Is Apple’s new lower-cost iPhone right for you? We can help you decide. Jason Cross reports

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It’s taken four years, but Apple has finally updated its budget, pocket-friendly iPhone SE. The original model took the internal hardware of the iPhone 6s (about six months old at the time) and crammed it into the smaller body of the iPhone 5s. The new model takes the same approach, stuffing a lot of the iPhone 11 hardware into an iPhone 8 body.

Is this the iPhone SE for you? Well, the £419 price is certainly very attractive, but it’s only a bargain if it’s a good fit. The iPhone 12 might cost more, but if you’re going to be happier with it, you might want to wait. Do the following statements sound like something you would say?

iPhones are too expensive

Well, you might as well jump on the new iPhone SE, unless you want to wait for Apple to start selling refurbishe­d models. Every iPhone on the horizon is expected to cost hundreds of pounds more.

This is the company’s least expensive iPhone by a long shot – the only way to get something cheaper is to get something old.

iPhones are too big

If you miss the size of the old iPhone SE, I’m sorry to inform you that iPhones that small are just not coming back. But the iPhone SE is still a lot smaller than every other modern phone Apple currently sells.

Look at the comparison opposite (from the excellent Phone Arena size comparison tool). Until today, the iPhone 11 was the smallest new iPhone; the iPhone SE (which is essentiall­y identical to the iPhone 8 in the centre opposite) is quite a bit smaller. Still, the original iPhone SE, on the right, is still much more petite.

But wait. The latest rumours about the iPhone 12, due for release this autumn, hint that the smallest size may have a 5.4in display. With no top or bottom bezels like the iPhone 11, that would make it very nearly the same size as the new iPhone SE. If you want a more modern phone with dual cameras, Face ID and so on, even if it’s more expensive, you might want to wait for the autumn to see if that rumour proves true.

I prefer Touch ID to Face ID

Once you get used to it, unlocking your phone with Face ID is faster and easier than Touch ID. And it’s easier to do with wet or dirty hands. Apple never collects your face data at all – it stays encrypted on your iPhone and they don’t even have the key.

But not everybody prefers Face ID. Some miss the good old Touch ID Home button. If you want to return to the days of Home buttons but don’t want to buy an old phone, the iPhone SE is your chance.

Of course, you give up a few other features...

I want to use Memoji and Animoji

If you don’t have Face ID, you don’t have the TrueDepth module. And if you don’t have the TrueDepth module, you can’t really use Memoji or Animoji. The front-facing 3D scanning sensors that are used for Face ID are

also used to approximat­e your facial expression­s and motion on Memoji and Animoji.

It’s also used to take Portrait Mode selfies. You’re giving up all these things with the iPhone SE.

I really want to use AR apps

The iPhone SE will certainly work with the current crop of augmented reality (AR) apps on the App Store, just as the iPhone XR can do so with only one rear camera.

But if you’re really into AR, you’ll want to wait for the iPhone 12 Pro, which is almost certain to have the LiDAR sensor found in the new iPad Pro. That will make a big difference in AR apps. You’ll be able to launch into them immediatel­y without waving moving your phone

around to scan the environmen­t first, and AR placement will be faster and more accurate.

Of course, it will cost you. The LiDAR sensor is rumoured to be only found in the iPhone 12 Pro, which will probably cost around £999.

I care most about camera quality

The good news is that the iPhone SE appears to have the same rear-facing wide angle camera as the iPhone 11 (12Mp and f1.8). With the A13 chip inside, it’s capable of nearly all the same image and video processing, including all the portrait lighting effects and Smart HDR. However, Apple makes no mention of Night Mode, which is strange... there’s appears to be no reason the iPhone SE couldn’t do it, but it can’t.

The bad news is that you only have the one rear-facing camera: no telephoto lens, no ultra-wide lens. You can do Portrait Mode, but as with the iPhone XR, it only works when it detects a person’s face, and there’s no Portrait Mode on the front camera.

The front-facing camera isn’t as good on the iPhone SE as on other modern iPhones. It’s a 7Mp camera that seems identical to that found on the iPhone 8, and is limited to 1080p video at 30fps. The A13 Bionic processor enables better image processing with it, but the hardware is a little aged.

So the photo and video quality from the rear camera should be up to par with the iPhone 11, but you don’t have as much flexibilit­y. Of course, we expect the iPhone 12 in the autumn to have an even better camera. It you’re concerned with quality more than price, you might want to wait.

Battery life matters most to me

If you want really epic battery life, you might want to look beyond the new iPhone SE. While we don’t expect it to have bad battery life, it should definitely not last as long as the iPhone 11 or iPhone XR.

Apple says it should get 12 hours of video playback or 8 hours of streaming video. For the iPhone 11, those figures are 17 hours and 10 hours, and the iPhone XR is about an hour less.

In essence, the new iPhone SE should get about the same battery life as the iPhone 8. That’s impressive when you consider the phone is way more powerful with the A13 Bionic processor inside, but disappoint­ing

when you compare it to more recent iPhones that have dramatical­ly improved battery life.

Smaller phone, smaller battery, less battery life.

5G is the future

Right now, 5G isn’t a critical technology for your iPhone. You can’t get a good 5G signal in most places, and even when you can the benefits are modest compared to the hype. There’s not much you can do with 5G right now that you can’t do with a good 4G LTE signal.

That won’t always be the case. The carriers will be working overtime over the next year or two to blanket the country with 5G coverage and improve its performanc­e. It’s not like 4G LTE is going to stop working for a long time, but over the next several years, 5G is going to be grow to be much faster and better than 4G LTE. If you’re buying a phone to keep for four or five years, you might want to wait for an iPhone 12, which is expected to support 5G networks. It won’t make a big difference this year, but in 2022 you could be glad you did.

I just want an iPhone that I can keep for five years

iPhones are expensive. Some people want the latest model every year, and others just want something reliable that they can keep for five years until it stops getting software updates.

While the iPhone SE is relatively inexpensiv­e, it’s also built using the A13 processor – Apple’s newest phone chip. That means it’s likely to be supported by new iOS updates for years to come. You’re better off

buying a new iPhone SE than a used or refurbishe­d older iPhone because the older model isn’t likely to be supported by iOS updates for as many years.

If you really want longevity, you might consider waiting for the iPhone 12 this autumn. It’s expected to cost a lot more, but feature a newer A14 processor (along with other fancy features) – five years from now, Apple may cut off iOS support in the A13 while still offering updates for products that use the A14. Because the iPhone 12 will have a TrueDepth module for the front camera, it will support whatever future features Apple comes up with that require it.

And of course, if you’re keeping your phone for four or five years, you want one with the best camera possible. That means waiting until the autumn and spending more money, but years from now you may be glad you splurged on a phone with a better front-facing camera and a rear camera capable of Night mode.

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 ??  ?? The iPhone 8 (centre) is the same size as the new iPhone SE – much bigger than the old SE (right), but smaller than the iPhone 11 (left)
The iPhone 8 (centre) is the same size as the new iPhone SE – much bigger than the old SE (right), but smaller than the iPhone 11 (left)
 ??  ?? The new iPhone SE will support AR apps, but likely not as well as the upcoming iPhone 12 Pro with its LiDAR camera
The new iPhone SE will support AR apps, but likely not as well as the upcoming iPhone 12 Pro with its LiDAR camera
 ??  ?? The iPhone SE camera is almost as good as the iPhone 11, but there’s just one rear camera, and no Night Mode
The iPhone SE camera is almost as good as the iPhone 11, but there’s just one rear camera, and no Night Mode

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