Mac Format

iPhone SE and iOS 13

PLUS: your first steps with iOS 13

- Written by ROB MEAD-GREEN

A beginner’s guide to Apple’s most affordable handset and the latest iOS

The definitive verdict on Apple’s most affordable iPhone

The iPhone SE is back! Two years after the original SE shifted off this mortal coil, its iPhone 8-based replacemen­t has arrived. And it’s a doozy. For just £419, you gain entry to the Apple ecosystem and that low-cost pricing makes it a great first iPhone for younger members of your household.

What do you get? All three models in the iPhone SE line-up get a 4.7in Retina HD display with 1334x750 resolution, the same A13 Bionic processor as the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro, plus a single lens 12MP Wide camera with an f/1.8 aperture and a 7MP front camera for selfies and FaceTime. The base £419 model gets 64GB of on-board storage, the £469 step-up model has 128GB and the £569 top-end version gets 256GB, which is plenty of wriggle room for most people. That pricing also makes even the most expensive iPhone SE £160 cheaper than the entry-level iPhone 11, and Apple makes it easy to get the iPhone SE for even less. Trade in your old iPhone and you could pick up the 64GB SE for just £279. Or why not get one on a mobile contract? A 64GB SE on Vodafone’s entry-level Red 24GB plan, for example, costs just £29 up front, then £39/month. And for that you also get 24GB of mobile data and unlimited UK calls and texts.

Those are the headline stats. Now let’s dig into the detail. As we’ve already said, the iPhone SE is essentiall­y the iPhone 8 from 2017, but equipped with some key features from the iPhone 11 – most notably its A13 Bionic processor.

That makes the iPhone SE positively tiny in modern iPhone terms, measuring just 138.4x67.3x7.3mm compared to the

You get an old-school Home button with Touch ID, which some people actually prefer

iPhone 11’s 150.9x75.7x8.3mm – and that’s not even the biggest iPhone. The difference in heft is noticeable too. Where the iPhone 11 weighs 194g, the iPhone SE is 46g lighter at 148g and you really notice the difference in your hand and in your pocket.

Because it’s based on the iPhone 8 (which was essentiall­y the same designwise as 2016’s iPhone 7, 2015’s iPhone 6s and 2014’s iPhone 6), the SE also looks and feels a little retro. That Retina HD display is boxed in by huge bezels at the top and the bottom of the 4.7in screen, although there’s no unsightly notch with Face ID either. Instead you get an oldschool Home button with Touch ID, which some people actually prefer. (We’re hoping Apple goes for offering both options in the iPhone 12.)

Performanc­e

While the display may be small, it’s easy to see in all but the brightest sunlight, and having the A13 Bionic chip on board means the iPhone SE never skips a beat when it comes to performanc­e – everything from navigating the interface to watching HD movies and playing the latest mobile games feels quick, slick and buttery smooth.

The interface also benefits from Haptic Touch, the force feedback replacemen­t for 3D Touch. This enables you to gently press on an app in iOS 13 to reveal further actions and options, before selecting one to open the app itself. Apple calls this ‘peek and pop’.

While Haptic Touch seems to be on offer system-wide in the iPhone SE, there is one place it isn’t and that’s on Lock screen notificati­ons, where they

That limited longevity contrasts strongly with the bigger (and bulkier) iPhone 11

don’t appear at all. First pointed out by early iPhone SE buyers online, it’s not clear whether this is simply a wrinkle in the iPhone SE’s iOS 13 implementa­tion, or a deliberate feature hobble by Apple. It seems like a strange omission, but then if that’s your biggest complaint about a £419 iPhone…

Snap. Happy?

Aside from the retro design and smaller screen, it’s clear that the Apple has made shortcuts elsewhere to hit that low price point. The iPhone SE has 802.11ax Wi-Fi (Wi-Fi 6) and Bluetooth 5.0 just like its pricier siblings, but it misses out on new U1 chip, which enables the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro to more accurately locate other U1 devices.

The biggest difference, though, lies with its camera. While the iPhone 11 has a twin lens array, and the iPhone 11 Pro a triple lens setup, the iPhone SE has just a single lens and a more limited feature set – there’s no Night Mode here for ultra low-light shooting, for example. The SE’s Portrait Mode implementa­tion, while good to have, also relies on machine learning to create depth informatio­n when shooting people pictures, whereas the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro use their multiple lenses to create more realistic ‘bokeh’ effects.

The other obvious limitation is that Portrait Mode on the iPhone SE mainly only works on people (by using face recognitio­n) rather than objects, where you’ll often get a ‘No person detected’ warning. And because it relies on having a 5x digital zoom rather than the optical zooms of the iPhone 11 and 11 Pro, close-ups can come out blurrier and noisier.

Then there’s the iPhone SE’s battery life. Given that it’s based on the iPhone 8, the SE’s identical score is no surprise. Apple says you’ll get 13 hours between recharges when watching a downloaded movie but only eight hours when streaming, and in day-to-day mixed use you’ll need to reach for its charger (Qi-compatible wireless charging is possible too) by the time you go to bed – although that’s never been unusual on a 4.7in iPhone. Audio playback is pegged at 40 hours.

That limited longevity contrasts strongly with the bigger (and bulkier) iPhone 11, which delivers up 17 hours of operation when watching a downloaded movie, 10 hours with streamed video and up to 65 hours audio playback. The monster iPhone 11 Pro Max, of course, has the longest-lasting battery of all – offering up to 20 hours’ movie playback and 80 hours’ audio playback, but then it also costs £1,149 – more than twice the price of the SE.

Finally, there’s build quality. Like all iPhones, the SE is beautifull­y made with a glass and aluminium body, despite its low price. It’s also dust- and water-resistant to IP67, meaning you can drop it in up to 1m of water for up to 30 minutes and it’ll live to tell the tale. After living with an iPhone 11 for a while, though, the SE’s slim size and ultra-light weight feels almost delicate to us – we’d definitely want to safeguard it with a protective case.

It should be clear by now that we love the iPhone SE. It’s affordable, sensibly specced and does almost everything most people need a smartphone for. The only things that really count against it are its slightly retro styling and limited battery life. It’s fairly future-proof too.

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 ??  ?? The iPhone SE comes with the same A13 Bionic chip as the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro and is buttery smooth in use.
The iPhone SE comes with the same A13 Bionic chip as the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro and is buttery smooth in use.
 ??  ?? The iPhone SE’s 12MP camera is the same one used on the iPhone 8 – only this time it has added iPhone 11 smarts.
The iPhone SE’s 12MP camera is the same one used on the iPhone 8 – only this time it has added iPhone 11 smarts.

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