Introduction
The iPhone 5. As in five million
units sold over the course of a … weekend. Can't say no to that. This is the
latest installment in the smartphone series that changed the mobile phone
industry and we can understand people couldn't wait. Now, what is it they
couldn't wait for?
The Apple iPhone 5 brings the
long anticipated larger screen and more capable internals that we already know
are ready to trade blows with the most powerful chipsets out there.
There's also the new slender,
slimmer body that no photos really do justice to. If all of Apple's claims are
true then the iPhone 5 is a real engineering masterpiece - double the
performance in a more compact package without sacrificing anything in terms of
battery life.
They could've done worse. A lot
worse. But this is Apple telling you to prepare to be wowed. So you have every
right to play hard-to-please.
Key features
- Quad-band GSM and quad-band 3G support with 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA
- LTE support where carriers support it and CDMA support when sold by CDMA carriers
- 4" 16M-color LED-backlit IPS TFT capacitive touchscreen of 640 x 1136px resolution
- Scratch-resistant screen glass, fingerprint-resistant coating
- 1.2GHz dual-core custom-designed CPU, PowerVR SGX543MP3 GPU, 1GB of RAM, Apple A6 SoC
- iOS 6 and iCloud integration
- 8 MP autofocus camera with LED flash and touch focus
- 1080p video recording at 30fps
- 1.2MP secondary front-facing camera
- Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot
- GPS with A-GPS connectivity; digital compass
- 16/32/64GB storage options
- Accelerometer, proximity sensor and a three-axis gyro sensor
- Active noise cancellation with a dedicated secondary microphone
- Standard 3.5 mm audio jack, stereo Bluetooth v4.0
- Excellent audio output quality (though worse than 4S)
- Apple Maps with free voice-guided navigation in 56 countries
- Voice recognition, Siri virtual assistant
- Supports HD Voice (needs carrier support too)
- FaceTime video calls over Wi-Fi and cellular
- Impressively slim and light
- Great battery life
Main disadvantages
- Aluminum body looks cool but is easy to scratch
- Proprietary connector, incompatible with previous-gen accessories (needs adapter)
- The new display is not proportionally bigger, but only taller
- Unadapted apps run letterboxed due to the unusual resolution
- nano-SIM support only
- Apple Maps app not up to scratch
- No USB Mass Storage mode
- No FM radio
- No stereo speakers
- No microSD card slot
- No NFC connectivity (though that may be nitpicking)
- Stuck with iTunes for loading content
- Mono audio recording in videos
Specifications
- GENERAL : 2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - GSM A1428 CDMA 800 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100 - CDMA A1429
- 3G Network : HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 - GSM A1428 CDMA2000 1xEV-DO - CDMA A1429
- 4G Network : LTE 700 MHz Class 17 / 1700 / 2100 - GSM A1428 or LTE 850 / 1800 / 2100 - GSM A1429 LTE 700 / 850 / 1800 / 1900 / 2100 - CDMA A1429
- Announced : 2012, September
- Status : Available. Released 2012, September
- BODY : Dimensions 123.8 x 58.6 x 7.6 mm
- Weight : 112 g
- DISPLAY : Type LED-backlit IPS TFT, capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
- Size : 640 x 1136 pixels, 4.0 inches (~326 ppi pixel density)
- Multitouch : Yes
- Protection : Corning Gorilla Glass, oleophobic coating
- SOUND Alert types : Vibration, proprietary ringtones
- Loudspeaker : Yes
- 3.5mm jack : Yes
- MEMORY : Card slot No
- Internal : 16/32/64 GB storage, 1 GB RAM
- DATA : GPRS Yes
- EDGE : Yes
- Speed : DC-HSDPA, 42 Mbps; HSDPA, 21 Mbps; HSUPA, 5.76 Mbps, LTE, 100 Mbps; Rev. A, up to 3.1 Mbps
- WLAN : Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, dual-band, Wi-Fi hotspot
- Bluetooth : Yes, v4.0 with A2DP
- USB : Yes, v2.0
- CAMERA : Primary 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, check quality
- Features : Simultaneous HD video and image recording, touch focus, geo-tagging, face detection, panorama, HDR
- Video : Yes, 1080p@30fps, LED video light, video stabilization, geo-tagging, check quality
- Secondary : Yes, 1.2 MP, 720p@30fps
- FEATURES : OS iOS 6
- Chipset : Apple A6
- CPU : Dual-core 1.2 GHz
- GPU : PowerVR SGX 543MP3 (triple-core graphics)
- Sensors : Accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
- Messaging : iMessage, SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email
- Browser : HTML (Safari)
- Radio : No
- GPS : Yes, with A-GPS support and GLONASS
- Java : No
- Colors : Black/Slate, White/Silver - nano-SIM card support only
- - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- - Siri natural language commands and dictation
- - iCloud cloud service
- - Twitter and Facebook integration
There are many sides to the Apple
iPhone 5's story. You can, for example, look at the progress it makes and
compare it to the last major Apple release, the iPhone 4. That one was truly
revolutionary - or, as the saying went back then, resolutionary. It had the
most impressive screen on the market, a camera that few could beat, an
incredibly attractive design, and processing power that equaled the most
impressive droids at the time.
In comparison, the iPhone 5
brings a modest screen update, which is nowhere near as impressive as a
four-fold increase in resolution brought by the iPhone 4. The performance of
the camera is basically identical to the one on the 4S, and while the phone
looks nothing short of stunning, the finish threatens to deteriorate quite
quickly if not looked after. Not to mention that it just lacks the wow factor
of the iPhone 4.
All we're left with is a
surprisingly solid chipset - and we mean a surprise that most quad-cores will
hardly call pleasant. But at the end of the day, Apple has failed to live up to
its own upgrade standard set with the iPhone 4. What we mean is the iPhone 4S
could get away with many things but not the iPhone 5 - not a second year in a
row.
Yes, another side to the story is
the upgrader's dilemma. So you have an iPhone already and you love it, but you
are looking for ways to take that iOS experience a step further. Is the iPhone
5 the device you were hoping to get?
If you own the iPhone 4, then
probably yes. At this point your home-button is probably starting to give up on
you (those are known not to age well), you are looking to get some extra speed
and a little extra screen estate, without writing off the investments you made
in apps and the iPhone 5 delivers that easily. True, the screen could have
grown a little more and the anodized aluminum case could have been more
durable, but the latest iPhone is still a worthy upgrade. And a real no-brainer
if you own one of the older generations of the Apple smartphones.
Apple iPhone 4
Things are far less
straightforward if you have the iPhone 4S, though. Sure, the iPhone 5 is faster
and slimmer, but is that enough to warrant the pricey upgrade? Given that the
3.5" screen is so easy to manage with one hand, you probably won't really
feel much difference from the slimmer waistline. The camera is the same and the
pixel density has no room for improvement, so all you'll be getting is more
speed (to what's by no means a slow device) and some extra height to the
screen.
Apple iPhone 4S
Turn another page and you see the
iPhone 5 right in the middle of a heated smartphone battle. The Android
open-source army is as strong as ever, while Windows Phone 8 has finally
emerged as a real alternative for those, who don't mind a closed ecosystem such
as Apple's.
The new Apple has a couple of
strong arguments in its favor. Firstly, the A6 chipset is one of the snappiest
around and is ready to face anything you throw at it. It may not win every
fight, but it will never suffer humiliating defeats either. Secondly, the
iPhone 5 is arguably the best looking of all the smartphones around. That
weapon would have been even more potent, had it not been for the aluminum
finish quality issues.
However, the iPhone 5 was let
down by what has been the lineup's greatest strength thus far. We are talking
the iOS 6 operating system, which seems to be falling behind the curve. After
the fiasco with the new Apple Maps some are even saying that iOS 6 is a step
backwards from iOS 5. Now, we wouldn't go that far as the new OS release teaches
the iPhone family plenty of new tricks, but we can't overlook the fact either
that while Android finally caught up in terms of fluidity and smoothness, iOS
is yet to match the functionality of its competitors.
That's why the Galaxy S III and
the HTC One X will sleep well, knowing very few (if any) of their owners will
be tempted to jump ship. The LG Optimus G will also be glad to know that it's
entering a game with a very open end, rather than being brought to the
slaughter.
Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III • HTC
One X • LG Optimus G E973
The Nokia Lumias and the HTC
Windows Phones will also probably find reasons to cheer in the fact that they
are finally ready to trade blows with the iPhone, instead of taking the
punching bag role of their predecessors. Even though the Microsoft platform
still has a long way to go to match the two industry heavyweights, it now has
more trumps in its hand than just the bargain price.
Nokia Lumia 920 • HTC Windows Phone 8XThe great news for Apple is that the closed ecosystem is yet again working in their favor. We wouldn't want to underplay the loyalty of Apple fans but a commitment like that is hard to back out of for purely financial reasons too. iPhone users can be anything from pleased, faithful and devoted, to addicted, but a tiny bit of that involves protecting their investment in apps, services and interconnected Apple devices.
Furthermore, if you are only now
looking to join the Apple family, you don't need to look any further than the
latest. The price difference is negligible between an iPhone 5 and a brand new
4S.
In conclusion, the Apple iPhone 5
is a very solid effort, a purchase which few are likely to regret. However, it
fails to be one of the revolutionary products its maker is known for.
We are not sure if it's due to
complacency or the innovation well has simply dried up, but Apple has let
competition catch up and even take the lead second year in a row. Had the
iPhone 5 come out last year, when everyone was expecting it, it would have been
a trend-setter, but now it seems to be relegated to a follower and the worst
part is the pricing department didn't even get the memo. Off contract, it's
probably the most expensive smartphone in Europe.