Comment: Why the iPhone X appears to be power-hungry despite more efficient 
OLED screen
9to5Mac  /  Ben Lovejoy


We noted earlier a Chinese regulatory filing that appears to confirm an earlier 
report that the iPhone X will come equipped with 3GB RAM. That same filing also 
contains another interesting number: the apparent battery capacity.

Serial leaker Steve Hemmerstoffer tweeted the image showing a battery capacity 
of 2716mAh – even higher than the 2691mAh battery found in the iPhone 8 Plus, 
with its far less power-efficient LCD screen …


LCD screens use a backlight to light up the entire display area. Even an area 
of the screen that is solid black gets the same amount of light, it is simply 
blocked by the black LCD pixels. OLED, in contrast, lights individual pixels, 
without any backlight required. A black area of the screen therefore uses no 
power.

It’s difficult to find true like-for-like comparisons, as manufacturers 
typically take advantage of the power efficiency of OLED by making their 
displays brighter. But a little Googling suggests that an OLED screen ought to 
use around two-thirds the power of an equivalent LCD one.

The iPhone X does, of course, have a somewhat larger display than the iPhone 8 
Plus, at 5.8 inches rather than 5.5 inches, but 5% more display area is 
relatively trivial compared to the power savings of OLED.

This suggests, then, that there’s other technology in the iPhone which requires 
significantly more power than less advanced models.

One obvious candidate is the optical image stabilization system. While the 
iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus have OIS on one camera, the iPhone X has it on both 
cameras. OIS has motors that physically move the lens to counteract hand 
movements, and this requires significant amounts of power.

A second likely suspect is the TrueDepth camera system. This is used not just 
for face recognition for unlocking the phone and authorizing Apple Pay 
transactions, but also for the new Animoji feature and the Portrait Mode when 
used with the front-facing camera.

The TrueDepth camera requires an infrared ‘flood illuminator.’ Although it 
doesn’t use visible light, this will use power levels not massively dissimilar 
to a visible-light flash, but will be operating for much longer periods.

So even with a larger battery and much more power-efficient display, Apple 
clearly finds that the extra features on the iPhone X eat significant amounts 
of power. It cites 12 hours of Internet use and 13 hours of video playback 
against an hour more of each for the iPhone 8 Plus.

When it comes to recharging your iPhone X or iPhone 8 battery, you’ll have the 
choice of fast-charging via wire or wireless charging with a pad, wireless 
charging without a pad or using furniture. Manufacturers of Qi chargers have 
wasted in no time in adding iPhone compatibility to their product descriptions.

Check out 9to5Mac on YouTube for more Apple news:



Original Article: https://9to5mac.com/2017/09/26/iphone-x-battery-capacity/


Sent from my iPhone

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