Hello Everyone,

Although the following article is quite long, I would argue that it is a
must-read for anyone considering iPhone 12.

Enjoy,

Mark

Apple iPhone 12 review: raising the bar: The Verge
It’s the one you should get unless you’re waiting for the Max or mini
By Dieter Bohn, Oct 20, 2020.

More than most years, there are a lot of things that are new in the iPhone
12. Apple has loaded in the usual upgrades like a faster processor and
improved camera, but that’s something we’ve come to expect. In addition to
all of that, there’s a new design, a new OLED screen, an entirely new
charging and accessory ecosystem with MagSafe, and, of course, 5G. 

It seems obvious that both Apple and its carrier partners are trying to
align to make this a supercycle for upgrades. All of that new stuff is also
paired with both a higher price ($829 for the base 64GB model) and discounts
and heavily marketed carrier trade-in and installment plans. In the midst of
a pandemic-induced economic downturn, it could be a hard sell.

It’s easy to recommend the default iPhone for the times when you need a new
phone anyway, but it’s much more difficult to say whether all of this new
stuff adds up to something that could compel you to upgrade earlier than
you’d planned.

Nilay Patel is reviewing the iPhone 12 Pro separately, here. Both the
smaller iPhone 12 mini and the iPhone 12 Pro Max with its better cameras
won’t arrive for a little while. There’s reason to consider all of them, but
the standard iPhone 12 is the one I think most people who need a new iPhone
will want to get.
 
Good Stuff
•       Excellent camera
•       Elegant design
•       Promising MagSafe ecosystem
•       Upgraded display

Bad Stuff
•       The 5G tax
•       Battery is a small regression
•       More expensive

iPhone 12 design
I love the new design for the iPhone 12. In addition to being smaller and
lighter than the iPhone 11, it has flat sides and a flat screen. We’ve been
living with curved edges on iPhones for six years, since 2014’s iPhone 6. So
part of my affection might just be that the iPhone 12 feels new. But it’s
also that it feels like a throwback to the iPhone 4 and 5 models, which were
the last iPhones whose design I truly loved.

Despite all of those flat edges, the seams and the corners are beveled just
enough to make it comfortable to hold. The rails on the iPhone 12 are matte
finish aluminum, and I prefer them to the glossy steel on the Pro models.
Unfortunately, the rear glass is super glossy, super prone to picking up
fingerprints, and as susceptible to picking up tiny little micro-abrasions
as ever. Most people will put a case on their phone anyway.

The front of the iPhone 12 isn’t technically glass at all, but a
glass-ceramic hybrid Apple has branded “Ceramic Shield.” It uses ceramic
crystals within the glass itself to improve drop resistance over the iPhone
11. Apple says it’s four times better, which is a good thing because screen
repair costs have gone up this year. I can’t test that with our review unit
(at least, not intentionally), but I did have a totally accidental drop to
concrete from three feet that stopped my heart but only put a barely
perceptible ding in the aluminum. Scratch resistance should be about the
same as last year.

If you look at the aluminum rail, you’ll see a bunch of antenna lines and
even a small plastic section on the side for the Ultra Wideband (UWB) mmWave
antenna. They break up the symmetry a bit (especially on the bottom), but it
doesn’t bother me. I’ve also become notch-blind at this point, but I should
note that Face ID still requires a very big cutout at the top of the screen.

The ceramic-glass hybrid screen should be more resistant to breaking from
drops

There’s no fingerprint sensor, and though I didn’t really expect one, during
the pandemic, it is a frustration. I suppose the one silver lining for
Android manufacturers mostly whiffing on Face Unlock is that their phones
are easier to get into when you’re wearing a mask. 

Overall, though, this design just feels more elegant and confident than the
past few years of iPhones, including even the big iPhone X redesign. And the
smaller size is the best part; the iPhone XR and iPhone 11 always felt just
a little too big. If this is the design we’ll be living with for the next
six years, I won’t complain.

The iPhone 12’s OLED screen is excellent. 
One of the reasons Apple was able to reduce the size of the iPhone 12 is
that it has switched over to an OLED screen. That helps reduce the bezels
and also keeps them perfect even all the way around the phone, while at the
same time keeping the actual viewable screen the same 6.1 inches as the
iPhone 11. I prefer the look of OLED to LCD because of its blacker blacks,
so I’ve been waiting for this change.

Along with the switch to OLED, Apple has also increased the pixel count to
1170 x 2532. If you haven’t been immersed in smartphone tech discussions,
you have blessedly avoided the complaining that previous iPhones didn’t even
technically hit 1080p. Now they have, and those complaints can finally
cease.

The OLED screen is excellent, with great contrast and colors — but no high
refresh rate  The large Face ID notch is still there, but it eventually
feels normal. 
But they’ll be replaced with another argument: whether the iPhone ought to
have a high refresh rate screen. Many Android phones at this price point
(and nearly all of them that cost more) have a 90 or 120Hz refresh rate,
which makes scrolling and animations smoother. The iPhone’s is locked to the
same 60Hz it’s always been. 

This is a tech spec argument, but it is something that you can feel when you
scroll or navigate around a phone. Apple ships such a screen on the iPad
Pro. I think the iPhone 12 gets away with leaving it out for two reasons:
one, iOS already feels smooth and fast natively, and two, this is the
lower-cost iPhone, so it isn’t a surprise to see a standard refresh rate.
The iPhone 12 Pro models lacking 120Hz is a little more jarring.

The iPhone 12 Pro does have one screen advantage over this phone: it can
reach a higher level of brightness in regular use. I didn’t have any
complaints about screen brightness on this iPhone 12, however, even
outdoors. And when watching HDR content, both phones can still reach peak
brightness of 1,200 nits. 

Overall, the OLED screen is a noticeable improvement for me mainly because
of its improved contrast and HDR, not the pixel count. I’m also happy to
report that Apple hasn’t compromised on its color science either — colors
are as accurate as ever. 

The MagSafe charging puck is thin, light, and can power the iPhone 12 at
15W. 
Of all the new things on the iPhone 12, I think MagSafe is the most
interesting. It’s an entire system for attaching things to the back of the
iPhone via magnets: wireless chargers, cases, car mounts, wallets, and
eventually, other things like gimbals or something I haven’t thought of yet.


The premiere accessory is the MagSafe charger, a $39 puck that snicks onto
the back of the phone with a satisfying clap and then wirelessly charges it.
The iPhone has a second NFC chip for MagSafe that identifies what’s been
attached to it. When it’s a MagSafe charger, it will allow the phone to
power up at 15 watts instead of the usual 7.5, provided you have at least a
20-watt power brick. (The MagSafe charger doesn’t come with one. Apple will
sell you a 20-watt USB-C charger for $19, or you can use one from another
device such as a laptop.) 
It’s the difference between wireless charging being annoyingly slow and
being acceptable. In my testing, I would get around 40 percent charge in an
hour. That’s slower than the fastest wireless charging systems out there and
much slower than a cable, but it’s also easy and convenient. 

Apple’s puck is thin and light and attaches firmly enough that you can pick
up the phone and use it without it getting disconnected. If anybody else
wants to make a charging puck, they’ll need to use Apple’s “Made for iPhone”
(MFI) program. Other fast wireless chargers still charge the iPhone at the
usual rate; new ones will need to use that NFC handshake as necessary for
the faster charging. (And no, apps can’t access this NFC chip directly, so
payments and other uses are still more locked down than on Android.)

NFC also lets Apple do cute little things like light up a ring on the screen
when it detects that an accessory has been attached. There’s a blue ring for
a blue case, for example. Apple is selling a series of MagSafe cases that it
claims are easier to snap on and off, but they’re not appreciably different
than the silicone cases from prior years. There’s also a wallet that can
hold three cards with special shielding to keep them from getting
de-magnetized. It’s nice enough for what it is, but you have to take it off
to get a card out or to wirelessly charge the phone.

I’m excited to see what third-party companies come up with for these
magnets. They don’t need to participate in MFI to simply make magnetic
accessories, and car mounts are already on the way. I’m hoping to see a
bunch of photography and video accessories, too. The magnets are strong
enough to hold the phone up against light jostling, but stuff like bike
mounts will still need a sturdier attachment. 

One last word about charging while we’re on the subject. Apple has indeed
taken the AC adapter out of the box and included a USB-C to Lightning cable,
so if you don’t have a USB-C charger, you’ll need to get one. Even though
the environmental benefits may not be huge, I am still in favor of this
decision. 

I’m less in favor of the decision to stick to the Lightning port for
charging. A major redesign is an opportunity to switch over to the more
common USB-C port, the same port that Apple’s own computers and tablets use
along with every other Android phone and many, many other gadgets. The fact
that Apple didn’t have the courage to do so tells me that its long-term
plans may have more to do with MagSafe than anything else. I don’t love
Lightning, but I have to admit it’s better than literally nothing when it
comes to wired charging. 

5G is great if you can find it. 
Apple has joined the 5G Hype Industrial Complex. It is promoting 5G as the
flagship feature on all of its new iPhone models and promising incredibly
fast download speeds. The reality in the US is that getting those speeds is
a matter of being in the right city and sometimes the right city block.
Heck, the ultra-fast millimeter-wave (mmWave) version of 5G requires being
literally on the right street corner.
The networks simply aren’t built-out yet, and despite lofty promises from
carriers, I don’t know how long it will be until they are.

Your experience with 5G will vary widely depending on your location,
carrier, and data plan
In my testing in Oakland and San Francisco on both T-Mobile and Verizon, I
found myself with an LTE signal as often as I did 5G — if not more. When I
did get 5G, my download speeds varied from just barely better than LTE to
about two times faster. But when I consciously sought out the sidewalks
where Verizon’s mmWave network is live, the speeds were mind-boggling.

All of which is to say that your experience with 5G is completely dependent
on where you are, what network you’re on, and how lucky you are in finding
the right signal. Getting 2,400Mbps and using it to download an entire
Netflix season really is awe-inspiring. Walking half a block and seeing
speeds drop down to plain old LTE speeds is not.

As far as the iPhone itself goes, it performs as well or better than 5G
Android phones. It can certainly handle the speed, and it appears to pick up
signal without issue. It does get hot on mmWave, and it does impact battery
life significantly if you overdo it. Apple is, however, doing a lot of work
under the hood in iOS to tweak the 5G experience.

Agree to Continue: iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro
Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and
conditions before you can use it — contracts that no one actually reads.
It’s impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these
agreements. But we’re going to start counting exactly how many times you
have to hit “agree” to use devices when we review them since these are
agreements most people don’t read and definitely can’t negotiate. 

To use an iPhone 12 or iPhone 12 Pro, you have to agree to:
•       The Apple terms of service agreement, which you can have sent to you
by email
•       Apple’s warranty agreement, which you can have sent to you by email

These agreements are nonnegotiable, and you cannot use the phone at all if
you don’t agree to them.

The iPhone also prompts you to set up Apple Cash and Apple Pay at setup,
which further means you have to agree to:
•       The Apple Cash agreement, which specifies that services are actually
provided by Green Dot Bank and Apple Payments, Inc, and further consists of
the following agreements:
•       The Apple Cash terms and conditions
•       The electronic communications agreement
•       The Green Dot bank privacy policy
•       Direct payments terms and conditions
•       Direct payments privacy notice
•       Apple Payments, Inc, license

If you add a credit card to Apple Pay, you have to agree to:
•       The terms from your credit card provider, which do not have an
option to be emailed

Final tally: two mandatory agreements, six optional agreements for Apple
Cash, one optional agreement for Apple Pay

By default, every 5G phone will have a “Smart Data mode” enabled. It drops
the iPhone 12 down to LTE speeds unless Apple’s software believes you really
need them. It’s a little unclear what circumstances will trigger a bump up
to 5G speeds, but it’s some combination of what kind of data you’re
downloading and perhaps what app you’re using. 

What’s weird is that when the iPhone is limiting you to LTE speeds, it will
still display the 5G icon in the status bar. It’s now an indicator of the
best speed available to you, not the actual type of connection that’s
actively in use. You can turn Smart Data off if you like, but I left it on
and honestly never really felt like I was being throttled. 
(As long as we’re talking about inaccurate status bar icons, I will point
out that AT&T’s deceitful “5G E” indicator for its LTE Advanced network is
sticking around. Shame on AT&T for this branding and on Apple for enabling
it.)

There are other nuances with 5G. Although Apple has done a remarkable job
ensuring the iPhone 12 will work on any US network, there are some band
differences internationally (where mmWave isn’t necessarily included), so
double-check if you move or ever get to travel again. And if you use both
the physical SIM and the eSIM on your iPhone, it turns out that the Dual SIM
Dual Standby spec can’t handle having 5G lit up on both networks at the same
time. If you have them both active, you’ll get 4G. But you can get 5G on
either on its own. 

Some networks — including Verizon — require you to get a new 5G-compatible
SIM card. So if you’re not getting 5G and you think you should be, that may
be the issue. You may also need to adjust your plan.

The iPhone will also try to be aware of your data plan, and if it knows you
have unlimited, it will use 5G more freely for certain things. Apple will
even allow it to download full iOS updates over 5G if you’re on unlimited.
If you change your plan or don’t want it to do that, you might need to go
diving through various settings. 

Apple also says that you might get faster tethering speeds over Wi-Fi than
tethering over a wired Lightning cable, thanks to optimizations it has made.
Wi-Fi tethering could be as much as four times faster than before in optimal
conditions (including, perhaps Wi-Fi 6 on the tethered device). Since it’s a
hassle for me to even find an mmWave signal, I haven’t had a chance to fully
test this.

Finally, 5G won’t work on your iPhone if your carrier doesn’t directly work
with Apple to light it up. Unlike previous networks, you can’t go in and
just manually set an APN and MMS settings and be good to go on 5G. That
shouldn’t be a problem for the vast majority of people, though. Apple has
worked with over 100 carriers in 30 markets to enable 5G on the iPhone,
including all three major carriers in the US — but if you use an MVNO, you
should double-check that 5G will work before you buy.

You really shouldn’t have to worry about most of these 5G details. If you
happen to get 5G speeds where you live and work, bully for you. If you
don’t, they will hopefully come to you soon, and hopefully the networks will
continue to be fast even after all these 5G iPhones start filling up the
channels. Either way, right now, it’s not a good idea to buy an iPhone just
because it has 5G. It’s a nice bonus, but not more than that yet. 

The dual-camera system on the iPhone 12. 
The most important changes to the camera in the iPhone 12 aren’t in the
sensors or the lenses. They are completely unchanged except for the main
wide-angle camera going from an ƒ/1.8 aperture to ƒ/1.6 to allow in slightly
more light. Instead, the bigger differences come from software and from
unlocking new capabilities, thanks to the new A14 Bionic processor that runs
everything on the phone.

The iPhone 12 camera is a clear, though not massive, improvement on the
iPhone 11
If you’re comparing iPhone 12 models, the key things to know is that the
regular iPhone 12 and the 12 mini have the same camera system. The iPhone 12
Pro adds telephoto, LIDAR for low-light focusing and depth calculations, and
some more encoding options for photo and video. The iPhone 12 Pro Max has a
bigger upgrade with a larger main camera sensor and improved image
stabilization. 
Nilay Patel’s review of the iPhone 12 Pro has details on some of its
distinct features and also goes more in-depth on video quality. Apple is
making big claims around HDR, dubbing this a Dolby Vision camera. I’ll let
Nilay give you all the nitty-gritty details on that. For my part, I’ll just
say that video quality continues to be excellent and is challenged only by
the Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, but I give the edge to the iPhone. 

But back to the A14 Bionic. It has unlocked night mode for all of the
cameras on the iPhone 12 (including the front selfie camera) and even a
night portrait mode. Apple has also made some tweaks to its system for
combining multiple frames into a single image, called Smart HDR 3. That
system should also be better at recognizing things like faces or the sky and
tweaking the photos to optimize their appearance. In fact, there’s even a
new setting called “Scene Detection” if you want to toggle it.
In general, the iPhone 12 does a better job on fine detail in regular
lighting conditions. Apple says this might be because it is applying its
Deep Fusion algorithms in more situations this year. I still like the
Pixel’s signature, contrast-y look, but Apple seems to be moving in its
direction just a little. The iPhone 12’s photos seem to finally be stepping
back from over-brightening shadows on faces. But it’s a minor tweak, the
bigger changes come in more extreme conditions. 
 
The iPhone 12 has more detail and also doesn’t need to even trigger night
mode as often in the first place. 
Compared to the iPhone 11, the iPhone 12 needs to drop into night mode less
often, thanks to that faster lens. And even when it does, I’m getting
clearer, brighter shots. In the very darkest conditions, the Pixel 5 still
handles itself a little better, but it’s much, much closer than it’s ever
been. 
Night mode portraits mean you can try them in more conditions, but the
quality is best in good light. 
Even in low light, the iPhone 12’s portrait mode passes the “glasses test,”
properly keeping them in focus instead of blurring them. 
Night mode portraits are one of the major new features, and they’re worth a
try, but the range of lighting conditions where they’ll look good isn’t
massively bigger. One nice thing is that the iPhone 12 passes the glasses
test with flying colors; they never seem to get accidentally blurred. I’m
less impressed with night mode selfies portraits. There’s no way to turn the
screen flash off in this mode, which is a problem if you wear glasses.
 
The Pixel clearly has more detail, but the iPhone’s aesthetics work well for
its limitations. 
Many of those software enhancements have also come to the ultrawide camera,
and so its quality is also improved. However, it is still a fundamentally
worse sensor and lens combo, and you can see grain in the details if you
look even a little closely. It’s good for landscapes, though.
 Apple’s algorithms for its ultrawide camera are improved, but there’s only
so much software can do. 
Apple says that it has done more tuning to compensate for lens distortion at
the edge of ultrawide shots, especially for faces and architecture. I do
think it helps but only a little. This photo of the Golden Gate bridge still
has a clear bend to it.
For me, the bottom line on the cameras is I definitely see a marked
improvement over the iPhone 11, but they’re not enough to compel an upgrade.
That doesn’t mean the iPhone 12 isn’t a massively good camera. It is, and
the combination of performance, simplicity, and just plain good quality
continues to impress. 

The rear of the iPhone 12 is glossy, and it picks up both fingerprints and
micro-scratches fairly easily. Use a case. 

iPhone 12 performance, battery life, and software
It should not come as any kind of surprise to you that the iPhone 12 is
blisteringly fast. The new A14 Bionic chip is built on a new 5nm process —
one that we expect will also power upcoming Mac computers. Games load fast
and there’s no lag, webpages render without hassle, and I’m seeing fewer
apps need to reload when multitasking.
Battery life is acceptable but doesn’t quite live up to the iPhone 11 — and
pay attention to your UWB 5G use
But in actual day-to-day use, I suspect nobody will see an appreciable
difference from the iPhone 11, which was and is very fast, too. The
importance of the iPhone 12’s speed isn’t that it’s fast today; it’s that
it’s likely to still be fast in three or even five years. 
Battery life is good but does seem to be a small regression from the iPhone
11 (an absolute battery champion). The fact that Apple felt the need to
create a special mode for silently turning off 5G is a little worrying in
terms of battery life. Luckily, I don’t think the battery life on the iPhone
12 is bad at all. I can get through a full day without much issue. On the
other hand, I have to admit that it’s easier to kill this thing with a full
day of heavy use than the iPhone 11. 

As for iOS 14, I’ll point you to Chris Welch’s review as his thoughts mirror
my own. I really like having widgets on the main home screen, although I
wish there was a wider selection from my favorite apps. Speaking of wishes,
I wish Apple would put much more effort into making Siri a little more
competitive with the Google Assistant.
The iPhone 12. 
The iPhone 12 is the first iPhone in several years that really does feel
like something new. But I can’t point to any specific single feature that
makes it feel that way. The 5G is fine. MagSafe is convenient, but we’ll
have to see if there’s a real ecosystem there. The OLED screen is lovely but
also kind of table stakes for smartphones these days. The new design is
elegant and modern, but it’s hard to tell you to buy a phone because it’s
pretty.

The iPhone 12 is the new default choice — and it’s a good one
The iPhone 12 is going to be the default choice for a lot of people buying
an iPhone over the next year, and it’s frankly fortunate that the default
iPhone is so good. I think most people should get this instead of the iPhone
12 Pro. But I also think if you have an iPhone that’s working for you just
fine, there’s not a must-have gotta-get-it feature here to compel you to
upgrade. That’s how default phones work: when you need one, get one, and it
will be way better than what you were using. When you don’t need one, don’t.

But when the time comes for you to get a new phone and if you end up with
this iPhone 12, I think you’re going to love it. 
Correction: The iPhone 12’s screen resolution is 1170 x 2532, not 1080 x
2340 as originally stated in the review. That lower resolution is for the
iPhone 12 mini.

Original Article at:
https://www.theverge.com/21522988/iphone-12-review


-- 
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries 
list.

If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you 
feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or 
moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself.

Your Mac Visionaries list moderator is Mark Taylor.  You can reach mark at:  
[email protected] and your owner is Cara Quinn - you can reach Cara at 
[email protected]

The archives for this list can be searched at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"MacVisionaries" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/macvisionaries/000301d6a705%24d2bc5000%247834f000%24%40edu.

Reply via email to