If you’re blind, this has to  be an  attractive option as well. A lower price 
for a robust phone where you  don’t have to pay the extra premium for  the 
bigger screen and snazzier visuals. The only real thing missing  seems to be 3D 
touch which until it matures a bit more doesn’t seem like a major deal breaker. 
Maybe there’s a slight drop-off in picture taking quality, but would it be 
enough to really impact apps like KNFBReader and Prismo? Perhaps not.

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Sieghard Weitzel
Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 12:50 PM
To: viphone@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: What you need to know about the 4-inch iPhone SE | Macworld

 

The only thing which was easy to verify was the 1.2 MP Facetime camera on the 
iPhone SE versus the 5 MP Facetime camera on the 6S/6S Plus. Does it matter? 
Probably not a lot, for Facetime or Skype video calls both still do 720P video, 
for the selfi enthusiasts out there maybe it matters a bit although most selfis 
end up getting put on Facebook or sent by Twitter or text/iMessage and are in a 
format where the difference probably isn’t earth shaddering.

 

The wireless specs for the 6S/6S plus also mention 802.11 AC with MIMO where 
the iPhone SE says 802.11 AC for whatever that is worth, both have Bluetooth 
4.2.

 

I think in most real-world scenarios the iPhone SE will perform very well and 
let’s not forget that a 64 Gb model in the States is $499 which is a lot less 
than a 64 Gb iPhone 6S and I think Apple is correct in that this phone will 
appeal to a lot of people who don’t want to spend that much, to women who 
simply want a smaller phone and also to customers in countries where people are 
not as well off as we are here in North America, many European countries and 
Australia/New Zealand.

 

 

Regards,

Sieghard

 

From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
Richard Turner
Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2016 12:40 PM
To: ViPone list <viphone@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Fwd: What you need to know about the 4-inch iPhone SE | Macworld

 

FAQ: What you need to know about the 4-inch iPhone SE

It starts at $399, it does Live Photos but no 3D Touch, and the battery should 
even outlast the bigger iPhones.

<image001.jpg>Apple's iPhone SE comes in many colors Credit: Apple 

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<http://www.macworld.com/article/3046697/hardware/faq-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-4-inch-iphone-se.html#comments>
 1Comment 

<image002.jpg>

 <http://www.macworld.com/author/Susie-Ochs/> Susie Ochs |  
<https://twitter.com/sfsooz> @sfsooz 

Executive Editor, Macworld 

·        Mar 21, 2016 5:40 PM

It turns out that in today’s “go big or go home” world, plenty of people didn’t 
want a bigger iPhone. So they did go home, back to their 4-inch iPhone 5s and 
5c models, to wait for Apple to make a pocket-sized iPhone once again. Now that 
wait is (nearly) over. 

On Monday, Apple unveiled the iPhone SE 
<http://www.macworld.com/article/3046615/iphone-ipad/iphone-se-first-look-its-2012-all-over-again.html>
 , which has the form-factor of an iPhone 5s, but the speedy components of an 
iPhone 6s. Here is everything we know so far about Apple’s newest little thing. 


Important thing first: When can I get it?


Let’s get this out of the way right now! Apple will start taking preorders for 
the iPhone SE on Thursday, March 24, and will start shipping the devices a week 
later, on Thursday, March 31. 


How much will it cost me?


The iPhone SE comes in two storage capacities. The 16GB version is $399 
unlocked, and the 64GB version is $499 unlocked. 

(Nope, there’s no 32GB iPhone SE, and nothing bigger than 64GB. If you need 
more storage, the iPhone 6s comes in 128GB size for $849 unlocked, or $949 for 
an unlocked 128GB iPhone 6s Plus.) 

Is it worth it? Check out Jason Snell’s  
<http://www.macworld.com/article/3046615/iphone-ipad/iphone-se-first-look-its-2012-all-over-again.html>
 first look at the iPhone SE. 


Can I pay in installments?


Of course you can. This is America. 

<image003.jpg>

First, the bad news: The iPhone SE is not eligible for Apple’s iPhone Upgrade 
Program 
<http://www.macworld.com/article/2982376/apple-phone/iphone-6s-pricing-plan-offers-frequent-upgrades-and-applecare-for-a-premium.html>
 , which only covers the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, and only when you buy it from 
the Apple Store. 

But there is also good news! The new iPhone SE is eligible for the “trade up 
with installments” program Apple announced in February 
<http://www.macworld.com/article/3035012/apple-phone/apples-new-trade-up-with-installments-plan-makes-it-more-affordable-to-upgrade-your-iphone.html>
 , but you can only get this deal by bringing your old device to the Apple 
Store. Depending on which model you’re trading up from, your iPhone SE could be 
as little as $10/month. 

“Carrier financing” is available—those are installment plans from the carriers, 
like T-Mobile Jump on Demand or AT&T Next. You can purchase your iPhone from 
Apple and then compare plans from multiple carriers, including Sprint Easy Pay, 
T-Mobile Equipment Installment Plan, and Verizon Device Payment. Or you can 
purchase the iPhone SE directly from your carrier of choice. 

Apple also has a financing program through Barclaycard, so you could put your 
new iPhone SE on installments that way. That’s not the same as the iPhone 
Upgrade Program, which is an 18-month financing term that lets you upgrade 
after 12 months and includes AppleCare+. Financing an iPhone SE through 
Barclaycard just lets you spread out the payments of the full retail price. 


What’s the screen like, besides 4 glorious inches?


It’s a 4-inch screen, just like the iPhone 5s, 5c, and 5. (iPhones before that 
had a 3.5-inch screen.) The resolution is the same, too: 1136x640 at 326 pixels 
per inch. 

That’s the same ppi density as the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and 6s—the iPhone SE 
screen won’t look any worse, just smaller. The really big iPhones (the 5.5-inch 
6 Plus and 6s Plus) have 1920x1080 screens at 401ppi. 

<image004.jpg>Apple


Does it have 3D Touch?


No. You can take Live Photos, and tap and hold the screen to see them animate, 
but the iPhone SE doesn’t have the full 3D Touch feature. You can’t deep-press 
home screen icons for Quick Actions, or use the Peek and Pop gestures. Bummer. 

3D Touch is currently exclusive to the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. 


Physically, how close is it to the iPhone 5s?


Extremely close. Apple mentions some incredibly subtle differences, like 
“bead-blasted aluminum for a satin-like finish,” but the size and shape are the 
same. Both the iPhone SE and the now-discontinued iPhone 5s are 4.87 inches 
tall, 2.31 inches wide, and 0.30 inch thick. You should even be able to use the 
same cases on both. 

The iPhone SE weighs 3.99 ounces, and the iPhone 5s weighs 3.95 ounces. Almost 
the same. 


What colors does it come in?


The four you’d expect, same as the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus: silver, gold, rose 
gold, and space gray. The space gray version has a black bezel around the 
screen, while the other three have white bezels. The ring around the home 
button matches the color of the metal back. 

And yes, “rose gold” could be colloquially known as “pink,” but it has a golden 
undertone that makes it look a little more sophisticated than a pure 
cotton-candy pink. 

<image005.jpg>Apple

Apple’s iPhone SE has the processing power of the iPhone 6S 


Tell me about the cameras


The rear-facing “iSight” camera has a 12-megapixel sensor with Apple’s Focus 
Pixels and True Tone flash. It can shoot 4K video and up to 63-megapixel 
panoramas. 

The iPhone SE’s front-facing “FaceTime HD” camera takes 1.2 megapixel stills 
and records 720p video. It gets the Retina Flash feature, which lights up the 
phone’s entire screen for a more natural looking flash, great for selfies. The 
front camera even has burst mode, like the rear camera does. 

To compare, the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus have all these features, but on those 
flagship devices, the front camera is 5-megapixels, not 1.2. The iPhone 6s Plus 
has optical image stabilization for both photos and video, but it’s the only 
device that does. (The iPhone 6 Plus does for photos but not video.) 


4K video? Does it have the same video modes as the bigger iPhones?


Yep! You can record 4K video at 30 frames per second (fps). If you go down to 
1080p video, you can opt to shoot at 30fps or 60fps, but 720p video is always 
30fps. Slo-mo is supported, at 120fps for 1080p, or 240fps for 720p. The 
time-lapse mode is here, and you get cinematic video stabilization in 1080p and 
720p modes, but the iPhone SE lacks the optical image stabilization for video 
that’s exclusive to the iPhone 6s Plus. You can even take 8-megapixel still 
images while you’re recording video. 


What kind of chip does it use?


The iPhone SE has the same 64-bit A9 system-on-a-chip, featuring the M9 motion 
coprocessor, as the flagship iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. 

When we reviewed the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus 
<http://www.macworld.com/article/2986703/smartphones/iphone-6s-and-6s-plus-review-the-best-iphone-ever-by-a-wide-margin.html>
 , we tested the A9 with GeekBench 3 and found it smoked all other 
iPhones—especially the iPhone 5s, which this new iPhone SE replaces. You can 
see those results below—longer bars mean faster performance. It’s a speedy 
little chip. 

 
<http://images.techhive.com/images/article/2015/09/geekbench-6s-100617342-orig.png>
 <image006.png>Jason Snell


What about the the battery life?


So glad you asked. One huge advantage of using the powerful A9 chip on a device 
with a smaller screen is that iPhone SE users should actually see better 
battery life than the larger-screened iPhone 6s and 6s Plus. 

Apple quotes up to 50 hours of audio playback, or up to 13 hours of video. 
Using the Internet, you should get 13 hours of LTE or Wi-Fi, and 12 hours of 
3G. You could talk for up to 14 hours on the 3G network, if you still use your 
iPhone for actual phone calls. And it should last up to 10 days in standby 
mode. We’ll test all these when we get our review unit. 


Can it use Apple Pay?


Yes. Thanks to Touch ID, built-in NFC, and the Secure Enclave, the iPhone SE is 
compatible with Apple Pay, which debuted with the iPhone 6 and recently spread 
to more countries, including Canada, the United Kingdom, and China. 

 
<http://images.techhive.com/images/article/2016/03/screen-shot-2016-03-21-at-10.36.52-am-2-100651725-orig.png>
 <image007.png>


Does it have a headphone jack?


Yes! We’ve heard rumors that the iPhone 7 may ditch the 3.5mm headphone jack, 
restricting users to Bluetooth or Lightning headphones instead. But the iPhone 
SE has the same headphone jack you’ve been using for decades now. Whew. 

Got more questions about the iPhone SE? Let us know in the comments and we’ll 
update this as we find the answers. 

Related: 

·         <http://www.macworld.com/category/hardware> Hardware

·         <http://www.macworld.com/category/apple-phone> iPhone

·         <http://www.macworld.com/category/ios> iOS

·         <http://www.macworld.com/tag/iphone-se/> iPhone SE

<image008.png>

Shop ▾

What is this? 

<image009.png>Amazon Shop buttons are programmatically attached to all reviews, 
regardless of products' final review scores. Our parent company, IDG, receives 
advertisement revenue for shopping activity generated by the links. Because the 
buttons are attached programmatically, they should not be interpreted as 
editorial endorsements. 

<image010.jpg>

Susie Ochs Executive Editor

 <https://twitter.com/sfsooz> <image011.png> 
<https://plus.google.com/u/0/+SusieOchs/posts> <image012.png>

Susie has been covering Apple since 2006, and when she isn't glued to her 
MacBook Air and iPhone, you can find her building sand castles at the beach or 
snowboarding in the mountains.

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