Saturday, 29 September 2012
And just like that, months and months of breathless speculation have finally come to an end. Apple Phil Schiller has just officially announced the new iPhone 5 at the company massive press event here in San Francisco, less than a year since its predecessor was unveiled.
We can finally put the debate to rest Apples newest mobile juggernaut is called the iPhone 5 (despite actually being the sixth iPhone to hit the market). Its 20% lighter than the iPhone 4S, 18% thinner, and crafted out of (what else?) glass and aluminum. Pre-orders for the iPhone 5 will begin on Friday, September 14, and the device will ship to lucky consumers starting on September 21. As usual, the device will be available in 16, 32, and 64GB models, which will cost $199, $299, and $399 respectively with a two-year contract from AT&T, Verizon, or Sprint. The long-rumored (and handsome) two-toned design is indeed legitimate, as is the new iPhones larger 4-inch Retina Display. And yes, that 16:9 display runs at 1136 x 640 with five rows of icons. According to Schiller, its the most accurate display in the industry because the touch sensors are embedded in the display as well. As expected, Apple has also unveiled a brand new chipset for the iPhone 5: the A6, which Schiller says is a full two times faster than the A5 chip in the iPhone 4S The iPhone 4S battery life wasnt anything to write home about, but the iPhone 5 seems equipped to do much better 8 hours of 3G talk time, as well as 8 hours of 3G and LTE web browsing to be precise. The iPhones audio system has been bolstered with a smaller (but improved speaker). There are also now three microphones in the mix: one on the front, one on the back, and another on the bottom. That oft-rumored miniature Dock Connector is real: its all-digital, has eight pins and its called Lightning. Yes, theres an adapter for it, but no word yet on exactly what it will cost you. Connectivity hardly a surprise at this point, but the iPhone 5 packs support for Sprint, Verizon, and AT&Ts LTE networks here in the States. Whats really impressive is that combined that LTE support with 2.4GHz and 5GHz 802.11n Wi-Fi onto a single ultra chip. Despite what a handful of leaks pointed to in the weeks leading up to the event, theres been no mention of an integrated NFC chip yet. Camera Smartphone cameras are really starting to give their point-and-shoot brethren a run for their money (think Nokias PureView and HTCs ImageSense tech), but instead of running up the megapixel count, Apple has stuck with an 8-megapixel camera. That said, the backside-illuminated sensor is smaller, and features much better low-light performance (finally!).
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