Even with its large, 6. As a result, its body is even smaller than that of the iPhone SE, yet the new phone has a larger, 5. Although the battery lasted all day in our initial testing, heavy users may need to top it off during the day.
If you want all the modern iPhone features but prefer a small device, the 13 mini offers a nearly perfect compromise. The iPhone 13 Pro Max has the largest screen of any iPhone, its battery lasts longer, and its cameras are higher quality than those of the iPhone 13 and 13 mini.
It may be a little faster for some graphics-heavy tasks, but otherwise it matches the rest of the iPhone 13 family in features and speed. The iPhone 13 Pro Max also has improved cameras compared with those on the iPhone 13 and 13 mini, including an added 3x telephoto lens and the ability to shoot macro shots.
In suboptimal situations, you may notice better photos, but based on our initial tests and comparisons of everyday shots, we believe the differences will be small, if any are present at all. The iPhone SE has a faster processor than you might expect in such a comparatively inexpensive phone, as well as a good camera—and it costs half the price of the iPhone The iPhone SE is significantly cheaper than the iPhone 13 but in many situations feels just as fast.
If you use your phone for more power-hungry activities like games, video, or voice or FaceTime calls over LTE, the smaller battery may not last all day. However, whereas cheap Android phones often stop getting software updates soon after purchase, even the least expensive iPhones, such as the SE, will receive iOS support for many years. Apple still issues security updates to older devices, and iOS 15 still supports every iPhone from on; even four-plus years later, older phones are getting new features.
A battery with depleted capacity can slow down your phone due to power-conservation features. The iPhone 13 is a great phone for almost anyone. It offers many of the same features as the more expensive and identically sized iPhone 13 Pro model does, and it has similar all-day battery life, excellent cameras that include Night Mode for low-light photos, and a large screen in a not-too-large body. Compared with the more affordable iPhone SE , the iPhone 13 offers a longer-lasting battery, a larger screen, a better camera system, a faster processor, and an arguably nicer overall design.
In our experience, the battery life on the iPhone 13 easily got us through a full day. Through a combination of longer exposure time and software processing, it allows you to take legitimately good photos at night or in other dark settings.
Shots that previously would have been unusable now look good or even great, even with shockingly low light. The Pro versions have an added lidar sensor and wider-aperture lenses that let more light in, and we found that their Night Mode photos looked a little sharper and reproduced colors better.
The iPhone 13, like the iPhone 12 and 11 before it, has a main megapixel wide-angle camera lens and a megapixel ultrawide lens, the latter of which lets you capture more of a scene.
Apple says the wide camera—the main camera for most shots—has a larger sensor that lets more light in. Most of the shots we took were pretty comparable between the iPhone 12 and the iPhone 13, especially in good lighting, but if you were to look closely at shots side by side, you might catch some differences. Even more impressive: The mode allows you to change the focus after the fact, because all the depth data is stored in the video file.
Apple has also added new presets to the camera, called photographic styles, that allow you to use different color tone and warmth levels without altering skin tones.
The iPhone 13 has the same-size, 6. The body is squared off much like that of the iPhone 4 and 5, and this design feels great. OLED provides better contrast and blacker blacks than LCD because pixels on an OLED display emit their own backlight, which can completely turn off while a pixel is displaying blacks; on an LCD, a single panel lights all of the pixels at once, regardless of the color each individual pixel is displaying.
Apple's new devices, its second virtual presentation during the pandemic , come at a difficult time. The coronavirus has infected over 32 million people around the globe and killed nearly a million.
Millions of people are out of work amid a recession that's hitting the US hard, and COVID shows no signs of abating in many places in the world. People have been scooping up electronics that let them work or take classes at home -- like webcams and laptops -- but they've been shunning purchases like 5G smartphones. This year, the phone industry will see its biggest drop in sales in a decade, according to CCS Insight.
Apple typically holds a flashy product launch in September to show off its newest iPhones. On those occasions, the Apple Watch , iPad and other devices take a back seat to Apple's key smartphone, and the company sometimes holds another event in October for its iPads and Macs. This time around, the focus was on its other products, particularly the Apple Watch and the iPad.
Apple earlier this year warned its iPhone production would be hurt by COVID, and in late July, it said its newest iPhones, which will sport super-fast 5G connectivity, would be delayed "by a few weeks" because of the pandemic. Apple has integrated Touch ID into the button on top of the iPad Air, a first for the company but something commonly found in Android devices. As phones get slimmer and sleeker, companies have been looking for ways to cram a bigger screen into a smaller package without carving out space for a fingerprint sensor.
Apple has relied on its Face ID to unlock its latest devices instead of a physical fingerprint reader, while other companies have commonly used techniques like embedding fingerprint sensors on the back or sides of devices or integrating the technology underneath the front display itself.
The COVID pandemic makes the move back toward physical buttons, like the iPad Air's integrated Touch ID, attractive to potential buyers who get frustrated by typing in a passcode every time they want to access their devices. Starting with the iPhone 5S in , Apple embedded its fingerprint sensor into a round button on the front of its devices, taking away real estate from the display.
Over the following years, Apple packed Face ID into its high-end phones and tablets , a move that allowed it to include bigger screens on the devices but keep a secure, fast way to unlock the gadgets. Hold your device as you normally would when unlocking it, and touch the Touch ID sensor with the outer areas of your fingertip, instead of the center portion that you scanned first. Tap something to buy. You'll see a Touch ID prompt. To make a purchase, lightly touch the Touch ID sensor.
Need help using Touch ID? Enroll up to five fingerprints. Each new print might make fingerprint recognition take slightly longer. Tap a fingerprint to rename it. Swipe to delete a fingerprint.
Identify a fingerprint in the list by touching the Touch ID sensor.
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