Apple
announced their new iPhone 6S and 6S Plus today at its fall event in San
Francisco. The phones have been given the standard Apple “S” treatment, with
upgrades to their processors, cameras, and a smattering of other features
including the long-rumored 3D Touch. The phones will also be available in a new
Rose Gold color, which the rest of the world would call pink. They call the Rose
Gold casing an entirely new kind of aluminum, not just a different kind of
color.
The
phones have been upgraded with Apple's A9 processor, which even outside of
Apple’s “full stack” boasts a 50 percent improvement over the A8 processor. Apple claims
the A9 gives the iPhone a 90 percent GPU boost.
The phone’s cameras have also been
upgraded: the rear-facing camera has been bumped to 12 megapixels with the
ability to shoot 4K video, and the front-facing camera sits at 5 megapixels.
The iPhone's displays will also light up as a makeshift flash, matching the
light in the room for proper color balance. Apple is also introducing
"live photos". It's basically a GIF with the option of sound, but the
camera takes 1.5 seconds of footage before and after the photo is taken. You
can also set a live photo as your Apple Watch face, and Facebook will support
live photos in the coming months as well.
The
most significant addition to the 6S line is 3D Touch, a feature first debuted
by Apple in the Apple Watch under the name Force Touch. Huawei actually beat
Apple to the punch, announcing a similar capability last week in their Mate
S flagship phone. The Chinese smartphone maker emphasizes their screen’s
capability towards weighing objects, which maybe might be kinda useful
sometimes, but Apple’s approach is more pragmatic.
Apple's 3D Touch is more geared towards
user interaction, adding new ways to access menus and giving easy previews of
content. It uses sensors in the back light, combined with data from the
accelerometer and touchscreen to give accurate force readings. Apple calls this
features "the next generation of multi-touch."
Apple
announced the iPhone 6S and the 6S Plus today during their fall event in San
Francisco.
The
phones have been upgraded with Apple's A9 processor, which even outside of
Apple’s “full stack” boasts a 50 percent improvement over the A8 processor.
Apple claims the A9 gives the iPhone a 90 percent GPU boost.
The new
iPhones will also usher in iOS 9, Apple's newest mobile operating system. From
WWDC, we saw that the new OS will feature a learning algorithm that tracks
daily habits (called Proactive), as well as multitasking capabilities for the
iPad Air 2. Notes will also get a long-overdue upgrade.
Siri is
also getting an upgrade. Proactive aside, the virtual personal assistant will
be always at the ready, waiting to hear the words “Hey, Siri.” That feature is
available now, but only when plugged into the wall.
Behind
the scenes, we’re also going to see improvements to the phone’s LTE chip. The
new Qualcomm chip doubles the LTE speeds from 150 mbps to 300 mbps, which while
impressive, is relatively meaningless as most carriers average at 40 mbps on LTE.
During
the keynote, CEO Tim Cook also touted the iPhone's popularity, calling the 6
and 6 Plus not only the most popular phones in the world, but the "most
loved phones". The new line of iPhone 6S and 6S Plus will be priced $199
and $299 respectively for 16GB models on a two-year plan, or $27 per month on
an installment plan. Apple is also offering their own installment plan, selling
the new unlocked iPhones starting at $32 per month with a yearly trade-in and
Apple Care+. They'll be available for preorder September 12.
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