The good: The iPhone 5
adds everything we wanted in the iPhone 4S: 4G LTE, a longer, larger
screen, free turn-by-turn navigation, and a faster A6 processor. Plus,
its top-to-bottom redesign is sharp, slim, and feather-light.
The bad: Apple
Maps feels unfinished and buggy; Sprint and Verizon models can't use
voice and data simultaneously. The smaller connector renders current
accessories unusable without an adapter. There's no NFC, and the screen
size pales in comparison to jumbo Android models.
The bottom line: The
iPhone 5 completely rebuilds the iPhone on a framework of new features
and design, addressing its major previous shortcomings. It's absolutely
the best iPhone to date, and it easily secures its place in the top tier
of the smartphone universe.
I've had the chance to use the iPhone 5 for nearly a week, and have been
using it for nearly anything I can think of. Is it as futuristic or as
exciting as the iPhone 4 or the original iPhone?
No. Does this change the smartphone game? No. Other smartphones beat it
on features here and there: if you want a larger screen, go with a Samsung Galaxy S3. If you want better battery life, go with a Droid Razr Maxx.
But,
if you want a great, all-around, beautifully engineered smartphone that
covers all bases, here it is. Just like the MacBook is to the world of
laptops, the new iPhone is one of the top three, if not the
best-designed, smartphone around. It's better in all the important ways.
What's different?
Look at our review of last year's iPhone 4S,
where we said, "Even without 4G and a giant screen, this phone's
smart(ass) voice assistant, Siri, the benefits of iOS 5, and its
spectacular camera make it a top choice for anyone ready to upgrade."
Well, guess what? Now it has 4G LTE and...well, maybe not a
giant screen, but a larger screen. That's not all, though: the already
great camera's been subtly improved, speakerphone and noise-canceling
quality has been tweaked, and -- as always -- iOS 6
brings a host of other improvements, including baked-in turn-by-turn
navigation, a smarter Siri, and Passbook, a location-aware digital
wallet app for storing documents like gift cards, boarding passes, and
tickets.
The question is: a full year later, is that enough? For me, it is. I
don't want much more in my smartphone. Sure, I'd love a new magical
technology to sink my teeth into, but not at the expense of being
useful. Right now, I'm not sure what that technology would even be.
Like every year in the iPhone's life cycle, a handful
of important new features take the spotlight. This time, 4G, screen
size, and redesign step to the top.
You've gotten the full rundown already, most likely, on the various ins
and outs of this phone, or if you haven't, I'll tell you about them
below in greater detail. Here's what I noticed right away, and what made
the biggest impression on me.
First off, you're going to be shocked at how light this phone is. It's
the lightest iPhone, even though it's longer and has a bigger screen.
After a few days with it, the iPhone 4S will feel as dense as lead.
Secondly, the screen size lengthening is subtle, but, like the Retina
Display, you're going to have a hard time going back once you've used
it. The extra space adds a lot to document viewing areas above the
keyboard, landscape-oriented video playback (larger size and less
letterboxing), and home-page organizing (an extra row of icons/folders).
Who knows what game developers will dream up, but odds are that extra
space on the sides in landscape mode will be handily used by virtual
buttons and controls.
Third, this phone will make your home Wi-Fi look bad. Or at least, it
did that to mine. Owners of other 4G LTE phones won't be shocked, but
iPhone owners making the switch will start noticing that staying on LTE
versus Wi-Fi might actually produce faster results...of course, at the
expense of expensive data rates. I hopped off my work Wi-Fi and used
AT&T LTE in midtown Manhattan to make a FaceTime call to my wife
because the former was slowing down. LTE, in my tests, ran anywhere from
10 to 20Mbps, which is up to twice as fast as my wireless router's
connection at home.
Using your iPhone 5 as a personal hot spot for a laptop or other device
produces some of the same strong results as the third-gen iPad...and
it's smaller. Of course, make sure you check on your tethering charges
and data usage fees, but my MacBook Air did a fine job running off the
LTE data connection at midday.
The look: Thin, metal, light as heck
You know its look, even if the look has been subtly transformed over the
years: circular Home button, pocketable rectangle, familiarly sized
screen. Can that design be toyed with, transformed a little, changed?
From left: The Lumia 900, iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S3.
The newest iPhone has a wide metal body that stretches
above previous iPhones, but is also thinner; still, this isn't a
massive phone like the Samsung Galaxy Note or HTC One X. The iPhone 5 rises above the iPhone 4 and 4S, but subtly.
From the front and sides, it looks very similar to the iPhone 4 and 4S.
The same rounded metal volume buttons, sleep/wake button on top, and
silence switch remain. The headphone jack has moved to the bottom of the
phone, just on like the iPod Touch. Some will like it, some won't; it
makes standing the iPhone upright and using headphones a virtual
impossibility. Actually, the entire bottom is all new: the headphone
jack, the larger, redesigned speakers, a different type of perforated
grille, and a much tinier Lightning connector port.
The Gorilla Glass back of the last iPhone is gone,
replaced with metal. The two-tone look might seem new, but it's a bit of
a reference to the silver-and-black back of the original iPhone. The
very top and bottom of the rear is still glass. That anodized aluminum
-- which Apple claims is the same as that on its MacBook laptops --
feels exactly the same, and is even shaded the same on the white model.
So far, it's held up without scratches. I'd say it'll do about as well
as the aluminum finish on your 2008-and-later MacBook. On the black
iPhone, the aluminum matches in a slate gray tone. On my white review
model, it's MacBook-color silver. That aluminum covers most of the back
and also the sides, replacing the iPhone 4 and 4S steel band, and
lending to its lighter weight. The front glass sits slightly above the
aluminum, which is cut to a mirrored angled edge on the front and back,
eliminating sharp corners.
Why the move away from a glass back? Is it about
creating a better, more durable finish, or is it about weight reduction?
Apple's proud of its claims of how light the iPhone 5 is, and the new
aluminum back is part of that. So is the move to a Nano-SIM card (making
SIM swaps once again impossible and requiring a visit to your carrier's
store). So is the thinner screen and the smaller dock connector. You
get the picture.
Hold an iPhone 4S up to the new iPhone, and I could see the difference
in thickness. It's not huge, but it feels even slimmer considering its
expanded width and length. What I really noticed is how light it is. I
still feel weirded out by it. The iPhone 5's 3.95-ounce weight is the
lightest an iPhone's ever been. The iPhone 4S is nearly a full ounce
heavier at 4.9 ounces. The iPhone 3G
was 4.7 ounces. The original iPhone and iPhone 4 were 4.8 ounces. This
is a phase-change in the nearly constant weight of the iPhone -- it's
iPhone Air.
Yet, the iPhone 5 doesn't look dramatically different like the iPhone 4
once did. Actually, it seems more like a fusion of the iPhone with the
iPad and MacBook design.
And, of course, there's the new, larger screen. You may
not notice it from a distance -- the screen's still not as edge-to-edge
on the top and bottom as many Android phones, but extra empty space has
been shaved away to accommodate the display. There's a little less room
around the Home Button and below the earpiece. The iPhone 5 screen is
just as tall as the screen on the Samsung Galaxy S 2,
but it's not as wide. That thinner body design gives the iPhone the
same hand feel, and what I think is an easier grip. The extra length
covers a bit more of your face on phone calls.
Over the last week with the iPhone 5, I started to forget that the phone
was any larger. That seems to be the point. And, the iPhone fit just
fine in my pants, too: the extra length has been traded out for less
girth, so there's little bulge. And, with that awkward statement having
been uttered, I'll move on.
That 4-inch screen: Going longer
The iPhone 5 finally extends the 3.5-inch screen that's been the same
size on the iPhone for five years, but it does so by going longer, not
wider. A move from the iPhone 4 and 4S' 3.5-inch, 960x640-pixel display
to a 4-inch, 1,136x640-pixel display effectively means the same Retina
Display (326 pixels per inch), but with extra pixel real estate versus a
magnified screen. All the icons and app buttons are the same size, but
there's more room for other features, or more space for videos and
photos to be displayed.
The iPhone's interface is the same as always: you have app icons
greeting you in a grid, and a dock of up to four apps at the bottom.
Instead of a grid of four rows of four apps, the longer screen
accommodates five rows of four apps. More apps can fit on the home
screen, but that's about it as far as user interface innovation. Extra
screen height means pop-up notification banners are less intrusive at
the top or bottom.
It's odd at first going longer versus also adding
width, and it means a shift away from the iPad's more paperlike 4:3
display ratio. Pages of e-books could feel more stretched. In portrait
mode, document text may not seem larger, but you'll see more of it in a
list.
In landscape mode, text actually seems bigger because
page width stretches out (so, you can fit more words on a line). The
virtual keyboard in landscape mode also ends up a bit more spread out,
too, with a little extra space on the sides, which took some getting
used to.
I preferred portrait typing because the keyboard size
and width remains the same, while the extra length allows more visible
text above the virtual keys.
The screen difference isn't always dramatic, especially compared with
some ultra-expansive Android devices: the Samsung Galaxy S3 beats it
both on overall screen size (4.8 inches) and pixel resolution
(1,280x720). In the iOS 6 Mail app, with one line of preview text, I fit
six and a half messages on the screen at the same time on the iPhone 5
versus five and a third on the iPhone 4 and 4S. Other apps toy with the
layout more; I fit eight tasks on one screen in the new iOS 6 version of
Reminders, versus five on the iPhone 4S with iOS 5.1.1.
Infinity Blade II, before iPhone 5 optimization. Note the black bars.
Of course, you'll need new apps to take advantage of
the longer screen, and at the time I tested the iPhone 5, those weren't
available because iOS 6 hadn't formally launched. Older apps run in a
letterboxed type of mode at the same size as existing phones, with
little black bars on the top and bottom. Apps work perfectly fine this
way, especially in portrait mode, but you definitely notice the
difference. App-makers will be scrambling to make their apps take
advantage of the extra screen space, and my guess is it won't take long
at all for most to be iPhone 5 (and iPod Touch) ready.
I tried iMovie, iPhoto, Pages, Numbers,
Keynote, GarageBand, iCards, and all of the iPhone 5's built-in apps
(Maps, Reminders, Messages, Photos, Camera, Videos, Weather, Passbook,
Notes, Stocks, Newsstand, iTunes, the App Store, Game Center, Contacts,
Calculator, Compass, Voice Memos, Mail, Safari, Music, and, of course,
Phone), and they all take advantage of the extra space in a variety of
useful ways. How others will adopt the extra real estate remains to be
seen.
I'm looking forward to killer apps that will take
advantage of the larger screen. So far, I haven't found any that do it
in surprising ways. My guess is that games will benefit the most, along
with video and photo apps, and, to some degree, reading/news apps.
Video playback, of course, has a lot more punch because the new 16:9
aspect ratio reduces or removes letterboxing across the board in
landscape mode. An HD episode of "Planet Earth" filled the entire
screen, while the available viewing space shrank down even more on the
iPhone 4S because of letterboxing. YouTube videos looked great. Some
movies, of course, like Pixar's "Wall-E," still have letterboxing
because they're shot in the superwide CinemaScope aspect ratio (21:9),
but they look a lot larger than before -- and you can still zoom in with
a tap on the screen.
I think that, much like the Retina Display, you'll miss the iPhone 5's
new screen more when you try to go back to an older phone. The new
display feels like a natural, so much so that to the casual eye, the
iPhone 5 doesn't look entirely different with the screen turned off. The
iPhone 4 and 4S screens feel small and hemmed-in by comparison.
iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S video playback of the same 1080p nature video.
The new iPhone 5's display also has a layer removed
from the screen, creating a display that acts as its own capacitive
surface. I didn't notice that difference using it; it feels as crisp and
fast-responding as before. Apple promises 44 percent extra color
saturation on this new display, much like the third-gen iPad's improved
color saturation. The difference wasn't as dramatic in a side-by-side
playback of a 1080p episode of "Planet Earth," but the iPhone 5 seemed
to have a slight edge. It was a little too close to call in
game-playing, photo-viewing, and everyday experience with the phone,
even held side-by-side with the iPhone 4S. The real difference, again,
is the size. Autobrightness adjustments have also been tweaked a little,
and I found on average that the iPhone 5 found more-appropriate
brightness levels for the room I was in.
This seems like a good time to discuss thumbs. As in,
your thumb size and the iPhone 5. Going back to the iPhone 4S, I
realized that the phone's design has been perfectly aligned to allow a
comfortable bridge between thumbing the Home button and stretching all
the way to the top icon on the iPhone's 3.5-inch display. That's not
entirely the case, now. I could, with some positioning, still thumb the
Home button and make my way around the taller screen, but the iPhone 5's
a little more of a two-hander. It might encourage more people and app
developers to switch to landscape orientation, where the extra length
and pixel space provide finger room on both sides without cramming the
middle.
Game developers are likely to lean toward the
landscape 16:9 orientation, because it more closely matches a standard
HDTV's dimensions, and most console games. The extra width allows useful
virtual button space, too.
4G LTE: Faster, at last
Last year's iPhone 4S had a subtle network bump to 3.5G (listed as "4G"
on the iPhone 4S following iOS 5.1), offering faster data speeds on
AT&T. The iPhone 5 finally adopts faster LTE, joining most other
smartphones on the market and even the third-gen iPad, with the leap to
LTE back in March. (On the top corner of the iPhone, the service
indicator reads "LTE" when it's up and running.) However, the presence
of LTE doesn't mean a world LTE phone; currently, LTE roaming between
carriers overseas is impossible.
There's also support, depending on the iPhone 5 version you buy, for
slower GSM (including EDGE and UMTS/HSPA) and CDMA/EV-DO networks. The
iPhone 5's LTE uses a single chip for voice and data, a single radio
chip, and a "dynamic antenna" that will switch connections between
different networks automatically.
In the United States, AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon Wireless will carry
the iPhone 5. T-Mobile loses out. In Canada, it's Rogers, Bell, Telus,
Fido, Virgin, and Koodo. In Asia, the providers will be SoftBank,
SmarTone, SingTel, and SK Telecom. For Australia there's Telstra, Optus,
and Virgin Mobile, and in Europe it will go to Deutsche Telekom and EE.
On carriers without LTE, the iPhone 5 will run on dual-band 3.5G HDPA+.
I didn't notice any problems when switching between LTE and 4G, but I
tended to find myself stationary in a place that had LTE service or a
place that didn't, without much time to test the transition midcall.
There's a catch, though: there are now two versions of iPhone 5 in the
U.S., one GSM model and another version for the CDMA carriers. You may
not have your dream of a universal LTE phone, but international roaming
is possible between 2G and 3G. Also, get ready to accept that Verizon
and Sprint iPhone 5s still won't be able to make calls and access data
simultaneously, even though many other Verizon/Sprint LTE phones can
pull this off. That's because those other phones use a two-antenna
system for LTE/voice (voice doesn't run over LTE yet), while the iPhone 5
only uses one plus a dynamic antenna for what Apple says is more
connection stability.
Nevertheless, data access via 4G LTE is stunningly fast. This is no
gentle upgrade. In my home on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, I tested
both my AT&T iPhone 4S and the AT&T iPhone 5 at the same time.
The iPhone 4S averaged a 2.4Mbps download speeds over "4G," whereas the
iPhone 5 averaged 20.31Mbps. In comparison, my home wireless Internet
via Time Warner averaged 9.02Mbps at the hour I tested (1:30 a.m.).
Click here to read our more detailed head-to-head testing of both the Verizon and AT&T iPhone 5 versus the Samsung Galaxy S3 and iPhone 4S in San Francisco and New York.
The difference can be felt loading Web pages: the mobile version of CNET
took 5.3 seconds over LTE, versus 8.5 seconds on the iPhone 4S. A
graphically intensive Web site like the desktop version of Huffington
Post took 16 seconds to load via LTE, versus 23.3 seconds on the iPhone
4S in 4G.
Those who already use 4G LTE may simply be nodding their heads, but to
iPhone owners looking to upgrade, this is major news. For many people,
LTE will be faster than their own home broadband.
Of course, that's a dangerous seduction: with fast LTE comes expensive
rates and data caps. AT&T also requires a specific plan to even
enable FaceTime over cellular. Make sure you don't fall down the rabbit
hole of overusing your LTE, because believe me, you're going to want to.
I tried setting it up a wireless hot spot for my MacBook Air, and the
result was generally excellent.
Outside major cities, it's not quite as exciting if you don't have LTE
coverage. Using the AT&T iPhone 5 out in East Setauket, Long Island,
data download speed was merely 3.5Mbps because of a lack of AT&T
LTE service. Verizon's LTE coverage map is larger, but Sprint's LTE
network is small as well. My experience with AT&T and LTE may not
necessarily be yours.
Wi-Fi has also gotten a bit of a boost via dual-band 802.11n support
over both 2.5GHz and 5GHz. It should help in the event of interference
with other Wi-Fi devices, although I never encountered that problem
before, even with tons of Wi-Fi gadgets scattered about my apartment.
The camera
Something on the iPhone 5 has to not be new, right? Well, even the rear
iSight camera's been tweaked, but not quite as much as other features.
It's still an 8-megapixel camera, but there's a new sapphire-crystal
lens, and improved hardware enabling features like dynamic low-lighting
adjustment, image stabilization on the 1080p video camera, and the
capability to take still shots while shooting video.
The camera takes excellent pictures, a bit more so now
than before. The iPhone 5 takes far clearer low-light pictures, but the
result, while more coherent, is grainier and lower resolution than the
wonderfully detailed images taken in bright, direct light. I ran around
in semi-darkness in my son's room taking pictures of his toys, and found
that the iPhone 5 was able to make things out in places where the
iPhone 4S couldn't. Read Josh Goldman's detailed, extensive testing of the iPhone 5's camera versus the Samsung Galaxy S3 and HTC One X.
Indoor shot with the iPhone 5.
I settled for some indoor house shots instead to show off how the camera
works in dimmer conditions. Of course, you'll probably use flash in
those instances, but it can't hurt to have it as a backup.
iPhone 5 camera, outdoors.
I took pictures outdoors and in, and the biggest differences I could
appreciate were the awesome new panorama mode and the even faster
picture-taking. One of these two features can be acquired on the iPhone
4S via an iOS 6 update. The other amounts to a bump up from the iPhone
4S camera.

Performance: The A6 processor
Each of the first three years that Apple's made its own ARM-based
processors, each successive iPhone has gotten an upgrade: the iPhone 4
had the A4, the iPhone 4S had the dual-core A5, and now the iPhone 5
features a brand-new A6 processor never seen in any other device, along
with double the RAM from the 4S, 1GB vs. 512MB.
In previous years, the iPad led the pack with the new processor before
the iPhone followed suit later in the year; this happened with the iPad
and iPad 2. The third-generation iPad of 2012 had an A5X processor, not
an A6: a dual-core CPU and quad-core graphics on a single
system-on-a-chip.
The A6 is custom-designed for this iPhone, and has indeterminate
features. We know that it's meant to be up to two times as fast as the
iPhone 4's A5 processor, and it's also been manufactured to be smaller
and more power efficient. Using GeekBench, a popular diagnostic iOS app,
the iPhone 5's A6 processor shows up as an "ARM v7" processor at
1.07GHz (faster than the 800MHz A5 processor on the iPhone 4S) with
1,016MB (1GB) of RAM, double what's on the iPhone 4S and matching the
RAM on the third-gen iPad.
That doesn't tell the whole story. Giving the iPhone 5 a test running
apps and using it with the included set of test apps (iMovie, iPhoto,
Pages, Numbers, Keynote, GarageBand, and iCards, plus Maps), everything
loaded extremely quickly and ran with a lot of zip. It's hard to measure
anecdotally, however, because the iPhone 4S is already zippy enough,
even a year later.
While it looks like the new iPhone is indeed faster, and may seem even
faster thanks to faster wireless 4G LTE service, switching and launching
apps, while even zippier, is sometimes a matter of nearly imperceptible
differences. I couldn't see a big difference when opening some apps,
but Web or iCloud-connected apps definitely loaded up faster, sometimes
by several seconds. The extra RAM should be a huge help when
multitasking or swapping between multiple high-powered apps.
The few preliminary tests I've run show great promise. Running the
SunSpider JavaScript benchmark test, the iPhone 5 ran twice as fast as
the iPhone 4S (1,073 ms vs. 2,238 ms). On GeekBench 2, the iPhone 5
scored 1,461 over three tests, compared with the iPhone 4S, which scored
629. That's 2.3x faster, or 132 percent, a very big leap forward. Using
an off-the-App-Store graphics benchmark tool, the 3D Shader results in
particular reflected a 2x bump as well. It's hard to test with any
games, since there aren't any out yet that take advantage of iOS 6 or
the A6 processor. It's also hard to test existing games because they all
run with black bars on the top and bottom, and don't take advantage of
the iPhone 5's longer and more-pixel-filled display. Stay tuned for full
benchmarking results, but it looks like the iPhone 5's A6 processor is a
bigger leap forward in raw speed from the A5 than the A5 was from the
A4.
Feeling the heat There's one thing I noticed when
using the iPhone 5 for long sessions, and I wonder how big a deal it
will be: it ran warm, especially when using 4G LTE instead of Wi-Fi.
After a 20-minute FaceTime call over LTE, the metal back became very
warm, but not hot. Using flyover in the Maps app over LTE produced this,
too, but in both cases the warmth didn't seem to affect performance. To
some degree, this reminded me of the temporary "heatgate" surrounding
the third-gen iPad; it bears some observation, but just be aware you'll
probably feel it in certain circumstances. I used the iPhone 5 naked,
without a case; would a case interfere with heat dissipation? I have no
idea yet, but I'll certainly try out cases when I receive them.
iOS 6
The release of iOS 6 offers
recent iPhone owners a whole new suite of features, in many ways making
their older iPhone (especially the iPhone 4S) feel like new. The iPhone
5 doesn't have any exclusive features like Siri last year, but it runs
them all exceedingly well.
Siri has been updated, and while I didn't enjoy using it very much the
first time around on my iPhone 4S, it seems like a better partner this
time. First off, it responds more quickly, thanks to faster LTE
wireless. Siri also responds to more types of requests.
Conclusion: Who should buy the iPhone 5?
If you were to travel in time from the year 2007 and see the new phone,
what would you think? It looks a lot like the first one, but nearly
every part has undergone change except for the Home button, and so have
its specs. For a counter-example, look at the 2008 MacBook Pro compared with the 2012 version (non Retina). The exterior's the same, but the internals have all been improved.
This is the perfection of a form in progress, not a reinvention of a form. This is the reboot.
Of course, consumers are not always out to achieve perfection in form.
They want big reasons to upgrade. There are some here, no doubt -- big
ones. But there isn't a single "magic thing" like FaceTime on the iPhone
4, or the experience of using Maps on the first iPhone...or, even Siri
on the iPhone 4S, which wasn't magical for everyone. (It's better now.)
Apple seems to be saying, "Hey, remember that iPhone you love? It still
has everything you love, but better."
Now the time comes to step back and evaluate the whole elephant that is
the iPhone 5, rather than hyper-examine each one of its parts. It's hard
to find a single part of the iPhone that hasn't been rewritten,
redesigned, retooled. It's an impressive attention to detail, but it
amounts to a rewriting or a heavy revision. The funny thing is, most
technology fans want to see great first drafts, not polishes. Most
everyday consumers want to see exactly the opposite.
The bottom line is, we said last year that the two big missing parts of
the iPhone were 4G LTE and a larger screen. The iPhone 5 has them, plus a
new processor, plus a new design, plus iOS 6, plus a lot more. It's the
best iPhone that's been made. Yes, it's playing catch-up on a few
features, but that's always been the case with the iPhone. If you
couldn't see that before, then you weren't paying attention.
The iPhone 5, had it been revealed last year, would have felt like the
future. This year, after more than a year of anticipation, it feels
expected, unsurprising. That doesn't mean it isn't excellent. To get 4G
LTE and a larger screen, plus what seems so far like
equivalent-or-better battery life, into an even lighter new phone is a
big achievement. In a mission-critical device, you want polish and
refinement, not big, bold experimentation. This is a phone, not an
amusement park ride.
Sure, I feel frustrations with the general lack of surprise the
iPhone 5 seems to emit. Part of that's due to the endless rumors and
leaks of the new iPhone, which turned out to be correct. Part of that's
due to a mobile computing industry that's moving fast, and has many
players. Apple's just one of them. I wanted faster connections speeds to
justify the new Lightning dock connector. I wanted NFC-like technology
to magically work with Passbook. I wanted a smarter, clever new
pull-down Notifications screen or dock to take advantage of the new,
longer screen. I wanted something I hadn't thought of, but that would
suddenly seem indispensable.
Other phones seem to be trying to lead the pack with new ideas, while
Apple takes a more conservative path with the well-designed iPhone. Some
wonder what the future of phones will be. Has the iPhone lost its edge?
There are plenty of competitors now that offer what the iPhone has, and
maybe even more, depending on if you value NFC, extra-large screens, or
pressure-sensitive styli. I can't tell you whether the iPhone beats all
Android devices. It'll never be what many Android phones are right now,
for better and sometimes for worse.
I can say that, if you choose iOS, this is the phone to get. It'll feel
like part of a unified family: the iPhone 4, 4S, and 5 are one
continuous swoop of design, a three-step path that feels for once like a
complete line rather than an archaeological timeline of iPhone
Evolution. The near future of phones may involve new wireless
technologies and plenty of exciting companion peripherals, but the shape
of the phone itself feels ready to settle in for a spell, like laptops.
That's what happens when you find a successful solution to a problem.
The iPhone 5 is approaching perfection of a form, not a solution to a
problem that isn't there.
If you own an iPhone 4, upgrade to the iPhone 5. Even if you own an
iPhone 4S, give it a long look and decide if you'd like 4G LTE, or if
you even have LTE service in your area.
Living with the iPhone 5 for a week, I forgot about its large screen. I
forgot how thin it was. I forgot about the camera improvements.
Sometimes, I even forgot about 4G LTE, and got confused whether I was
currently surfing on Wi-Fi or not. The iPhone settles in, feels natural,
doesn't impose. Going back to my iPhone 4S, it feels thicker, heavier,
small-screened, but no less impressively designed. Somehow, the iPhone 5
and iPhone 4S feel like they can co-exist.
If you're looking for a show-off gadget, something with gee-whiz bells
and whistles, then go somewhere else...except for the fact that people
will inevitably want to see the iPhone 5 and grab it out of your hand.
But, if you're looking for an excellent, well-conceived phone...well,
here it is.
The iPhone 5 goes on sale September 21 from AT&T, Verizon, and
Sprint in the United States. It will come in black and white, and
pricing starts at $199 for the 16GB version, $299 for 32GB, and $399 for
64GB.
.