Header Ads

iPhone X hands-on: High price, new screen, no Home button

The brand new iPhone X -- that's pronounced "ten," by the way, not "ex" -- is a phone of firsts for Apple. The 5.8-inch OLED screen isn't just larger, it also uses a different technology that Apple says will make colors absolutely pop. It's also the first iPhone to completely do away with the iconic home button. And the first to offer Face ID as a new way to securely unlock the phone and pay in the check-out line. 

The iPhone X alone is Apple's only new device to have optical image stabilization on both rear 12-megapixel camera lenses, a portrait mode on the front-facing camera (despite just one lens and not two), and -- more breezily -- a new feature to animate emojis. 

These are the distinguishing features we looked at when going hands-on with Apple's newest, largest and priciest iPhone at Apple's equally new Apple Park headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. -- see for yourself in the videos above and below.

You won't get the iPhone X's large, OLED screen or face unlocking on the more traditional iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, which were also announced Tuesday. And that's by design. The boldness of the iPhone X design is exactly what makes it Apple's extra-special cherry on top to mark the 10th anniversary of the very first iPhone in 2007, which revolutionized at that time everything a smartphone could be, and hurled us on the path that led to what smartphones are today. 

Apple in no way abandons the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus. All three new handsets for 2017 get a major feature that Apple's been lagging on for years: Qi wireless charging (pronounced "chee"). Wireless charging is now a Samsung staple that already works with both Qi and PMA standards. While Apple only mentioned Qi support and not PMA, it's nevertheless a key addition that could kick up demand for wireless charging in a way that Samsung, LG, Nokia and Microsoft hadn't been able to accomplish before.

The iPhone X, iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus are also the first phones to launch Apple's iOS 11 software, which comes with improvements for Siri, the lock screen and notifications, and all these smaller surprises, too.

The two biggest questions for me focus on the iPhone X's most daring design change, ditching the home button. Will that actually make the phone more convenient to use? And will using your face to unlock the phone benefit you, or is it just a workaround? 

It's clear that Apple is prepping iPhone users to wave goodbye to the home button, by framing its dismissal as a feature. But until we can thoroughly test it to see how well it actually works, we're dubious if this is an empty upsell. If it does work well, you can bet Samsung will step up its game to make its own facial recognition software secure enough for mobile payments (right now, that's just iris scanning and the fingerprint reader). It's likely other phonemakers would ditch a current trend to put the fingerprint reader on the back and adopt -- or at least experiment -- with face unlocking, too.

Apple die-hards will certainly pick up one of the three new phones. Now it's time for on-the-fencers to make their decision. As we head into a crazy-competitive holiday season, the iPhone X, 8 and 8 Plus will together lock arms against Samsung's best-selling Galaxy Note 8, LG's video-focused V30 and Google's upcoming Pixel 2 for smartphone supremacy.

Powered by Blogger.