Apple iPhone X review
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- Anonymous
- IW@
- 09 Nov 2017
TheProperGentleman, 09 Nov 2017I'm here to remind y'all that the battery test doesn't refl... moreGsmarena's battery tests never use the phone's own mobile data - only wifi. It is for this reason that the iphone x's battery endurance seem comparable to android phones with larger batteries, but the truth is they perform so much worse in real life usage. Gsmarena needs to update its battery endurance test protocol because very few people carry mobile wifi. Nobody ever uses mobile wifi with an LTE-capable mobile phone unless they stay at home all the time.
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- Bbm
- CAj
- 09 Nov 2017
AnonD-711468, 09 Nov 2017Gesture navigation and face unlock offers a million times b... moreDo you blackberry os? The first and best swipe-system
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- AnonD-607239
- j83
- 09 Nov 2017
Apple, Google and Samsung seem less concerned with quality and more in a rush to get a high price phone on the market.
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- AnonD-119751
- nCi
- 09 Nov 2017
Anonymous, 09 Nov 2017She will lost (one of) them and then you'll have to buy a n... morei am using it for the past one year , i am traveling by metro everyday at rush hours . It never even falls once from my ears. She might be very careless. Earpods are one of my best purchase ever.
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- AnonD-616861
- Nej
- 09 Nov 2017
Said it before and will say it again.. X is a nice to have gadget but an unfinished, experimental phone. Apple itself is warning everyone now about the downsides of OLED display (burn in, deterioration in picture quality over time, shifts in color and hue depending on viewing angles..), users are reporting shattered glass all over the internet (replacement glass costs USD 500+..), most apps don't fit the full screen (and developers are coming up with apps to hide the notch), Face ID doesn't always work and can be tricked (see loads of videos on YouTube), not even the battery percentage shows on the main screen, no headphone jack (obviously!).. and of course the swipe learning curve for the non-geeks now that the home button is gone.. All for USD/GBP 999! For the basic model.. Why?? More like wtf! All this for the novelty of Face ID and owning the latest iPhone? I absolutely PASS... There is much better out there for literally HALF the price (or even less). Brainwashing at its finest..... and sadly most of you fall for it every time
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- jg
- nFK
- 09 Nov 2017
I stopped at the opening paragraph - I fail to see any way in which the iPhone X is game-changing - apart from changing the price game.
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- Anonymous
- dWg
- 09 Nov 2017
Bluetooth headphones are better alternatives.
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- Anonymous
- dWg
- 09 Nov 2017
Verne, 09 Nov 2017What my daughter's buying every two months are EarPods, not... moreShe will lost (one of) them and then you'll have to buy a new pair in every two weeks.
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- AnonD-669148
- J5M
- 09 Nov 2017
Fingerprint unlock is far more user-friendly than face unlock!
I will never buy any phone without 3.5 mm headphone jack!
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- Verne
- kmI
- 09 Nov 2017
Anonymous, 09 Nov 2017AirPods are wireless earphones, I don't see problem there.What my daughter's buying every two months are EarPods, not AirPods.
Somehow she's killing the wiring (though she claims she's not suspending the phone by the wires or dropping the phone and catching the wires).
When EarPods go bad it's generally the wiring (unless they've been in service for so long that something else actually wears out). Hence my thought that getting her AirPods may cure her everlasting quest for more EarPods.
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- Verne
- kmI
- 09 Nov 2017
Anonymous, 09 Nov 2017Times have changed and apple tried to deliver best of both ... moreThe original iPhone centered its UI around the home button ... an obvious choice.
This made the phone very intuitive to use, but as time went on and complexity grew, you had double taps, then triple taps, then laying your thumb on the home button without pushing it. As complexity grows, intuitive controls become less ... intuitive.
Now with the elimination of the home button, a replacement is needed for control of the device that the most logical choice is gestures.
People may grouse about gestures, but really there's nothing intuitive about them, and discoverability potential is low (outside of pinching the side of the phone and swiping to switch tasks). And certain gestures and 3-D touches have to be eliminated from use for system control, since you may be disabling a critical control within one or more applications since the system would "steal" that action from the application.
Because of this, your gestures need to start from a point outside the content region of the application, and there are a limited number of places to do this.
You raise your phone to wake it, and you're presented with generic notifications. You see you have an iMessage and an email. Face ID unlocks your phone, and you can now see the partial content of the text message and email. Tapping a notification takes you to that app; swiping up peels back the notification layer and returns to where you were when the phone locked or to the home screen. These are all things the user would logically want to do.
But what if the user wanted to go to a previously run app? Swiping halfway up the screen and pausing reveals the multitasking view, where the user can swipe through applications and tap the one he/she wants.
Swiping down from the right ear gives you the control center, and swiping down from anywhere else brings down the notification shade.
This is nowhere near the UI mess that the reviewer thinks it is ... but it's not really intuitive in the sense that no gesture is intuitive ... it should simply not break applications that are already running fine.
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- Anonymous
- vGW
- 09 Nov 2017
Surficial, 09 Nov 2017Any midranger with near stock android would be faster real ... moreAny midranger with near stock android would be faster real world but will get slower after some time(usage). Iphones, they stay the same always.
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- Anonymous
- dWg
- 09 Nov 2017
Verne, 09 Nov 2017You do realize that EarPods are wired headphones ($15-29), ... moreAirPods are wireless earphones, I don't see problem there.
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- Verne
- kmI
- 09 Nov 2017
Love the Community, 09 Nov 2017I used to want the iPhone 8. I meant THIS 8 (iPhone X). Now... moreThe iPhone 8 is still a great phone ... it's just the iPhone X is ... better.
But even there, it is overshadowed by the 8 Plus's battery life and screen size (which is probably still better for watching 16x9 video.
Tech reviewers will call the form factor old and tired, but really the form factor remained unchanged because there was nothing wrong with it and it worked quite well. I'm probably as ADHD as they are, but I was perfectly happy with my 7 plus until the X came along :-).
And let's not forget the cost ... an iPhone X with 256GB storage is expensive. If you add in AppleCare+ (and you should considering this is a glass phone), you're up to $1348 not including tax.
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- Verne
- kmI
- 09 Nov 2017
TheProperGentleman, 09 Nov 2017I do agree with you on the software side. I miss Android Ki... moreApple doesn't use Qualcomm SoCs ... they design their own and a lot of folks think their chip design team is at the same level (or better than) Intel's. Their CPUs are (now) 64 bit only (which is why iOS 11 requires 64 bit), and they're using wide data paths, out-of-order execution units, and have made all sorts of architectural changes to improve performance.
Believe it or not, multicore is really only good for games or processes which can be made multithreaded. It's really the single core performance which is the true indicator of performance as a lot of tasks cannot be parallelized.
One performance penalty that Android suffers is that users demand multitasking, which really doesn't help performance of the task in focus. iOS allows very limited multitasking for things like audio playback or navigation, but for applications it pretty much only does suspend and switch (context switching). Who cares if the editor you're not looking at or is sitting in the background is running or not?
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- Love the Community
- Fv4
- 09 Nov 2017
I used to want the iPhone 8. I meant THIS 8 (iPhone X). Now that I see the score being 4.3, I'm no longer interested. I'm only interested in phones that is rated 4.5 and above here.
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- TheProperGentleman
- ar6
- 09 Nov 2017
Verne, 09 Nov 2017A lot of the problem with Qualcomm and Samsung and the rest... moreI do agree with you on the software side. I miss Android KitKat days a lot. After that, while the design got better, the software became more power hungry with each version.
But I'm looking for an answer for this question: Why did Apple made such a big lead if it uses the same ARM cores as other chip makers such as Qualcomm? The lead is not small by any means. Especially when looking in the multi-core performance.
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- Sailfish OS user
- 3Qb
- 09 Nov 2017
What about X gestures - do they similar to sailfish? I guess, yes. Sailfish and its predecessor have very well implemented this feature, so why this delightness, huh?
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- AnonD-711468
- JbI
- 09 Nov 2017
Anonymous, 09 Nov 2017Times have changed and apple tried to deliver best of both ... moreGesture navigation and face unlock offers a million times better user experience than anything in the market really. For 10 years I was waiting for buttons (either soft or hard) to go bye bye.
Android soft buttons look clunky by comparison. I always had to root my phones so that to enable gesture navigation (GMD gestures), now Apple does it in-the-house.
There's really no phone like this, everyone I know that has used it for a while can't go back...
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- Anonymous
- 3xW
- 09 Nov 2017
Times have changed and apple tried to deliver best of both wolrds...One of the most advanced phones so far, in order to keep up with android competion, but forgot completely about the user experience which mede them so great once.
It´s a mix bag really. Honestly it´s success will depend heavily on apple fans.
For 1200€ it´s certanly not cheap