i phone 11pro Review

      * i phone 11 Pro and  Pro  features*

       Apple has announced an iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max that will retail for $999 and $1,099.

       Color-wise, there’s a new midnight green color, a refreshed space gray, refreshed silver, and a             new gold finish. Apple is also promoting a wider dynamic range display called Super Retina               XDR. As was rumored, it has a new triple camera system — a triangular array of lenses in a                rectangular camera bump.

        Apple has added the ultra-wide lens on both the iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max, which is shown in          the Camera app as a 0.5x button. All a user has to do is just zoom out to see more and take                  widershots, from 0.5x to 2x. The ultra-wide has an f/2.4 aperture with a 120-degree field of                   view.

       



           There are also upgrades to the telephoto and wide-angle lenses, including 100% Focus Pixels.             There   is a new Night mode to take illuminated low-light photos similar to the Google Pixel               Night Sight feature.

           Apple is using computational photography to fuse photo data from all three lenses in order to               improve image detail. A technology called “Deep Fusion” combines nine images using a                     neural            network analysis on every single pixel. Senior Vice President of Worldwide                     Marketing Phil                  Schiller described it as “computational photography mad science.”

           Like with the non-Pro version, Apple has upgraded the front camera with a 12-megapixel                     sensor. The camera is also wider so you can now rotate to landscape on the selfie cam to fit                  more people into the frame. There is also slow-mo on the front camera for the first time.


          This week, a few different financial analysts are reporting pessimism towards Apple iPhone 11             shipments. Rosenblatt reported that Apple is reducing production by about 25%.

           Today, Credit Suisse analyst Matt Cabral said that shipments of iPhone in China fell more                    than     35% in November, compared to the same month in 2018. Apple infamously suffered a              mass slowdown in China iPhone demand for the holiday quarter in 2018, so a fall compared                to that reduced level is possibly significant.




           Apple currently sells four different iPhone models, with the two bookend models — the                       iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 8 available in both large and small sizes. With so much variety, it                 may be confusing as to which iPhone is best for you or someone you plan on buying one for.

           In this hands-on video walkthrough, I share my opinion and answers to the question: Which                 iPhone should I buy?


   *     iphone 11 pro battery life *

         This year I’ve written two iPhone reviews. This one has my testing results of the new iPhone               11      models. The other, found here, is an advice column for the many     readers we’ve heard              from who have older phones—I’m looking at you, iPhone Sixers!

     *    I’ll regale them with stories of portable chargers the size of cinder blocks strapped to the                     backs            of our phones. I’ll tell them how we scoured walls in search of     power outlets.               I’ll describe               the panic that set in when the red empty-battery icon dipped below 5%.

     *  The new iPhones have improved cameras, but our columnist is betting you’ll care most about             the extra juice
         All three new iPhones met or exceeded that in my real-world use. However, my video                          streaming         tests didn’t always show as big of a leap in battery life as my actual   usage—                nor as big as                   Apple’s battery-life claims. Battery testing is a tricky thing. Between             screen-brightness settings           and our countless app options, we all use our   phones                       differently. Here are my notes on all three         phones. I have about 5% to 10% still remaining            by my 11:30 p.m. bedtime—with no extra                   charging during the day.


    *   i phone 11 pro back camera *

          Let's get it out of the way first: The new iPhone 11 Pro has the best overall smartphone camera system I've used. That may change when Google releases the Pixel 4 next month, but for now, the iPhone 11 Pro is the champ. And while I have no problem giving credit where it's due, I'm left with some extremely complicated feelings about Apple's new flagship imaging devices. Even beyond a few notable drawbacks, I wish it was simpler to know what's actually going on inside the camera.
The iPhone 11 Pro’s main camera remains the standard wide-angle; it’s by far the most useful and also the most advanced. There’s a new sensor inside that seems to have improved the performance in low natural light. It’s hard to gauge, however, because the overall picture-taking process relies so heavily on the software tweaks. Apple has increased the maximum ISO (the rating that indicates the camera’s perceived sensitivity to light) from roughly 2,300 up to about 3,400. Raising that setting typically increases ugly noise that shows up in your photos, so Apple is either more confident in the sensor's inherent low-light chops or it has added more processing firepower to fix it later. The reality is probably a mixture of the two.

Not only does the actual flash from the Sony create much higher overall image quality and sharpness (thanks to the short duration of the flash that doesn’t leave room for camera shake), it would also overpower any possible mixed-light temperature situations that you might encounter. In short, if you were thinking about getting a real camera because you can use flash, Night Mode shouldn’t change that at all.
Above, you’ll find a picture of a transaction happening at the excellent Troy, NY, farmer’s market. I pressed the 2x zoom on this image because it was


* i phone 11 pro fort camera*


he iPhone 11 Pro’s face is indistinguishable from last year’s phone11pro being built with the same notch at the top of the screen and thick bezels surrounding it. But as soon as you get it in your hands, you know it’s different.


The first noticeable change is the weight and thickness. It feels like a thicker, heavier iPhone, and that’s because it is. The iPhone 11 Pro weighs 11 grams more than the XS. It’s not an objectionable weight for a phone, and I got used to it after a few minutes. Plus, the purported four-hour battery gains are owed to this bigger beltline.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Happy New Year 2020

Happy Christmas 2019