There's a part of me that doesn't understand why Apple gets the
amount of interest it does with something like the iPhone SE. It's a
phone that's in an identical chassis to the one released three years
ago, and beyond a new color it's impossible to know which model is
which. It's the iPhone 'Special Edition'.Then I look around the train carriage on the way to work and count the amount of iPhone 5S and 5 devices that are being prodded quietly all around. The number is staggering, and it easily dwarfs the amount of iPhone 6 or iPhone 6S handsets on show.
Has
Apple been smart here? Looked at the way people are using phones and
realised there's a massive market for a certain form factor - one that's
not only not being serviced in the iWorld, but in the smartphone arena
in general?
The iPhone SE is a phone that many might not have expected - in truth, we thought the iPhone 5C
would get a reboot, with the plastic chassis coming in a more rounded,
6S-a-like shape and allowing Apple to offer a lower-cost phone that
could be pushed to other territories where flagship phones don't sell as
well.
But instead we got a hark back to a long-forgotten era in
smartphones, like Apple slit time in two and pulled a phone back
through, and charged US$399 (£359, AU$679) for the 16GB model, and
US$499 (£439, $AU829) for the 64GB option for the privilege.
The
question of price is more important here than ever before. By launching a
4-inch phone, no matter how fancy the internals are, consumers will
expect it to be a little cheaper - and thankfully that's what Apple has
done.
It's
actually rather impressive - in the UK at least, the price of the
contract for this phone is cheaper than many flagships from 2015, and
considering the high-end internals used here, it's pretty good. The
SIM-free price isn't cheap, but it's more affordable than a 'new' iPhone
has ever been.
But enough about the price - usually, people that
are embedded into the iOS ecosystem struggle to leave it, and are
willing to pay whatever's necessary to get a decent new phone.
So
what about this decision to re-re-release the iPhone 5? Has Apple
zigged when the rest of the world has zagged, and come up with the
direction everyone has been clamoring for, making a
powerful-yet-palmable phone?
Or is this a company arrogantly
believing it can churn out the same phone design for the third time and
hope the world will consider it different enough to be worth the
upgrade?
Key new features
Besides price (the iPhone SE is
the cheapest Apple handset on the market, after all) the key selling
point with this new phone is the design. The chassis, as I've mentioned
above, is precisely the same as on the iPhone 5 and iPhone 5S, and beyond coming in rose gold, doesn't offer anything new at all.
That
said, so many people are looking at the iPhone's evolution to the
4.7-inch display of the 6 and 6S and scrunched their noses up a bit, not
wanting to make the leap to the larger size of screen (and that's
before we even get into the iPhone 6S Plus' mega size).
The
new phone is designed to be easily operated with one hand, the 4-inch
screen sitting just at the edge of a thumb stretch, and Apple is banking
on this fact keeping the handset current.
However, internally
things are genuinely supercharged, a world away from the innards stuffed
into the handset from a few years back. The camera has had one of the
biggest overhauls, now coming with the 12MP iSight sensor found in the
current flagship phones, and offering the same array of tricks. That
means Focus Pixels to offer clearer and faster autofocus, the improved
two-tone flash and Live Photos, where a small amount of video is
captured with every photo taken. 4K video recording and ultra-slo-mo
movie modes really help sweeten the deal too.
The power of the
iPhone SE is something to behold as well - it's as powerful as the
iPhone 6S and 6S Plus thanks to having the new A9 chip, the M9
co-processor and 2GB of RAM.
Compare that to the A7 chip with a
measly 1GB of RAM from the iPhone 5S and side by side they're absolutely
night and day in terms of speed and battery life management.
The
M9 co-processor is an important element too, telling the phone when it
should be heading into a dormant mode thanks to being sat quietly on a
desk or in a pocket, which prevents the battery-hungry pings that lead
to the red line of doom and you needing to reach for the charger at 6PM.
Battery
life is impressive on the phone, especially when you consider there are
only a few mAh added in here, from 1560mAh to 1624mAh, and with no
increase to the size of the chassis at all, this is a really impressive
feat and addresses one of the key concerns I had with the iPhone 5S.
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