I Switched To The
iPhone XR. #Helpful Post
-
Hey guys, this is Austin.
The
iPhone XR has been controversial to say the least.
On
one hand this is by far the cheapest of the new iPhones,
but
on the other you are losing a lot compared to the XS.
So
to find out if it's really worth it,
I
switched over to this as my daily driver.
Sure,
it might look like the iPhone 5c at first glance
with
the bright flashy colors,
but
whereas the iPhone 5c was essentially
just
the last generation iPhone in a plastic shell,
the
XR is properly a flagship.
That
means you've got the same excellent
Apple
A12 Bionic chip, which is hands down the fastest
that
you'll find in a phone today.
Seriously
the benchmarks embarrass
everything
else out there.
Say
what you will about Apple,
but
they are absolutely on top of their game
as
far as SOCs are concerned.
As
far as photos go, it really is only second
to
the Google Pixel 3 right now.
As
far as video is concerned,
I
would argue that the XS and the XR are the best
that
you can find on a smartphone.
Because
I really wanted to give this a try,
I
used the XR as my only camera at a recent event
and
it held up surprisingly well.
Now,
no there is no telephoto option,
which
is definitely the main thing
that
you do lose over the XS.
I'll
get into that a little bit later,
but
the basic story,
the
main thing that you're gonna find with the XR
is
that the camera here for what you're taking
90%
of your photos with is exactly the same as on the XS.
There's
also the same
gesture
based navigation from the X and the XS
and
that really does help that A12 feel even faster.
There's
also the same fast wireless charging,
the
same Face ID,
and
the same excellent sounding front firing speakers.
There
is definitely no doubt
that
there is a lot of iPhone XS DNA inside the XR.
Of
course it's not all perfect.
There
are definitely some things missing compared to the XS.
The
first one is easy, the XR has IP67 water resistance
like
the last couple years of iPhones,
however
the XS does up that to the slightly more robust
IP68
water resistance.
Something
else you might not necessarily notice,
but
it's still here is that this lacks the same gigabit
LTE
connection as the iPhone XS.
Now
as of right now there's actually
very
little speed difference that I've been able to test,
but
as LTE networks get faster over the next few years
the
XS should have a slight advantage there.
You've
also got a bit less RAM.
Three
gigabytes on the XR versus four gigs on the XS.
Now
unless you have them side-by-side
or
if you use both the XS and the XR
the
difference is pretty hard to spot,
but
as someone who has actually used a XS and a XR,
I
can notice that apps don't last
as
long in memory on the XR.
Now
to be fair memory management is pretty solid on iOS,
so
it's not exactly a big deal,
but
that is one performance advantage you will find
going
with the XS.
We're
also looking at aluminum instead of stainless steel.
Now
this is something I definitely do prefer on the XS.
It
not only feels a little bit heavier,
but
it just gives it a little more
of
a nicer feel in the hand.
Probably
the most noticeable cutback is with the camera.
So
like I said the front camera
as
well as the rear cameras are identical,
but
what you don't have here is the telephoto option.
Now
sure you've got digital zoom
and
while it does get the job done,
even
though the telephoto camera on the XS
isn't
exactly great it is a lot clearer when it comes
to
actually punching in on a subject.
You've
also got a pretty seriously cutback portrait mode.
Since
you don't have that telephoto camera
to
get that extra depth information,
it
has to entirely use software to cut out
and
it only really works
when
you actually have a face in the shot.
It
works, it's fine,
but
it's no where near as good as on the XS
or
even on the Pixel.
Something
a little bit more subtle
is
that the bezels are slightly thicker
and
that is thick with a pair of C's my friends.
-
[Matt] No don't do that, don't do that one.
Oh
God no. - T-H-I-C-C, thick!
Now,
for real, it's actually not a big difference,
I
think unless you have them side-by-side,
it's
really not enough to notice.
What
you will notice is the display.
Not
only is the screen a lower resolution,
but
it also uses the older IPS style from previous iPhones,
whereas
the iPhone X and XS use OLED.
On
paper it's not all that impressive,
but
actually take a look and use the screen
and
it's really not bad.
So
for an IPS panel,
one
of the main downsides is typically contrast,
but
this actually is a pretty contrasty panel.
And
Apple has done a lot of work with anti-aliasing
the
edges to make sure the roundabout, the roundabout?
The,
what do you call it, the curves?
The--
- [Ken] The edges.
-
The edges, thank you!
Edges,
I know words.
The
edges are nicely rounded and on top of that,
the
black of the actual display up top
does
match nicely with the notch.
They
did good job with making the IPS panel
look
quite bit like an OLED panel.
However,
specs definitely don't tell the entire story,
actually
use the iPhone XR display
and
it's surprisingly good,
even
though it might be sub-1080p.
So
joining me today is our resident screen testing expert,
Wes,
he spent a lot of time with the XR.
What
do you think?
-
I think that the display is fantastic.
-
Even though it's sub-1080p?
Isn't
that deal breaker?
-
Even though it's sub-1080p.
-
[Austin] One of the main things that surprised me
was
that this is the brightest smartphone
that
we've ever actually tested.
It
was what, over 600 nits?
-
Yeah, it was roughly 650 nits.
What
we're seeing are ultimately
some
of the best colors that I've ever seen.
-
So, you ran it through the full suite of colors tests?
-
Yes, the entire suite.
-
[Austin] You also found that this is this is
a
more color accurate panel than the OLED on the XS, right?
-
Yeah, not only that, I actually went back to the iPhone 8.
-
Okay. - To look at an older
Apple
LCD panel, and this is actually better
than
the iPhone 8.
-
One downside is that you do lose 3D Touch
which
has been on all iPhones dating back to the iPhone 6S.
Now
this is a little bit more annoying
than
a lot of the other things here,
mostly
because I actually do use the shortcut
of
being able to hold and 3D Touch on the actual
keyboard
to move my cursor around.
Now
there are some workarounds for example,
on
the keyboard, you now hold down the space bar.
But
still, 3D Touch is a little bit
of
a weird one to remove.
Now
it is definitely not all bad news.
Some
stuff is actually better on the XR.
First
of all, it has a unique form factor.
With
a 6.1 inch display, it fits nicely in between
the
5.8 inch iPhone XS and the 6.5 inch XS Max.
For
me, while I loved that huge XS Max screen,
it's
just too big to use with one hand.
Whereas
the XR is a little bit better
and
the XS is basically perfect,
but
I think this is very much a subjective thing,
so
it really does just come down to actually
trying
each one of them to see what's the right size.
The
XR, I think is a good sweet spot for a lot of people.
I
think this point will easily get buried,
but
I really do think that the iPhone XR
has
the best battery life of any iPhone I've ever tried.
It's
legit my favorite feature of the phone.
Then
there are the colors,
now
sure, if you really do want a yellow phone,
dbrand.com
is the place to be.
But
as far as I'm concerned,
I
really do dig this yellow with the gold color scheme.
The
real reason most people
are
going to buy the iPhone XR though,
has
nothing to do with any of these features,
it's
the price.
At
a full $250 less than the base XS
and
$350 less than the XS Max,
this
is just straight up a better deal.
Surprisingly,
Apple even priced
the
storage upgrades pretty reasonably.
To
go from 64 gigs which is the base model
up
to 128 gigs is only $50.
To
put things in perspective, a 128 gig iPhone XR
is
a full $100 cheaper than a 128 gig Pixel 3.
I
can't believe I'm about to say this,
but
this is an Apple product,
which
is actually kind of reasonably priced.
Ultimately,
what you're getting here is a phone
that
does fall short of the XS in a few areas,
but
overall especially when you consider the price,
this
really is the iPhone
that
most people should pick up in 2018.
And
well, most of 2019.
Not
gonna lie, I'm gonna keep rocking it for a while.
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