Hey, what's up guys will here for GSM marina, the iPhone 11 is the cheapest model of the 11 series, and the successor to last year's 10 are what's been upgraded since last year and compared to the pro versions but source of trade-offs. Would you had to live with, let's find out in our 4 of you looks-wise, the iPhone 11 doesn't bring many surprises, it's quite similar in appearance to last year's iPhones? It's made of ion strengthened glass on the front and back its frame is made of brushed aluminum, though, rather than the stainless steel you get on the more premium.11 pearl models, the iPhone 11 comes in a set of new colors and the purple one. We have looks snazzy and fresh plus. The new square camera setup makes it stand out compared to the pro model of the finish here: isn't frosted but glossy, so it will get smudged more easily and isn't quite as scratch resistant the water resistance has been bumped up from IP 67 to IP 68 this year. So now it can survive under 2 meters of water for half an hour. The pro models can go twice that depth the size is quite comfortable in the hand, a bit larger than the 11pro, but still okay for one-handed use.
Actually, the dimensions and weight are the same as last year's iPhone 10 are along that same vein. The iPhone 11 screen is also exactly the same as the 10 ours. It's a 6.1 inch IPS LCD with a sizable notch cut out and a pixel density of 326 PPI. The bezels are thicker here than on the iPhones, with OLED screens. You get used to it, but they do stand out when you first see them just like last year's 10 are.
The screen is excellent, with good contrast and accurate colors. The true tone feature will automatically adjust white balance based on the ambient light and though the panel isn't quite as sharp as the pro models OLED screen. It was hard for me to tell the difference with a naked eye. However, something the iPhone 11 doesn't offer, is HDR 10, support or Dolby Vision, which are available on the higher tier models. It does bring the same low touch.
Latency, though thanks to 120 Hertz input poling. It's a nice boost for gaming, but sadly the screens refresh rate is still capped at the regular 60 Hertz. Maximum brightness is good. We measured up to 640 nits with a manual slider. There should be no problem using the phone outdoors, unlocking the phone is quite secure, with Apple's face ID, which uses 3d facial mapping, it's quite fast as well, but still requires you to swipe on the screen after you've been recognized for audio the iPhone 11 Pro has a pair of stereo loudspeakers they're, not as balanced as those on the pro model, which has more bass from the top speaker, but they still have a rich sound with a very good, measured, loudness and support for spatial audio.
It's no surprise that there is no headphone jack here and Apple still doesn't bundle an adapter, but you do get ear pods in the box that you can plug directly into the Lightning port. The iPhone 11 runs the latest iOS 13 point one at the time of review, and it's quite familiar, though, does bring a few new features to the table. One such feature is a system-wide dark mode which can turn all of your white menus into black ones. Unfortunately, since this is an LCD screen, you don't save power like you would on an OLED, but hey it still looks cool. Another change from before.
Is that, instead of 3d touch, which activated context-sensitive actions based on the pressure of your finger on the screen? Now, there is only haptic touch which triggers things with a long press. There have been some upgrades to the photo editor, which has many new options and filters and intensity sliders to give your pictures just the right touch, and it's not just photos. There are plenty of options to customize your videos to just keep in mind when taking lots of photos and videos. That storage is an expandable here. If you end up buying the 64 gigabyte option, you might run out of space pretty easily inside the iPhone.11 is Apple's new, a 13 Bionic chipset, and, along with that is four gigs of RAM performance. Here is just the same as on the pro version, that is to say, brilliant it's unmatched by anything in the Android world.
The iPhone 11 aces benchmarks providing 20%, better CPU performance over last year's chipset. It does a great job at staying cool too, they say heat, dispersing graphene layers, so sustain performance for something like heavy gaming is great without much thermal throttling. On top of that, the a13 is more power efficient than last year's chip. The iPhone 11 has a 30 100 million power battery just a little bigger than the 10r, but battery life is much better. Here.
We measured a great endurance reading of 94 hours in our proprietary battery tests. This is even better than the iPhone 11 Pro, perhaps due to the different power draw from the screens. There's support for 18 watt fast charging like on the pro models, but here it doesn't come with a phone. You only get a 5 watt, one that charges the phone from zero to only 18% and half an hour, whereas the faster charger would get you up to 55%. There's support for QI.
Wireless charging to Apple doesn't make a charging pad, so you need to use a third-party one. Moving on to the cameras- plural here, unlike the iPhone 10 R, is single camera. Now, on top of the 12 megapixel main camera, a pixel ultra-wide shooter. The thing that's missing, though, is the third telephoto camera that comes with a pro version in daylight. Photos from the main camera have rich detail, impressively low noise and excellent dynamic range.
They aren't perfect, though colors are accurate, but if you enjoy a more vibrant look, they seem a bit bland and washed out. Contrast is a bit lacking, and there is some over sharpening. One interesting feature is called capture outside the frame when you snap a photo with the main cam. The phone will also take one with the ultra-wide two. Then, when it recognizes that you accidentally cropped a person out of the frame, it will suggest a wider angle that fits the man.
The feature also works for videos. The ultra-wide cam itself is pretty average. As far as these type of cameras go, there's no IS or autofocus quality. Wise photos from this camera are decent with colors contrast and dynamic range matching, the main cam, but there is some visible noise, and we wish there was more detailed portrait mode uses the main camera in good lighting. You get nice detail and colors, but, unlike the iPhone 11 Pro, this setup doesn't use a second camera for depth mapping.
So the subject. Separation- isn't quite as good with some defects here and there moving on to nighttime photography when the light gets low, the iPhone 11 will automatically switch to night mode and will take a pseudo long exposure shot. The quality of these is superb. There's plenty of detail balance sharpening excellent colors. In contrast, balance exposure.
We didn't get a single blurry photo while shooting either. If you ought to turn off night mode. The results are still good with plenty of detail and low noise, but the exposure is dark. There is no night mode on the ultra-wide cam and if you try to shoot with it in low-light, the results are pretty bad. This year's iPhone is brought an upgrade to the selfie camera.
It's now 12 megapixels, with a wider 23 millimeter lands depending on the orientation of the phone. The selfie cam will switch between the new wider field of view or a cropped one similar to last year's, or you can toggle it manually. The selfies use Smart HDR and their quality is top-notch. There is more than enough detail. Balanced, sharpening and great dynamic range.
Colors are accurate, though still a bit washed out. The selfie cam can now take video and up to 4k or 60fps, and it's stabilized though it's quite well, but there's no autofocus here. You can also take slow fees, which are what Apple calls slo-mo selfie videos in 1080p at 120 fps, it's kind of gimmicky, but you can have some fun with it. Videos from the rear cameras can also be taken in up to 4k at 60fps. They all have as and can use smart HDR and have a wide stereo sound, recording to 4k videos from the main camp.
Looks very good with plenty of detail: low noise, spot-on sharpness, impressive dynamic range and true-to-life colors. The colors actually don't look as washed out as in still photos either.4K footage from the ultra-wide snapper is average in quality. It's lacking in detail and the corners are soft, but there are still good colors contrast and dynamic range. So that's the iPhone.11 though it is, the budget option still bring. Some top-notch features like a water-resistant design with plenty of color options.
A bright LCD screen nice stereo speakers world-class performance, great photo quality, especially at night, and perfect battery life. So what about the shortcomings? Well, compared to the pro versions? You don't get the brilliant OLED screen or the telephoto cam, and the glass on the back isn't frosted for that's worth. Also, the lack of a proper charger in the box is kind of insulting, but overall the iPhone 11 still brings pretty much the same experience as the pro versions had a much more competitive price is even cheaper than the 10r ones has 700 bucks for a 64. Gig option is still far from a budget phone, but it's definitely more appealing than a thousand and deserves a recommendation. Thanks for watching guys and see you in the next one.
Source : GSMArena Official