Monday, 26 November 2018

If you have an iPhone 6S or older, it's officially time to upgrade to a new phone

  • Now that Apple's new iPhones are out, there's a bigger difference than ever between the older devices and the new ones.
  • That means that if you own an iPhone 6S or older, it's probably time to start thinking about upgrading.
  • There are five key reasons why you should upgrade, including battery life, performance, design, and the camera.
Anyone who owns an iPhone 6S or older, it's time: you probably need to buy a new phone.
It's not an emergency, of course. It can wait until the end of your phone contract, or the holidays, or whenever you get a nice little bonus at work.
But when the time comes, don't put it off.
That's because in 2018, the new phones are finally a big enough upgrade from the old device that you'll feel a noticeable difference in your quality of life.
So if you have an iPhone 5, 5S, 6, or 6S — or even if you're holding on to a practically ancient iPhone 4 or 4S — here are the 5 reasons why you should upgrade to a new iPhone.

1. The battery life

If you have an iPhone that's a few years old, I don't need to tell you how terrible your battery life is.
I use an iPhone 6S, and at this point, it's hard to get to 5 PM on a single charge — I almost always recharge my phone in the middle of the day. And a few weekends ago when it got really chilly outside, my phone started doing that fun thing where it shuts itself off, even with 30% battery left, because the outside temperature is too low.
I've only had my phone for not-quite-two-years, so I can't imagine how grim the battery life is for anyone with an older phone.
When you look at the battery life on any of the three new iPhones Apple unveiled this fall, it feels almost luxurious:
  • The iPhone XS gets 14 hours of video playback, 12 hours of internet use, and 20 hours of talk time
  • The iPhone XS Max gets 15 hours of video playback, 13 hours of internet use, and 25 hours of talk time
  • The iPhone XR gets 16 hours of video playback, 15 hours of internet use, and 25 hours of talk time

2. The camera

Even last year, there was almost no major, noticeable differencebetween the camera on the 3-year-old iPhone 6S and the one on the new iPhone 8.
But this year, the cameras on the new phones are miles ahead of the cameras on older devices.
Here's a photo of the same place, shot almost side by side. The image on the left was taken with my iPhone 6S, while the image on the right was taken with the new iPhone XR:
Pretty big difference, right?
That's because Apple has added a bunch of upgrades to its recent iPhones, including better low-light performance and a new feature called Smart HDR, which automatically blends together the best parts of separate exposures into one photo.

3. The performance

If you're using a 3-year-old — or 4-year-old, or 5-year-old — iPhone, that means you're also using a years-old chip.
Say you're using the iPhone 6S, like I am. Your device has the A9 chip, which at the time, was top-of-the-line. But these days, Apple's new phones come with an A12 Bionic chip, which Apple promises will give the devices speed and fluidity, the ability to experience augmented reality, and nice-to-have features like depth control when you're using portrait mode (if you use an older iPhone, your device doesn't even haveportrait mode).
What this means in your day-to-day life is that your phone doesn't open apps as quickly as it should, it doesn't switch between pages very fluidly, it's slow to do things like delete emails or send a picture to someone, and it just all around makes your day a little bit slower.
A new phone like the iPhone XS or the iPhone XR would solve some of those issues.
Up until the iPhone X last year, the iPhone's design had looked relatively similar for several years. The phones came in black and metallic colors, had a round home button on the front, and relatively large outer boarders, called bezels, around the screen.
But the iPhone X changed all that. Gone was the home button, (mostly) gone were the bezels. Instead, Apple pivoted to a phone that's front was mostly screen, with a "notch" along the top to house the selfie camera and Face ID sensors.
Apple stuck with that design for this year's phones, the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR. That means that any phone before the iPhone X — even the iPhone 8, which came out at the same time — automatically looks a little dated.
Design isn't the most important aspect of choosing a new phone, but sometimes it is nice to feel like you own the latest and greatest.

5. Futuristic features

If you have an older iPhone, it can already do a lot of the things new iPhones can do. That's thanks to iOS 12, Apple's latest smartphone operating system, which Apple made available for iPhones as old as the iPhone 5S.
But there are a handful of things your phone can't do, features that will make your life easier and more convenient:
  • Face ID— Apple's facial recognition software, which unlocks your phone by scanning your face. It's available on the iPhone X, iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR.
  • Wireless charging— This allows you to charge up your device on a wireless charging pad, rather than having to plug it in. Wireless charging is available on the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPhone XS and XS Max, and iPhone XR.
  • More storage— If you're anything like me, chances are you've run out of space on your iPhone more than once. The beauty of Apple's newer devices is that they often come with more starting storage (the iPhone XS, for example, comes with as much as 512 GB of storage).
If none of this matters to you, sure — stick with your old iPhone. But as more times goes on, the issue becomes that Apple won't repair old devices. In fact, if you own iPhone 4 or 5, your phone is already obsolete.

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