The iPhone 16, the most recent model of Apple’s flagship smartphone, has been unveiled. The iPhone 16 is available in a range of significantly updated colors that are more vibrant than those from prior models. Another change is its redesigned dual-camera setup on the back, which is again arranged vertically like it was on the 2020 iPhone 12.
A new A18 chip with a 3nm process, longer battery life, water, and dust resistance, an Action Button that made its debut on the Pro models of last year, satellite messaging (beginning in the US and Canada), Wi-Fi 7, a better thermal design for gaming with hardware-accelerated ray tracing, and a physical Camera Control button beneath the power button are just a few of the new hardware improvements and features found on the iPhone 16.
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The new button, which blends in perfectly with the casing, enables both physical pressing down slightly to take images and swipe and tap movements to control the camera app.
Six performance cores and four efficiency cores make up the new A18 processor. Apple’s assertion that the iPhone 16 offers a significant increase in battery life is probably made possible by the fact that its CPU is 30% faster and can use 30% less power than the iPhone 15’s, and its GPU is 40% quicker while consuming 35% less power.
Additionally, the A18 boasts better gaming performance, making AAA titles like Resident Evil 4 and Assassin’s Creed Mirage, which were previously only available on the iPhone 15 Pro, playable on the iPhone 16.
With an update scheduled for October, the iPhone 16 will be the first popular phone from Apple to use Apple Intelligence in beta. At WWDC, the company gave a sneak peek at the AI software, which was previously restricted to iPhone 15 Pro models alone.
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Apple previewed a new Google Lens-like search feature called Visual Intelligence, which enables an iPhone 16 user to search for information based on what the camera sees, while also spending time reviewing many of Apple Intelligence’s upcoming features already shown at WWDC (like the ability to summarize text or emails and create custom emoji).
Concerning photography, the iPhone 16’s dual configuration, comprising a 48-megapixel primary camera and a newly developed autofocusing ultra-wide camera, provides the “equivalent” of four lenses through the use of macro and 2x crop modes (additional features that have trickled down from recent Pro iPhone models).
The larger iPhone 16 Plus will have a 6.7-inch display, while the basic iPhone will once again have a 6.1-inch screen. Both screen sizes and the 60Hz refresh rate are the same as those of the iPhone 15 generation. However, the iPhone 16 pair’s screens have a maximum brightness of 2,000 nits and a minimum brightness of 1 nit.
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With a squared-off frame, a rear glass that supports MagSafe and Qi2 wireless charging, Apple’s Dynamic Island top cutout to house the front-facing camera and Face ID sensors, and a USB-C charging/data connector at the base, the 16 has the same general design as the 15.
Although the return to vertically aligned rear lenses may appear like an odd reversion to a design aspect that Apple abandoned, it makes sense given that it enables the iPhone 16 to support spatial images and films taken with the Apple Vision Pro.
With 128GB of built-in storage, the iPhone 16 starts at $799, while the iPhone 16 Plus has the same starting price of $899. Preorders for both phones begin on September 13 and are scheduled to ship on September 20.
For more information, read the official blog here.
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