Let's take a look at iPhone 6s and 6s plus. We knew the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus were thicker and heavier than
their predecessors, but it's more noticeable in hand than we expected.
These are still relatively light and thin flagships (outside
from Samsung, you won't find many premium-built phones that are better
in this respect). But the difference is big enough from last year's
iPhones that we'd no longer call light and thin killer features. Samsung
is now the clear leader in that category.
That puts a lot of pressure on 3D Touch – the new feature that caused
the new models to bulk up. So far 3D Touch looks very cool; if you've
used an Apple Watch or 2015 MacBook,
you're already well familiar with the basic concept. The phone can
recognize not just touches on the screen, but deep presses and (unique
to the iPhones) deeper presses.
It's handy having quick shortcuts that jump
straight into commonly used sub-sections of apps. A deep press on the
phone icon, for example, lets you create a new contact, and a deep press
on iBooks lets you search the store. There's also Peek and Pop: a
first-level deep press gives you a pop-up preview of something like an
email or photo, and a second-level press pops you all the way into it
(full screen).
Our favorite 3D Touch feature so far is cursor control. In a text entry
field, press on the keyboard and you can slide your finger around as a
cursor, to make text editing easier. The iPads also got this capability
with iOS 9, only it's activated by placing two fingers on the keyboard, instead of deep-pressing (which no current iPads support).
There's no reason, though, that last year's iPhone 6 Plus
couldn't have gotten cursor control support by using two fingers. It
would be a bit more cramped than it is on an iPad, but apart from
needing to use 3D Touch to sell this year's models, it's hard to see why
cursor control was left out of last year's phablet.
We aren't yet sure if 3D Touch is a groundbreaking
feature, or whether it's just adding an unnecessary layer of complexity
to smartphones. At the very least, though, it's going to be a handy
shortcut tool, a bit like right clicks on desktop PCs.
The other big upgrades are speed and cameras. Our early test shots look
good, but we'll wait to say much about photo quality until we spend more
time with them and run our full review. Both new iPhones are noticeably
zippier than last year's models, but we still think the iPhones 6 and 6
Plus are plenty fast and powerful for most smartphone shoppers.
We'll cover much more ground in our full iPhone 6s
and 6s Plus reviews. Right now they look a lot like other S-year iPhone
updates: better than last year's models, but owners of those phones will
do just fine standing pat.
Credit: Gizmag
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