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Apple's first review iPhone 11 Pro & iPhone 11 Pro Max



As you may have surmised from the names, the iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max are the successors to last year’ iPhone XS and XS Max. In terms of design, there are some subtle changes. There’s a new Midnight Green finish that, to my eyes, looks like olive and a bit military. The phone itself is still made out of a combination of stainless steel and glass but the finish on the back is no longer glossy. It's matte. It feels grippier in the hands. In terms of dimensions and weight, the iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max are a little heavier and a little thicker. This could be due to the glass, which Apple says its the hardest that they have ever put on an iPhone. Hopefully, this means less cracked screens.



Speaking of screens, screen sizes and resolution are unchanged, so the iPhone 11 Pro sports a 5.8-inch screen with a resolution of 2,436 x 1,125 pixels. The iPhone 11 Pro Max, on the other hand, has a 6.5-inch screen with a resolution of 2,688 x 1,242 pixels. Both phones’ displays have a pixel density count of 458ppi.
There are, however, improvements under the hood. It can now get even brighter ― up to 1,200 nits ― and it has a 2,000,000:1 contrast ratio. Apple calls this new display Super Retina XDR display, after the Pro Display XDR that was unveiled at WWDC 2019 earlier this year.




Yes, the notch is still there. I have mixed feelings about this because on the one hand Face ID is really convenient, fast to use, and secure. But on the other, I dig the full-screen displays that modern Android flagship phones have. Still, the displays are HDR-certified, supports the DCI-P3 colour space, and therefore looks mighty gorgeous. It’s crisp and sharp with bright, vivid, punchy colours.


The big change is to the camera system. The iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max both have a triple-camera system consisting of three 12MP cameras. They are as follows:
  • 12MP wide ― 26mm / f1.8 / OIS / 100% focus pixels
  • 12MP telephoto ― 52mm / f2.0 / OIS / focus pixels
  • 12MP ultra wide ― 13mm / f2.4 / 120° field of view
The front camera has been improved too. It now shoots at 12MP and, for the first time ever, can record video in slow-motion. Apple calls these resulting slow-motion selfie videos "slowfies."
The camera bump is contentious. It’s big and conspicuous and some people loathe it. I’m indifferent, though I can definitely appreciate the engineering that has gone into it. The enclosure is actually a single piece of sculpted glass which is hard to do.


Obviously, these three cameras will give you greater freedom and creativity in framing your shots. But to be honest, Apple is playing catch-up here as Android phones with triple-camera systems are commonplace these days. Still, Apple’s system looks mighty refined and results, at least in the sample images that I have seen, look really nice. We’ll have to put the cameras through their paces to really see what’s what.
Also worth mentioning is that all three cameras can record videos at up to 4K 60fps. And there’s a Night Mode too that turns on automatically in the dark but I have been told that this only works with the wide camera and not the other two. As you'd expect, the sample photos that I saw looked great and it will be intriguing to see how it stacks up against Google's Night Sight.

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