Top Apple iPhone 11 Pro Max Series Review 2019
- Alright, its iPhone time. Apple released three new iPhones
all at once this year 2019.
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| iPhone 11 Pro - Max |
The iPhone 11 Pro, and
The iPhone 11 Pro Max.
Now, I honestly think the iPhone
11 is the phone most people in the iOS eco-system should get if they are
upgrading. So we have got a whole other review of that phone that you should
check out, too. But this, this is the Pro review. The dark mode, cash money
review for professionals who use their phones to do pro stuff. Like taking
telephoto photos. Actually, I have no idea why Apple called these phones Pro. They
are basically just nice updates to the iPhone XS, but I also think its a waste
of time to argue about names. iPhone 11 Pro Max is a bad name. But you know
what, its a great phone. And I think Apple might have done it.
This is the best camera I have
ever seen on a phone. Lets get into it. (calming music) The iPhone 11 Pro looks
almost exactly like the iPhone XS from the front. Its a little heavier and
thicker, but unless you are comparing them directly, you probably wont notice. I
certainly didnt. You do get a much bigger battery in exchange for that extra
size, which Apple says leads to a four-hour battery life increase on the
regular Pro and a five-hour jump for the Pro Max. But its surprisingly hard to
check that number. I will get into why in a minute. The big difference from the
XS comes on the back where Apple says the rear glass is now stronger and it
comes in this frosted matte finish. It also integrates a glossy camera bump
with three cameras. The whole back and the bump is a single piece of glass thats
milled out. The iPhone 11 is the reverse. It has a glossy back and the camera
bump is matte. Now you know. I got a lot of questions about this matte finish and
I think its really nice, especially in this new midnight green color. It didn’t
really pick up any finger prints, but it does seem a tiny bit more slippery than
the gloss back of the previous phones and the iPhone 11. But I also think most
people are just going to stick this thing in a case, so it doesn’t seem like a
huge issue. A lot of people also asked me if this matte finish will scratch
easily, similar to the back of the Pixel 3, and so far the answer seems to be
no. But were going to have to keep an eye on it over time.
Apples finally relented and
included an 18W USB-C fast charger with the Pro phones. So you get a USB-C to
Lightning cable as well. Now Apples USB-C charger is not the smallest or
prettiest charger out there. But anything is better than the slow 5W brick its
been including for years, so Ill take it. So lets get into these cameras. Apple
has a lot at stake here.
Google and Samsungs cameras have
been outperforming the iPhone for a couple of years now. And Chinese phone
makers, in particular, have been racing each other to add an endless array of
photography features. If you are in the US, you are probably locked into I Message
and no camera is good enough to make you switch. But Apple doesn’t have that
advantage in big markets like Europe and China. Everyone uses WhatsApp and
WeChat, and switching from iOS to Android is much easier. So Apples added a
bunch of features that first appeared on Android phones.
There are three cameras on the
iPhone 11 Pro. The telephoto camera has the same basic sensor, but a faster
f/2.O lens. The main camera has the same f/1.8 lens and a slightly better
sensor. And theres the new super fun ultra-wide camera, which is basically
twice as wide as the main lens and f/2.4. And the f/2.2 front camera is now 12
megapixels, up from seven, and has a wider 24mm focal length so it can pull out
to a slightly wider angle in landscape for selfies. Apples also updated its
smart HDR processing system, which I was not very impressed with when I
reviewed the iPhone XS and XR.
The iPhone 11 cameras are an enormous
improvement over the XS, and beat the Pixel and Galaxy Note 10 in most of our
tests. This shot of Verge video producer, the writer or blogger, outside in
bright sunlight shouldn’t be too hard for any camera to do a good job with. And
all these photos look basically fine. But zoom and do 100 percent crop and the
improvement from the iPhone XS to the iPhone 11 main camera is stunning. The
iPhone 11 is way sharper, with way more detail. I also think the iPhone 11 does
a way better job than the Note 10 and its a little better to my eye than the
Pixel 3. This improvement is due to something Apples calling semantic
rendering. Basically, Smart HDR recognizes whats in the image and renders it
appropriately. I asked Apple to break down how it works for me and it basically
goes like this: First, the iPhone starts taking photos to a buffer the instant
you open the camera app. So by the time you actually press the button, its
captured four underexposed frame sand the photo you want. Then it grabs one
overexposed frame.
This is all basically the same as
the iPhone XS and the Pixel 3, except the Pixel doesn’t grab that overexposed
frame. Second, Smart HDR and semantic rendering then start looking for things
in the photos it understands. Faces, hair, the sky, things like that. Then it
uses additional detail from the under and over exposed frames to selectively
process the areas of the image its recognized. Hair gets sharpened, but the sky
doesnt. It just gets de-noised. Faces get relighted to make them look more even
and the iPhone knows to sharpen up your facial hair. Smart HDR is also less
aggressive in flattening the photos. Highlights and faces aren’t corrected as
aggressively as before because those highlights make photos look more natural. But
other highlights and shadows are corrected to regain detail. Finally, the whole
image is saved and you have got a photo. This all happens instantly every time
you take a photo, which is a testament to how powerful Apples A13 processor
really is. Here is that final image we just took. You can see how the iPhone 11
preserves more detail than the Pixel and Note in the shadows and highlights, and
just blows the iPhone XS away in sharpness.
The improvements to Smart HDR are
applicable across cameras. Here is a quick comparison of the ultra-wides in the
11 Pro and the Note 10. The Note 10 did a better job exposing the sky, but the
11 is just a much sharper photo with more detail. You can see the same thing
with selfies. The XS Max has pulled up shadows so much that it looks a little
hazy, while the iPhone 11 evenly pulls up shadows in Writer’s face, but preserves the contrast with the
background. The Note 10 did all kinds of goofy skin smoothing and the Pixel 3
looks great, but it has less detail than the iPhone. Just look at her
eyelashes. Now there are places where the iPhone 11 didn’t win in our tests. The
XS historically struggled with backlit subjects. And while the 11 is a definite
improvement, this photo is really blue. And there is basically no detail in
Mariyas face. I think the Note actually did the best overall job here. And I
think the Pixel does the best job in low light, but the iPhone isn’t bad. Its a
lot better than the XS was last year. Apples promised a new mode for these
situations called Deep Fusion, which is supposed to ship later this year, but I
wasn’t able to test it. If it improves photos taken in this kind of light, then
the iPhone will basically pull ahead in every situation. Apple also added a
Night mode this year and its really impressive. It preserves a ton more detail
than the Pixel. It comes on automatically in the dark and suggests an exposure
time, which you can tweak or turn off if you want.
The Pixel photo here looks more
dramatic, but look a little closer. The iPhone has preserved all of the detail in
the brick and graffiti, which is basically gone in the Pixel shot. Both of
these Night mode photos look pretty similar, but look at all the extra detail
in the bushes in the iPhone shot. Same with this shot. Youd never know that
fence was even there in the Pixel photo. I think the Pixel produces more
dramatic-looking shots out of the camera, but I would rather have the extra
detail from the iPhone. All in all, I think the iPhone 11 camera does better in
bright light than the Pixel 3 and Note 10, and the Night mode beats the Pixel 3
more often than not. If this promised Deep Fusion update improves medium- to
low-light performance as much as Apple says it will, the iPhone 11 will once
again be the smartphone camera to beat. Apples also made video on the iPhone 11
better with improved stabilization exposure and the ability to record 4K60
video from any of the three cameras.-
But is it really that good ? Lets
put it to the test. Alright, so were going to head out in New York City and
were going to test against the Note 10, the Pixel 3, and the XS to see who does
video best. We started out at the water and immediately you can see the color
differences between the cameras. The Pixel leaned into the warm tones, while
Samsung muddied the mid tones. And the iPhone XS leaned into the blues of the
sky, while the 11 Pro-balanced the warm and cool tones out the most. With the
subject closer to the lens the Note 10 kept the flowers the sharpest, while the
iPhone XS blurred the background the most. Okay, weve got to test the audio on
all these phones. I will let you guys be the judge. Do I sound like the
beautiful angel voice that I have, angelic voice? Of course, the answer is yes.
But on these phones, whos to say ? In low light, Apple isn’t afraid of under exposing
the blacks, whereas Samsung and Google will bring them up.
Now the 11 Pro does do a lot more
smoothing to compensate for all of the noise this typically creates. The
front-facing camera on the iPhone 11 Pro did a great job of balancing my skin
tone and just the exposure in general. Even against this large neon light
source. But it wasn’t as sharp as the Note 10. Now all these comparisons are
great, but chances are you won’t be recording on all of these phones side by
side at the same exact time. So let’s just talk about the iPhone 11 Pro. The
front-facing camera now records in 4K and the & quot; slofie & quot; is
exactly how you would imagine it. You will use it once and probably never touch
it again. The video from the rear cameras, though, is really good. Like, in
perfect light, its honestly just impressive. Switching between lenses is pretty
seamless in terms of color accuracy and exposure. And you can use the dial
method or just tap the lenses on the screen to switch. Now you can’t switch
between lenses when you shoot in 4K60. So make sure you set 4K30 or lower if
you are going to be doing that. The ultra-wide angle lens looks super cooleven
with the crazy distortion. But there is no image stabilization, which shouldn’t
be a problem because naturally, the wider the lens, the less need for that. Both
the telephoto and wide lens keep your shot stable and pretty sharp for a sensor
their size. The color is punchy and pretty saturated and in perfect lighting,
you, too, can have that " shot on iPhone & quot; look. But in low
light, even the iPhone 11 Pro, when viewed on a screen larger than its own, succumbs
to noisy blacks and haloed highlights.
My big issue, though, why do I
have to leave the camera app to change the frame rates ? Its not intuitive and
its just time-consuming. Apple, just put it in the app. iPhones have always had
great video, but the video on the 11 Pro is the best I have seen on a
smartphone to date. And the gap is only getting bigger. Enough of me, back to Mihan.-
The screen on the iPhone 11 Pro is a new OLED that Apple is calling the Super
Retina XDR display. There are still a notch and Apple is still doing fancy,
rounded corners and uniform bezels, which no one else in the industry has
really managed to match. Those bezels are still pretty big, though, especially
compared to something like the Galaxy Note 10. This is the third year of the
basic iPhone X design and Apples competitors haven’t been sitting still in
trying to beat it. The big upgrades to the screen are around brightness and power
efficiency. Basically, the screen can get a lot brighter than before and it
also uses up to 15 percent less power, according to Apple. Now in typical
situations, Apple says the iPhone 11 Pro display can go up to 800 nits of
brightness and that when you are watching HDR content, the highlights will peak
at 1,200 nits. In normal situations, I don’t think you are going to notice it.
I have never had a problem looking
at my iPhone XS display outside. But its a huge and obvious improvement when
you are watching HDR movies. I never really bought the idea that previous
iPhone displays were Dolby Vision, but the iPhone 11 Pro display kind of pulls
it off. Its hard to capture this on video, but its just a lot brighter and
punchier on the 11 Pro display compared to the XS. The Note 10 display
definitely looks as bright, but the iPhones color processing looks way more
natural to me, especially with Apples True Tone system turned on. Of course,
Apple and Google are still in a fight over video codecs, so you can’t watch any
4K or HDR content on the iPhone 11 Pro from YouTube. So this video is not in 4K
if you are watching on an iPhone. Sorry about that.
Apple has also updated the audio
on the iPhone 11 and iPhone 11 Pro, with something they are calling spatial
audio. Its basically a surround decoder. If youre watching a Netflix movie with
Adobe 5.1 sound or game encoded in 7.1, you will get virtual surround from the
stereo speakers. The iPhone 11s also support Dolby Atmos, which is a little
silly for stereo speakers, but its there. Theres also standard wide stereo
support like last year for everything else. All in all, the iPhone speakers
sound really loud and generally better than ever. Theres no more 3D Touch on
the iPhone 11 Pro, its been replaced by what Apple calls Haptic Touch, which is
basically just long pressing on things with haptic feedback. In most places,
you won’t really notice its gone and some things are actually a little easier
to figure out. Opening the camera from the lock screen feels the same to me. Rearranging
icons on the home screen is a little simpler to figure out since theres a
context menu that pops up now. Peeking at links in Safari is a little different
in iOS 13, but its also a little simpler. The only place I truly missed 3D
Touch was the keyboard. You could press down anywhere on the keyboard to move
the cursor around on the XS, but with Haptic Touch on the iPhone 11 Pro, you
can only press and hold on the space bar.
Now, I never really realized how
many times a day I used that one specific 3D Touch feature and I missed it. But
if the trade-off is that theres more room inside the case for a bigger battery,
Im fine with it. Apple claims the iPhone 11 Pro lasts four hours longer than
the iPhone XS, and that the iPhone 11 Pro Max lasts five hours longer than the
XS Max. As I mentioned earlier, its really hard to test those claims. Apple
doesn’t run a strict battery test that we can just repeat. Instead, its getting
that number by taking its huge data set of iPhone usage and applying it to a
model of the new phone. So you will notice that the only hard numbers Apple
publishes are like hours of video playback. Simple tests of a single task, which
isn’t how anyone uses a phone. All that said, the battery life on the iPhone 11
Pro has been impressive. I have been using an 11 Pro Max as my primary phone for
the past week, and it has consistently run for 12 to 14 hours on a single
charge. And about 10 hours of screen-on time, off the charger, is reported in
battery settings. That is a huge improvement over my XS Max, which generally
runs for eight to nine hours on a single charge. The smaller 11 Pro has been
just as impressive. Thats the phone Be caused for her testing and it still had
50 percent of its battery left the morning after she shot her part of the
review. It turns out a slightly thicker phone with a bigger battery was the
right move after all. Inside the new iPhone 11 Pro, theres the new A13 Bionic
processor which, as usual, benchmarks far above the competition. Theres a lot
of headroom here for things like AR, games, and high-end photo and video apps, but
its not like the A12 Bionic in the iPhone XS is slow.
Most of this extra power will be
useful towards the end of this phones life, not the beginning. Face ID is a
little bit faster and works at more angles, but its not particularly dramatic, it
just works a little bit better. I think this is the best kind of iterative
update. It made a thing that was already pretty good a little bit better, and
anything that makes securing your phone a little bit better is great. And most
intriguingly, theres a new chip inside the iPhone 11, its called the U1,which
does precise positioning using an ultra wide band radio. Apple says the
forthcoming iOS 13.1 update will allow you to just point the phone at another
U1 device to put it at the top of your Air Drop list. But none of that works
yet, so well just have to see.(calming music) Obviously, the iPhone 11 Pro runs
iOS 13 and I have to tell you, iOS 13 is pretty buggy. I saw all kinds of
glitches and crashes during my week of testing, and iOS 13.1 is already in beta
and scheduled for wide release by the end of this month. So it really seems
like Apple just squeaked this thing out the door and is racing to fix bugs.
I asked Apple about some of these
glitches and they told me they are always fixing bug sand iPhone owners
generally auto update. But if you are on the fence about upgrading, you might
want to wait until some of these bug fix updates actually ship. Assuming all
the bugs get fixed, the biggest new feature in iOS 13 is Dark Mode, which is
very nice. But otherwise, this is a lot of tiny little updates. Theres a
swiping keyboard now. Reminders is a much better app. There are better photo
editing tools and you can edit videos as well. Apple Maps keeps getting a tiny
bit better every year. Sir is voice is slightly smoother. Its a lot of little
things that add up into a big update, but if you handed this phone to someone
using iOS 12, they might not even notice unless Dark Mode was on.
The iPhone 11 Pro starts at $999
with 64GB of storage, which doesn’t seem like quite enough for that price. And
the 11 Pro Max starts at $1,099. You can spec the Pro Max all the way up to
$1,449 with 512GB of storage, which means that you can pay an awful lot of
money for this phone if you want to. If you are in the iOS ecosystem and its
time to upgrade, its a pretty tough choice this year. The standard iPhone 11
offers almost everything you get from the Pro for $699. And I think most people
should get the iPhone 11.Youll still get the improved main camera, the fun new
ultra-wide lens, the A13 processor, and iOS 13,and all the rest.
The extra money for the Pro basically
buys you a far superior display, a telephoto camera, and improved LTE
performance. And if you want a smaller phone, the iPhone 11 Pro is a little bit
smaller than the iPhone 11,which seems a tiny bit unfair to people who want a
smaller phone. The entire lineup is still pretty big, though. So if you are
hoping for something to replace that aging iPhone SE, you are not going to love
any of these options. I am very picky about displays and cameras, so I am going
to get an iPhone 11 Pro. In fact, the cameras on the iPhone 11 and 11 Pro are
so improved that I think they are worth the year-over-year upgrade from last
years models for the first time in a long time. Add in the improved battery
life and the iPhone 11 Pro-stands out as a major step forward from the XS and
one of the best flagship phones of the year. Or it will be, when Apple fixes
iOS 13. Hey everybody, this was obviously the iPhone 11 Pro review. We also
reviewed the iPhone 11, that was a fun collab we did with Dieter Bohn. Watch
both videos, they are both on the channel, and then let me know which of these
phones you think you are going to buy or if you are waiting for the Pixel 4.
== End ==
Labels: Technology




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