iPhone 5s vs iPhone
5:What’s New
After months of leaks and
rumors, the iPhone 5s is finally real.Packing a fingerprint sensor, improved
camera, and A7 processor, the revamped smartphone is a significant improvement
over the 2012 iPhone 5.
Design
The iPhone 5s looks largely
similar to its predecessor, with a few small tweaks. The home button has
eschewed the square logo in its center, and is now simply a circular ring that
utilizes the device’s new fingerprint scanning technology. The iPhone 5s retains the 2.31
x 4.87 x 0.3-inch, 3.95-ounce build of the original iPhone 5. Probably the
biggest change to the design is that while the original iPhone 5 launched in
Black/Slate and White/Silver, the 5S will be available in Silver, Space Gray
and a Champagne Gold.
Specification
The biggest
upgrade to the iPhone 5s is the phone’s A7 processor, which Apple says has a 40
times faster CPU than the original iPhone. Apple claims the 64-bit mobile
processor is the first of its kind and will have twice the graphics performance
of the iPhone 5.
The iPhone 5s has the same 802.11 a/b/g/n Wi-Fi support
as the iPhone 5. However, the new model is designed to deliver 10 hours of talk
time on 3G, 10 hours of Web browsing on Wi-Fi and LTE (8 hours on 3G), 10 hours
of video playback and 40 hours of music listening. The 5 only offered 8 hours
of 3G talk time and 8 hours of LTE Web browsing.
Like the standard iPhone 5, the 5s will have
a 4-inch, 1136 x 640-pixel Retina Display screen.
New Features
The iPhone family now has its first
fingerprint sensor with the 5s’ Touch ID technology. This new feature takes a
high-res image of your fingerprint with a laser cut sapphire crystal, which
allows the phone to store a detailed fingerprint image that can be read from
multiple angles. Touch ID will be used to unlock the iPhone 5s, and can be used
for confirming App Store purchases for those who’d rather not type their
password in repeatedly.
With the iPhone 5s’s
new M7 motion coprocessor (something the iPhone 5 didn’t have), the handset can
keep track of users’ motions more accurately than ever without overloading the
CPU. The new coprocessor will allow for improved fitness apps, as the
chip measures user movement even when the phone is in sleep mode.
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