Friday, November 22, 2024

Apple’s New iPhone 16 Pro Delivers Delight And Disappointment

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Apple’s community is preparing to enjoy the latest iPhone hardware with the highest specifications, a new and physical user interface around the camera, and the transformative power of AI. While these will delight, they all arrive with an air of disappointment.

The specifications may be higher than the iPhone 15 models they replace, but they are not significantly higher. The display can go a little dimmer and a little brighter as required. The A18 Pro chipset runs faster than the iPhone 15 Pro’s A17 Pro, which was already enough to cope with most of the phone’s demands. Apple has increased the memory with a view to supporting new AI tools, and the battery life when watching videos has increased.

All of these are larger and more welcoming than twelve months ago, but none feel like progress. Instead, Apple has kept pace with wider industry trends, and as the only manufacturer of iPhones, those looking for something a bit better have no choice but to buy the iterative update.

But there’s one area where Apple has innovated hard.

Following on from the introduction of the programmable Action Button to the iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max last year, Apple has gone button crazy. The Action Button is now available over all four iPhone 16 models, and a second capacitive button has been added. The Camera Control button acts as a shutter button, but thanks to its capacitive nature, it can offer a multitude of functions, all accessible under a single finger.

This includes controls for exposure and depth of field, along with photo filters, zoom, and switching between photo and video modes. There’s no doubt that the camera control button is a welcome addition to the interface. Forbes contributor David Phelan picks out this one change as a game-changer for the shutterbugs:

“There’s a learning curve here, but it’s shallow and easily managed. And the results are terrific—this is easily the best way to shoot video and stills on an iPhone, with perfect placing of the button and fast and responsive mechanics in the Control itself.”

The camera control button is one of the delights of the new iPhone design, but it’s arguably the only significant addition to the package. Does one button make a banquet?

There is, of course, one elephant in the smartphone room that is revolutionising the space. The use of generative artificial intelligence.

The iPhone 16 family has been heralded as the first to be built for Apple Intelligence. The use of generative AI in smartphones burst into the public consciousness with the Google Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro in October 2023, and the second generation of the software launched in August 2024.

Since then, Apple’s generative AI system—the clunkily backronymed Apple Intelligence—has been presented to the press twice by Apple, first at June’s Worldwide Developer Conference and then at the launch of the iPhone 16 family itself. Yet, it is still not available for public release.

The first hints of generative AI will be added to iOS in the v18.1 update due in October, with the addition of the iconic ChatGPT not happening until December, and the core functionality, as seen across the Android platform, may arrive by March 2025.

The most significant innovation in the smartphone space will not be available to iPhone users until Spring next year. In that same window, the majority of Android users will have seen not only the full suite of first-generation generative AI but will have received the updated second-generation software.

Even with the most generous reading of the “Apple is not first, but Apple is the best” mythic storytelling, Apple has missed the boat on AI and is struggling to catch up.

AI has changed the smartphone game and Apple promises that Apple Intelligence will do that when it finally arrives. For now, it is impossible to judge if Tim Cook and his team have called it correctly.

The Camera Control button has improved the camera game. Yet, it would be remiss not to mention that the software on this is not ready either, and key features (such as a half-press to hold focus) are expected in a later update, but Apple has not offered a timescale.

Finally, the Top Trumps styled raising of each specification by a few percentage points each year brings us more battery life, brighter screens, faster processors, and more memory.

There are moments of delight, the promise of more, and the allure of the Apple brand. Ultimately, the iPhone 16 Pro—and the iPhone 16 family as a whole—is little more than an iterative update on last year’s iPhone 15 Pro.

Now read more about Apple’s decision to downgrade the iPhone 16 family in Europe…

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