(light music)
- Hey, this is the iPhone XR.
It's Apple's new mainstream
iPhone which starts at $750.
Excuse me, are you already typing?
Are you already leaving a comment
about display resolution and pricing
and OLEDs versus LCD, can you just stop?
We can do that later.
We'll have a great time down there.
For now, just hang out a
second and ask yourself,
how much do you really, really care
about the display on a phone?
I know a lot of people have
questions about the 10 R size,
this weird, not huge
and not small 6.1 inches
and I'll get to that.
But I'm telling you the deciding factor
between the 10 S and
the 10 R is the screen.
If you could put a dollar amount
on how much you care about the screen,
would that dollar amount be $250?
Because that is exactly
how much you need to care
in order to buy an iPhone
10 S instead of the 10 R.
Let me explain and then
you can all do your thing.
Okay, so last month I reviewed
the iPhone 10 S and 10 S max,
which are Apple's new flagship phones.
They have new A-12 processors,
edge to edge OLED displays,
Apple's latest camera
system that does smart HDR,
it's essentially everything
Apple can fit into a phone.
And the iPhone 10 R is
basically the iPhone 10S
with a slightly worse display.
That's it, that's the whole thing.
It's got the same A-12 bionic processor,
the same main camera with
smart HDR, the same iOS 12,
but instead of that edge to edge OLED,
there's a 6.1 inch liquid retina LCD.
And the display is fine.
It's lower resolution and
pixel density than OLEDs
in new flagship phones like
the 10 S and the Galaxy S nine
and Pixel three, but if you're upgrading
from a previous LCD iPhone
it's going to look really familiar.
I do think it's a little worse
than previous LCD iPhones
when you look at it off axis.
It shifts a tiny bit pink and
the brightness drops quickly,
which means it can sometimes
look a little shimmery,
but honestly you have to
be a huge display nerd
to really notice that.
What you will definitely
notice is the larger bezel
around the entire display
and Apple's notch.
The notch is the same deal
as the iPhone 10 and 10 S.
It houses a face ID system
in the front facing camera,
but the thicker bezel is there
because Apple had to fit the backlight
for the LCD panel somewhere.
Don't get me wrong, that
bezel looks gigantic
and especially silly next to the 10 S
but the backlight engineering
is actually really clever.
You don't see a lot of LCD phones
with perfectly rounded
corners and no chins out there
and Apple did a bunch of
crazy Apple stuff here.
One of the major differences
between LCD and OLED screens
is how they produce light.
OLED pixels are their own light source
and you can turn them
on and off individually.
You can't do that with an LCD
because there's just one
backlight for the entire display.
So you can round off LCD corners
by shutting off the pixels
but it's super tough to get it perfect
because the backlight
will still shine through.
But check out the 10 R.
We literally put it under a
microscope so you can see this.
See how some of those pixels look smaller?
That's because Apple
built little apertures
for the pixels around the corners
to mask some of the light coming through
on top of anti-aliasing
the curving software.
It looks great.
Is any of this necessary?
No, but it's super cool
and it's super Apple.
All of that screen re-engineering
means that Apple had to take out 3D touch.
Instead there's something
called the haptic touch
which is a fancy way of saying
long press with haptic feedback.
Now there's only two
places I ever used 3D touch
on my other iPhones and I
didn't really miss it here.
I used it to scroll around a text field
which works with a long
press on the space bar
and turning on the camera and flashlight
from the lock screen, which you can do
by just holding on those buttons.
Apple has the best haptic
feedback in the industry
and all of it sort of
feels very convincing.
I did miss previewing links
in Twitter and Safari,
but Apple tells me haptic touch will come
to more and more places
in the iOS over time.
Hopefully that gets added back in.
Overall, I've always been
a fan of how accurate
and balanced Apple's LCDs are
compared to the OLEDs
in most Android phones
and the 10 R is definitely
another Apple LCD.
If you're coming from an
iPhone six, seven, eight,
it's going to look very familiar.
But after spending a
year with the iPhone 10,
I gotta tell you it's not
as good as Apple's OLEDs.
It doesn't have the deep black levels
or infinite contrast to the iPhone 10 S.
It doesn't support HDR or
Dolby Vision video playback.
And in general that backlight
means you can always see
the border between the bezel
and the edge of the display
even when you have a dark background.
The display does have true tone
but it's always a little
warmer than my 10 S.
Again, I think you have
to go really looking
for some of this stuff
and if it bothers you
you can just spend more
money on a better screen,
which I am definitely going to do.
Okay, so that's the display,
what about the rest?
(upbeat music)
Size-wise, the 10 R sits right between
the old iPhone six,
seven, eight size phones
and the bigger plus models.
Now, I have pretty big hands so this feels
like a nice size compromise
but if you've been using
one of the smaller phones,
the 10 R is definitely
going to feel bigger.
And it's a taller screen
and a narrower body
than the old Plus phones.
I would definitely
recommend going to the store
and holding this thing before you buy it
because it's a totally new size of iPhone
and it's different from anything
you might be familiar with.
If you're a small phone person
you're basically going to be stuck with
last year's iPhone eight or
paying more for an iPhone 10 S.
I kind of hope Apple fixes that next year
and does small and large
in both models of phone.
There's a glass back and aluminum border
that comes in a bunch of colors.
I love how mean our
black review unit looks,
but I got to see the other
colors and they're really nice.
I like the blue and the coral the best
but the project red is striking
and I know people are
excited about the yellow.
Just keep in mind that
while the screen on the 10 R
is made of the same glass on the 10 S
that Apple says is the most durable ever,
the 10 R's back is not the same glass.
It's the glass used on
last year's iPhone 10,
and the back of my iPhone 10 shattered
even though I keep it in
the case all the time.
So, you know, be careful out there.
The phone supports wireless charging
with the same redesigned
coil for faster charging
as the 10 S, and it has
IP67 water resistance,
which is a little worse
than the IP68 of the 10 S,
but it's fine for the occasional splash.
We've also got Apple's
new wide stereo speakers
which are much louder than before
but not quite as loud as the 10 S Max.
Around the back there's the
single wide angle camera,
which is bascially the same
as the iPhone 10 S wide angle.
This is our third shot at reviewing
Apple's new smart HDR camera system
after the iPhone 10 S review
and the Pixel three review
and we wanted to do something
a little bit different.
So Verge video producer
Maria Abdulkof and I
ran around Brooklyn and
took a bunch of photos
that look a lot like what you'd
see every day on Instagram
using the Pixel three and the iPhone 10 R.
And while I think Apple's smart HDR
still isn't quite as
good as the Pixel three,
I think I finally understand
what Apple's trying to do.
It flattens highlights and lifts shadows
so aggressively that
everything looks evenly lit,
and that can sometimes reduce detail
and make photos look a
little bit artificial.
Here's a good example of the iPhone
doing better than the Pixel
shooting out over the waterfront.
These photos both look really good
and even quite similar at a glance,
but the iPhone is a little bit warmer
and all the shadows by the fountain
and in the skyline have been lifted,
resulting in a less contrasty
image with more detail.
The Pixel three is more dramatic,
but the iPhone 10 R is more even.
But Apple's smart HDR
doesn't always get it right.
This photo of Maria
against a bright backlight
would be challenging for any camera
and you can see how the iPhone 10 R
brought down the highlights
in the background,
lifted the shadows on Maria's face
and warmed everything up while the Pixel
exposed Maria correctly and
let the background highlights
blow out way more naturally.
The Pixel also captured
more detail on Maria's face.
I much prefer the Pixel here.
It's the same thing with selfies.
The iPhone brought up the shadows so much
that it made the black jacket turn gray.
It almost looks like we shot
this photo with a film flash
and there's far less
detail in Maria's face.
Again, I really prefer the contrasty look
of the Pixel three photo.
There was a bunch of controversy
around the front camera
on the iPhone 10 S which people claim
was smoothing out and beautifying skin,
but Apple tells me that was all a bug
and that iOS 12.1 will improve selfies
on the 10 R and 10 S by
picking a sharper base frame
instead of a blurrier long exposure.
I don't have iOS 12.1 yet
so we'll just have to
see how it works out.
Okay, here's a really hard one.
Low light with a weird lighting in a bar.
I think most people would
prefer the iPhone here,
but it also doesn't
actually look like reality.
The iPhone found Maria's face,
exposed it correctly
with the right skin tone
and then flattened all the highlights
and lifted all the shadows
to make the scene look even.
Again, it almost looks like
we brought lights to the bar
and lit the photo.
The Pixel three on the other hand
does a much better job of capturing
the strange red light in this room
even if the photo is a
lot darker and weirder.
Now, do you want a photo
that's more accurate to reality
or more pleasant to look at?
I cannot tell you, it's a
really subjective decision.
The 10 R only has a
single lens in the back
and I'm just going to come out and say
that I don't miss having the second lens
from the 10 S at all.
I never really took zoomed photos in 10 S
and the 10 R's single lens portrait mode
is actually really good.
In fact, I prefer the 10 R's
portrait mode to the 10 S
because shooting using the brighter
wide angle lens means it
works better in low light
and takes more interesting photos.
Check out this photo we
took on the riverfront
where I was able to capture
the sign in the background.
It just wasn't possible to get this shot
in portrait mode on the
10 S or the Pixel three
which crops in for portrait mode.
In a low light, the 10 R is
obviously better than the 10 S.
This photo in a bar looks
like a grainy, dark mess
using the 10 S' telephoto
compared to the 10 R,
which did a halfway reasonable job.
The 10 R's portrait mode also
has Apple's nice falloff blur,
which looks more like a real boca than
sort of the bad cut out blur
you see from the Pixel three.
Now I don't really use portrait mode
on any of these cameras.
I don't think any of it looks terrific
or perfectly cut out, but
the 10 R's portrait mode
is kind of the most flexible
and useful of the bunch.
After three rounds of
testing Apple's smart HDR,
I'm beginning to understand
what it can and can't do.
I'm starting to get
better photos out of it.
It can definitely take photos
no camera has ever really taken before.
But it still crushes detail
and produces artificial looking images
way more often than I would like.
While the Pixel three just
produces winners consistently.
As always, I can't possibly
tell you what to like better.
But I know that I prefer the consistency
and naturalness of the
Pixel three over the 10 R.
And this is all just the first stages
of computational photography.
I would expect the competition
between Apple and Google
to be fierce over time.
But right now, I would
pick the Pixel three.
The iPhone 10 R has the same video capture
as the iPhone 10 S.
It can shoot 4K 60.
When you shoot in 24 it adds frames
to create greater dynamic range,
and it records stereo audio.
If you want to record
video on your smartphone,
you should get an iPhone.
(upbeat music)
In terms of performance,
the 10 R was essentially
identical to the 10 S
as I used it day to day
and it even had basically
the same benchmark number
in some quick tests.
It has slightly less RAM than the 10 S,
it's three gigs instead of four,
but it's pushing half as many pixels
and honestly I think the RAM spec
matters way less on iOS than
it does on Android phones.
Apple's chips are so far
ahead of the industry
that it's clear the A-12 bionic
has tons of headroom to spare.
The 10 R's gonna feel fast
for at least a few years.
The 10 R also has a larger battery
than the 10 and the 10 S
and it ran for about 13
hours with my everyday use
of browsing and email and Slack and apps.
There's about six hours of screen on time.
That's slightly more than the 10 S and
even more than the eight
plus from last year.
The only major performance difference
between the 10 R and 10 S is LTE.
The 10 S supports the
faster gigabit LTE speeds
and the 10 R does not.
I don't live in a city with gigabit LTE,
but maybe you do and it's
something to be aware of.
So there's a lot of iPhone
6 S's out in the world,
more than you think,
and I think a lot of people
are going to upgrade to
the 10 R from the 6 S.
So I have to mention there
is no headphone jack,
which I think will prompt
another round of annoyance,
and there are also
basically no accessories
for the 10 R yet.
Apple doesn't even have
its own 10 R cases ready,
which is a little strange.
And there have never been
official battery cases
for any iPhone 10, which is a shame.
There's also no third
party headphone adapters.
There's just a bunch of stuff missing.
So if you're upgrading right away,
it's worth noting that
the accessory ecosystem
is a little thin right now,
but I would expect that
to get a lot bigger fast.
(upbeat music)
And one thing is clear
about the iPhone 10 R,
it's that Apple is going
to sell tons of these.
They are huge upgrades
from the iPhone six,
seven, eight generation
with Apple's latest
processors and cameras,
a big screen and a updated design
and a competitive opening price of $750.
And honestly when we first
started making this video,
it felt like the big question would be
what is the 10 R missing
compared to the 10 S.
But now that I've used
this thing for a while,
it's flipped in my mind.
The real question for iPhone buyers
is whether spending $250 more on the 10 S,
is it really worth it over the 10 R,
because the 10 R offers almost
everything you would want
in a 2018 phone minus an OLED display.
I would pay that extra
money in a heartbeat
because I am really,
really picky about screens.
But I think most people aren't.
I think most people can
find way better ways
to spend $250 than infinite black levels
and 60% wider dynamic range in photos.
For all of those people, the
iPhone 10 R is a no brainer.
The real question is
whether you, yeah you,
think the better screen
on the 10 S is worth $250.
Now you can leave a comment.
Hey everybody, thank you
so much for watching.
We talked a lot about the iPhone 10 S
and the Pixel three in this review.
Those reviews in full
are up on the channel,
go check them out,
subscribe if you haven't.
If you like the wallpaper we use
as much as I do, check out
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It's right there, all
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they're great, thanks so much.
