iPhone 4S Review
The iPhone 4S is the best phone you can buy right now. That's been true of every iPhone, really.The other thing that's been true about every new iPhone, except perhaps the iPhone 4: Most of the fresh magic is in the software. When Steve Jobs announced the original iPhone, he said the software is "five years ahead of what's on any other phone." It's kind of crazy that he wasn't far off, since it's taken nearly five years for other phone software to even come close, with the latest Windows Phone and possibly the next Android.
And it's really subtle, but perhaps the most important thing about the 4S—not to me or to you—is that it's the first iPhone that's truly post-PC, thanks to a couple pieces of software called Siri and iCloud. (I know Android was there first, but if you want to quibble over that, you're missing the point. I have an HP TouchPad I'd like to sell you, though.)
The iPhone 4S's camera is probably better than your phone's camera. The iPhone 4's camera was the first good camera in a phone I'd genuinely tell you to buy since, like, the Nokia N95, but it has a tendency to oversaturate,
trading accuracy for eye-pleasing punch. The 4S's photos pack more
pixels, the colors are more accurate, the details are shaper, the low
light performance is better. And it's faster. Noticeably, but not
dramatically so. Of the cameras in some of the highest end American
phones you can buy today—the Amaze 4G, Droid Bionic and Galaxy S II—I
think the 4S's photos are the best, followed closely by the Galaxy S II,
whose color palette is slightly more neutral. (You can judge for yourself with these untouched, full-res photos and videos, of course.) I rarely pulled out my beloved S90 after I got an iPhone 4. The 4's photos edged into good enough. The 4S sits there, quite comfortably. I don't think you'll need a separate point-and-shoot again, either.And if the Flip camera had not died a year ago, it would be on a death march. The 4S's 1080p, 30-frames-per-second HD video is excellent, surprisingly so. It's not the best, though. The 1080p video taken by the Galaxy S II is ever so slightly more detailed, the colors more accurate—the 4S's video has a definite sense of warmth that sometimes doesn't quite exist in reality. It's why I'd get a 32GB phone, though.
It's my favorite camera to use on any phone, because it is the easiest, and almost always does exactly what I want it to.
And apparently you need the power for Siri, according to Apple. She only rides in Ferraris. Made out of silicon.
I don't know if you've ever heard me speak. My normal voice
is like drunken slurring thrown in a blender with a mumbling dock
worker and the geekiest kid you knew in high school, but on
methamphetamines. Siri, the iPhone 4S's virtual assistant, understands
me almost as well as humans do—I'd gauge around 85 percent. Windows
Phone's voice command hovers somewhere around 80 percent, and Android's
around 70 percent.What makes Siri vastly better than what's on any other phone right now is that it groks humanspeak. It's human enough. "Is it going to be cold tomorrow?" I'm looking at the weather report for NYC. "Where I can grab a beer?" A list of bars appears. "Is Brian Lam around?" Find My Friends, and I'm staring at a light purple dot on the western fringes of Brooklyn. Or a million other commands, nefarious or otherwise. It's so cleverly designed you never quite feel like you're being forced to remember a script, so whenever Siri failed to understand me, I was far more forgiving than when my Kinect, with its handful of keywords, doesn't know what the hell I'm asking it to do. It still made me sad, though: the higher the expectations, the higher the fall.
Siri's a lot of fun. But I mostly stopped reaching out to her after the third day, slipping back into my old routines. I suspect when I'm driving a lot over the next month, Siri and I might be friends again.
Does somebody wanna start a wireless carrier with me?
There's
a feeling from Android that you never quite used to get from the
iPhone, this sensation of being constantly connected, always in the
middle of everything, like you were standing barefoot in the middle of a
cold, shallow stream. That's there now with iOS 5.The Notifications Center is the primary reason, I think, because everything that's waiting for you to deal with it is right there, with a swipe. It completely changed the way I use my iPhone, and the way I feel when I use it. It's like I can touch a million different parts of it simultaneously, like if I were a giant octopus with a million tentacles. Things could be even better though: Why do I have to manually clear out Facebook notifications still waiting for me after I've already opened the app? Why are the X's to clear stuff out so damn small? Why can't it be smarter, like webOS and the Android? And multitasking in general: It needs to feel more fluid, more natural, more powerful, less like a bolted-on afterthought than it does now.
Then there's iMessages. It didn't feel different from texting, other than the fact it'd work on Wi-Fi and it was free and the bubbles were blue, until I got in a fight with a girl and then it felt way more like instant messaging, way more tethered, than SMS. And it's even better on the iPad, says Adrian.
And the other thing is location, and the new way it's used in iOS 5. Find My Friends is a game-changer, since none of my non-nerd friends used Latitude. I've already used it to crash a co-worker's apartment and ruin his Friday night. Foursquare lets me know every time I pass a restaurant I want to go to. Reminders tells me to send emails when I get to work. It also makes it feel more like Android, in that it killed my battery roughly 30 percent faster. Oh. The other other thing. When I pulled this phone out of the box, I didn't plug it into a computer. I punched in my iCloud account. And my blank iPhone 4S suddenly looked a lot like my iPhone 4. Over a year ago, I asked why I wasn't the center of the Apple universe. Why I had to plug my iThing into a computer. I don't anymore. It syncs, wirelessly, to iCloud. Or to my computer, when I want it to. It means never worrying again about the last time I synced my phone. Or dumped photos. iCloud's not perfect. But it's good, and it's a security net way too many people lived without.
There are a lot of other new things in iOS 5. Like 200 or so, mostly small, but nice things, like hourly weather updates, or deleting songs from your phone, or Twitter built right in. But connection. That's the main one.
I wish iOS 5 felt fresher, though. And oh god, the leather. Make it stop.
But I don't think they'll be better than the iPhone 4S, not really, though they may come very, very close, closer than anything's come before, like an asymptote.
This is the phone to buy, for most people. Not if you have an iPhone 4, but for everybody else. Next year, five years after the iPhone, maybe things will be different.

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