Shropshire Star

iPhone X: A first look at Apple’s £1,000 flagship phone

The tenth anniversary device has been labelled the “future” of smartphones.

Published
(Martyn Landi/PA)

Marking ten years of the iPhone – a device Apple often champions as one of the modern world’s defining gadgets – was never an anniversary the company was likely to let pass by quietly.

So, the iPhone X appeared – a major redesign and rethink of some of the core features that have made the iPhone such a force for the last decade.

The home button is gone, the phone can be wirelessly charged, supports facial recognition technology and the screen is larger and OLED for the first time.

Apple has called it the “future of the smartphone” and though most of the new features have actually been seen before, Apple has a habit of being the watershed for technology – making the statement seem quite believable.

So, what does the future of the smartphone look like up close?

Glass

The iPhone X from the front
(Martyn Landi/PA)

The X looks like no iPhone before it, with the OLED screen reaching all four corners of the device for the first time.

This blanket coverage of the phone’s face, combined with the brighter, more colourful display, make a striking first impression.

The biggest change, of course, is the removal of the home button, a step that while slightly jarring and unfamiliar at first, has in fact improved the look of this iPhone no end.

Flip the phone over and it’s all change too. Much like on the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus, the X has a glass back for the first time, giving the phone a more uniform feel.

Back of the iPhone X
(Martyn Landi/PA)

More change comes with the camera layout, with the dual lens now sitting vertically next to each other rather than side-by-side.

Perhaps the most pleasing aspect of the iPhone X form factor is that this device offers a larger screen than the larger 7 Plus, as well as better dual cameras, on a phone similar in size to a traditional iPhone.

It is big features without the bulk and that is likely to entice plenty.

Colour

The iPHone X
(Martyn Landi/PA)

Samsung has been wowing for some time with the colour range and screen quality of its Galaxy S and Note flagships – now the iPhone X Super Retina display looks like a genuine counter to them.

Combined with updates to the camera, photos taken and shown on the X look hugely impressive. The image quality and depth of colour seen here was good enough to rival anything seen elsewhere.

Swiping up to unlock and seeing the home screen for the first time is a great moment too – all that extra space is one plus, but app icons are brighter and sharper, the screen a lot more engaging than anticipated.

Camera

iPhone X front camera in action
(Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)

Firstly, there is the TrueDepth technology, which brings portrait mode photos to the front-facing camera for the first time – upping the selfie game significantly in the process.

Portrait mode enables users to play around with depth of field, blurring the background to their liking in portrait photos.

Portrait lighting is also a new feature and uses a simple mini scroll wheel in the camera app to tweak the amount of lighting effect applied to the faces of subjects in your images.

The rear iPhone X camera
(Martyn Landi/PA)

As well as being able to swiftly unlock the device using your face – though we only saw a brief demo it appeared to work fairly comfortably – the technology can also be used for far more fun exercises – Animoji, for example.

The animated emoji are powered by the movement of a user’s face when activated and are wonderfully responsive and fun to use. Once the X launches, expect to see them start to appear in your iMessage inbox pretty quickly.

The price question

The Apple event iPhone X launch
(Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)

Firstly, it is worth noting that the £1,000 threshold is not as bold a leap forward as some have suggested – both Apple and Samsung already sell phones above the £900 line.

Mobile carrier discounts and monthly contracts also mean few are likely to pay the well-publicised price either.

However, the price tag is still hard to ignore and so the big question remains: is the iPhone X worth it?

Based on the build quality, the display and camera prowess, and crucial introduction of wireless charging to the already potent Apple ecosystem, it’s likely many consumers will say yes.

On first impressions, the X is a big enough leap forward to spark those on an iPhone 6 or older to consider upgrading and striking enough looks-wise to tempt Android and other platform users to give in and switch to iOS.

The iPhone X is the best-looking iPhone ever made and has the potential in the new features glimpsed so far to be the most well-rounded device the company has ever created.

Considering what has come before, that puts the iPhone X in a strong starting position.

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