Review iphone 7

iPhone 8 Vs iPhone 7: What's The Difference?

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The iPhone 8 is not what you think. Unlike recent yearsApple AAPL -0.62% did not follow the iPhone 7 with an ‘iPhone 7S’ so instead we have the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus as well as a radically redesigned (and jaw droppingly expensive) all new iPhone X. So what is the difference between the iPhone 8 and iPhone 7 and is it a worthy upgrade? 
Here’s what you need to know…
Apple
Design - The Same, But Worse?
Looking face on at the iPhone 8 and iPhone 7 shows two smartphones which are almost indistinguishable. The large top and bottom bezels remain, the display appears unchanged and the iPhone 7 even has more colour options (silver, gray, gold, rose gold and jet black Vs silver, gray and gold).

But look closer and you’ll see one change which is not for the better:
  • iPhone 8 - 138.4 x 67.3 x 7.3 mm (5.45 x 2.65 x 0.29 in) and 148g (5.22 oz)
  • iPhone 7 - 138.3 x 67.1 x 7.1 mm (5.44 x 2.64 x 0.28 in) and 138g (4.87 oz)
Yes, the iPhone 8 is fractionally larger than the iPhone 7 and over 7% heavier. Why? Because of its most controversial change: the back of the iPhone 8 is glass not aluminium.
Apple has done this to add wireless charging (more in the Battery Life section) but the cost is a heavier phone (glass needs to be thicker for the same protection as aluminium) and a back which can crack. Whether that is worth the trade off, will matter on how much you want wireless charging.
Apple
iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus are IP67 dust and water resistant
Less controversially, the iPhone 8 retains its Touch ID fingerprint scanner in the home button (which the iPhone X drops in favour of Face ID facial recognition) and - glass aside - it remains a durable phone matching (but not improving upon) the iPhone 7’s IP67 water and dust resistance and rigid Series 7000 aluminium frame (exposed on the side sections).
Where Apple has improved the iPhone 8 is a 25% boost in volume compared to the iPhone 7’s stereo speakers, though there is no return for the headphone jack with Apple retaining only the Lightning port (some naively hoped for universal USB-C) as the sole port on the phone.
Displays - Old Dog, New Tricks
While there’s debatably no tangible improvement to the iPhone 8’s design over the iPhone 7, Apple has made advances with its display - despite it looking identical on paper:
  • iPhone 8 and iPhone 7 - 4.7-inch LED-backlit IPS LCD, 1334 x 750 pixels (326 ppi), 65.6% screen-to-body ratio
Yes there’s no sign of the scene stealing OLED panel of the iPhone X, but Apple has given the iPhone 8 ‘True Tone’ technology from the iPad Pro range which reacts to environmental light and ensures a correct colour balance at all times. There’s also support for Dolby Vision and HDR10 for higher dynamic range (HDR) - something fast being added to Netflix, Amazon Video and iTunes.
Apple
iPhone 8 Tone Tone technology ensures correct colour balance in any ambient light
Less impressively, it seems Apple is unable to squeeze any more from LCD as the iPhone 8 doesn’t improve on the iPhone 7’s contrast ratio (1400:1) or brightness (625 cd/m2 max).
In short: you do not buy the iPhone 8 for its design or its display.
Performance - Faster And Smarter
What you would buy the iPhone 8 for, however, is its performance. According to most benchmarks, the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus remains the fastest smartphones in the world but that was before the iPhone 8 came along:
  • iPhone 8iPhone 8 PlusiPhone X - Apple A11 ‘Bionic’ chipset: Six Core CPU, Six Core GPU, M11 motion coprocessor, 3GB RAM (iPhone X, iPhone 8 Plus), 2GB RAM (iPhone 8)
Yes, the iPhone 8 is getting essentially the same performance as the more expensive iPhone 8 Plus and 40% more expensive iPhone X. The difference is less RAM, but the iPhone 8 drives a lower resolution display and only a single rear camera (more in the Camera section) so there should be no tangible difference in real world use.
Apple
And how much faster is the iPhone 8 than the iPhone 7? Apple claims its A11 chipset is 25% faster at top speed (when using high performance cores) and up to 70% faster when idling (using high efficiency cores). Graphics performance is also 30% faster and multitasking is up 70%, a crucial improvement given users are continually hopping between apps.
As for the Bionic part, the iPhone 8 doesn’t get the best use of it. Primarily it refers to the horsepower used for the iPhone X’s Face ID facial recognition system which the iPhone 8 lacks, though it does come in very useful for the next feature: the camera…
Cameras - Brains Not Brawn
Like many features of the iPhone 8, on the surface not a lot appears to have changed from the iPhone 7 - especially on paper.
Apple
iPhone 8 (right) is now the only new iPhone not to have a dual rear camera
The iPhone 8 has a 12 megapixel wide-angle camera with f/1.8 aperture and optical image stabilisation plus a 7 megapixel, f/2.2 camera on the front - both identical to the iPhone 7. It also highlights the iPhone 8 as the only new iPhone not to get dual rear cameras.
But lifting the mood is the A11 Bionic. Apple promises major photographic and video improvements from the iPhone 8 due to its integrated and Apple-designed Image Signal Processor (ISP). This promises to bring better pixel processing, faster low-light auto focus and noise reduction. The latter two were an Achilles Heel of the iPhone 7.
Apple
And if this sounds too good to be true, it isn’t. Last year Google took the camera crown with the Pixel and Pixel XL which both have inferior camera optics to most of their rivals, but they won out through class leading image processing. So if Apple can replicate the brains Google demonstrated with superior hardware then we could have a new class leader on our hands.
Battery Life And Charging - Not Longer, But Faster And Wireless
When it comes to battery life there’s good news and bad news. The bad news is even Apple admits on its comparison page the iPhone 8 only “Lasts about the same as iPhone 7” which in turn was barely better than the iPhone 6S or iPhone 6. Wasn’t losing the headphone jack meant to free up space for a bigger battery?
Apple
The good news is when your iPhone 8 does run out of juice, it will charge more quickly as Apple has finally added wired quick charging and followed this up with Qi-compatible wireless charging.
But then comes more bad news. The iPhone 8's wireless charging only operates at 7.5W which is much less than the 15W peak Qi charging supports and rivals like the Galaxy S8 use.
Furthermore Apple has not bundled a fast wired charger with any of its new iPhones (no, not even the $1,149 256GB iPhone X) and compliant fast Apple chargers start at $49. In turn these chargers use a different (Lightning to USB-C) cable which isn’t bundled with the fast charger and costs $25 (one metre) or $35 (two metres).
Apple
So you’re looking at $75 for every location you want to fast charge your iPhone 8. This is outrageous considering every single Android flagship (and most midrange and even budget models) come with fast charging out the box, while fast chargers cost $5-15 and use the cable which came in the box.
Meanwhile a little known secret of the iPhone 7 is it can charge more quickly if you use an iPad charger. No, it won’t match the iPhone 8’s quick charging speeds but if you already own an iPad and don’t need super fast charging this will save you from what can only be described as Apple’s greed.
Storage And Price - Up and Up
Like battery life, there’s good and bad news with the iPhone 8’s price:
Yes, storage has doubled but prices have gone up as well and there are now only two storage options. Meanwhile Apple has reduced the iPhone 7 by $100, but retained its smaller storage capacities creating a real dilemma between the 128GB iPhone 7 and paying $50 more for a 64GB iPhone 8.
It is also worth noting the iPhone 8 Plus has a $100 price premium over the iPhone 8 at each capacity, while the iPhone X is stratospheric with a $300 premium at both 64GB and 256GB.
Apple
Bottom Line
The iPhone X will understandably grab the headlines for its dramatic design changes, especially while the iPhone 8 will look like more of the same to most iPhone owners.
This is understandable because the iPhone 8 is something of a contradiction. It is not a significant upgrade over the iPhone 7 (performance, and - potentially - camera aside) while Apple has sucked the joy from its fast charging. If you own an iPhone 7, the iPhone 8 is definitely not worth the upgrade.
And yet the iPhone 8 is also potentially a bargain. Take away the display and Face ID and the iPhone 8 is essentially an iPhone X (which is unavailable for months anyway) for $300 less, plus you get to keep Touch ID.
As such iPhone 7 owners should not be impressed, but for everyone else the iPhone 8 might just be the best boring phone on the market...

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