Hands on with Apple's three new X-class iPhones

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Well, there’s no doubt about it: This is an S year.

As longtime Apple (AAPL) followers are aware, Apple seems to alternate iPhone design years. For every Big New Dramatic iPhone Year (like iPhone 4, iPhone 5, iPhone 6), there’s an S year (iPhone 4s, iPhone 5s, iPhone 6s). During the S years, Apple engineers spend their time refining the last year’s model. They make it faster, enhance its camera maybe, but make no changes to the design or basic operation.

The world’s tech reporters converged at Apple’s circular headquarters to get some hands-on time with the new phones.
The world’s tech reporters converged at Apple’s circular headquarters to get some hands-on time with the new phones.

On Wednesday, at its spaceship-shaped headquarters in California, Apple unveiled three new iPhone models. All three are spinoffs of last year’s iPhone X. They’re called the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR. (It’s pronounced “TEN-s” and “TEN-r,” even if you think it really is Xcessive.)

The X-class phones all have these features in common:

  • All screen. There’s no empty space above or below the screen. More screen, less phone. Better yet, the Xs models are OLED screens—the stunning colors and deep blacks (million-to-one contrast ratio!) of organic LED technology. (And yes, this means that the controversial “notch”—the gap in the top edge where the cameras and sensors hide—is on all three of the new models.)

  • No home button. As on the iPhone X, the new phones substitute various swipes and side-button presses to perform the functions of the old Home button. Do a quick, short swipe upward to go Home. Hold down the side button to trigger Siri. And so on. (Here’s my complete list of the new gestures.)

  • Face ID. No more fingerprint reader. Instead, the phone has a face scanner that unlocks the phone when it recognizes you. In iOS 12, also released this month, you’ll be able to train your phone to recognize up to two faces.

  • Wireless charging. It’s not really wireless, meaning through-the-air charging. It’s laying your phone on a special charging pad. You’re no longer plugging in a power cord. Nice enough. Apple uses the same charging standard that Samsung and other companies use, called Qi (pronounced “chee”). You don’t have to buy Apple’s charging pad; you can use any company’s. You’ll have to, in fact, since Apple’s AirPower charging pad still isn’t available, a year after it was announced.

So what’s new?

So what is new in these new phones? There’s a faster chip, called the A12; better waterproofing (withstands 30 minutes, six feet under water); greater stereo separation on playback; stereo recording in videos; and “the most durable glass ever in a phone,” according to Apple.

Apple says that the batteries are better, too—the XS gives you 30 minutes more than last year’s iPhone X, and the Max gives you 90 minutes more than the 8 Plus.