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iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C lose to Galaxy S3 in touchscreen accuracy test

iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C lose to Galaxy S3 in touchscreen accuracy test

iphone5S_5C_vs_Galaxy_S3
The next time you shake your fist at Apple’s auto-correct, you might want to take a look at what is actually causing those occasionally amusing mishaps.
Apple is often noted for having the best hardware in the mobile industry. The company’s phones are stylish, sturdy-feeling, and often provide a user experience that outperforms the competition with little effort. Even if you’re not a fan of Apple or their mobile services, it’s hard not to be impressed by what it comes up with each year.
Last year the iPad mini received top marks for being one of the most accurate touchscreens in the tablet space, which was a big deal considering how most people hold the 7.9-inch device. Unfortunately, this year did not bring the same complement to Apple’s newest smartphones. In fact, during a recent test Apple got the silicon beat out of them by Samsung’s Galaxy smartphone from last year.
touchscreen_test_robot
OptoFidelity is a Finnish company that specializes in measurement automation and machine vision. The team used a measurement device it calls “WatchDog” to test the accuracy and responsiveness of the touch panels on the iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C, comparing the results to the Galaxy S3. Samsung’s previous generation smartphone still has plenty of users all over the globe, so this served as a decent control for this test.
In the tests, it was found that the displays on Apple’s latest smartphones are mostly inaccurate. The map OptoFidelity generated to demonstrate the results shows that there are very few parts of iOS that would not be affected by these issues, including typing on the keyboard in landscape or portrait orientation.
To show you how bad the iPhone panels apparently are, the image you see at the top of this post shows all three panels with red and green dots scattered across them. Green areas mean an inaccuracy of less than 1mm. Red areas have an inaccuracy of over 1mm. As you can clearly see, both the iPhone 5S and 5C panels generally have an inaccuracy above 1mm whereas the Galaxy S3 is much more uniform and rated below 1mm across the whole panel.
The test also confirmed that Apple’s latest phones are a great deal faster than the Galaxy S3, which should come as no surprise to anyone. Their performance tests captured the speed of both the camera and the browser, revealing that both the 64-bit iPhone 5S and the A5-powered iPhone 5C are noticeably faster when it comes to launching applications like the camera.
In my own tests with the iPhone 5S, I found that there were very few applications even the best performing Android phones would load faster, so the results here are entirely expected.




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Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, 2013)


Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (13-inch, 2013):Not a Retina MacBook Air, but awfully close


The good: The 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display has phenomenal battery life, better-than-average integrated graphics, faster Thunderbolt 2 ports, and a lower price than last year.
The bad: Still expensive if you plan to add more storage or RAM; no extra Nvidia graphics option as on the 15-inch version; yes, it’s thicker and heavier than an Air.
The bottom line: There are other high-res laptops out there, but this year’s more powerful and affordable 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro is one of the best of the bunch, and makes a compelling case for upgrading from the 13-inch Air.

Last year’s 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display was a bit of an odd duck. Yes, it was the Retina Display-equipped 13-inch MacBook everyone had been waiting for, but it wasn’t the powerhouse performer the 15-inch version was, and it cost a lot more than a MacBook Air.

This year it’s back in a more powerful, less expensive package that makes a lot more sense: it’s now a Retina laptop that people can actually afford.

The 13-inch Retina Display MacBook Pro always caught my eye, but its price was originally prohibitive; $1,699 was a steep starting price. A year later, the entry point is $1,299, which, in Apple’s laptop landscape, isn’t so bad at all -- and, in fact, is pretty close to what competitors charge for thin 13-inch laptops with super-high-res screens.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
The 13-inch MacBook Pro (let's agree to call it that, even though there is a thicker 13-inch Pro that Apple still sells) is still a tweener among Apple laptops: it’s heavier and thicker than the Air. The Air has better battery life. But the Retina Pro has a beautiful, far crisper screen, and better graphics. No, the 13-inch Retina Pro doesn’t have the workhorse quad-core processor or extra Nvidia graphics of the 15-inch Pro. It’s not the same computer. But, it’s not the same price, either: the entry-level 15-inch model is $700 more. The 13-inch MacBook Pro is Retina for Everyone…provided you can afford $1,299 for a laptop.
Consider it Apple’s version of an ultra-high-resolution ultrabook with vamped-up processing, or the thicker Retina Air you’ve always wanted. Is this year’s version the sweet-spot compact high-end MacBook you’ve been looking for? So far, signs point to yes.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Design: Thick Air, or thin Pro?
The newest 13-inch Retina Pro looks identical to last year’s -- a thinned-down optical-drive-free variant on the thicker original 13-inch Pro -- but, it’s actually even a little thinner and lighter, at 0.71 inch and 3.46 pounds versus 0.75 inch and 3.6 pounds for the 2012 model. Now, it’s just as slim as its larger 15-inch cousin. It’s heavier than a 13-inch Air, by about a half pound (the Air is 2.96 pounds) but the Retina Pro still has a very compact feel -- and a notably smaller footprint.
In a world of thin-and-light laptops, the 13-inch Retina Pro is decidedly heavy: the Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus weighs 3.06 pounds and is just a half-inch thick, despite an even higher-resolution display. But, compared with “full-powered” laptops, the Retina Pro is definitely thinner and lighter. It’s cleverly designed, too: speakers (and vents) are tucked out of sight, via nearly hidden vents on the bottom edges.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
The solid unibody aluminum frame and glass display are longstanding hallmarks of Apple’s laptops, but this 13-inch Pro feels especially rock-solid, easily one of the best-built laptops currently made. The backlit keyboard and large, clickable trackpad are both as excellent as always, and just about identical to what you find in the MacBook Air.
Yes, the Retina Pro is not Air-light. But it slides into a bag and feels suitably compact, and takes up relatively little space. It’s compact enough for my needs.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Retina Display: No longer unique, but still great
Last year, the 2,560x1,660-pixel 13.3-inch Retina Display was the highest resolution you could get in a 13-inch laptop. What a difference a year makes -- suddenly, Windows laptops such as the Toshiba Kirabook and Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus are approaching and exceeding those resolutions, copying Apple’s playbook. The Kirabook’s 13-inch display is 2,560x1,440 pixels, and the Book 9 Plus is 3,200x1,800.
Apple Macbook Pro 13-inch (October 2013)Samsung Ativ Book 9 PlusMacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
Price$1,499$1,399$1,099
Display size/resolution13.3 -inch, 2,560x1,600 screen13.3-inch, 3,200x1,800 touch screen13.3-inch, 1,440x900 screen
PC CPU2.4GHz Intel Core i7-4850HQ1.6GHz Intel Core i5 4200U1.3GHz Intel Core i5 4250U
PC Memory8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz4,096MB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz4,096MB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz
Graphics1GB Intel Iris Graphics1749MB (shared) Intel HD Graphics 44001024MB Intel HD Graphics5000
Storage256GB SSD128GB SSD hard drive128GB SSD hard drive
Optical driveNoneNoneNone
Networking802.11ac wireless, Bluetooth 4.0802.11b/g/n wireless, Bluetooth 4.0802.11a/c wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating systemOS X Mavericks 10.9Windows 8 (64-bit)OSX Mountain Lion 10.8.4
Both of those laptops start at $1,299 and $1,399, respectively. The Kirabook comes with twice the RAM and flash storage (8GB, 256GB) versus the Retina MacBook Pro for the same price; the Ativ Book 9 Plus comes with the same 4GB RAM and 128GB SSD for $100 more. Both of those systems are thinner, lighter laptops, but also run less powerful ultrabook-optimized Core i5 processors.
But enough of the nit-picking. The point is, the 13-inch MacBook Pro with Retina Display matches the territory in terms of price. And the Retina Display, the same as last year’s, looks just as good.
The improved color quality and finer detail are worth the upgrade for photo-editing or any sort of graphics work. Apple’s operating system and all of its current apps take advantage of the Retina Display to optimize text and graphics, usually to the tune of making everything crisper and better-detailed versus expanding screen real estate. You can, however, adjust to make for more desktop space (and smaller icons and text) in system settings. Windows 8 laptops can do the same: tile-based Windows apps scale nicely to higher-res displays, and using “desktop” mode gives you extra space.
Retina-level resolution in a laptop isn’t an essential difference-maker, but it’s absolutely an upgrade, if a subtle one at times, from whatever you may have been using otherwise. The 227 pixels per square inch amount to, if nothing else, a lot easier-on-the-eye reading clarity.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Ports: Nearly everything...except Ethernet
One of the big advantages to the Retina Pro over the 13-inch MacBook Air is its plethora of ports: two USB 3.0, two faster-throughput Thunderbolt 2 ports, an SDXC card slot, and even HDMI. The Air lacks the extra Thunderbolt port and HDMI.
A physical Ethernet port is still an unfortunate and intentional omission. We’re in an age where wireless is clearly the way to go -- and with upgraded 802.11ac wireless built-in, you’re only a compatible router away from greatness. If you really need hard-wired Ethernet, a USB (or Thunderbolt) adapter is sold separately.
The new Pro also has improved dual microphones and an improved-light-sensitivity 720p FaceTime camera for Web chats -- welcome improvements for this type of premium product.
Configurations and storage
The 13-inch Retina Pro starts at $1,299, and you get standard-for-an-ultrabook specs: 128GB of flash storage, 4GB of RAM, and a 2.4GHz dual-core fourth-gen Core i5 processor.
Increasing storage means buying Apple’s next step-up model, which costs $1,499, bumps the RAM to 8GB, and storage to 256GB. That’s the sweet-spot level most people will want -- and, considering how hard it is to upgrade RAM and storage on these slimmed-down Retina Pros, you’ll want to consider this choice quite seriously. That's the review model we have at CNET.
For a little more, the $1,799 model has a bumped-up 2.6GHz Core i5 processor and increases storage to 512GB, and that’s the only way to get up to 512GB. RAM and processor can be bumped up on any model, to get to a faster Core i5 or dual-core i7 processor, or to get up to 16GB of RAM. A new top-level of 1TB of flash storage is now on tap, at a lofty $500 extra. With all bells and whistles purchased, you could max out the 13-inch at $2,699 -- but, at that point, you might as well get the 15-inch Pro and its better quad-core CPU and Nvidia graphics.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Performance: Better than Air, better than last year
We know how standard fourth-gen “Haswell” Core i5 processors perform, at this point, on most laptops: a little better than last year, with much-improved integrated graphics.
The 13-inch Retina Display MacBook Pro has, for the most part, standard “mainstream” specs, if you’re just looking at the processor. A dual-core 2.4GHz Core i5 processor is definitely a faster CPU than the MacBook Air’s lower-speed, lower-power-oriented CPU, but the gap between “low-power” and full-power processors continues to narrow. But, the Retina 13-inch has the aforementioned faster flash storage, and Intel Iris integrated graphics, a step up from the average thin-and-light laptop.
The type of flash used on these new Retina MacBook Pros has also changed: it’s PCIe-based, and all you need to know is it is, indeed, even faster than before. The 13-inch Retina Pro woke from sleep nearly instantaneously, and launched applications and files at a faster-than-Air level. A cold boot-up into OS X 10.9 Mavericks, which comes preinstalled, took around 13 seconds. That contributes to an extra dose of overall system speed.
As you’d expect, this laptop is definitively faster than the 13-inch Air on all our tests, and slower than the 15-inch Pro, especially when it comes to multitasking (no surprise, the 15-inch version has a quad-core processor). It’s a bit of an apples-to-oranges comparison with the summer’s 2013 Air because these computers have OS X Mavericks preinstalled, but stay tuned for updated results against Mavericks-installed Airs.
We’ve never tested Iris graphics on a laptop before; the 15-inch Retina Pro has even higher-up Iris Pro graphics and an Nvidia graphics card in higher configurations, while the 13-inch just has Iris. It’s a higher level than the HD 4000-level graphics seen on a lot of ultrabooks and mainstream laptops. It’s hard to find games that offer decent benchmarking tools on the Mac, but Call of Duty 4, despite being an old game, shows the gain over last year’s 13-inch Retina Pro: 34 frames per second at 1,440x900. Diablo III can scale up to Retina-level resolution: with graphics settings on High and a resolution closest to the native 2,560x1,600, Diablo III ran at 12 frames per second. With the resolution dialed down to 1,968x1,230, it ran at 19fps. The take-away: the 13-inch MacBook Pro fares better with games than last year, but I still wouldn’t call it a gaming PC unless you dial back settings.
Battery life is the biggest and most pleasant surprise: instead of the promised 9 hours of video playback, our tests showed a whopping 13 hours and 2 minutes. Part of that may indeed be Mavericks, but who cares? The 13-inch Retina Pro has all-day (and then some) battery life in everyday use, and ends up as our best battery-life laptop next to the 13-inch MacBook Air. You can use this on a flight with little concern for that charger.
(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
Conclusion: The 13-inch MacBook we've been waiting for…nearly
I own a 2008 13-inch MacBook. I haven’t upgraded in all this time because, frankly, no 13-inch laptop in the Apple universe made me want to upgrade. I wanted something compact and full-powered like that 13-inch model was back then.
This year has offered me two compelling options to upgrade: the 13-inch Air, and the 13-inch Retina Display MacBook Pro. Both products existed last year, but this year’s versions are more affordable and more powerful, and each boasts better battery life.
Ideally, I’d want a Retina Air. In absence of that, I lean toward the Retina Pro. It’s a laptop I’d seriously consider as my next computer. But I do have some reservations: I’d still prefer more-affordable flash storage options, and I’d like more-robust graphics.
But, at least until there’s a true Retina Air, the 13-inch Retina Pro is Apple’s only option for super-high-res ultra-mobile computing. At least, this time, it’s far more affordable at $1,299, versus the $1,699 last year’s started at. It’s just a $200 upsell over the lowest-price Air. And, if you’re comparing it with the similarly priced Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus, you could make the argument that the Retina Pro comes out a little ahead, if you value a bit more performance.
The 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro is still a story of compromise, but it’s also Apple’s closest thing to a sweet-spot power laptop. And even if it costs a bit more than the Air, it also feels more future-proofed for the next few years because of its extra performance, and its display. Just make sure you leave a few dollars earmarked for a RAM/storage bump-up, because I certainly think I’d need it.
QuickTime iTunes multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Adobe Photoshop CS5 image-processing test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Apple iTunes encoding test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Handbrake multimedia multitasking test (in seconds)(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
Alienware 14
180 
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch with Retina Display (October 2013)
445 
Call of Duty 4 (Retina comparisons, in fps)(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Video playback battery drain test (in minutes)(Longer bars indicate better performance)
System configurations:
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch with Retina Display (October 2013)
OSX 10.9 Mavericks; 2.4GHz Intel Core i5-4258U; 8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 1GB Intel Iris Graphics; 256GB Apple SSD
Apple MacBook Pro with Retina Display (15-inch, June 2012)
OSX 10.7.4 Lion; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-3610QM; 8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 1GB Nvidia GeForce GT 650M + 512MB Intel HD 4000; 256GB Apple SSD
Samsung Ativ Book 9 Plus
Windows 8 (64-bit); 1.6GHz Intel Core i5 4200U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 1749MB (shared) Intel HD Graphics 4400: 128GB SSD
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
OSX 10.8.4 Mountain Lion; 1.3GHz Intel Core i5 4240U; 4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 1024MB (Shared) Intel HD Graphics 4000; 128GB Apple SSD
Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch w/ Retina display (October 2012) 
OSX 10.8.2 Mountain Lion 2.5GHz Intel Core i5 3210M, 8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz,768MB (Shared) Intel HD 4000, 256GB Apple SSD
Alienware 14
Wndows 7 Home Premium (64-bit); 2.4GHz Intel Core i7 4700MQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 2GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 765M; HDD#1 256MB Lite-On SSD HDD#2 750GB, 7,200rpm Western Digital
Apple MacBook Pro 15-inch (October 2013)
OSX 10.9 Mavericks; 2.3GHz Intel Core i7-4850HQ; 16GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz; 2GB Nvidia GeForce GT 750M + Intel Iris Pro Graphics; 512GB Apple SSD




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