iPhone 6s Plus Touch ID Much Quicker Than iPhone 6 Plus in New Hands-On Video
With the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, one well-known hardware feature got a substantial upgrade: Touch ID. Apple improved the Touch ID sensor, allowing it to recognize fingerprints faster than it could previously. We went hands-on with the brand new iPhone 6s Plus and compared its improved Touch ID sensor to the one in the iPhone 6 Plus.
The 6s Plus’ Touch ID unlocks the phone almost instantaneously, taking a user straight to their Home Screen when they rest their finger on it. Comparatively, the speed of the 6 Plus’ Touch ID makes it seem like a two-step feature, first waking up the display and then taking a user to the Home Screen.
On first impression, some users think the new Touch ID is too fast, however. Reddit user MasterofLuiz notes that it’s so fast it affects how he usually uses his phone.
I can’t even click the home button to check the clock without it automatically unlocking the phone. It’s crazy
MacRumors forum member mykaluk has attempted to best the speed of the new Touch ID, attempting to tap the Home Button so quickly that it doesn’t read his fingerprint. However, he notes that the Touch ID is able to read the fingerprint every time.
Be sure to check out the iPhone forum to join the discussion about the two new phones and their new features, or visit the iPhone accessories forum to see how the new cases look on the new devices, or whether existing cases fit the new devices. If you’d like to find out which apps take advantage of 3D Touch, make sure to check out the iOS Apps forum.
Live Photos Shown Off In New Hands-On Video
One of the brand new features for the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus is Live Photos, which captures an additional 3 seconds of video around a still image and plays it through when a user 3D Touches the photo. We went hands on with the new feature and experimented with it.
To use Live Photos, a user just has to take a normal photo when the “live” icon in the upper center of the screen is lit up. The iPhone automatically captures 1.5 seconds of video before and after the photo and stitches it all together. Because Live Photos combines video and still images, the new format takes up double the space a regular photo would.
While reviewers were largely positive on Live Photos, first impressions from users haven’t been as kind. MacRumors forum member kungxpao said that he turned the feature off after a few test shots. However, some users see potential in the feature, like fellow forum member Conan86.
Live Photo is a great feature when you create them intentionally. I hope Apple would allow us to remove accidental “live” portions of a photo as I probably wouldn’t hold 3 seconds to take a photo every single time.
Only the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus can create Live Photos, but they are viewable on all iOS 9 devices and Macs running OS X El Capitan. Eventually, Live Photos will also be shareable on social media services like Facebook and Instagram.
iOS ad blockers might be messing with your online shopping
Ads pay the bills for a lot of sites (including this one). But they can also be intrusive and with some of the tracking abilities available out there, a bit creepy. To combat some of that and to speed up page loads Apple introduced a Content Blocker feature for mobile Safari that allows third-party developers to create extensions that are “a fast and efficient way to block cookies, images, resources, pop-ups, and other content.” Apparently people really hate advertisements on the internet because ad blockers have rocketed to the top of the paid app section of the App Store. But the side effect of at least a few of these apps is that it screws up shopping on the online versions of Sears and Walmart. Fortune talked to the developer of Crystal, an app that’s messing with some shopping sites. After they informed him about what was happening, he said he would remove the sites from a blacklist. But, during our test, we were still unable to get to some product pages on Walmart.com to load. So, we decided to test some more online shops to how much commerce is being thwarted by a hatred of ads.
As expected the online Apple store worked flawlessly. But it wasn’t the only ecommerce site to keep plugging along ready to take your money even with an ad blocker installed. Staples.com worked just fine and I almost ended up with a new shredder. Sears.com worked, but we were presented with a pop to take a survey which seems like the kind of thing Crystal should block. Mega-site Allibaba worked great as did Amazon. Target on the other hand wouldn’t load individual product pages or the cart. Macy’s worked but also loaded a survey pop-up. Buying a Nexus device on the Google store seemed to be going well until it was time to check out and everything came to a screeching halt because you can’t get to the cart. Crystal isn’t the only content blocker that stops users from buying stuff.

Another ad blocking app featured in the top paid charts, Purify Blocker, while offering more options (like whitelisting sites) had nearly the identical effect on the shopping sites. Sites like Amazon worked flawlessly, while Walmart and Target crashed and burned. Actually, with Purify Blocker some of Target’s pages presented a blank screen. Even after whitelisting the page, it still made shopping on Target.com impossible because nothing would load. On the plus side, I was able to get to the Google Store checkout page with a Nexus device even though that I would be foolish to buy anything branded Nexus at this point.
So if you’re trying to buy a new sweater or phone online from a retail site and nothing seems to work, it’s probably a good idea to turn off that content blocker you added to Safari.
Source: Fortune
Feld & Volk and Colette Match Apple’s Launch With New Luxury Modified iPhone 6s Models
Luxury modified iPhone manufacturer Feld & Volk and French fashion boutique Colette are partnering on new devices based on Apple’s iPhone 6s, launching the new products on the same day Apple begins shipping out its latest devices.
Feld & Volk previously partnered with Colette to show off some of the Russian firm’s modified iPhone 6 designs, and Apple itself worked with Colette for the first public preview of the Apple Watch nearly a year ago.
iPhone 6s Double Carbon Limited Edition
The new two new iPhone 6s models from Feld & Volk and Colette include a customized limited-edition Double Carbon version and a Dark Graphite version from Feld & Volk’s WOOD collection. The company uses premium materials such as carbon fiber, titanium, and wood to build custom rear shells with lighted Apple logos for the various iPhone models, with prices starting at several thousand dollars.
iPhone 6s WOOD Graphite
Deliveries of the two new iPhone 6s models begin on September 30, and additional iPhone 6s-based models will be coming soon from Feld & Volk.
Tell us how you really feel about iOS 9
Sure, new iPhones are being released today, but plenty of you have already made the jump to iOS 9. And, while we loved its refinements enough to call it “a must-have update,” we’d like to know how it’s faring out in the wild with our readers. Head on over to the Engadget database page to let us know what you think of all the improvements, including smarter Siri features, Slide Over multitasking and the Apple News app. Then, we’ll feature some of your more eloquent and astute comments in a future post.
Comments have been turned off for this post; please go to the iOS 9 page to write a review. If you don’t have a database account, sign up here!
Aaron Sorkin Blasts Tim Cook for Calling Steve Jobs Films ‘Opportunistic’
Earlier this month, Tim Cook sat down for an interview with Stephen Colbert, where discussion turned to Aaron Sorkin’s upcoming “Steve Jobs” film and Alex Gibney’s “Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine” documentary.
Though Cook has not seen either film, he called Jobs an “amazing human being” and suggested he hated the movies being made about Jobs. “I think a lot of people are trying to be opportunistic and I hate this,” he said. “It’s not a great part of our world.”
Aaron Sorkin gave a scathing response to Tim Cook’s comment in a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter calling out Apple’s Chinese factories and telling the interviewer that he and other top executives on the project had taken pay cuts to get the film made.
“Nobody did this movie to get rich,” he said. “Secondly, Tim Cook should really see the movie before he decides what it is.”
“Third, if you’ve got a factory full of children in China assembling phones for 17 cents an hour you’ve got a lot of nerve calling someone else opportunistic.”
Aaron Sorkin’s Steve Jobs film, which stars Michael Fassbender as Steve Jobs and Seth Rogen as Steve Wozniak, is set to premiere next month. It’s already been screened at the Telluride Film Festival in Colorado, where it received rave reviews and led to buzz about a possible Oscar nomination for Fassbender’s performance.
The movie is based on Walter Isaacson’s best-selling biography and follows Jobs at three product launches, giving a behind-the-scenes look at the way Steve Jobs interacted with friends, colleagues, and family, including his daughter Lisa. In the past, Tim Cook has said the biography was a “tremendous disservice” to the Steve that he knew because it focused on “small parts of his personality.” “The person I read about there is somebody I would never have wanted to work with over all this time,” he said.
MacRumors Giveaway: Win a Bolt Briefcase From WaterField Designs
For this week’s giveaway, we’ve teamed up with WaterField Designs to offer MacRumors readers a chance to win a Bolt Briefcase for the 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro. For those unfamiliar with WaterField Designs, it’s a small San Francisco-based company that specializes in high-quality bags and sleeves for Apple devices.
The Bolt Briefcase comes in Small, Medium, and Large, to fit up to a 17-inch laptop, and it comes in six different color combinations in either ballistic nylon or waxed canvas, both of which feature leather accents and splash-proof zippers. Ballistic is more professional and lighter in weight, while the waxed canvas is more casual and will become better looking as it ages.
The Briefcase has a padded laptop compartment to keep a notebook safe from drops and damage, along with two deep interior pockets for holding things like hard drives and power supplies, and a bunch of exterior pockets.
There are two quick access pockets at the front for things that are used frequently, like a smartphone or earphones. Above that, there’s a zippered iPad-sized pocket that can hold a tablet or paper documents, and at the back, there’s a pocket to allow it to fit over a suitcase handle and another to hold newspapers or magazines.
WaterField’s Bolt Briefcase can be purchased from the company’s website for $249 for the Small (13-inch laptops), $259 for the Medium (15-inch laptops), and $279 for the Large (17-inch laptops).
We’re giving one of the Bolt Briefcases designed for the 13-inch Retina MacBook Pro to one lucky reader, with the winner picking the color and material. To enter to win, use the Rafflecopter widget below and enter an email address. Email addresses will be used solely for contact purposes to reach the winner and send the prize.
a Rafflecopter giveawayhttp://widget-prime.rafflecopter.com/launch.jsYou can earn additional entries by subscribing to our weekly newsletter, subscribing to our YouTube channel, following us on Twitter, or visiting the MacRumors Facebook page. Due to the complexities of international laws regarding giveaways, only U.S. residents who are 18 years of age or older are eligible to enter.
The contest will run from today (September 25) at 1:15 p.m. Pacific Time through 1:15 p.m. Pacific Time on October 2. The winner will be chosen randomly on October 2 and will be contacted by email. The winner has 48 hours to respond and provide a shipping address before a new winner is chosen. The prize will be shipped to the winner for free.
iPhone 6s First Impressions: Touch ID is Super Fast, Live Photos Are a Gimmick and Rose Gold is Not Too Pink
We’re well into the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus launch day, which means people all over the world are receiving their devices either via delivery or from Apple retail locations. On the MacRumors forums, customers who have an iPhone in hand have started sharing their first impressions of the device, giving us a look at release reactions from the general public.
We’re highlighting some interesting tidbits and thoughts on the iPhones below, and we’ll link to a number of forum threads that are well worth checking out.
Image via SmoveAL01
Initial reactions from customers receiving their devices are similar to the thoughts we saw in the first reviews. Customers are liking the new flagship feature, 3D Touch, and say Touch ID is a whole lot faster than it was on the iPhone 6. Some even think it’s too fast. From MacRumors forum member Conan86:
Touch ID is so fast that just tapping the Home Button to access shortcuts such as the Control Center or Swipe up for Camera would just unlock the device.
On the slight size increase, MacRumors readers feel that it’s definitely a noticeable change, with the iPhone 6s Plus and the iPhone 6s feeling heavier. With the addition of 3D Touch, the weight of the two devices jumped to 143 grams (iPhone 6s) and 192 grams (iPhone 6s Plus), up from 129 grams and 172 grams, respectively, in the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.
Image via tgwaste
A lot of new iPhone 6s and 6s Plus owners are unimpressed with Live Photos, and several have called the feature a “gimmick.” The new always on “Hey Siri” feature works great according to AppleRobert, PedCrossing says the Taptic Engine “feels fantastic” and “makes much less noise,” and JD2015 says the iPhone 6s Plus is “noticeably faster” than the iPhone 6 Plus. From forum member yep-sure:
Live Photos are a terrible gimmick. I just don’t understand the point. If you want a photo, you take a photo, if you want video, you shoot some video. All recent iPhones do this very well. Live Photo looks like a great high quality image, then it goes to a lower quality, choppy/low frame rate video for a few seconds. This is a feature that I would turn off immediately/never use.
In a thread on the Rose Gold iPhone 6s, readers are sharing their thoughts on the new color. Most people think the Rose Gold iPhone is less pink than they expected.
Image via Bako-MacAddict
Of course, there’s still debate over its color, with reader asleep calling saying “It’s ‘no doubt about it’ pink in daylight.” From forum member Nazifur:
I don’t know what all these people were talking about earlier.
The rose gold colour is veryyy nice.It’s definitely not that light pink pink… it has a copper look when you hold it in certain angle.
Over all it’s diffidently a mix of gold and pink which looks awesome.
New iPhone owners are also discussing which existing iPhone 6s and 6s Plus cases fit the new thicker, taller devices. The iPhone 6 Plus Silicone case fits the iPhone 6s Plus “perfectly,” and the Leather iPhone 6 case fits the iPhone 6s. Westcoastcyc helpfully points out that Best Buy has relabeled most cases as suitable for the iPhone 6 and 6s, so most cases will fit both devices despite the small size difference.
iPhone 6s Plus in a Seidio Surface Case via Wangta
A full list of the threads cited above is included below, along with some additional threads that include interesting information on the two new devices.
– iPhone 6s and 6s Plus First Impressions – Share Your Photos
– Rose Gold iPhone 6s and 6s Plus Impressions
– iPhone 6s Plus – First Thoughts
– Will Old iPhone Cases Fit the iPhone 6s/6s Plus?
– Cases for the Rose Gold iPhone 6s
– Full Price AT&T Phone Comes Unlocked
– Tim Cook Visits Georgetown Apple Store for iPhone 6s Launch
– iPhone 6s Yellow Tint?
– iPhone 6s and 6s Plus Dock Impressions
Make sure to check out the iPhone Forum to join in on the discussion about the two new iPhones, or visit the iPhone Accessories Forum for advice on which cases might look best with the new devices and which existing cases fit. For apps that take advantage of the new 3D Touch feature, make sure to check out the iOS Apps Forum.
iPhone Upgrade Program Causing Headaches for Some Launch Day Customers
Apple launched its iPhone Upgrade Program today in the U.S., enabling customers to purchase the iPhone 6s or iPhone 6s Plus with AppleCare+ coverage included for 24 equal payments of between around $30 and $45 per month depending on the model. After at least 12 monthly payments, the customer can upgrade to a new iPhone and restart the 24-month payment cycle.
Apple stipulates that the iPhone Upgrade Program is available to qualified customers only with a valid U.S. personal credit card, since the program is based on a 24-month installment loan with a 0% APR from Citizens Bank. For customers with good credit, most did not expect this requirement to be an issue. But, as launch day unfolds, some customers have had frustrating experiences.
MacRumors user onujpt writes that he was declined from the program, despite having good credit and an Apple Barclaycard with a $4,000 available balance, in the iPhone Upgrade Program Experience Thread in our discussion forums. Many other users shared similar experiences in the thread.
Signed up for a reservation. Got there. Front of the line quickly. Got the phone and began the checkout process and notified them I wanted to do the iPhone Upgrade Program.
I have a 724 credit score, a Barclaycard through Apple, and a $4,000 available balance on that card with a combined household income of over $80,000.
I was declined. At first everyone was getting declined. Then some started to work. Mine didn’t. They attempted 3 or 4 times with absolutely no luck.
It immediately added a hard inquiry to my credit score. Although we attempted four times, for now it appears that it only hit my credit score once.
I’m beyond upset and will anxiously be awaiting my letter from the bank to find out why I was declined. I personally believe it was a system communication error. And that maybe I was approved but the system just didn’t show it. I’m tempted to go back and try again tomorrow just to see if it was a launch-day-8-am issue or not.
MacRumors user inkyoto echoed similar frustration in his thread Nightmarish Experience With Apple Upgrade Program in our discussion forums, noting that he was denied approval for the iPhone Upgrade Program with both Chase and Bank of America credit cards despite having “flawless credit.”
Chase call #1 — Chase said they didn’t even receive an authorization for the purchase, but put on a high spending note anyway. Tried it again, no dice – same error message.
Trying another card — Okay, trying another credit card, this time from Bank of America. Went through the entire process again. Same error message.
Chase call #2 — This rep has no idea what is going on and is confused about why I’m financing a purchase on my credit card. Tells me to contact Citizens One (the bank financing the iPhone upgrade program) because the error isn’t on their side – they aren’t even seeing an authorization.
Citizens One — Rep says I have 3 tries per card before I have to wait 30 days. Says that their financing limit is $4000 so as long as I’m under that, and my credit can accommodate the next 3 months of payments, it should go through. Tells me to contact Apple. Gives me a phone number for Apple Financing that goes to “not in service”. Nice.
Trying again — Decided to give it another shot with my Bank of America card so we could get another look at the error message. This time it changed. Now it says “Customer ineligible for Apple Offers.”
Apple — Enter the twilight zone. Apple rep has no idea what is going on. When I ask to be transferred to whoever is responsible for Apple financing, they say it’s the person in the store. Oh yeah, brilliant! I ask again to be transferred and they say they don’t have anyone to transfer me to and that I need to contact Citizens One about why it’s not going through.
It is possible that iPhone Upgrade Program approvals have been experiencing problems due to the high volume of traffic today in Apple Stores, but in the meantime some customers with good credit may be forced to pay upfront or walk away empty handed. Alternatively, some customers may opt for a carrier financing plan from AT&T, Verizon, Sprint or T-Mobile.
Enrolling in the iPhone Upgrade Program requires visiting an Apple Store. Apple states you must be at least 18 years old and bring your current iPhone, a valid personal credit card, your personal information and two forms of identification and your carrier information, such as your wireless account password. The full terms and conditions are posted on Apple’s website.
Should Apple discontinue the 16GB iPhone?
In the wake of the launch of the iPhone 6S/6S Plus, the tech journalism sphere was awash with outrage about the continued existence of the 16GB iPhone. This bottom tier is “insulting,” in an era when most Android manufacturers now sell their flagship phones with at least 32GB of built-in storage. If it wasn’t intolerable before, they say, then the addition of live photos and 4K recording to these latest devices have rendered a 16GB iPhone with almost no usable space whatsoever. But is this a real point of concern, or some manufactured anger that masks a culture of entitlement? Devindra Hardawar and Dan Cooper try to hash this topic out without flipping any tables in the process.

Dan Cooper
As much as we may all feel differently, Apple does not owe any of us, at all, jack shit.
Take a look at some of these opinion pieces and the anger all seems to be centered on the idea that Apple owes us a 32GB iPhone when it clearly does not. Do you think it’s because Apple is one of the richest companies in the world that people feel so entitled to demand that it discount its most profitable products? I don’t imagine too many people being taken seriously if they suggested that McDonald’s should replace McDoubles with Big Macs and yet still only charge $1 for it.
It should come as no surprise to anyone that technology companies produce devices for less money than they charge to sell them. That’s how you create a sustainable business, and it’s not as if Apple is different from every other firm in history for acting this way. There’s no definitive figure, but it’s believed that the cost to produce an iPhone is roughly $200, with the remaining $449 of that $649 off-contract price going to the company. Does that make it a rip-off? Possibly, but nobody’s forcing you to buy it. There are figuratively hundreds of companies who will sell you cheaper devices, including Apple itself.
I guess the one stick that you can beat Apple with is that the Galaxy S6, which was released in March, can be had for $130 on a two-year deal with 32GB of built-in storage. I think that’s a false line of argument, since disappointing sales of this six-month-old device forced Samsung to slash the price. When it launched, it cost the same as a 16GB iPhone on a two-year deal, but clearly not enough people found it compelling enough to want to fork over that amount of cash. And yet, they’re more than happy to for a device that’s somehow inferior?

Devindra Hardawar
It’s really not about entitlement — at all. My hatred for the 16GB iPhone stems purely from the fact that it’s a shockingly low amount of storage for a premium device in 2015. Today, 32GB is pretty much the default now on other high-end smartphones, and many even offer expandable storage via microSD cards. Sure, 16GB made sense for the first few years of the iPhone, when apps didn’t take up much room and iOS wasn’t so bloated. But now that the iPhone has 4K video shooting, a 12-megapixel camera and apps are getting even bigger, it seems like a baffling limit.
Apple, of all companies, should be well aware that our smartphones are now our primary computing devices. And putting 16GB in a high-end smartphone today is like making someone buy a premium laptop with a hard drive smaller than 64GB. It was perfectly fine years ago, but it wouldn’t fly today. (Notice that the MacBook ships with 256GB of default storage, and the 11-inch MacBook Air has 128GB.)
The biggest reason I’m annoyed by the 16GB iPhone? It makes for a pretty terrible user experience, which feels very un-Apple. Once you’ve got a bit of music on the phone and your favorite apps, there’s not much room to store 4K video (which eats up 375MB a minute, according to Apple), and larger 12MP photos. Even if you’ve got around 12GB of space to work with, perhaps the most storage you can eke out of a 16GB iPhone when accounting for the size of iOS 9, that only leaves you around 32 minutes of 4K video. That may sound like more than enough for amateur home videos, but the issue is more about what your experience would be like a few months after you unwittingly snap up a 16GB iPhone, when the combination of text messages, offline media and 4K clips leads to constant “storage full” warnings.
I’m no fool; I understand the importance of Apple’s profit margins. And it’s pretty obvious that by having a size jump between 16GB and 64GB iPhones, Apple can push more discerning buyers toward more expensive models. It costs Apple around $200 to build a 16GB iPhone 6 (which sold for $649 at launch), according to IHS, and it’s just another roughly $20 to build a 64GB model. Considering that Apple can charge $100 more for the 64GB iPhone, that’s a pretty significant bit of profit. (CNET has a good breakdown of Apple’s build pricing.)
So sure, it makes sense for Apple to eke out as much profit as it can by keeping the 16GB iPhone around. But just because it can, doesn’t mean it should.

Dan Cooper
iOS occupies about 4GB of your iPhone’s storage, leaving most users with about 12GB for apps and media. For plenty of people, that would surely be enough for a couple of playlists, a movie downloaded from iTunes and a week or two’s worth of photos. If anything, I’d say that your ire is misplaced, because it’s not the storage limit that’s the problem; it’s how a lot of apps slowly fill our devices with junk cache data. For instance, Twitter and Facebook for iOS 8 are 63MB and 95.9MB when you grab them from the App Store. On my phone, both have bloated to a ridiculous 563MB and 386MB — a fault we can lay at the feet of the engineers who built those apps. If iOS apps were built with better cache management, then a lot of people’s storage-management issues would disappear overnight. The less said about the dreaded “other” section that pops up when you connect your phone to iTunes, the better.

Also, you say that Apple is making it impossible for users to take advantage of the iPhone 6S’ new features with just 16GB storage. If you wanted to use that iSight camera to record 4K video, you’d be able to save around 32 minutes of footage in ultra-high resolution. Now, if you’re a professional filmmaker, or someone who is expecting to shoot a lot of 4K clips, you won’t be doing so on a base-model iPhone. If you’re an amateur, then what exactly are you shooting that lasts longer than 32 minutes and is so important that you need to shoot it in 4K?
One thing I will concede is that I think Phil Schiller’s point about iCloud being the savior of 16GB iPhones is farcical. I’m always worried when executives talk about imagined solutions to problems that forget the practical needs of real, “ordinary” people. I can’t think of many people who regularly spend $120 a year for extra storage and have a data plan that wouldn’t penalize you for pushing and pulling stuff from iCloud on a regular basis. Google tells me that Schiller has a net worth of around $60 million, but telling people to “rely on the cloud” isn’t going to fly when your 1GB Verizon plan charges you $15 if you go over your cap by even a megabyte.
I have a confession: Until last year, I always bought the base model iPhone and, largely, that unit has come with just 16GB storage. Most weeks, on a Saturday, I would sync my device with my computer, buy third-party cache clearing apps and generally mother my device to make sure I didn’t run out of space. If I had been making more money, then I’d have probably plumped for the more expensive device, but I couldn’t, so I didn’t. A lot of people out there can’t afford to make that upgrade, and Apple produces a relatively low-cost device ($199 on contract) that can do what its more expensive siblings can do — you just have to be a bit judicious as to how you use it. Maybe that’s the point, because Apple’s lack of educating users as to how to effectively manage the iPhone’s storage is why iOS adoption has slowed.

Devindra Hardawar
I feel for you, Dan, I couldn’t imagine sticking with a 16GB iPhone over the past few years. I’ve got my preorder for the 128GB iPhone 6s in, because I’m already getting warnings about my 64GB iPhone 6 getting full. My usage habits probably aren’t very common: I like to keep a large library of personal music on my phone, along with a rotating playlist of offline Spotify tracks (both necessary for listening to music on the subway). Mostly, though, I wanted a phone that didn’t feel like it had any limitations. It’s just a shame to see Apple stick with arbitrary restrictions when it’s trying to convince us that new technology like “3D Touch” and 4K video are worth buying a new phone.

Dan Cooper
You’ve gotta cut your coat according to your cloth, and if you can’t afford that extra $100 (or $200) when September rolls around, then that’s that. As much as I’d love it if the world’s richest company whacked in more storage into the iPhone, it only really benefits people who are euphemistically called “power users.” I’d say that as technology journalists we both fall into that category, but I’d wager that plenty of folks — the same people who still get use out of the 2GB iPod Shuffle or 16GB iPod Nano — don’t sweat the storage.
The other thing I’ll say is that I know that we’ll see a 32GB base model iPhone at some point, and maybe 2016 is when that will happen. Apple has, traditionally, always waited until it could divine some benefit to a feature before adding it, like holding off on NFC until the 2014 iPhone 6 — a feature Android had in 2012. As apps become more powerful and space-hungry, the default will have to increase, but that decision will be Apple’s, and no amount of pressure will make that change come sooner.
[Image credit: Chris Velazco/Engadget]













