Here’s what you need to know about Apple’s 2021 pair of Pro smartphones.
Paging the iPhone 13 Pro
But if you’re keen on an OLED screen — either 6.1in on the iPhone 13 Pro or 6.7in for the iPhone 13 Pro Max — then there’s only one place to look. Apple’s also launching something called ProMotion, which is a fancy way of saying that the Pro series supports variable refresh rates — down as low as 10Hz and as high as 120Hz. Leave it to Apple to just rename something we’ve previously seen elsewhere.
What are you looking at?
And then there’s camera performance, as Apple has ramped up its Pro camera sensors, There’s a 3x optical zoom telephoto (f/2.8), an f.1.8 ultrawide and an f/1.5 wide-angle sensor to look forward to — which doesn’t seem like much of a change, but Apple’s given all three sensors access to Night Mode (thanks, software trickery) and there’s also new Macro photography skills to play with. The Pro lineup can snap pics at a minimum distance of 2cm — which lets you see your lunch in a whole new light.
There’s also a new range of video trickery, with Cinematic mode letting you adjust depth after you’re done filming. The 13 Pro series records in Dolby Vision HDR and Apple is punting them as professional-grade creation hardware. The fact that you can record 4K at up to 30fps in ProRes format (which plays very nicely with Final Cut Pro) thanks to dedicated hardware acceleration might have a little something to do with that.
Time to pay the price
There are four shades incoming — Graphite, Gold, Silver and then something called Sierra Blue — which apparently took some doing to make, so everyone’s gonna want one. Apple’s also launching a 1TB iPhone for the first time — we shudder to think what it’s going to cost to stick one of those in our pockets.