iPhone SE (2020) Review - A powerful throwback - Android

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iPhone SE (2020) Review - A powerful throwback - Android

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Apple’s new iPhone SE (2020) is an iPhone 8 with the internals of the iPhone 11.

While smartphone enthusiasts have been scoffing at the tiny handset’s outdated design since Apple revealed the SE earlier this month, it’s actually one of the best entry-level smartphones to be released in years, particularly in Canada.

For $599 CAD, you get a camera nearly as capable as the iPhone 11 series’ shooter, coupled with Apple’s powerful A13 Bionic processor. For a lot of people, this is all they want and need from an iPhone upgrade.

iPhone SE

To be clear, the new iPhone SE is not for me. I appreciate the design and additional features the iPhone 11 series and other high-end smartphones offer. I just wouldn’t be happy with a handset that looks exactly like 2017’s iPhone 8. This, however, doesn’t mean there isn’t an audience of iPhone users out there who want a smaller, 4.7-inch iPhone featuring Touch ID and a modern processor.

In fact, I’d argue that particular iPhone audience is more significant than a lot of people might assume, and that this is precisely who Apple is targetting with the new iPhone SE.

An iPhone 11 in an iPhone 8

iPhone SE 2020 vs iPhone 8

As expected, the new iPhone SE (2020) is a massive leap over 2016’s 4-inch, A9-powered iPhone SE. Nearly every aspect of the smartphone’s hardware has been upgraded, with the display and look of the phone being the only exceptions.

This includes the 1.2-megapixel f/2.4 front-facing shooter in the original SE jumping to an f/2.2 7-megapixel camera, as well as the new SE’s rear-facing lens moving to 12-megapixels with an f/1.8 aperture with optical image stabilization, from 12-megapixels and f/2.2 on the original SE. To be clear, the new SE doesn’t feature the iPhone 11’s wide-angle shooter or the iPhone 11 Pro Max’s telephoto lens.

The device’s screen measures in at 4.7 inches with a  750 x 1334 pixel resolution, it includes HDR (though not really true high-dynamic range) and True Tone, Apple’s ambient light adapting display technology, just like the iPhone 8. The display looks passable but is dated when compared to the iPhone XR’s and iPhone 11’s excellent LCD screens, as well as most modern Android phones.

iPhone SE 2020 Touch ID

The Home Button is also back, which will be welcome news to anyone who avoided upgrading from the iPhone 6, iPhone 7 or even the iPhone 8 because they weren’t fond of Face ID. To a certain extent, I understand this perspective. Face ID is great, but it doesn’t work 100 percent of the time, whereas, the iPhone SE’s fingerprint sensor didn’t fail at all during the few days I’ve used the smartphone so far.

This time around Touch ID also features Haptic Touch, which means the button doesn’t click and vibrates instead. It still works just as well as it did with the iPhone 7 and iPhone 8. I generally found switching back to using a physical Touch ID sensor to be a nostalgic but frustrating experience.

I’m so used to iOS’ swipe gestures at this point that I needed to relearn how to navigate the operating system with a physical button to use the new iPhone SE. Of course, this won’t be a problem for anyone still rocking an iPhone featuring Touch ID.

iPhone SE (2020) vs iPhone SE (2016)

Other features include IP67 water and dust resistance, Qi wireless charging, Gigabit-class LTE, Wi-Fi 6, eSIM support, additional roaming bands, the ability to shoot 4K video and, arguably the most important update included in the iPhone SE, Apple’s A13 Bionic chip.

To put this in perspective, this is the same processor featured in the iPhone 11 series, complete with its 8-core Neural Engine. The processor is also 2.4 times faster than the A9 featured in the iPhone SE and 40 percent faster than the A11 Bionic included in the iPhone 8. This means the new SE is just as capable of running modern apps, computational photography and offering smooth operating system navigation as the iPhone 11 series.

The iPhone SE (2020)’s benchmarks left, while the iPhone 11 Pro Max’s are on the right.



Given that the SE is pushing a much smaller LCD screen with a lower resolution, it should be benchmarking at least slightly higher than the iPhone 11 Pro Max, similar to the high benchmark achieved by the iPhone SE (2016).

For reasons that remain unclear, the iPhone SE (2020) Geekbench benchmarks are nearly identically to the iPhone 11 Pro Max, coming in at 1,332 for its single-core score compared to the Pro Max’s 1,326. Multi-core scores reveal similar results, with the new SE hitting 2,996 and the iPhone 11 Pro Max coming in at 3,262.

This could have something to do with the SE featuring less RAM than the iPhone 11 Pro Max, or Apple including some sort of thermal throttling in the iPhone SE to make the A13 Bionic chip run in the body of an iPhone 8.

Whatever the reason, it doesn’t matter in a practical sense. The iPhone SE (2020) is a powerhouse of a smartphone capable of running any modern iOS app smoothly.

Like the rest of Apple’s recent iPhones, the SE, unfortunately, doesn’t feature a 3.5mm headphone jack. While I expected this, it’s still disappointing. Speaking of Apple’s last phone with big bezels, the new SE’s battery life measures in at roughly a day of use, just like the iPhone 8.

This means that the power efficiency offered by the A13 hasn’t changed the iPhone SE’s battery life in a significant way.

The SE features most of the iPhone camera features that matter

iPhone SE 2020 rear camera

The SE’s rear-facing 12-megapixel camera snaps photos that seem to be on par with what the iPhone 11 is capable of shooting.

It includes the same ‘Portrait Mode,’ live ‘Depth Control’ while taking pictures and in post, ‘Portrait Lighting Effects’ like ‘Studio Light,’ ‘Contour Light,’ Stage Light’ and ‘Portrait Lighting Controls,’ as the iPhone 11. I snapped a few shots comparing the iPhone SE’s various Portrait Lighting effects to the iPhone 11 Pro Max’s, and other than the images being slightly lighter and less zoomed in, the resulting photographs are nearly identical.

iPhone SE vs iPhone 11 Pro Max contour comparison

Even Apple’s computational photography Smart HDR, which often results in better photos when shooting under challenging lighting conditions, is featured in the SE.

On the front of the new SE, the 7-megapixel selfie shooter doesn’t snap images quite as impressive as what the iPhone 11 is capable of taking. Photographs tend to feature slightly more noise given the lower megapixel count, though the difference is negligible. The front-facing camera is only capable of shooting 1080p video.

22/04/2020 01:00 PM