Teardown Finds iPhone 5 Costs Apple About the Same As Did 4S 143
Nerval's Lobster writes "A physical teardown of the iPhone 5 by IHS iSuppli reveals that Apple has managed to keep its materials and manufacturing costs roughly in line with that of the iPhone 4S. The firm estimated the Bill of Materials for the iPhone 5's low-end variant at $199.00, rising to $207.00 once manufacturing costs are entered into the equation. It tallied the BOM for the 32GB version at $209.00 (or $217 with manufacturing) and the 64GB one at $230.00 (rising slightly to $238 with those manufacturing costs). Compare that to the BOM for the iPhone 4S, which IHS iSuppli estimated at $188 for the 16GB version (rising to $196 with manufacturing costs added in), $207 for the 32GB version ($215 with manufacturing) and $245 for the 64GB version ($254 with manufacturing)."
Reader redkemper writes with another kind of comparison of the newest iPhone to its predecessor: "Apple didn't spend too much time talking about the iSight camera at the iPhone 5s unveil event because it's mostly the same as the one found in the iPhone 4S. Thankfully, iMore grabbed an iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S and did a fantastic shoot-out between the two device's rear cameras. [The new camera] just barely edges out the iPhone 4S's year-old camera."
Re:Spent less on mapping license didn't they? (Score:5, Informative)
iMore comparison (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a link to the actual comparison, instead of a blog describing the comparison: http://www.imore.com/iphone-5-vs-iphone-4s-camera [imore.com]
Apple does development ... (Score:5, Informative)
Development, for starters.
Which part in the iPhone 5 or iPhone 4(S) develop, for starters?
For one, the CPU. From wiki:
"The A6 is said to use a 1.2 GHz[3][4][5] custom Apple-designed ARMv7 based dual core CPU,[1] rather than standard cores like in previous designs, and an integrated triple core SGX 543MP3[6] graphics processing unit (GPU) with the same performance as the previous Apple A5X processor found in the third-generation iPad. The SGX 543MP3 is running at 266MHz."
Software development has costs too. Even FOSS software has paid developers at times, the success of some FOSS projects has been tied to this fact.
iPhone 5 notably better in low light (Score:4, Informative)
Other reviews have noted that while the iPhone 5 camera is just a little better in normal light, it's much better in low light according to this review shooting in Iceland [austinmann.com].
From other tests I seen, it seems to be about two stops better at high ISO shooting. Lower noise and clearer images.
Re:Well, (Score:5, Informative)
You'd have to actually change something to increase cost.
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2012/09/iphone-5-deconstructed-packed-with-power-efficient-parts/ [arstechnica.com]
iFixit's usual thorough analysis reveals that nearly every hardware component has been upgraded or improved, yet is so power efficient that the battery capacity largely remains the same.
Re:Camera (Score:3, Informative)
Yawn. First of all, lets link to the original article [imore.com] instead of the BGR rumination.
"However, if you want a thinner phone that still takes great photos, if you want a better screen that gives a more accurate representation of your photos, if you want the ability to take photos while shooting video, then taken together, the answer could very well change to yes. In fact, if taking and enjoying photos with your iPhone is one of your primary passions -- if you consider yourself an "iPhoneographer" -- the display alone is worth the upgrade to the iPhone 5."
Oh, and how about the motto of the photo blog http://www.imore.com/photography [imore.com]: "Everything you need to know to take the best pictures imaginable with the iPhone, the best camera you have with you".