WHY SHOULD I BUY AN IPHONE?

iPhone is a pocket camera, computer, and yes — communicator — all in one. It’s Apple’s most strong product and one of the most successful products of all time. Introduced by Steve Jobs in 2007, Apple has sold over a billion of them to date.

Current models include iPhone X, iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus and iPhone SE. That’s a lot of iPhones, with a lot of different innovations, at a lot of different price points. Here’s how to classify them all out!
This is the most critical cause why the iPhone is so unique: The software is created to work with the hardware, and vice versa. Since Android is used by many various businesses, they don’t have this. iPhones, however, are only made by Apple. This leads to higher battery life and way better performance. Fewer bugs and lag too. Also, the carrier is not in control of the iPhone, so no carrier apps!
The iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus may not deliver super screen resolutions, but they hit the best notes for many buyers. Now we have the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus that combine in wireless charging and upgraded cameras and the OLED iPhone X with Face ID adding to the reasons the iPhone is useful for many users.

7 Reasons Why You Should Buy an iPhone
  1. Much, much faster
If you’re thinking of purchasing the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus or iPhone X, know that the A11 Bionic chip inside blows away anything from the Android camp. Not only did this processor pace Apple’s flagship to significant wins in synthetic benchmarks such as Geekbench 4 and 3DMark; it also ran circles around the likes of the Galaxy Note 8 and the Pixel 2 XL when doing things like editing 4K video and opening big files.This speed variation should also make playing the fastest games, and especially enjoying demanding augmented-reality apps, a smoother experience.
  1. The best cameras
Samsung held the camera phone crown for nearly two years, but Apple has cleared to the top spot, thanks to the cameras inside the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus. (The iPhone X will have a dual-lens setup alike to the iPhone 8 Plus’.)
Based on our head-to-head comparisons in our camera shootout between the iPhone 8 Plus and the Galaxy Note 8, Apple’s flagship takes more vibrant photos with more graphics and more natural-looking colours. It particularly excelled in sunlight, where the Note 8 washed out some pictures.

The Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL deliver better images in low light and offer better HDR performance, which based on our camera face-off.

There are plenty of great Android phone cameras, but at least for now, the iPhone is the champ.
  1. Works beautifully with Macs
If you haven’t tried a Mac in a while, you might be shocked to know just how well iPhones work with them. For instance, with the Continuity feature in macOS, you can use your MacBook to send and receive text messages and even accept and place calls. All you have to do is keep your iPhone nearby.I find the Handoff feature a little less helpful, but some may like that they can do things such as start an email on their Mac and then pick up where they left off on their iPhone — or vice versa. Thanks to iCloud keeping everything in sync, you also have simple access to your Mac to the photos you take on your iPhone, as well as any notes or documents you design.
  1. Apple Pay
Between Android Pay and Samsung Pay, Apple has plenty of competitors, but right now, Apple Pay is the most recommended method for making mobile payments. It’s also dead-simple to use. All you have to do to use Apple Pay is bring your iPhone close to the supported payment terminal at the checkout counter and then press your finger on your phone’s Touch ID sensor.

With the iPhone X, you double tap the Side button and then stare at your phone to use Face ID.
If you’re not that excited by using your phone to pay for stuff at the store, you can try another option: iOS 11 supports transferring and receiving money from friends and family from within the Messages app. Yes, there are third-party apps that do this, but with the iPhone, it’s created right in.

5.iPhones are more private
Two main strands are backing up the above statement: the privacy rules built into Apple’s smartphones (and particularly the newest generations of iPhone), and the comments and actions that Apple has made in support of user privacy.

iPhone privacy measures
We’re not just talking about passcodes and fingerprints, although these things can support to defend your data (one element being the way that the iPhone locks up for successively longer and longer terms the more times you get the passcode wrong, in order to prevent would-be hackers from ‘brute-forcing’ the passcode; get it wrong 10 times and the phone locks down permanently). Nor are we talking about the end-to-end encryption Apple has added to iMessage. There’s something better than all this, in the more modern generations of the iPhone.

As well as introducing Touch ID, the iPhone 5s was the first iPhone to feature a protection measure that Apple calls the Secure Enclave, a sub-section of the processor chip that stores the fingerprints and other security-critical data. It is also a critical part of the encryption setup.

6.iOS is more user-friendly
Personally, I think iOS is comfortable and more convenient and pleasant to use than Android; and it would appear that a lot of my fellow smartphone users agree since iOS users are on average more faithful to the platform than their Android counterparts. Once people have analyzed the iPhone, they tend to stick with it.

7.iPhones get better apps, earlier
It’s easier to find useful apps as an iOS user. And discoverability is no small issue in a store with well over a million apps. Apps are cheap and numerous, and individual buying decisions are much more natural than merely finding the stuff worth considering in the first place.

What’s more, quality apps are more likely to appear on iOS than on Android, and if they seem on both, they tend to appear first on the Apple App Store. Why? Because on average, Android users are less inclined to pay for apps, which means developers have less reason to put the effort in. It might seem wrong, but by joining the platform with the more spend-happy consumers, you’re earning yourself special treatment from software developers.

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