items 1: articleHeading: Apple iPhone 15 full review
articleLink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8ZnoMQpimA
articleSummary: The 60Hz refresh rate is a drawback, making scrolling and animations appear less smooth than on phones with higher refresh rates.
articleTitle: Youtube
articleType: web_article
favicon: https://i.flash.tech/a/plain/s3://flash-creatives/images/icons/youtube_favicon.png
snippets: one of these Generations Apple should give us a high refresh rate on a ven iPhone but not this time this means your swiping and scrolling will again appear less smooth to the eye than on most other phones which feature 90 HZ or above
type: ARTICLE
items 2: articleHeading: iPhone 15 / 15 Plus Review - Suspiciously Good!
articleLink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1XVb4mdELc
articleSummary: The 60Hz display is considered an anomaly for an $800 phone and makes animations feel less smooth.
articleTitle: Youtube
articleType: web_article
favicon: https://i.flash.tech/a/plain/s3://flash-creatives/images/icons/youtube_favicon.png
snippets: But while we're up here talking about the screen on this phone, it's also brighter, It's up to 2,000 nits now, which looks awesome outdoors., However, that’s the only real change with the screen., We don’t get the LTPO panel from the iPhone Pro’s, we don’t get the ProMotion 120hz, its still just a 60hz screen on this iPhone 15, we don’t get the always-on display option, so in that regard, this is still quite a few steps below the Pro iPhone’s again this year, but at least there’s something that’s been upgraded here., But also, it's 2023, and this is an $800 phone that still has a 60 hertz display., This is actually really fascinating to me., Like, on one hand, for most people buying this phone, it's totally fine., It literally doesn't have, it's a new baseline iPhone, have you talked to someone who buys a new baseline iPhone?, They literally don't care., It doesn't matter, it's not something they pay attention to, you could ask them right now how many frames per second their phone is and they wouldn't have an answer, just doesn't matter., So just as long as it works and it's all relatively smooth like last year and the year before and the year before and the year before, it's totally a non-factor., I have actually literally handed 120 hertz phone to people next to a 60 hertz phone, and even side by side next to each other, they can't see the difference., Or if they do, it's just like, oh, that's a subtle thing that seems kind of neat but they'd be totally fine missing out on it., So with the target demographic of this phone, it's totally fine., But on the other hand, Apple, the richest technology company in the world, does stuff all the time that regular people will literally never notice, that are subtle improvements or changes here and there, all the time., Like, when they switched these baseline iPhones from LCD to OLED displays, do you think any of these people actually noticed that?, Or what about going from the A15 Bionic last year to this A16 Bionic?, Do you think people are actually noticing the differences here?, Or what about when they just added 5G to the iPhone and most people didn't care?, Like, making subtle improvements over time is what modern smartphones are all about these days., And I would actually argue that a higher refresh rate is more noticeable to more people than some of those other things., Like, I think you could today hand me, a professional, an unlabeled iPhone with an A15 Bionic and an A16 Bionic, and it would take me quite some time to find the real differences between them., And so, that combined with the fact that it's incredibly cheap and easy and reasonable to get to like at least a 90 hertz phone, isn't the new Moto G is like 90 hertz at $170 or something like that?, Now I'm sure that's a horrible looking screen compared to this iPhone, it's 720P with the brightness of a box of crayons., But still they decided to add that to that phone because Motorola knew that enough people would notice it and feel that smoothness difference and it's a higher level of perceived performance., So it's just wild to me, knowing how easy it would be for Apple to make this even a 90 hertz display, but they just refuse to do it because they've attached the word Pro to that feature., It's promotion for the Pro phones., And it just strikes me as a tool just to sort of continue widening the gap as much as they can between the Pro iPhones and the non-Pro iPhones, and they're happy to do it, even if it makes this iPhone 15 the most expensive phone in the world with a 60 hertz display.
type: ARTICLE
items 3: articleHeading: iPhone 15 / 15 Plus Review - Suspiciously Good!
articleLink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s1XVb4mdELc
articleSummary: The 60Hz display is a significant compromise, making animations feel less smooth compared to competitors.
articleTitle: Youtube
articleType: web_article
favicon: https://i.flash.tech/a/plain/s3://flash-creatives/images/icons/youtube_favicon.png
snippets: The display is still only 60 Hz with no prootion just like the iPhone 16., This is a bit unfortunate and if you do want 120 Hz for a much smoother looking iOS experience, you'll need to go up to a pro model iPhone as even the nonpro 16 still doesn't have it.
type: ARTICLE
items 4: articleHeading: Apple iPhone 15 full review
articleLink: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8ZnoMQpimA
articleSummary: The 60Hz refresh rate is a drawback, making scrolling and animations appear less smooth than on phones with higher refresh rates.
articleTitle: Youtube
articleType: web_article
favicon: https://i.flash.tech/a/plain/s3://flash-creatives/images/icons/youtube_favicon.png
snippets: one of these Generations Apple should give us a high refresh rate on a ven iPhone but not this time this means your swiping and scrolling will again appear less smooth to the eye than on most other phones which feature 90 HZ or above
type: ARTICLE