iphone 6
Update iOS 11 secara diam-diam membuat performas CPU di perangkat iPhone 6, iPhone 6s dan seri Plus mengalami penurunan drastis jika baterainya sudah tidak sehat. Apple sudah memberikan penjelasan untuk hal tersebut beberapa bulan lalu dan program diskon ganti baterai. Namun pasti kamu masih penasaran, seberapa lemot sih iPhone 6s yang menggunakan baterai lama dan mengalami throttling CPU,

Seorang pengguna YouTube dengan nama Bennett Sorbo membagikan ceritanya mengenai iPhone 6s yang digunakan. 29. Dia menunggu lebih dari sebulan karena Apple kehabisan stok baterai di beberapa Apple Store mengingat permintaan yang banyak. Klik tautan ini jika video di atas tidak muncul. 6 Alasan Membeli iPhone 6s daripada iPhone 8 di Tahun 2018, Nomor 5 Menang Banyak! Dapat kamu lihat pada video di atas, iPhone 6s yang masih menggunakan baterai lama terlihat sangat lambat. Bahkan untuk sekedar membuka aplikasi Safari, Sono, Yelp, Spotify dan beberapa lainnya.

Apalagi jika kamu menggunakan iPhone 6s dengan baterai yang sudah bermasalah ini untuk bermain games atau aplikasi yang membutuhkan performa CPU dan grafis tinggi, prosesnya akan terasa jauh lebih lambat. Jika dilihat dari angka benchmark menggunakan Geekbench, hasilnya juga berbeda sangat jauh. Untuk iPhone 6s dengan baterai lama, hanya menampilkan skor 2485 di multi-core testing. Sedangkan untuk iPhone 6s yang menggunakan baterai baru mendapatkan hasil 4412. Sangat jauh berbeda ya! Apakah kamu termasuk pengguna iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus yang merasakan performa sangat lambat karena baterai sudah harus diganti, Bagikan pengalaman kamu di kolom komentar ya!

The latter group helps to make the iPhone 6 Plus your one device to rule them all pocket computer. But that continuity is broken a bit when you go back to those portrait-only apps. Screen size is, of course, one of your biggest considerations. The iPhone 6's screen is 73 percent as big as the 6 Plus'.

But that smaller iPhone 6 screen is still 38 percent bigger than the 2012-13 iPhones (5, 5c and 5s). Compared to the pre-2012 iPhones (4s and older), the iPhone 6's screen is 67 percent bigger. So if your priority is a big screen, the 6 Plus may or may not be what you're looking for - and much will depend on your frame of reference.

If you're used to 5-in or larger Android phones, the iPhone 6 might feel a little undersized. But it still gives you significantly more real estate than any pre-2014 iPhone did. Its 4.7-in size hits a sweet spot that gives you a solid window into your content, but without feeling gigantic in hand or pocket.

The screen quality prize probably goes to the iPhone 6 Plus, as its 1080p screen is about 23 percent sharper. But in practice, we don't think this should be a deciding point: Apple nailed subtler details like color accuracy, viewing angles and brightness - making that pixel density discrepancy barely (if at all) a factor. The iPhone 6 also has a slightly higher contrast ratio (1400:1 to the Plus' 1300:1), which helps to make up for the lower pixel density. Both have very good displays, and there are more important points to base your decision on.

Our tests show a battery life advantage for the Plus. While streaming video over Wi-Fi (with brightness set at 75 percent), it dropped around 12 percent per hour. In the same test, the iPhone 6 lost over 14 percent per hour. We don't see uptimes as a concern in either handset, but you might get a little more battery bang for your buck from the larger Plus.

This latest pair of iPhones has outstanding cameras (well, for smartphones), and they're on almost completely level ground. Both are very good in low-lit conditions, and are quick to launch and quick to snap shots after tapping the shutter. Both have dual-LED flashes (for more even and colorful-looking flash shots), 720p slow-motion at 240 fps, and burst mode.

The one difference is the Plus' addition of OIS. If you aren't the steadiest of photographers, and you're on the fence about everything else, then maybe the 6 Plus' stabilization will push you over to its side. Elsewhere, both have Apple's excellent Touch ID fingerprint sensor (including  Pay support), both run iOS 8, both are sold in the same three colors (space gray, silver and gold) and both have zippy, silky-smooth performance. The simplest buying advice we can give is that the iPhone 6 is more of a classic smartphone, and makes a better complement for an iPad.