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The latest iPhone.

(41 Posts)
MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 14:34:42

Could anyone explain how it differs from others?
Is there a way of being able to tell, in a brief glimpse, what model it is?

How does the iPhone differ from a Samsung, for example, and how can you tell, just by sight, what model and make it is?

Teacheranne Fri 10-Jun-22 16:26:47

silverlining48

Calendargirl, we seem to have the same phones, so do they have face recognition? How would you even know?

If a phone uses facial recognition to open it, then you would have been asked to stare into a circle thingy on the screen while it mapped the features of your face. You then merely have to look into your phone when you first open it for it to operate.

iPhones are different and savvy people can tell the difference. My iPhone, the XR, does not have a home button, it is operated by swiping the screen so pretty obvious which model it is.

MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 16:28:30

I suppose it depends on what size individual bars of chocolate are? smile
Mine is a,bit bigger than a,bar I think.

BlueBelle Fri 10-Jun-22 16:29:16

Go into settings
tap ‘general’ then
‘About’
And it will tell you the model
Mines iPhone 7 Plus I think the latest is up to iPhone 13 so I m way back but it’s fine for me and does everything I need it to do and syncs with everyone else in the family for photos and things and with my iPad

MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 16:29:25

My phone opens by swiping the screen.
Samsung.

Mamie Fri 10-Jun-22 16:31:26

I have the iphone SE 2020 and the Apple Watch SE. Both much cheaper than the top of the range, but do everything I need them to do. You could spot the difference if you were an Apple nerd, but who cares?

MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 16:35:21

People here care.
As I've said, people feel obliged to point out that others (poor people) have the latest model.

Nothing here to convince me of that, though.

Mamie Fri 10-Jun-22 17:04:42

I don't think it is really anything to do with iphones though MissAdventure.
I think it is just a long line of examples of people trying to making themselves feel better by blaming the feckless poor.
Like iphones / flatscreen TVs / video recorders / record players / bingo / wirelesses / perms / gin / nights out at the music hall etc

CaravanSerai Fri 10-Jun-22 18:50:02

I like Apple products but keep them until they break so my phone is an elderly SE. I take very litte notice of what phones other people have, couldn't say if they are latest model or not.

I agree with Mamie. Some people like to think that everyone else is feckless and undeserving. Off topic, but earlier I relistened to a 2016 File on 4 programme about selling off housing association properties. One man, a bit part actor, said he couldn't afford to buy his London 2 bedroom home but was doing a deal with a property developer who would put up the money so that he, the actor, could buy and then sell on the house at a tidy profit for himself whereupon the developer would redevelop the plot into a four bed luxury house that he could also sell for a good profit. Asked by the interviewer if he thought this was ethical, he replied that if left as a housing association property, once he no longer needed it, it would go to a family "who wouldn't deserve it". How and why would he think that? Did he think he didn't deserve the house when it was first rented to him?

MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 18:55:01

He sounds a nice sort! shock
I'd love it if someone from the housing association put a name to that voice.

CaravanSerai Fri 10-Jun-22 19:06:53

It was Huggy Leaver. You can listen to him here about 4 minutes in to 8 minutes including the developer.

www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/b07gfjhr

MissAdventure Fri 10-Jun-22 19:14:02

Oh, I'm cross before I've even listened!

ElaineI Fri 10-Jun-22 21:02:29

You can't really tell by looking at what someone else has in their hand. Most modern mobiles look similar and you absolutely wouldn't be able to tell if it was the latest or an older model unless you were very near or handled it. Many people only have mobiles not land lines now. For anyone who trots out these myths - what a judgemental thing to say. Why shouldn't "poor" people have mobiles of whatever age? In our family as in many others they get passed on. The youngsters get new and us oldies get the cast offs which work well enough. All our phones look new from a distance.

Helen657 Sat 11-Jun-22 07:31:25

Mine’s an iPhone 11 (just had to go into settings to check!). It’s got 2 camera lenses on the back along with the flash, I think the more expensive & later iPhone models have 3 lenses, & the earlier ones have 1????
Got mine in Sept 2020 when the “motherboard” (apple shop lingo) went on my old phone & it wasn’t fixable, & treated myself. It’s bigger than my old one so I can use it without my glasses ?

Maggiemaybe Sat 11-Jun-22 08:36:29

My iPhone’s an SE 2020 and DH’s is a 6, which I passed on to him when Apple stopped security updates for that model. He only uses his phone for texts and Wordle so doesn’t need them. smile

Yes, I can tell the difference instantly just by looking at them, because his is in a blue case and mine’s in pink. Otherwise, I’d have no idea.

All this about younger people and those on benefits “having the latest phones” is maddening. It must be nigh on impossible to manage without a mobile at all these days, but there aren’t that many who see them as status symbols.

Lucca Wed 15-Jun-22 17:31:38

MissAdventure

I'm trying to dispel the myth that poor people have "the latest" iphone" which is trotted out with regularity here.
Hence, I'm asking who could tell without removing it from the poor person and comparing/contrasting it.

??