incremental

iPhone 5 was announced last night. It’s twice as fast for both CPU and graphic, shifts to a larger (4″) 16.9 screen ratio, has an even better camera, new WiFi chips for faster transfers, new 4G wireless with global support, better battery life and managing all of this while being lighter than ever and thinner … Continue reading “incremental”

iPhone 5 was announced last night.

It’s twice as fast for both CPU and graphic, shifts to a larger (4″) 16.9 screen ratio, has an even better camera, new WiFi chips for faster transfers, new 4G wireless with global support, better battery life and managing all of this while being lighter than ever and thinner than ever.

But, yes, incremental is how most jaded journalists are describing it. Of course, when MicroNokiaSungTC brings out a new phone “IN YELLOW”, it will be proclaimed that the cellphone wars are over. Yellow is in.

Such is the situation with tech journalists. When Apple was down, they hated Apple. Now Apple is on the up, guess what?

I suppose “incremental” is a step better than “beleaguered”.

0 thoughts on “incremental”

  1. I described it as an incremental upgrade to every subsystem of the phone.

    That’s not a bad thing at all if you are the best phone out there already 😉

    I would have liked it to have NFC for payments though, but as I doubt that will be widely introduced in Belfast over the next 2 years so that’s not a deal breaker at all.

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