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iPhone X iPhone 8 Plus iOS 16.7.10: 2 GB iPhone 8: A10 Fusion 3 GB LPDDR4 1600 MHz iPhone 7 Plus iOS 15.8.3: 2 GB iPhone 7: A9 iPhone 6s iPhone 6s Plus iPhone SE (1st gen) A8 1 GB LPDDR3 800 MHz eMMC iPhone 6 iPhone 6 Plus iOS 12.5.7 A7 iPhone 5s: A6 LPDDR2 533 MHz iPhone 5 iPhone 5c: iOS 10.3.4 (iPhone 5) iOS 10.3.3 (iPhone 5c) A5 512 MB ...
The iPhone X (Roman numeral "X" pronounced "ten" [13]) is a smartphone that was developed and marketed by Apple Inc. It is part of the 11th generation of the iPhone. Available for pre-order from October 27, 2017, it was released on November 3, 2017. The naming of the iPhone X (skipping the iPhone 9 and 9s) marked the 10th anniversary of the iPhone.
The XS Max introduced a larger 6.5-inch screen. The iPhone XR included a 6.1-inch LCD "Liquid Retina" display, with a "bezel-less" design similar to the iPhone X, but does not include a second telephoto lens; it was made available in a series of vibrant colors, akin to the iPhone 5c, and was a lower-cost device compared to the iPhone X and XS. [44]
The iPhone maker, along with some other big technology companies, has found it hard to cut reliance on Nvidia's pricey and short-in-supply processors despite in-house efforts to develop their own ...
Available via iOS 18.2, iPadOS 18.2, and macOS 15.2, the upgrades are part of Apple’s effort to goose iPhone, iPad, and Mac sales and compete with Android (GOOG, GOOGL) rivals in the US like ...
The XS, which is visually near-identical to the iPhone X, has a better system-on-a-chip: the A12 Bionic chip built with a 7 nm process. [20] It has a 5.85 inch (149 mm) OLED display (marketed as 5.8 inch) with a resolution of 2436 × 1125 pixels (2.7 megapixels) at 458 ppi, dual 12-megapixel rear cameras, and one 7-megapixel front-facing camera.
For an event built around unveiling Apple’s first AI-powered iPhone, there was one striking absence over the two-hour presentation: the words “artificial intelligence.” The two words Apple ...
Shipping symbols [2] from ISO standard 780 "Pictorial marking for handling of goods" [3] or ASTM D5445 "Standard Practice for Pictorial Markings for Handling of Goods" [4] which depict shipping boxes as squares with rounded corners: "Fragile": the silhouette of a broken wine glass "This end up": a horizontal line with two arrows pointing up