Display

Though many expected Apple to redesign everything around a 4“ display, the display on the 4S superficially identical. The 4S includes the same size and resolution display as the 4, namely a 3.54” IPS panel with 960x640 resolution. We’ve been over this a few times already in the context of the iPhone 4 and the CDMA iPhone 4, but it bears going over again.

In retrospect, moving up to 4“ would’ve gone against Apple’s logical approach to maintaining a DPI-agnostic iOS, and it makes sense to spread the cost of changing display resolution across two generations, which is what we see now. While Android is gradually catching up in the DPI department, OEMs on that side of the fence are engaged in a seemingly endless battle over display size. You have to get into Apple’s head and understand that from their point of view, 3.5” has always been the perfect size - there’s a reason it hasn’t changed at all.

I’ve been through a few 4s myself, and alongside the CDMA iPhone 4, have seen the white point of the retina display gradually shift over time. While I don’t have that original device anymore, even now the 4S seems to have shifted slightly compared to a very recently manufactured 4 I had on hand, and appears to have a different color temperature. We’ve been measuring brightness and white point on smartphone displays at a variety of different brightness settings, and the 4S isn’t spared the treatment. I also tossed in my 4 for comparison purposes. The data really speaks for itself.

The first chart shows white point at a number of brightness values set in settings. You can see the iPhone 4 and 4S differ and straddle opposite sides of 6500K. I would bet that Apple has some +/- tolerance value for these displays from 6500K, and the result is what you see here. Thankfully the lines are pretty straight (so it doesn’t change as you vary brightness), but this variance is why you see people noting that one display looks warmer or cooler than the other. I noted this behavior with the CDMA iPhone 4, and suspect that many people still carrying around launch GSM/UMTS iPhone 4 devices will perceive the difference more than those who have had their devices swapped.

The next two charts show display brightness at various settings for solid black and white on the display.

The 4S and 4 displays follow roughly the same curve, however there is a definite shift in contrast resulting from higher black levels on the 4S display. I’ve seen a few anecdotal accounts of the 4S display being less contrasty, and again this is the kind of shift that unfortunately happens over time with displays. I’ve updated our iPhone 4 result on the graph with the latest of a few I’ve been through.

Display Brightness

Display Brightness

Display Contrast

Unfortunately the 4S falls short of the quoted 800:1 contrast ratio, whereas the 4 previously well exceeded it (the earliest 4 we saw had a contrast value of 951). Rumor has it that Apple has approved more panel vendors to make the retina display, I have no doubt that we’re seeing these changes in performance as a result of multiple sourcing.

WiFi, GPS, Audio, Speakerphone Camera Improvements
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  • crankerchick - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - link

    Nice in depth review. AnandTech is the best place to get quality reviews. Thanks!
  • Death666Angel - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - link

    I don't really see how a doubling of bandwidth (3GS->4->4s) is "more dramatic" than a tripling (3G->3GS). I am also not really impressed that smartphones now have the bandwidth of PCs from 7 years ago. After all, they have a great copy sheet.
  • Soldier1969 - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - link

    If you already have a I4 this is NOT worth the upgrade! Waste of money. Much better options out there for a upgrade path the 4S isnt it...and Ive had the Iphone since release. This was a huge disappontment and failure for Apple. The only reason it sold as much as it did was all those people that still had the 3GS from 2 or 3 years ago or new customers. If you had a 4 already your just a "moop" if you upgraded to one of these!
  • PeteH - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - link

    Depends what you are looking for in an upgrade. That graphics performance is pretty incredible. If you want to develop games pushing the boundaries of what is possible graphically on a mobile device the 4S makes a lot of sense.
  • Lucian Armasu - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    The graphics performance "in a benchmark". As you could see in the review, it only gets about double the FPS in real games, because it's bound by memory bandwidth.

    I doubt the games can run any faster or look any better than other current GPU's in mobiles.
  • thunng8 - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    wow, what an absurd statement. Several games that were optimised for the new graphics increased their details level greatly and also added FSAA. You should have a look before passing judgement.
  • *kjm - Tuesday, November 1, 2011 - link

    Unless your like me and on Sprint comming from a Samsung M800 that is going on 4yrs old. I would think "most" people that can upgrade don't to stay off contract as long as the phone is working for them.
  • doobydoo - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    What would be a 'better option' right now, to upgrade an iPhone 4 to?
  • Lucian Armasu - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    The differences are not that big hardware wise at this point, so it will be more of a decision based on software. If you like iOS 5 you get an iPhone 4S, if you like Android 4.0, you get a Galaxy Nexus. If you like a different phone design, you get a Droid RAZR.

    I don't think the upgrade from iPhone 4 to iPhone 4S would be worth it anyway. Maybe from iPhone 3GS, for those who want to stay in the Apple ecosystem.
  • weiran - Wednesday, November 2, 2011 - link

    > If you like a different phone design, you get a Droid RAZR.

    Which is ugly as sin, and isn't really an "upgrade" from an iPhone 4.

    IMO from a design POV the most interesting iPhone competitor right now is the unreleased Nokia Lumia 800, for hardware and software.

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