![]() ![]() The iPhone 6 was shockingly light and svelte, while the iPhone 6s has a more solid feeling in the hand and some might even prefer that. It is slightly, but noticeably heavier and thicker (143g on the 6s vs 129g on the 6, 7.1mm vs 6.9mm). ![]() While you can’t tell the new iPhone 6s from the iPhone 6 from afar, you will be able to tell the difference when you pick up the new phone in your hand. ![]() Rose gold (pink, maybe?) is the new color, and it’s a subtle shade that appeals to both sexes and is not over the top kitsch. Except if you don’t happen to have the rose gold version of the new iPhone. The iPhone 6s is no exception: it looks just like its predecessor, and you won’t be able to tell the two from afar. With the ‘s’ series of phones, Apple has established a tradition of changing the inside, but not the outside of the phone. How does this work out in real life? And should you upgrade from the 6 to the 6s? Read on to find out.ĭesign You can’t tell the two apart from afar, but once you hold the 6s you’d notice that it’s slightly heavier and thicker. You know there are also improvements on the inside: a new Apple A9 system chip that is now built on a new-generation, more efficient manufacturing process, updated cameras: a 12-megapixel main iSight camera, up from 8 megapixels and maybe even more importantly – a 5-megapixel selfie cam, a huge jump from the 1.2-megapixel front shooter before. And unless, you pick it up: the new iPhone is slightly but noticeably heavier and thicker. Unless, you are faced with the ‘rose gold’ version of the new iPhone. Yet the new iPhone 6s looks practically identical to the iPhone 6 and you can’t recognize which is which from afar. ![]()
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