消费者报告推荐iphone5# PDA - 掌中宝
l*a
1 楼
不过,还是认为盖世三是机王。
Devin Coldewey
Consumer Reports recommends iPhone 5 (but says Galaxy S III is 'still king')
Wilson Rothman / NBC News
Consumer Reports, whose considered opinions on products tend to be taken
seriously, has called the iPhone 5 "a winner" in its review, but said in a
press release that the Android-powered Samsung Galaxy S III was "still king."
CR gave the phone a coveted "recommended" badge, praising, as we did, the
iPhone 5's thinner, lighter frame and extra screen space. The reviewers
noted that the improved specs do in fact put it well above much, if not all,
of the competition.
They called its camera "the best we've seen on a smartphone" apart from the
Nokia 808 Pureview (which can't compete with the iPhone 5 in most other ways
). The CR team did note, however, that the camera's low-light performance
wasn't quite as improved as Apple had promised, an observation we
corroborated in our own testing.
Similarly overblown were Apple's claims about the iPhone 5's noise-canceling
multiple microphones; the reviewers didn't think they affected call quality
on either end.
Despite Apple's new Maps app being "relatively streamlined," its lack of
details and customization options did not impress. However, these
shortcomings are well known and Apple is already working to improve things,
so for a long-term purchase such early hiccups aren't a deal-breaker.
Devin Coldewey
Consumer Reports recommends iPhone 5 (but says Galaxy S III is 'still king')
Wilson Rothman / NBC News
Consumer Reports, whose considered opinions on products tend to be taken
seriously, has called the iPhone 5 "a winner" in its review, but said in a
press release that the Android-powered Samsung Galaxy S III was "still king."
CR gave the phone a coveted "recommended" badge, praising, as we did, the
iPhone 5's thinner, lighter frame and extra screen space. The reviewers
noted that the improved specs do in fact put it well above much, if not all,
of the competition.
They called its camera "the best we've seen on a smartphone" apart from the
Nokia 808 Pureview (which can't compete with the iPhone 5 in most other ways
). The CR team did note, however, that the camera's low-light performance
wasn't quite as improved as Apple had promised, an observation we
corroborated in our own testing.
Similarly overblown were Apple's claims about the iPhone 5's noise-canceling
multiple microphones; the reviewers didn't think they affected call quality
on either end.
Despite Apple's new Maps app being "relatively streamlined," its lack of
details and customization options did not impress. However, these
shortcomings are well known and Apple is already working to improve things,
so for a long-term purchase such early hiccups aren't a deal-breaker.