Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Here at Ars, one of the things we like to focus on in reviews is new technology. There are a few reasons: new stuff draws readers, new stuff is fast and shiny, and new stuff points the way to where technology is headed.

The thing about the iPhone SE is that there’s basically nothing that’s new about it. It’s a four-year-old phone design filled with six-month-old parts, and it’s the rare product that amounts to exactly the sum of its parts. You could almost write a review of it without laying hands on it.

So we’ll spend a little time with the tech inside, but this review is going to focus primarily on the Big Questions: Who should buy this? Why should they buy it? Who shouldn’t buy it? And where does it fit into Apple’s Grand Plan for the iPhone?

Here’s where it’s like an iPhone 5S

The iPhone SE looks almost 100 percent identical to the iPhone 5S, which didn’t change much about the iPhone 5 design from 2012. It’s familiar; holding and using the SE is exactly like holding and using a 5S or a 5. There’s a little “SE” on the back, the regulatory logos have been tucked away inside the software, and there’s now a rose gold color option. Other than those, there are only a couple of giveaways.

The phone’s chamfered edges and the Apple logo on the back have been tweaked, but both changes are aesthetic rather than functional. The edges are now matte instead of reflective, which Apple tells us was done to make the edges of the phone the same color and texture as its sides and back. And the Apple logo is now a separate piece of inset shiny metal rather than just a shiny spot screen printed on the back, which Apple says was done to make it consistent with the design of the 6 and 6S.

Specs at a glance: Apple iPhone SE Screen 1136×640 4-inch (326PPI) touchscreen OS iOS 9.3 CPU 1.85GHz Apple A9 RAM 2GB DDR4 GPU "Apple A9 GPU" Storage 16 or 64GB NAND flash Networking 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.2 Ports Lightning connector, headphone jack Camera 12MP rear camera, 1.2MP front camera Size 4.87" × 2.31" × 0.30" (123.8 × 58.6 × 7.6 mm) Weight 3.99oz (113 g) Battery 1624mAh Starting price $399 unlocked, $499 for 64GB Other perks NFC for Apple Pay, Touch ID, charger, earbuds, Lightning cable

There are benefits to recycling an old design. For one, cases and accessories made for the 5S should work with the SE with no problem at all (and if you have a 5S, you can look forward to continued support from case and accessory makers). The flat edges of the 5-era design make it easier to hold onto than the rounded, more slippery edges of the 6 and 6S design. Even though the SE uses the same camera as the 6S, there’s no unsightly camera bump here. And since the 5S and the SE use many of the same parts, it should be easy to repair and replace many SE components right from the start.

But there are downsides, too. There isn’t really room to fit the 3D Touch hardware inside this smaller case; you’re dealing with a slower first-generation TouchID sensor, the front-facing camera is the older 1.2MP version and not the newer 5MP version, and the screen is exactly identical to the 5S not just in size and resolution but also in color and contrast. Blacks are less black, which can make the display look a little flat or washed out compared to the 6 and 6S—it’s not a bad display, it’s just not up to the same standard as the higher-end iPhones.

The people who are the most interested in this phone will probably be upgrading from a 4- or 5-era design rather than stepping down from a 6, 6 Plus, 6S, or 6S Plus. But as a 6/6S user who hasn’t used a 4-inch iPhone on a daily basis in a while, I can tell you that I actually prefer holding and carrying the SE around. The flat edges make it easier to keep a hold of, the smaller size reduces hand strain, and this phone will better fit into pockets (especially if you have to deal with women’s clothes and the associated tiny pockets). That said, it’s not as comfortable to type on, and I found myself going for my computer more often when I wanted to tap out anything longer than a Tweet, a short e-mail, or a quick note. The larger screens are definitely better if you’re interested in using your iPhone as a productivity device.

Here’s where it’s like an iPhone 6S

The SE is identical to the iPhone 6S in most of the ways that count. It’s just as fast as a 6S thanks to the Apple A9 SoC. Its CPU appears to be exactly as fast as it is in the larger iPhones, and while the GPU is a little slower (check the Offscreen scores, which put all GPUs on the same footing) the reduction in speed appears to be in proportion to the reduction in the number of pixels the GPU needs to push (see the Onscreen scores, which render at native panel resolution).



















While it doesn’t show up in these charts, bumping the SE up to 2GB of RAM makes a huge difference for heavy multitaskers or people who have lots of Safari tabs open at once. If your main problem with your 5 or 5S is frequent tab reloading, the SE is the answer to your prayers.

It takes the same pictures as an iPhone 6S, which means you’re getting a very good pocket camera that also happens to be able to shoot 4K video at 30FPS. I use the Live Photos feature very, very rarely (and on occasion I’ve had trouble sending accidentally taken Live Photos to friends with Android phones), but it’s here if you want it. Unsurprisingly, however, this phone lacks the optical image stabilization features from the 6S Plus.

These are some perfunctory test shots below to show you that the SE and 6S are in fact using the same camera (and that they’re a nice step up from the 4S, 5/5C, or 5S), but I’ll point you to our iPhone 6S review for a more wide-ranging comparison.

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

Andrew Cunningham

The SE’s wireless capabilities are closer to an iPhone 6—it’s got 150Mbps LTE and the 433Mbps 802.11ac Wi-Fi, presumably because there’s not enough room in the smaller case to fit the extra antennas needed to further boost speeds. All iPhones Apple currently sells support Bluetooth 4.2 and NFC (for Apple Pay), so there’s no difference between the SE and the 6S there.

Finally, the SE’s Apple A9 supports the hands-free Hey Siri feature, which makes the phone spring to life whenever you say, “Hey Siri.” If you need to quickly get some information or set a timer while your phone is on the counter, it’s definitely useful.

Does it do anything unique?

There is one thing this phone can brag about that neither the 5S or the 6S can boast: superior battery life. All the chips inside are a couple of years newer, which means they include a couple years’ worth of manufacturing advancements and power consumption improvements. The battery is just a little larger than it was before—1624mAh instead of 1560mAh, a roughly 4-percent increase. And the screen is relatively small and relatively low-resolution, which eliminates one of the biggest power drains on all of the large-screened phones we’ve seen lately.

We’re using the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus battery figures from our original review, but for the 5S we’ve re-run them on an older phone with a brand-new battery from iFixit. If you’re using a 5S with its original battery, your current battery life is probably a bit worse than this depending on when you bought it.





In our standard Wi-Fi browsing test, the SE actually outlasts the iPhone 6S by a couple of hours, and it even beats the longer-lasting 6S Plus by a comfortable margin. The story is the same in our heavier WebGL test, which puts a light but continuous load on the CPU and GPU; it lasts longer than either of the current flagship iPhones. All of those power efficiency improvements mean that the iPhone SE is also a huge step up over an iPhone 5S with a fresh battery. In its smallest phone, Apple has done what we’ve been asking it to do for years: stop chasing thinness and prioritize battery life instead.