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iPhone 11 Pro Speed Test Shows the Latter Fails to Beat Last Year’s iPhone XS

iPhone 11 Pro Speed Test Shows the Latter Fails to Beat Last Year’s iPhone XS

5 years ago
Anonymous $MUlyiGRWxa

https://wccftech.com/iphone-11-pro-speed-test-vs-iphone-xs-vs-iphone-x/

The iPhone 11 Pro equipped with Apple’s latest and greatest A13 Bionic silicon grant the phone extraordinary increases in both performance and efficiency. This would make this device the fastest for this year right? Not quite, because according to the latest iPhone 11 Pro speed tests, the results might disappoint you, but there might still be hope.

App launch speed tests are all the craze these days on YouTube and this one isn’t different, except for the fact that we have a new device. Heading over to the channel EverythingApplePro, the iPhone 11 Pro speed test pits Apple’s latest device against last year’s iPhone XS as well as the iPhone X. To recap on how these tests work, a series of apps categorized under productivity, entertainment, and gaming are opened in quick succession. The first round of ‘quick app firing’ tests the raw performance of the device, while the second round reveals how many of those apps can be retained in the phone’s memory, or RAM.

iPhone 11 Pro Speed Test Shows the Latter Fails to Beat Last Year’s iPhone XS

Sep 22, 2019, 12:14pm UTC
https://wccftech.com/iphone-11-pro-speed-test-vs-iphone-xs-vs-iphone-x/ > The iPhone 11 Pro equipped with Apple’s latest and greatest A13 Bionic silicon grant the phone extraordinary increases in both performance and efficiency. This would make this device the fastest for this year right? Not quite, because according to the latest iPhone 11 Pro speed tests, the results might disappoint you, but there might still be hope. > App launch speed tests are all the craze these days on YouTube and this one isn’t different, except for the fact that we have a new device. Heading over to the channel EverythingApplePro, the iPhone 11 Pro speed test pits Apple’s latest device against last year’s iPhone XS as well as the iPhone X. To recap on how these tests work, a series of apps categorized under productivity, entertainment, and gaming are opened in quick succession. The first round of ‘quick app firing’ tests the raw performance of the device, while the second round reveals how many of those apps can be retained in the phone’s memory, or RAM.