Dave hates the speaker:
It's 10 dB lower volume, so in some activities where the usual iPhones work fine, the Air is inaudible.
View attachment 2559390
I agree with him. It’s subpar imo, but I’ll get used to it.
Dave hates the speaker:
It's 10 dB lower volume, so in some activities where the usual iPhones work fine, the Air is inaudible.
View attachment 2559390
The speaker stinks. Either you can live with it or not.Dave hates the speaker:
It's 10 dB lower volume, so in some activities where the usual iPhones work fine, the Air is inaudible.
View attachment 2559390
Agreed. It’s a non issue for me, but I can absolutely tell the difference and people who care about audio from their phones should be aware.The speaker stinks. Either you can live with it or not.
That's not how it works on the Air.Love the speaker on my Air - perfect, clear audio, great tone reproduction using the entire screen as the speaker baffle.
It’s funny to see some people not only defending the major flaws of the iPhone Air, but also willing to pay a premium price for a phone with battery life and speakers reminiscent of the iPhone 3/4/5 era—just for the sake of a lighter device. I’m actually glad this phone seems to be at the bottom of iPhone sales, according to MKBHD, because at least that shows companies not everyone wants this kind of compromise in the future.
I read somewhere that Apple had allocated approximately 10% of its overall iPhone production to the Air. If that is close to accurate, and given that the Air remains in stock in so many places and it's not even sold in places like China, then that 9% demand may actually be better than what some other pundits might have been estimating.Most consumers are pretty sane.
"Analyst Amit Daryanani cited results from a survey of nearly 4,000 consumers that pointed to solid demand, especially for the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. About 56% of respondents said they planned to buy one of the two higher-end models, with many opting for larger memory configurations after Apple eliminated lower storage tiers."
Not all models are seeing the same traction. The iPhone Air has lagged, with only 9% of consumers in the survey planning to buy it. Concerns about battery life and a single-camera design may be weighing on demand."
I read somewhere that Apple had allocated approximately 10% production to the Air. If that is close to accurate, and given that the Air remains in stock in so many places and it's not even sold in places like China, then that 9% demand may actually be better than what some other pundits might have been estimating.
I guess it depends upon where that survey was done though. If only the US, then that 9% might be expected, since I'd guess that US is over-represented for Air buyers compared to other parts of the world. Amit Daryanani is a US-based analyst.
I don't think the Air is even available yet in China, because it's eSIM-only.I'd expect this survey to be U.S. based. In China, I'd be surprised if the Air hit even 5% interest due to the fully cashless and digital economy. If you try paying cash, nobody is going to give you change. This means battery life is imperative. eSIM is another barrier.
I don't think the Air is even available yet in China, because it's eSIM-only.