It may now be possible to connect to 5G networks on an iPhone, but it will cost you in battery life. Enabling 5G can cut battery life by up to 20% based on initial findings, meaning that you may need to recharge the iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 Pro before the end of the day.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/5G-may-cost-up-to-20-battery-life-on-the-iPhone-12-and-iPhone-12-Pro.498841.0.html
Yup, not surprising. And some 5G shills still cite the theoretical value that 5G is "over 200x more efficient" than 4G.
Of course, Apple cutting the battery size cuts battery life too.
It doesnt matter, people will buying it whatsoever, who cares the battery life, it can have 2hrs...
As long 5G can be entirely deactivated in the data/radio settings, I am fine. I don't need more than good LTE coverage on my 15GB Vodafone contract.
Quote from: Lulzi on October 26, 2020, 10:22:52
As long 5G can be entirely deactivated in the data/radio settings, I am fine. I don't need more than good LTE coverage on my 15GB Vodafone contract.
Largely, yes, only that useless 5G support probably accounts for $100-200 of the retail price, if you're willing to swallow that, then totally.