New things for iphone 12 pro max5/4/2023 The big reason I can still use a 6.9-inch Galaxy Note 20 Ultra screen one-handed is that I place all my apps at the bottom of the homescreen. Instead, my biggest gripe with iOS is its restrictive homescreen grid, which still forces users to place apps in a top-down, left-to-right system. The lack of a truly free homescreen on iOSīut things like the PIN pad placement are not my biggest gripe, because I can see how it was just a harmless oversight from iOS engineers - after all, Face ID had worked so well in the pre-mask era that the PIN pad was rarely ever needed. Everything is exactly the same, except they're larger - often unnecessarily so. You can't place more apps onto the Max homescreen than you can on the Mini. Despite the drastic size difference, the UI for both phones is exactly the same. The iPhone 12 Pro Max rocks a 6.7-inch display, while the iPhone 12 Mini packs a 5.4-inch screen. The iPhone 12 Pro Max screen is just a supersized iPhone 12 Mini screen The problem is, as the article title already spoiled, iOS. The biggest reason I can one-hand a Galaxy Note 20 Ultra or LG Wing in ways I can't do with the iPhone 12 Pro Max is because they have software that has adjusted for their larger screens. Their longer/narrower aspect ratio and curved sides help, sure, but it goes beyond that. I can still use those three phones one-handed without any issues. I already know what some iPhone users are thinking "well, if you choose to use a phone with a huge screen, then you have to sacrifice on ergonomics."īut what if I told you it doesn't have to be this way? The Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra, the LG Wing, and the Huawei Mate 40 Pro are as large - in some cases taller - as the iPhone 12 Pro Max, but I don't have to pull off hand gymnastics to do something basic and repetitive like pulling down the notification shade.
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