What do those changes mean for your photos? We went out with the iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone 11 to find out. Up front, there's a more powerful sensor for the iPhone 11's TrueDepth camera - 12-MP to the 7-MP shooter on the iPhone 8 and 8 Plus. The iPhone 11 goes the other direction, with a 12-MP ultra wide lens joining the standard wide camera. The 8 Plus augments its 12-MP main shooter with a 12-MP telephoto lens that supports a 2x optical zoom. The iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone 11 may have the same number of cameras, but the lenses serve different purposes. The iPhone 8 makes do with a single 12-MP wide camera with an f/1.8 aperture. The iPhone 11 sports two lenses, the same amount you'll find on the iPhone 8 Plus. The other noticeable difference between older and newer iPhones is the number of cameras on the back of each one. Considering that iOS 13 added support for long presses to all iPhones, losing 3D Touch support doesn't feel like that big a downgrade. The iPhone 8 and 8 Plus both support 3D Touch the iPhone 11 does not, turning to Haptic feedback where you can summon up shortcuts and other commands with a long press of the iPhone's screen. All three phones support True Tone, Appleās technology for adjusting the display based on ambient lighting around it. There's not really much of a difference: The iPhone 11 offers the same pixels per inch as the iPhone 8, and when we tested the displays, they turned in similar numbers for reproducing colors and, in the case of the iPhone 8 Plus, color accuracy. Apple has dubbed the screen on the iPhone 11 a "Liquid Retina display," compared to the Retina display available on the iPhone 8. The iPhone 11 features an LCD screen, like the older iPhones, but they go by different names.
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