Apple has been releasing a new iPhone every year for 15 years. Each year, the newest iPhone always offers something more than its predecessors, but some years, the improvements are more impressive than others. This is a good year for the “Pro” version of the iPhone. The iPhone 14 Pro offers numerous improvements over older models, most of which are also improvements over the brand new iPhone 14, and any one of these additions would have made for a nice upgrade. Put them all together, and you get an iPhone that is significantly better. If you are in the market for a new iPhone this year, the iPhone 14 Pro is fantastic.
Life is better when you have your own island
Five years ago, Apple introduced the iPhone X with an edge-to-edge screen. The ability to see even more on the screen of a device that was roughly the same size as its predecessor was amazing. The drawback was that there had to be a notch at the top to house cameras and sensors, but fortunately, it didn't take long to get so used to the notch that you rarely paid attention to it. On the iPhone 14 Pro, the notch has turned into the Dynamic Island. That’s a radical name for a terrific new feature. Instead of being something to ignore, that area at the top of the screen is now something that you want to pay attention to: a valued feature, not a necessary compromise.
The term "island" typically makes me think of a beautiful beach with white sand and blue water where I relax and enjoy doing nothing. That’s not what we have here. The Dynamic Island is all about utility and productivity. It is a form of multitasking, allowing you to do more things at the same time. There is nothing unusual about that on a computer, where you can have several overlapping windows open at once so that can go back and forth and be productive. The iPad also offers split screen and other multitasking solutions that boost productivity. I always thought that the iPhone’s screen size was too small to offer any sort of usable multitasking, other than notifications that would briefly appear and then disappear from the top of the screen. But it turns out that multitasking is possible and useful on the iPhone when done the right way.
The Dynamic Island takes key information about one app running in the background—or sometimes, two apps—and places it in the same area of the screen that was previously just dead space that we learned to ignore for the last five years. Thus, the portion of screen real estate that it uses was previously wasted space, so you don't lose anything on the main part of the screen. And what you gain in the Dynamic Island is the key information that you need about another app and the ability to interact with that other app without leaving the app that is occupying the primary portion of the screen.
If Apple had just created an Island, that alone would have been pretty neat. But the "Dynamic" part of Dynamic Island makes it infinitely better than a dedicated area of a fixed size. It allows the island to get longer or shorter to display more information as needed. You can even hold down a finger on the Dynamic Island to enlarge it, providing space for more buttons and information. If you have two apps that can use the Dynamic Island, they each get their own island: one larger, and one very small. And you can do all of this without leaving the primary app that is on your screen.
For example, if you are playing a song in the Music app and then switch over to the Mail app, the Dynamic Island shows the album art for the song that is playing and a (true) waveform. If you want to control the music, there is no need to go back to the Music app. Just press on the Dynamic Island for a second and the island grows to show a lot more information and lots of controls. As an alternative, you can use the Dynamic Island to go back to the Music app if you want—just tap it quickly to launch the Music app—but you probably won't need to do so because all of the most important controls are shown on the larger version of the Island. This means that you don’t lose your focus on the emails that you are reading in the main portion of the screen just because you want to make a quick change like jump to the next song track.
Other apps that use Apple's built-in controls for playing sound, such as the Overcast app that I use to listen to podcasts, work the same way. So you can listen to and control the In the News podcast—or, I suppose, some other podcast—while you are using another app on your iPhone.
If you have a second app that wants to visit Dynamic Island, the island splits. One app gets a longer island on the left. The other island gets a small round island on the right. For example, in the following picture, music is indicated and controlled on the left while a timer indication is on the right. If I hold down on the timer for a second, it gets large for just a second or two so that I can see the time remaining, and then it becomes small again.
There are already tons of built-in apps and services that support Dynamic Island. Jacob Siegal of BGR compiled this list of them. For example, the Dynamic Island can hold timers:
However, since the Dynamic Island was a surprise when Apple announced it, third-party app developers are just now starting to come up with ways to integrate it with their apps. As they do so, the Dynamic Island will become even more useful.
Even better, when Apple releases iOS 16.1, the Dynamic Island will support Live Activities. Live Activities are sort of like notifications, except that they can keep up to date—always showing you, for example, the latest sports score, new message count, Lyft status, etc. And of course they are also interactive, just like the Dynamic Island is now. Live Activities in the Dynamic Island will mean that you can do one primary thing on your iPhone while keeping tabs on something else at the same time.
And perhaps best of all, the graphics used for the Dynamic Island are incredible. Because the Dynamic Island animations run as 120 FPS, they are super smooth and feel alive. The way that they bounce as they transform size is fun to watch.
The team at Apple that invented and implemented Dynamic Island are geniuses. This is a cool and useful feature today that is going to get dramatically better in the future as developers come up with new ways to take advantage of it. I love it. Every other iPhone, including the brand new iPhone 14, is missing something special by not having this feature.
Impressive camera improvements
The Dynamic Island was unexpected. But when Apple said that you can take better pictures with the iPhone 14 Pro, many may have been tempted to yawn. Apple says the same thing every year. But some years, the camera improvements are larger than other years, and this year, we have more substantial improvements.
New hardware seems like the main reason that the iPhone 14 Pro cameras are so much better. Both the ultrawide camera and the 3x telephoto camera have improved lenses that take better pictures. But the standout is the main lens. It can now take 48 megapixel photos with more detail than ever. Or, it can take a standard 12 megapixel photo, but use four hardware pixels to create a single pixel in a 12 MP image, a process called binning that selects the best information from multiple pixels to create a single great pixel that is better lit and more precise. The result is pictures are are more detailed and more true to life.
I'm sharing some sample pictures below, but note that all of these pictures are not at their original size. Sharing those pictures would make this post far too big. Instead, I've scaled and compressed the pictures in a way that reduces the file sizes while still presenting the differences.
For the times when the light is good and you want to get pictures with better details, the 48 MP camera can make a big difference. For example, I took a picture out of my office window on Friday (I’m on the 46th floor), looking towards the Warehouse District section of New Orleans where the National World War II Museum is located. Here is an overview, to show you everything that was in the full frame when I took the picture at my window.
The World War II museum recently added a huge canopy on top of the buildings that is lit up at night but can also be seen during the day. I was taking the picture during the day, so there was plenty of light. First, I took a picture using my iPhone 14 Pro’s main camera, a normal 12 MP picture. Second, I took a picture with the same Main camera but tapped the RAW button to switch to a 48 MP picture. Third, in both pictures, I zoomed in to the part showing the canopy. In the following image, the left side reflects what I took with the 12 MP camera and the right side reflects what I took with the 48 MP camera:
As you can see, the 48 MP picture contains much more detail. You can see the red-and-white stripes on the flag. The canopy is much more detailed. And while the words THE NATIONAL WWII MUSEUM are almost impossible to make out in the left side of the picture, you can barely read them on the right side of the picture.
When you don’t have lots of light, the new camera is also useful because it uses binning to take each of the four pixels that would be used for a 48 MP photo and turn them into the best and brightest single picture of a 12 MP photo. For example, the new iPhone produced a much better version of a piece of artwork. Just for context, here is the overall picture, captured using the iPhone 14 Pro’s camera, but again note that this version is scaled and compressed:
In the next picture, I’ve zoomed in on the full-quality versions of two pictures, on the left using the iPhone 13 Pro’s camera (12 MP) and on the right using the iPhone 14 Pro’s camera (12 MP). As you can see, the version on the right is brighter and shows a lot more detail. Indeed, on the right side, you can even see the brush strokes:
Zooming in on an image amplifies the effect, but even when you are looking at the image at normal size, you can often tell that the iPhone 14 Pro image is crisper and more precise—especially if you are using a larger screen. The difference is also more noticeable if you crop a photo, which is something that I do frequently to change the focus of the picture and/or to make the picture more dramatic. Whenever you crop, it helps to start with a higher-quality image.
I've taken some other comparison pictures of my kids over the weekend. In some cases, both the iPhone 13 Pro and the iPhone 14 Pro took pictures that were equally excellent. In other cases, the iPhone 14 Pro pictures were better, especially if you zoomed in. As iPhone 14 Pro devices have gotten into more reviewers' hands, I've seen other post similar results in articles in which they shared some sample pictures that show off what the iPhone 14 Pro can do. For example, check out this review by Raymond Wong of Input and this article by Patrick Holland of CNet.
Something else that I really like about the new cameras is the return of a 2x optical zoom. When Apple first introduced an iPhone with three cameras, the iPhone 11 Pro, there was a 0.5x camera for ultrawide shots, a 1x camera for normal shots, and a 2x camera for zoom shots. In my review of the iPhone 11 Pro, I provided lots of sample pictures showing how those three different sizes allowed your pictures to tell three different stories. Last year, in the iPhone 13 Pro, Apple replaced the 2x telephoto camera with a 3x telephoto camera. As I noted in my review, that 3x lens allowed you to get closer to the subject of your photo, and in some circumstances, that is great. But 2x is also a very nice zoom ratio, and I missed it. It is roughly similar to a 50mm camera leans, perhaps one of the most popular lenses. Sure, I could just take a 1x picture and crop to fake a 2x zoom, but then I was sacrificing some detail.
This year, the main camera has a trick up its sleeve: it can be turned into a 2x telephoto camera. When you tap the 2x button in the Camera app, the iPhone 14 Pro takes a 48 MP image with the main camera and then crops it to a 12 MP image, which results in a 2x image as compared to what you would have gotten if you took a normal picture in 12 MP mode. So in other words, this is a true optical zoom, not a digital zoom that sacrifices quality for size. In a low light situation, a 2x photo might not come out quite as good as a 1x photo for which the iPhone 14 Pro can use binning to use four different pixels to produce each final pixel, resulting in a brighter and more clear photo. But if you have decent light, then you won’t notice the difference in quality—you will just see that you have a great 2x picture.
Thus, with the iPhone 14 Pro, and for the first time ever in an iPhone, you have four choices for picture size. You can take a 0.5x photo using the ultrawide lens. You can take a 1x or a 2x photo using the Main lens. And you can take a 3x photo using the telephoto lens. You can also use a digital zoom up to 15x, but that just means that you are making everything bigger and reducing picture quality as you do so.
Another way to look at it is that the new Main lens on the iPhone 14 Pro has three different roles. If you take a normal 12 MP photo, at 1x, each of the final pixels will be created by looking at four different pixels. If you take a 48 MP photo, you get a ton more detail, albeit without the extra light. If you take a 2x photo, then you get the center portion of the 48 MP image. Which mode you select for the lens will depend upon what kind of picture you are trying to create.
The front-facing camera on the iPhone 14 Pro is improved in two ways. First, unlike the camera used for the last two years which was f/2.2, the iPhone 14 Pro uses f/1.9, so it lets in more light. Second, this is the first time that the front-facing camera has used autofocus. In my tests over the weekend, these changes made a noticeable difference. If you take lots of selfie pictures, or if you use the front-facing camera for videoconferences, you will see an improvement.
Those are just the hardware improvements, but there are software improvements as well. Apple uses a new technique called the Photonic Engine to improve the detail in light-light. Apple also has something called Action Mode to reduce shakiness in handheld videos. I haven’t had a reason to use either yet, but I look forward to doing so.
Another change is that you can use Cinematic mode for videos in 4K and HDR. I prefer to take my home videos in 4K HDR because I know that, years from now, that quality difference will be appreciated. Thus, I didn't try out Cinematic mode during the past year because I didn't want to have to take videos at 1080p. With this improvement to Cinematic mode, I'm more likely to use it in the future, but I haven't done so yet.
All of these changes add up to an incredibly impressive camera. If taking pictures with an iPhone is important to you, then you will love the iPhone 14 Pro.
The iPhone that can save your life
Sure, we all like better photos and a funky little island at the top of the screen, but wouldn't it have made more sense for me to start this review by shouting that the iPhone 14 Pro can save your life in two different ways: crash detection and Satellite SOS? You could make a good argument for that, especially if you happen to be the person who was saved by one of these two new features. Nevertheless, I don't have too much to say about these features beyond what I said in my preview about two weeks ago because I haven't tested these features. First, I'm happy to report that I wasn’t in any car accidents over the weekend. Second, the satellite features don’t go live until November.
A screen that doesn't sleep
When iOS 16 was released on September 12, I installed it on my iPhone 13 Pro and used it all week. I enjoyed the new ways to customize the lock screen, especially the ability to have different photos show up at different times, but I didn't do much with the lock screen widgets. Instead, I would typically pick up my iPhone to do something specific, so I only saw the widget for a fraction of a second before I unlocked my iPhone.
With the iPhone 14 Pro, the screen can stay on all of the time, albeit in a dimmed mode. The screen does go completely off sometimes, such as if the iPhone senses that it is covered or face-down on a table or in a pocket. It will also go off completely if you are in a sleep focus mode. But if your iPhone is just on a desk, you will see the screen dim, but you will still be able to see things on the screen. For this iPhone, lock screen widgets make more sense, although for my eyes, they are still a little small to see when I just glance at my iPhone on my desk. It is clear to me that lock screen widgets are better when you have an always on screen. But it is not yet clear to me how much I will care about this feature.
On the other hand, the clock on the always-on screen is large and clear enough that I can always easily see it. And that feature is nice. I like that whenever I glance at my iPhone I can see what time it is. Sure, I could do the same thing by glancing at my Apple Watch (which also has an always-on screen), but now I have more clocks to catch my eye.
The lock screen photo is dim when my iPhone is just sitting on a table without being used, but it is typically just bright enough that I can see what the picture is. Is this important? No. Is it nice? Yes.
For now, the main reason that I find the always on screen useful is the clock. It's the same reason that I prefer the always on screen of the Apple Watch: I can see the time without having to raise my wrist.
Etc.
The Dynamic Island, cameras, ability to save my life, and always-on screen were the most obvious changes with the iPhone 14 Pro, but I noticed other things as well.
First, the iPhone 14 Pro can have a brighter screen. In normal use, both the iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro use a 1,000 nits screen, and they look the same. (The iPhone 12 Pro used a 800 nits max screen.) When looking at an HDR (high dynamic range) photo, such as one taken by an iPhone, the iPhone 13 Pro can go up to a peak of 1,200 nits while the iPhone 14 Pro can go up to a peak of 1,600 nits. If you have an outdoor photo where one part of the photo is especially bright, it looks more lifelike if you compare the iPhone 13 Pro to the iPhone 14 Pro side-by-side. But it is a subtle difference, and unless you are doing a direct comparison, you won't notice. When you are outside, the peak HDR on the iPhone 14 Pro is 2,000 nits. In my tests, there was a more noticeable difference between the iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro when outside and looking at an HDR photo with a part of the photo especially bright. But how often will this be an issue for most folks? Perhaps at the beach? Most of the time that I am looking closely at photos, I am unlikely to be in direct sunlight. I'm glad that Apple continues to push the limits, but this isn't a feature that you will notice unless you go looking for it.
Second, the iPhone 14 Pro uses the latest-and-greatest chip from Apple, the A16 Bionic. According to some initial speed tests, this new processor is 10% faster than last year's iPhone. That all sounds great, but that much of a speed increase wasn't something that I could notice in everyday use. Having said that, I'm sure that the processor works closely with the camera when taking photos, and if part of the reason that I was so happy with the new camera is attributable to the A16 Bionic chip, well then I guess I'm a fan.
Third, the new iPhone 14 Pro uses an eSIM with no option for a physical SIM for the United States model. I didn't notice any difference when using the phone portion of the iPhone. If you are the sort of person who travels internationally and likes to purchase SIM cards in other countries, you should look into whether getting an eSIM is an option for those countries, and if not, this change can have an effect on you. But for most folks, I don't think that they will ever notice the lack of a SIM tray port.
By the way, I've heard that in the iPhone 14 Pro, Apple isn't do anything to take advantage of the extra space that comes along with not having a SIM card tray. That makes sense since Apple still supports SIM cards in the international version of the iPhone 14 Pro. My guess is that Apple is making this a transitional year. Perhaps next year, there will be no SIM tray port in any iPhone sold anywhere, and at that time we will see how Apple uses that space. Perhaps it will result in extra battery life.
Conclusion
The iPhone 14 Pro gives you the delightful and useful Dynamic Island, plus it takes noticeably better pictures, plus it has features that can help to save your life. Any one of those three would be a compelling reason to upgrade from an iPhone 13 Pro, and getting all three of them makes this feel like a substantial upgrade over last year's iPhone. I consider the always on display a less important new feature, but it is something else to put in the "plus" column. Moreover, if you are upgrading from something older than an iPhone 13 Pro, then you will get even more great features that will be new to you, like the 3x telephoto lens and macro lens that were both added last year and the fantastic design with flat sides that was introduced two years ago. Suffice it to say that anyone who purchases an iPhone 14 Pro will find something new to love. The iPhone 14 Pro is an amazing device that gets my highest recommendation.