The iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6S Plus are highly expected to be
launched on Sept. 9 as the successor models of last year’s iPhone 6
models. The upcoming iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6S will likely arrive with
4.7-inch and 5.5-inch displays, respectively. However, fresh reports
suggest that both the handsets will support higher resolutions and pixel
densities.
According to Phone Arena, a tipster with Weibo account @KJuma has
revealed that the Apple iPhone 6S will be coming with a display of 4.7
inches that supports 1125 x 2000 pixels resolution. It is rumored to
support a pixel density of 488 ppi. The iPhone 6 from 2014 featured the
same display size, but supported 750 x 1134 pixels resolution and 326
ppi.
The Apple iPhone 6S Plus is also going to feature an upgraded
display. Its 5.5-inch screen is expected to support 1242 x 2208 pixels
resolution, and a pixel density of 460 ppi. The iPhone 6S Plus is likely
to be enabled with a full HD resolution along with 401 ppi.
Previous rumors suggested that the Cupertino tech giant would be
launching the newer iPhones with the same screen resolution as iPhone 6S
models from 2014. According to Phone Arena, the Weibo website has
revealed some specs of the iPhone 6S through its Geekbench benchmark
scores. The single-core and multi-core scores of the iPhone 6S on
Geekbench are 2,248 and 4,036.
The iPhone 6S is expected to feature the Apple A9 chipset that clocks
at 1.8 GHz and 2 GB of RAM. The older iPhone 6 comes with the Apple A8
SoC and 1 GB of RAM.
Apple is pegged to unveil the iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6S Plus on
Sept. 9 through a launch event at Bill Graham auditorium in San
Francisco. It is also rumored to unveil the large-sized Apple iPad Pro
and the iPad Mini 4 at the event.
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