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On Tue, 1 Jul 2025 15:45:35 -0400, -hh wrote :You said it...
You can take it as a lie but I said very clearly the iPhone earned a B.Absolutely. I agree. Nothing wrong, per se, with a "B" score.>
Which means that your claim (still quoted above) that Apple has
"dismally failed in efficiency." is a flat-out lie.
I said all the Android OEMs earned an A rating. And a G was really bad.
A B is NOT a fail.I knew iPhones would fare dismally simply because of the crappy batteries.Because Apple advertises they're more "efficient".>
And yet, they're not.
Incorrect: they've merely not achieved the highest possible score on
this particular benchmark test that happens to be used in the EU.
How many years, exactly?While all tests have limitations, Apple *knew* about this test *years* inIf iPhones are so wonderfully efficient, why can't Apple get an A?>
The answer is obvious - but that's the question we have to ask.
Not at all, because anyone with a well grounded background in T&E knows
that all tests have constraints & limitations, and there's also a lot of
assumptions which go into weightings for a summary score.
>
For example, the EU tests & applies weighting factors for:
>
* Scale of energy efficiency classes;
* Energy efficiency class;
* Battery endurance per cycle;
* Repeated free fall reliability;
* Battery endurance in cycles;
* Repairability;
* Ingress Protection rating.
>
advance. Do you seriously claim the EU kept the test methods secret?
Do you seriously claim the EU didn't take into account OEM input?Do you seriously claim VW (an automotive OEM) wasn't taken into account regarding diesel emissions standards/
For years?
Do you seriously claim Apple wasn't on the defining committee for theA "B" isn't "crappy".
tests? Are you seriously claiming the testing agency was biased?
What exactly are you disputing in terms of the EU tests Apple formulated?
These tests are well vetted as they were agreed to by all the OEM makers.
The sad fact is the iPhone has a crappy battery.
Everyone knows that.
The EU tests simply proved it.
Nope. That's simply false.From an engineering design perspective, there's going to be tradesNo. That's all an excuse for the iPhone crappy battery.
which need to be made between these subsets to achieve the highest
overall summary score .. and within other non-listed constraints too,
such as the product's price point. It may very well be preferable to
accept a slightly lower raw energy efficiency to put more budget into a
better battery endurance...or vice-versa: the classical approach is to
seek to optimize the final summary score.
There is one reason and one reason alone why iPhones fared poorly.
The iPhone battery is garbage.
You're stating it.You're the troll because I'm stating outright that Apple earned a B.>No. It's not a troll. It's a factual observation.
Calling a "B" score as "dismally failed in efficiency" is the troll.
And I'm stating all the Android OEMs earned an A. That's just a fact.
Get used to facts.I've already shown in a head to head where you basically insisted Apple was worse that it was (in ACTUAL fact) better.
Apple touts a brazen lie of efficiency so they can use smaller batteries.
And yet, they can't.
Apple doesn't own physics.
The reason iPhones suck at battery life is simply the batteries are crap.
(Life here means lifetime. In years.)
Nope. Apple has stated that the data indicated that they COULD have been award an "A" and chose not to.Well, as I said, I never disagree with a logically sensible statement.All you're doing is making lame excuses for why iPhones aren't efficient.>
>
Despite the millions of dollars of Apple propaganda to the contrary, the
starkly obvious fact remains that iPhones are less efficient than Androids.
Incorrect: less than *some* Androids, as per *some* tests. But the
opposite is true to: that's the nature of complex systems.
No mater what the record is of the person making that statement.
Some Android OEMs who earned an A also earned less than an A in some of
their models, and, in particular, their models with crappy batteries.
Yet not a single iPhone model was able to earn an A.
And that's the point.
The iPhone batteries are crap.
And this test shows it.
Note that I knew this was going to happen because Apple doesn't own'For example, Energy Efficiency Index scores for iPhone models on the EU market in June 2025 all qualified for the highest “A” grade, but Apple chose to voluntarily derate scores to a “B” grade to minimize the probability that a third-party tester interpreting the regulation differently would achieve a lower grade. '
physics. The iPhone batteries are garbage. An A rating isn't possible.
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