I have been doing so much research on the iPhone (6) six product and I have been discovering that the iPhone 6 product has been slow.
After so much research I leant that it was just because of a particular reason that the product was slow.
Note: This goes to all iPhone users, Once you know about this reason you will be so angry for wasting your money. Thou is not your fault.
Scroll below to know the reason why the product is slow.
After this much research, here was what I got
Apple’s story isn't really that much better though, because it means that Apple is knowingly designing and selling products that begin to fall apart after a year — which certainly has a way of encouraging people to buy a new one. This isn't something buyers are warned about, and they aren't presented with options to fix it. It's always just been assumed that you have to buy a new phone, which is a big expense.
This problem is, to a very real extent, unavoidable. Phone batteries will wear down and die, and Apple is doing somewhat of a right thing by trying to mitigate that so that your phone stays usable. But there are two bigger problems here: for one, Apple should be designing phones that don't degrade this rapidly; and two, it should have let owners know what was going on. There's already a low-power mode built into the iPhone — it wouldn't be farfetched to include a toggle to let more demanding iPhone owners turn off processor throttling if they don't want it. A simple popup after this feature is introduced or enabled would go a long way toward letting iPhone owners understand what’s going on, too.
Or, come on, just make a slightly thicker iPhone with a bigger battery. We’ve all been asking for it anyway
Apple intentionally slows down iPhones as they get older. I don't know how many times I heard people say this as a conspiracy theory — one that I've dismissed, chalking it up to operating system updates and more demanding apps — but it turns out, it's true. Apple really is slowing down phones as they age with use (specifically, as their battery gets worn down), apparently as a way to mitigate issues that come with reduced battery life. Evidence was uncovered by Geekbench developer John Poole this week, and Apple admitted to it.
There is some good reason for Apple to do this. By their nature, lithium-ion batteries degrade over time, storing less and less of a charge. This happens very quickly on a device we use 24/7. So it's not a bad idea for Apple to limit speeds on older phones, such that they don't push things too far on a depleted battery. That absolutely makes the phone more useable — it apparently helps stop random shutdowns, which are a major pain. And I would think it helps with battery life in general as well.
But it also speaks to a really enormous problem with the iPhone: this $700 to $1,000-plus product, as designed, isn't able to function near its peak after just a year of use. That should be unacceptable.
Slowing down the phone is one way to work against aging issues, but there are other, more obvious things Apple could do here. It could put larger batteries in the iPhone in the first place, so that they last longer before this kind of adjustment needs to kick in.
#Credit goes to Geekbench
For any more info & complaint, comment below………. Thanks for Your Cooperation.



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