Apple finally accepts that 64GB is inadequate for iPhones and iPads

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For eight years, Apple has sold iPhones starting at 64GB to hit a price point, but Apple Intelligence has made it accept what we all knew already -- 128GB is the real minimum.

Smartphone placed on its box, featuring dual cameras and an Apple logo, on a wooden surface.
Apple has made 64GB the base storage for all iPhones from the iPhone X in 2017 until 2025



Back in 2017, the iPhone X brought us features that we wouldn't be without today, like Face ID and an edge-to-edge screen. None of this may ever go away, and certainly the thousand bucks price tag isn't going to shrink, but one thing has changed.

The iPhone X, along with the same year's iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus, introduced 64GB as the starting storage capacity. There had been 64GB configurations before, starting with the iPhone 4S, but it was that 2011 model's maximum capacity.

Then there were oddities like the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, the year before the iPhone X. Those did not offer 64GB, but that was because they started with 32GB and skipped to 128GB and 257GB.

From the iPhone X, though, 64GB was the minimum. While it may have seemed cramped to some users, it was a lot compared to the then-current iPads.

In 2017, the 5th-generation iPad started at 32GB. Only that year's iPad Pro started at 64GB.

Times change



There weren't any widespread complaints about the 64GB capacity at first. But we never stop taking photos and we hardly ever remove them, so with larger image sizes, more video, and a larger iOS footprint, 64GB can be cramped, especially if you don't subscribe to larger iCloud storage tiers.

Apple tried to address this with iOS 11 in 2017, that introduced the ability to automatically offload apps to save some space. But speaking of iOS, users complain Apple's iPhone operating system still requires more space during installation than it does afterwards.

So you could find yourself having to delete gigabytes of data just to update your iPhone or iPad. And the offloading of apps is a great idea, but only if you always have perfect internet connections.

That's because the offloading worked by determining which apps were the largest and had not been used recently. It was clever, but not practical.

For instance, if you only travel to a city like London every few months, iOS would offload apps like London Underground map and route-finding ones. And you wouldn't realize until you were in the city and couldn't get a good cell signal to re-download them.

No more 64GB options



With the launch of the latest iPad Air, and the iPhone 16e before it, Apple has dropped 64GB from all of its devices. With the exception of the iPad Pro which starts at 256GB, all iPhones and iPads start at 128GB -- including the base model, the 10th generation iPad.

No question, providing more SSD storage space at least used to hit Apple's bottom line. As larger capacities become more common, though, it's possible that Apple has phased out 64GB because that smaller size is no longer economic, given the vagaries of chip production and the commodity markets.

But it's more likely that Apple has run the numbers decided it's worth increasing the storage capacity in order to have Apple Intelligence run on all of its devices. All bar the latest base iPad, as that now has the storage capacity, but not the processing power for Apple Intelligence.

When the first beta versions of iOS and macOS with Apple Intelligence were released, users had to download Apple's Large Language Model, and it was just over a 3GB download. Now Apple says that Apple Intelligence requires 7GB of storage space to operate.

So including Apple Intelligence, iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, now have markedly increased storage requirements. It all cuts into the user's space, and brings people closer to that frustration of running out of room.

That said, there can't be an iCloud user who isn't frustrated by Apple's miserly storage offering there. While it's been eight years since 64GB first became the starting storage capacity for iPhones, but its 14 years since iCloud first offered 5GB for free.



Read on AppleInsider

williamlondon

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 12
    Xedxed Posts: 3,090member
    You hear a lot more complaining about this on tech sites than in the real world. I'm using about 60 GB on a 128 GB iPhone which means 128 GB is ideal for my needs, but I know a lot of normal users who are doing just fine with 64 GB, especially on the iPad. These are people that only use it for basic consumption. You probably won't even find them keeping bookmarks in Safari in many cases.

    That said, I do think that 128 GB should be the minimum moving forward as iOS and iPadOS increase in size each year.
    neoncatgrandact73baconstangwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 2 of 12
    MplsPmplsp Posts: 4,100member
    Xed said:
    You hear a lot more complaining about this on tech sites than in the real world. I'm using about 60 GB on a 128 GB iPhone which means 128 GB is ideal for my needs, but I know a lot of normal users who are doing just fine with 64 GB, especially on the iPad. These are people that only use it for basic consumption. You probably won't even find them keeping bookmarks in Safari in many cases.

    That said, I do think that 128 GB should be the minimum moving forward as iOS and iPadOS increase in size each year.
    True. iOS and iPadOS do a good job with memory management. With a phone, photos are often the big memory hog. The addition of ‘live photos’ several years ago meant you were storing a bunch of 2 second movies rather than still photos. That combined with ever-increasing camera resolutions eats up memory in a hurry. 
    williamlondongrandact73appleinsideruserbaconstangwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 3 of 12
    netroxnetrox Posts: 1,546member
    I am pretty sure it has to do with manufactures stopped making 64GB chips so Apple had no choice but to move up to 128GB. It just makes no economic sense to keep making low capacity storage. 


    muthuk_vanalingamwilliamlondonwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 4 of 12
    bloggerblogbloggerblog Posts: 2,565member
    Meh whatevs, my Commodore Amiga had 500KB of RAM right out of the box!
    williamlondondanoxwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 5 of 12
    jvm156jvm156 Posts: 76member
    Remember 4gb
    williamlondonbaconstangwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 6 of 12
    Really, off-line cloud storage is basically essential now that "we" carry a lifetime of photos and movies around in our pockets. To say nothing of a lifetime of emails, chats, notes, etc., etc. Somewhere along the line, we got accustomed to never having to delete anything.

    We've come a long way from the days when we routinely offloaded our photos to our computers and decided what music to load to our iPod or iPhone.

    Younger people nowadays are spoiled, not having about this sort of thing, but it does mean that we have generations of people (unknowingly) 100% dependent on datacenters for managing their personal documents. 
    dewmeneoncatappleinsideruserget seriousbaconstangwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 7 of 12
    Xed said:
    You hear a lot more complaining about this on tech sites than in the real world. I'm using about 60 GB on a 128 GB iPhone which means 128 GB is ideal for my needs, but I know a lot of normal users who are doing just fine with 64 GB, especially on the iPad. These are people that only use it for basic consumption. You probably won't even find them keeping bookmarks in Safari in many cases.

    That said, I do think that 128 GB should be the minimum moving forward as iOS and iPadOS increase in size each year.
    Having 60GB out of 128GB used is WAY (!) different than having 60GB out of 64GB used. Fill your 128GB iPhone with 124GB worth of data and then try to update iOS. See how well that works out, lol. :D (Spoiler: Not well, haha.)

    I have a 64GB iPhone and I’m consistently hovering around 60GB used (give or take a few GBs). And a lot of the time that’s fine. But anytime I need to upgrade iOS, it takes some creative offloading of apps and deletion of data to get my phone to have enough free space to actually do the update.
    muthuk_vanalingamwilliamlondonwatto_cobra
     2Likes 1Dislike 0Informatives
  • Reply 8 of 12
    Xedxed Posts: 3,090member
    Xed said:
    You hear a lot more complaining about this on tech sites than in the real world. I'm using about 60 GB on a 128 GB iPhone which means 128 GB is ideal for my needs, but I know a lot of normal users who are doing just fine with 64 GB, especially on the iPad. These are people that only use it for basic consumption. You probably won't even find them keeping bookmarks in Safari in many cases.

    That said, I do think that 128 GB should be the minimum moving forward as iOS and iPadOS increase in size each year.
    Having 60GB out of 128GB used is WAY (!) different than having 60GB out of 64GB used. Fill your 128GB iPhone with 124GB worth of data and then try to update iOS. See how well that works out, lol. :D (Spoiler: Not well, haha.)

    I have a 64GB iPhone and I’m consistently hovering around 60GB used (give or take a few GBs). And a lot of the time that’s fine. But anytime I need to upgrade iOS, it takes some creative offloading of apps and deletion of data to get my phone to have enough free space to actually do the update.
    I'm curious if you think my comment in any way stated that 64 GB is more than enough for me because I'm only using 60 GB. 
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 9 of 12
    Xed said:
    Xed said:
    You hear a lot more complaining about this on tech sites than in the real world. I'm using about 60 GB on a 128 GB iPhone which means 128 GB is ideal for my needs, but I know a lot of normal users who are doing just fine with 64 GB, especially on the iPad. These are people that only use it for basic consumption. You probably won't even find them keeping bookmarks in Safari in many cases.

    That said, I do think that 128 GB should be the minimum moving forward as iOS and iPadOS increase in size each year.
    Having 60GB out of 128GB used is WAY (!) different than having 60GB out of 64GB used. Fill your 128GB iPhone with 124GB worth of data and then try to update iOS. See how well that works out, lol. :D (Spoiler: Not well, haha.)

    I have a 64GB iPhone and I’m consistently hovering around 60GB used (give or take a few GBs). And a lot of the time that’s fine. But anytime I need to upgrade iOS, it takes some creative offloading of apps and deletion of data to get my phone to have enough free space to actually do the update.
    I'm curious if you think my comment in any way stated that 64 GB is more than enough for me because I'm only using 60 GB. 
    I don’t mean this to be rude, but: I wasn’t talking about you and your usage. I was very specifically talking about my own usage. But also 64GB iPhones more generally. I was just using your quoted reply to do so. But I wasn’t talking about you. Again, I’m not trying to be rude. I’m just plainly stating that I wasn’t talking about you.
    williamlondon
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  • Reply 10 of 12
    Over the years I've helped probably a thousand people with storage management concerns. I have always been surprised by how many people never delete a message and have migrated years of conversations across many devices. Record convo was just short of 10 years between two sisters that contained almost daily photos. The reaction of people when their device takes 10-30 seconds to calculate storage and generate the little color bar is so fun. The other great reaction is when people realize how long they've tapped past the "This Device has not been backed up in XXX infinity time"
    John/Jane Q Regular user will generally fill whatever storage they have and buy the next capacity larger next device rather than manage storage.
    watto_cobra
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  • Reply 11 of 12
    zenwaveszenwaves Posts: 95member
    I've been waiting to upgrade my 64GB 4th gen iPad Air ... I got the base model (then and now), as I don't do any production on it - just browsing, streaming, and a few spreadsheets every now and then.

    But, there have been several instances in the last year or so, where I didn't have enough space for software updates, and had to delete a bunch of apps.

    I'm hoping that the current 128GB base configuration won't encounter this issue....
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
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  • Reply 12 of 12
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,659member
    Meh whatevs, my Commodore Amiga had 500KB of RAM right out of the box!
    Memory may have gotten bigger, but the gameplay on many of those old titles on the Amiga are still better than many of the games being sold today….

    Speaking of which will there ever be any new Star Wars games that are as good as Jedi Academy or Jedi outcast from the early 2000’s-2007?
    edited March 8
    neoncatwatto_cobra
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