There's not much to say.
- The pixel density is substantially higher, and you do not have to hold the phone an inch away from your face.
- The pixel density is NOT beyond the resolution limits of the human eye. Beyond SOME human eyes, probably. But then again, the standard iPhone resolution is beyond SOME human eyes. This has been already widely debunked by a few experts:
Display Expert: iPhone 4 Resolution ‘Significantly Lower’ Than Retina | Gadget Lab | Wired.com
- The higher resolution does not mean anything is smaller or harder to see. It just means there are more pixels filling in the same space as before.
- If you hold the phone, you know it's not sharp. So "incorrect" is all that needs to be said.
The other couple points I already addressed.
The only thing that's impossible to address is the ridiculous speculation about dropping it. The reality is that nobody knows specifically, but aluminosilicate is extremely tough and difficult to break so there's absolutely zero reason to believe the phone is more fragile than any other - especially not from just handling it briefly.
My point wasn't entirely that these specific pieces of misinformation should be corrected - which, of course, they should. My point is that nobody is fact-checking before they parrot what they've heard/thought. The facts are widely available at our fingertips - I just have such a hard time believing that people don't check things out for themselves.