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iPhone 8 expected Sept. 12: What we know about launch date, specs and price
editors' note, August 31: This article was originally published on February 16, and we'll continue to add new rumors and stories as they emerge. It's official.
Apple
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a date. And if our expectations are fulfilled, Apple will unveil three new phones in less than two weeks.
On
September 12, at 10 a.m. PT, the company will hold its inaugural event
at the Steve Jobs Theater at its newly built headquarters in Cupertino,
California. The official invitation, distributed to media on August 31,
follows tech blog Mac4Ever's report (later corroborated by the Wall Street Journaland TechCrunch) that Apple plans to bring out its iPhone 8 and the iPhone 7S and 7S Plus at an event on September 12.
The big day can't come soon enough for Apple, which would love to cast a big iPhone-shaped shadow over Samsung's brand new Galaxy Note 8 -- and drive up sales before its financial quarter closes on September 30. (The premium model is reported to start at around $999.)
In addition to a redesigned flagship iPhone with an OLED display, new
UI and facial recognition technology, we also expect see other products
introduced including the Apple Watch 3 and a new 4K Apple TV.
If
the rumors are true, Apple's 10th anniversary iPhone will see the light
of day in about two weeks. We'll continue to count down the days,
assembling all of the iPhone 8 rumors below.
Yet Apple continues to move forward with its standard early September event, despite months of reports about potential postponement and even panic. The presumption is that Apple will deliver a plentiful supply of the two LCD models, while the OLED iPhone 8 may be more difficult to come by, at least initially.
Bye bye, home button?
The new iPhone may replace the home button with a new UI.Mark Gurman at Bloomberg, among the most credible sources of Apple news, reports
that the iPhone 8 may dispatch the home button concept completely,
replacing it with a new gesture-based user interface. He suggests that
the new phone will have an app dock similar to the one found on the
iPad, with a thin software bar anchored along the bottom of the display.
Last month, Steve Troughton-Smith tweeted that
the iPhone 8 will have a virtual home button, which can change its size
or disappear entirely, depending on the app or task. And Ming-Chi Kuo has long insisted that the iPhone 8 wouldhave a virtual home button but not Touch ID.
$1,000 base model
The New York Times reports that the "premium model" iPhone 8 will start at roughly $999. That squares with earlier predictions from Morgan Stanley, Fast Company and Goldman Sachs,
who have suggested that the new flagship could cost as much as $1,200
in the US (roughly £950 or AU$1,450), which would account for upper-end
models with more storage capacity (more on that below). Earlier this
year, a UBS analyst reported that Apple could price the 64GB iPhone 8 as
low as $850 (roughly £655 and AU$1,110) to better compete with the Samsung Galaxy S8 Plus. The iPhone 7S and 7S Plus
are expected to be priced comparably with the current generation 7 and 7
Plus, so $649 (£500 and AU$850) and $769 (£580 and AU$980),
respectively. Handy Abovergleich's conceptual rendering of an iPhone 8 Pro and Apple Pencil.
Handy Abovergleich
Pencil support for the iPhone 8?
Apple could undercut one of the Samsung Galaxy Note 8's
greatest strengths by adding Pencil support to the iPhone 8. The
long-simmering iPhone stylus rumor boiled up this week, as Apple filed
new patent applications connecting the Apple Pencil with the iPhone (via PatentlyApple).
We think this one's a long shot for the iPhone 8 -- there hasn't been
much chatter or photographic evidence to support it -- but inevitable in
the long run.
The game-changer: Face ID
According to developer Steve Troughton-Smith, the HomePod firmware leakconfirms the
existence of the iPhone 8's facial-recognition technology; if true,
you'll be able to use your face to unlock the iPhone 8, pay for stuff and much more. Mark Gurman, the Bloomberg News technology reporter with a strong record on Apple stories, says that the company's pitch will be that "Face ID is quicker, more secure, and more accurate than Touch ID." A purported image of the iPhone 8's rumored dual camera array, which is said to enable new facial recognition technology.
/LEAKS
Face-seeking cam on the front
To
support the new facial-recognition technology, Apple has arranged the
front-facing cameras in a new configuration within a cutout atop the new
edge-to-edge display. According to veteran Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo,
the setup will support AR and 3D modeling with a trio of components -- a
front-facing camera, infrared transmitter, and infrared receiver.
Dual cams on the back
The
growing consensus among the rumor watchers is that the iPhone 8 has two
rear cameras arranged vertically with an LED flash in the middle. Fast Company has reported that Apple has developed a rear-facing 3D laser system that supports AR depth detection and autofocusing.
LCD or OLED displays?
The iPhone 8 may have an edge-to-edge OLED display, with a cutout along the top bezel.
@VenyaGeskin1
Both.
The 7S and 7S Plus are expected to stick with the iPhone's current LCD
technology. The next flagship is almost certain to have an OLED. (We've
also heard that the entire iPhone lineup could go OLED in 2018.) Ironically, those OLED screens will almost certainly be supplied by archrival Samsung, which is said to control around 98 percent or more of current phone-sized OLED manufacturing capacity.
Could this be what the iPhone 8 looks like in black, silver and gold(ish)?
MacRumors
Kuo
reports that each the three new models will be available in three
colors -- black, silver and gold. This runs counter to previous reports
of an expanded palette of options that included a mirror-like, reflective finish, jet black, and rose gold.
Hey, dummy
Troughton-Smith has now refined his initial leak of the iPhone 8 glyph with some precise measurements of the front of the device, with a camera cut-out along the top edge. An increasing number of images and video of dummy phones and molds show an iPhone 8 that's bigger than the iPhone 7 ($599.99 at Amazon Marketplace) and smaller than the 7 Plus ($849.50 at Amazon Marketplace);
the iPhone 8's display, rumored to extend from edge to edge, with very
narrow bezels, would likely be more comparable with that of the 7 Plus.
The iPhone 8 is likely to feature a combination of curved glass and
stainless steel, according to Bloomberg.
Charging forward
Will Apple bring wireless charging to all three new models or just the iPhone 8?
CNET
Ming-Chi
Kuo reports that all three new models, both the iPhone 7S and 7S Plus
as well as the flagship, will support faster "plugged-in" charges,
though you'll need an add-on USB-C power adapter to take advantage of it. Noted Apple watcher John Gruber tweeted in
July that "wireless" charging -- that is, an inductive charge pad
accessory, which, technically, still has wires -- may be "sold
separately" and not until later in the year, as part of a future iOS 11
update, similar to Apple's rollout of the iPhone 7 Plus portrait mode in 2016.
According to analysts at JPMorgan (as reported by MacRumors),
Apple may equip the iPhone 8 with an "enhanced receiver," which is
housed within the slit on the front of the phone where you put your ear
during calls. This upgrade would ostensibly deliver louder, clearer
audio as well as superior waterproofing (more on that below). Today, the AirPods are a $159 accessory. Could Apple include them for free with the iPhone 8?
Apple
AirPods included? Don't bet on it
JPMorgan has also postulated that the iPhone 8 will come with AirPods
included. These Bluetooth-enabled headphones currently sell as a $159
accessory (£159 in the UK and AU$229 in Australia). And so this one is a
stretch. But if Apple prices the new phone high enough, there could be
margin enough to make it happen. Which brings us to...
Gigabit LTE
One
area the iPhone 8 may end up trailing the Galaxy S8 is cellular network
speed. The Samsung phone features Qualcomm's Snapdragon 835 processor
or, in some markets, Samsung's own Exynos 8895 chip -- both of which
support Gigabit LTE. According to CNET's Roger Cheng,
Apple uses Qualcomm and Intel modems and, at the moment, the Intel
version can't deliver Gigabit LTE speed. This could force Apple to slow
down the Qualcomm version to ensure all iPhones are on the same footing.
Apple waved goodbye to the analog headphone jack with the iPhone 7. And it's probably not coming back.
James Martin/CNET
Return of the headphone jack? Nope
A Barclays analyst (reported by MacRumors)
has suggested that Apple will stick with its Lightning connector -- and
include a 3.5 mm headphone jack adapter -- for the next phone. Highly
doubtful. Despite the shade being thrown by competitors like OnePlus,
whose new newest phone has the legacy connector, Apple is very unlikely to reverse its position on this one.
Enhanced waterproofing
That same Nikkei Asian Review article
also claims that at least one of the forthcoming iPhones will be
waterproof. This follows earlier rumors, reported by the Korea Herald and others, that the next iPhone will have a higher water-resistance rating of IP68 compared with the current generation's IP67, meaning it could be immersed in water for longer and to greater depths.
Next-gen components
The iPhone 8 is expected to run on Apple's A11 CPU. There's a rumor that the company is developing its
own graphics chips, too. But the time frame for phasing out its current
supplier is 15 to 24 months, so it's unlikely that an
Apple-manufactured GPU will make it into the next iPhone. We're probably
looking at 2018 or 2019 for this one.
/LEAKS
According to a listing on Chinese blogging site Weibo,
Apple may dump its 32GB model, at least for the iPhone 8, and offer
three storage tiers: 64GB, 256GB, and 512GB; this is consistent with an
earlier rumor reported by TrendForce.
These reports also suggest that the company will boost the amount of
memory to 3GB, though the 7S and 7S Plus will get only 2GB. These
incremental bumps for the flagship would follow last year's precedent of
Apple ditching its outcast 16GB model when it released the iPhone 7.
And what about the iPhone 9?
From the outer frontier of the iPhone hype cycle, The Bell (via Korean site The Investor)
reports that Apple will supersize its future phones, with the iPhone 9
featuring two variations with an OLED display -- a 5.28-inch model and a
6.46-inch one. And Nikkei Asian Review suggests that all of next year's iPhones could adopt new screen technology, not just the most high-end model.
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