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Apple iPhone 16: Unique All-New Design Promised In New Report

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When Apple releases its next iPhones, the iPhone 16 series, it could have a different design, with physical buttons replaced by capacitive ones, a new report has said.

April 25 update below. This post was first published on April 22, 2024.

The claim comes from the Economic Daily News, and it could make for in iPhone that’s subtly unlike any models that have come before. Instead of power and volume buttons that move in and out as you touch them, as now, there would be capacitive buttons which sense pressure and respond with haptic feedback. That feedback makes the button feel like it’s moving when it’s not.

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Apple has form here: later versions of the Touch ID home button on the iPhone used capacitive buttons—the iPhone SE still does. It really feels like the button is responding to a press by moving, but as is proved by pressing when the iPhone is turned off, it’s actually fixed in position.

The result is a phone with fewer moving parts. But Apple has never done this with a power button on the iPhone before. The report says the capacitive elements will be on both sides of the phone, with volume switches on one side, presumably with the Action button as well. The other side of the iPhone currently only has one button, the Side Button, which is used to turn the phone on and off.

Could Apple make this a capacitive element or would it save this feature for the predicted new Capture button? I’m puzzled as to how the power button could become a capacitive type, but I am excited by the possibility.

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The report is emphatic that the change will “cancel the physical volume buttons and power buttons on both sides of the fuselage and replace them with capacitive touch buttons,” and that it will lead to “the goal of the physical button disappearing on the iPhone's external body.”

The report also says something which casts doubt on one thing: are the capacitive button components really for the iPhone 16 series? It says, “it is expected to enter the release stage of volume shipment in the third quarter.”

That, of course, is the quarter that starts on July 1, and seems preposterously late for Apple’s needs, given that the iPhone is expected to launch in September. If this part of the rumor is accurate, it seems more likely that the buttons are being readied for the iPhone 17 series, not iPhone 16.

It’s worth adding that most other iPhone 16 leaks have pointed to mechanical buttons, so, again, it could be accurate on component detail but not the year. Stay tuned.

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April 24 update. Another big change is coming to the iPhone this year, it seems, and we’ll know about it in just a few weeks’ time. That’s because it’s going to be built into the software that Apple will announce at WWDC on June 10.

We think that AI is going to play a part in the new software that’s announced. But it now looks like Apple will introduce a different kind of AI from rival companies. Apple always has privacy front-and-center, and a few months ago, CEO Tim Cook told me the company would never change from this, saying, “We think privacy is more important today than it was ten years ago. It’s one of the most profound issues of the century. We’re not backing off.”

So perhaps it’s not surprising that Apple’s generative AI is likely going to be deployed on the iPhone, not in the cloud. As Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman said in his latest Power On newsletter, “All indications suggest that it will be entirely on-device. That means the technology is powered by the processor inside the iPhone, rather than in the cloud.”

This might not be as powerful but, as Gurman says, “the approach will make response times far quicker. And it will be easier for Apple to maintain privacy.”

We’ll know the full details in less than two months.


April 25 update. One of the capacitive buttons predicted above is called the Capture Button, it’s believed, designed to make for speedy access to the iPhone cameras. This button isn’t the only way Apple is believed to be changing the design of the camera. For a start, it’s thought that a new anti-reflective optical coating could be used on the lenses on the iPhone 16, 16 Plus, 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max. Such a coating would reduce lens fare, according to Daniel John at Creative Bloq. It’s also believed that the diagonal placement of lenses on the iPhone 15 and 15 Plus will be replaced by a vertical arrangement, to allow the new phones to be able to shoot spatial video, of the kind that can be played back on the Apple Vision Pro. It’s thought that the current placement is what prevents the iPhone 15 from shooting this video, while the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max can do it.

Further, the report goes on, the iPhone 16 Pro Max looks to continue the tradition of the Max having the best camera. The current model, the iPhone 15 Pro Max, has a 5x optical zoom, against the 3x zoom of the iPhone 15 Pro. The next Max, it seems, will increase the focal length to 300mm from the current 120mm. That means, if true, that the iPhone 16 Pro Max would have a 12x zoom compared to the main camera.

It's also thought that the iPhone 16 Pro will gain the 5x zoom lens currently exclusive to the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Such a superzoom would be welcome by many photographers, though the truth is that in many situations 5x is magnification enough. If, like me, you insist on shooting at the native resolutions of each lens, gaining a 12x zoom but losing a 5x zoom may not be the outcome you’re looking for.

There’ll be more iPhone leaks soon, surely, but the current design changes are shaping up to be extensive.

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