iPad&iPhone user

Evaluating the rumours of the 2020 iPhone

With the new year upon us, rumours concerning Apple’s upcoming smartphone­s have started to appear. Dan Moren reports

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It has only been a few months since the release of Apple’s latest iPhone line-up and already the rumour mill is working overtime on what might arrive in the company’s smartphone­s this year and, believe it or not, the year after that.

Even if the iPhone is making up a smaller percentage of Apple’s revenue these days, it hasn’t ceased being

the product that defines Apple, meaning speculatio­n remains at peak levels. And all the smartwatch­es, streaming services, and fancy wireless headphones aren’t going to be changing that calculus anytime soon.

Certainly the next iPhone is still a way off, but it’s worth taking a moment to look at this latest round of rumours and think critically about what they might portend – even if they don’t end up coming true.

No port in a storm

Let’s start with the latest titbit to dribble out: that the 2021 iPhone – not this year’s – will lack any sort of physical port whatsoever, relying instead on wireless connectivi­ty for both data transfer and charging.

On the face of it, this idea hardly seems difficult to believe: the company’s long been on a mission to reduce and, where possible, eliminate ports. The iPhone 7 did away with the headphone jack. The 2015 MacBook had only a single USB-C port for power and connectivi­ty.

With the inclusion of wireless charging in more recent iPhones, it’s certainly not impossible that Apple is heading in this direction. Removing the data port frees up more space on the interior of the phone, which potentiall­y means more battery life, and removing it on the outside opens up the possibilit­y for – an Apple favourite – a thinner phone. Not to mention that it’s one less thing you have to water- and dust-proof.

All of that said, part of me remains sceptical. For one thing, wireless charging isn’t yet as omnipresen­t as physical plugs. It would be all too possible to get stuck somewhere with no ability to charge. For

another, physical connection­s allow for a level of diagnostic troublesho­oting that you can’t always do via a wireless connection (especially if the wireless capabiliti­es are themselves the problem). Even the Apple TV has a secret Lightning diagnostic port. Plus, there are still accessorie­s that you just can’t use without a port – microphone­s, for example – which means Apple might need to come up with some way to accommodat­e users of those devices.

I definitely think it’s plausible that Apple is currently experiment­ing with the idea of an iPhone without physical ports – heck, these days I rarely plug my phone into anything but my car charger. But not everything the company investigat­es ends up in a shipping product.

Good things come in small packages

The iPhone’s displays have gotten larger and larger over the past few years, but it may be time that the

pendulum swings back in the other direction. One rumour has Apple releasing a model with a 5.4in screen, alongside 6.1- and 6.7in models. That 5.4in model would be slightly smaller than the current iPhone 11 Pro’s 5.8in screen, while the 6.7in would be .2 inches larger than the current iPhone 11 Pro Max. (The 6.1in model would be the same as the current iPhone 11.)

A vocal contingent of iPhone customers have certainly made their desire for a smaller phone known ever since the iPhone SE was discontinu­ed. This may not quite scratch that itch, as even a 5.4in model would be considerab­ly larger than the iPhone SE’s 4in display. Sadly, the rumoured SE 2 successor that could arrive

in the spring would likely be the size of the current iPhone 7/8 models.

It seems not unlikely that Apple will eventually broaden its line-up to include smaller phones again. After all, if you’re looking to appeal to customers who aren’t currently buying your product, you could do worse than filling a product gap that your line-up doesn’t address.

The sound of one finger tapping

Finally, there remains a persistent theory that Apple will bring back Touch ID in its home button-less phones by embedding a fingerprin­t sensor underneath the screen, using an ultrasonic method developed by Qualcomm. Some phones already on the market use this technology, including Samsung’s Galaxy S10; however the version Apple would theoretica­lly use would probably be more advanced, allowing users to place their finger anywhere on the screen rather than a specific spot.

I remain sceptical about this. While there are still some circumstan­ces where Touch ID is more friendly than Face ID, they are vanishingl­y few.

Plus, the ultrasonic fingerprin­t technology is still in early stages – the Samsung models that used it initially had issues with screen protectors, which could accumulate dirt and particles that might be mistakenly recognized as a fingerprin­t.

More to the point, Apple is not a company that goes backwards often; even the recent update to its MacBook Pro keyboards was put forth not as a step back to the old mechanism, but forward to a new, even better

mechanism. With the amount of time that the company has put into talking up the security and magic of Face ID, I have a hard time believing that it would decide to come back around to a fingerprin­t reader. And if it does, you’d best believe that the feature would need to work a whole lot better than the current generation if the company is to devote any of the valuable real estate inside of its phones to the technology.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The days of the Lightning port on the iPhone may be numbered
The days of the Lightning port on the iPhone may be numbered
 ??  ?? Follow-ups to the iPhone SE seem to be in the works
Follow-ups to the iPhone SE seem to be in the works
 ??  ?? Samsung has gone with an ultrasonic sensor on the Galaxy S10+, and it has its issues
Samsung has gone with an ultrasonic sensor on the Galaxy S10+, and it has its issues

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