The New Zealand Herald

New number

Apple gets ready to launch latest iPhone

- Mark Gurman

Apple’s most important new phone for years will be called the iPhone X, according to a leak of the company’s latest mobile operating system.

Strings of software code inside of the leaked operating system, first detailed by Apple news website 9to5Mac, show the expected three new phones will be called the iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, and iPhone X.

App and game developer Steven Troughton-Smith discovered the names in the software and tweeted about it yesterday.

The iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus are successors to the current iPhone models, while the iPhone X is the premium version with an all-new design, crisper OLED screen, improved cameras, and a 3-D facial recognitio­n scanner for unlocking the device.

The “X” in the iPhone’s name may be a reference to this model being a special 10th anniversar­y edition. The iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus will look similar to the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, but include faster processors.

The new devices will be unveiled at an event on Wednesday. An Apple spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

The leak comes not long after Apple accidental­ly published early HomePod speaker software that provided details on iPhone features.

Apple chief executive Tim Cook has criticised news reports on upcoming iPhones this year, saying the articles dented sales of current models.

Still, expectatio­ns are running high for a blockbuste­r holiday season: In a recent survey by RBC Capital Markets, almost two-thirds of respondent­s said they would buy a new iPhone model sight unseen.

The leaked operating system corroborat­es earlier Bloomberg News reports that the premium X device will replace the usual Touch ID fingerprin­t scanner with a face unlock feature. Apple will call the enhancemen­t Face ID, according to the code.

The sensor will also be used for scanning a person’s facial expression and converting that into animated emojis for messaging, the code shows.

Bloomberg recently reported that the premium model will lack a home button and instead use a series of gestures for controllin­g the device.

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Tim Cook

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