Apple developing its own displays
Apple is designing and producing its own device displays for the first time, using a secret manufacturing facility to make small numbers of the screens for testing purposes, according to people familiar with the situation.
The technology giant is making a significant investment in the development of next-generation MicroLED screens, say the people, who requested anonymity to discuss internal planning.
MicroLED screens use different light-emitting compounds than the current OLED displays and promise to make future gadgets slimmer, brighter and less powerhungry. The screens are far more difficult to produce than OLED displays, and the company almost killed the project a year or so ago, the people say.
Engineers have since been making progress and the technology is now at an advanced stage, they say, though consumers will probably have to wait a few years before seeing the results.
The ambitious undertaking is the latest example of Apple bringing the design of key components in-house.
The company has designed chips powering its mobile devices for several years. Its move into displays has the long-term potential to hurt a range of suppliers, from screen makers like Samsung, Japan Display, Sharp and LG to companies like Synaptics that produce chipscreen interfaces.
Controlling MicroLED technology would help Apple stand out in a maturing smartphone market and outgun rivals like Samsung that have been able to tout superior screens.
Ray Soneira, who runs screen tester DisplayMate Technologies, says bringing the design in-house is a ‘‘golden opportunity’’ for Apple. ‘‘Everyone can buy an OLED or LCD screen,’’ he says. ‘‘But Apple could own MicroLED.’’
None of this will be easy. Mass producing the new screens will require new manufacturing equipment. By the time the technology is ready, something else might have supplanted it. Apple could run into insurmountable hurdles and abandon the project or push it back. It’s also an expensive endeavour.
Ultimately, Apple will likely outsource production of its new screen technology to minimise the risk of hurting its bottom line with manufacturing snafus.
The California facility is too small for mass-production, but the company wants to keep the proprietary technology away from its partners as long as possible. ‘‘We put a lot of money into the facility,’’ one of the people says. ‘‘It’s big enough to get through the engineering builds [and] lets us keep everything in-house during the development stages.’’ An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment.
Smartphones and other gadgets use off-the-shelf display technology. The Apple Watch screen is made by LG Display. Ditto for Google’s larger Pixel phone. The iPhone X, Apple’s first OLED phone, uses Samsung technology. Phone manufacturers tweak screens to their specifications, and Apple has for years calibrated iPhone screens for colour accuracy.
But this marks the first time Apple is designing screens itself.
It’s unlikely that the technology will reach an iPhone for at least three to five years, the people say.
While the smartphone is Apple’s cash cow, there is precedent for new screen technologies showing up in the Apple Watch first. When it was introduced in 2014, the Apple Watch had an OLED screen. The technology finally migrated to the iPhone X last year.