- The iPhone 17 may not obtain an upgrade of the chipset, according to an analyst renowned
- But a smaller and more efficient dynamic is added to the place
- Other iPhone 17 models should obtain chipset upgrades
An analyst noted from the industry suggested that the iPhone 17 may not obtain an upgrading of a processor, instead of launching with the same chipset as the current generation model.
Jeff Pu, Apple Analyst of the GF Securities Research Company, suggested that the next iPhone will jump the usual upgrade of the chipset and will continue to use the A18 chipset found in the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Plus.
If this Tipoff turns out to be true, it would be the second time that Apple has launched a phone without upgrading the chipset. In 2022, the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus were launched in mixed reactions when it was revealed that Apple had equipped the two phones with the same A15 chipset found in the iPhone 13 and the iPhone 13 Mini.
As Phonearena reports, the iPhone 17 could be the only launch model of the upcoming iPhone 17 with an A18 chipset – the iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max should both get the A19 Pro chipset, while the new air of the iPhone 17 is planned to obtain the A19.
Minor design differences
So, is Apple in a second lateral eye of criticism and customers? Maybe. If we believe the latest rumors of iPhone 17, the next Apple basic model headlight will be the only one not Get a kind of major overhaul with this year series.
The iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max should get large camera bars to the The Google Pixel 9 and the iPhone 17 air are tilted to get a new thin and light chassis with a single camera.
This would leave the ordinary iPhone 17 as the only one in its series without a kind of design update, attracting even more attention to its similarities with the model of last year.
A new dynamic island?
Distinct rumors suggest that the next vanilla could at least benefit from a dynamic upgrade of the island to come throughout the iPhone 17 range.
Previous indices of Jeff Pu have indicated a reduced dynamic island using a metal for face ID, which means a lens that compacts the transmitter and the receiver in a single component. As Macrumors reports, the suggestion was shared in an investor ticket issued by PA earlier this month.
However, another Apple analyst and worthy of appointment renowned Ming-Chi Kuo said in January that they did not expect a change with regard to the size of the dynamic island.
We expect the iPhone 17 series later this year. Would you buy an iPhone 17 that does not come with an improved chipset? Is a smaller dynamic island sufficient for updating its design? Let us know in the comments below.