If the leaks to date are to be believed, the iPhone 16 Plus will be replaced by the iPhone 17 Air, and the latest rumor coming out of Apple‘s supply chain is that the 2025 flagship phone will have an upgraded display attached.
According to the usually well-informed DigiTimes (via 9to5Mac), Taiwanese display manufacturer Novatek could start mass production of its next-gen OLED screens during the second quarter of 2025 (April, May, and June).
These OLED screens are said to come with TDDI (Touch and Display Driver Integration) technology built in, which means the same chip handles both output and touch input – which then means thinner and more efficient screens.
And the first customer for these thinner, more efficient screens? Apple, quite possibly, according to DigiTimes. The link is described as “speculation” at this point, but the timings would match – and so would the introduction of a slimmer iPhone model.
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The iPhone 17 story so far
Besides the possibility of a thinner and lighter iPhone 17 Air (or Slim), we don’t know too much about the handsets coming next year. It’s still early days of course: our iPhone 16 review hasn’t been up for long, after the series was unveiled last month.
We have heard that the iPhone 17 could arrive with another new button – or rather, that the Action button and the volume buttons could be combined into one, at least on the Pro and Pro Max versions of next year’s handsets.
As for the two non-Pro models, they will apparently get screen upgrades that enable an always-on display option, as well as a variable refresh rate for smoother animations and transitions (on top of the other display upgrade covered above).
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It could be the iPhone 17 Pro Max that gets the most updates, however: we’ve heard that it’s going to come with more RAM, enhanced on-device AI capabilities, and an upgraded cooling system to further boost performance.
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It wasn’t long ago that I was sitting in the TechRadar office, talking the ear off of one of my colleagues about how book-style foldables like the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 and Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold didn’t quite make sense to me.
I just couldn’t see the utility in a square, mid-sized display running a smartphone operating system – I had been an iPad user for almost a decade, and spending nearly half my life using large tablets had me convinced that nothing could best them for media consumption, reading, and light multitasking. News of the upcoming Huawei Mate XT – the world’s first tri-fold smartphone that expands to a 10-inch tablet – stoked this suspicion even further. But even as I saw my vision of the future unfold, my curiosity for conventional folding phones simmered.
The thing is, I hadn’t actually used a foldable for any more than fifteen minutes at a time, usually while passing through a busy Samsung store. I’d never really entertained the idea of walking out with a Z Fold of my own thanks to the starting price of $1,899 / £1,799 / AU$2,749, but was always impressed by the construction, design, and possibilities. Maybe – just maybe – my cynicism had emerged from unresolved curiosity.
When given the chance to test out a folding phone long-term, I felt this curiosity reignite. My first hour with the OnePlus Open was spent in a tech-fueled trance as I opened, then shut, then opened it again, completely enraptured by the engineering on display (both literally and figuratively). A few weeks later, and I’m happy to report that I was wrong to doubt folding phones – these things absolutely rock.
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More screen, less problems
The central conceit of the OnePlus Open can be described in two words: big screen. Placing two phones next to each other – as Samsung suggests with its Try Galaxy feature – gives some semblance of the Open’s 7.82-inch inner screen, but using one quickly reveals it to be more than just the sum of its parts.
Embedded videos in articles and other web pages become actually watchable when the device is unfolded, rather than something to note for later or just scroll past. The form factor makes multitasking realistic, with two apps side-by-side and a third in a floating window. You still won’t be doing complex work on a device like this, but cross-referencing web pages or watching a video in the background feels much more practical than gimmicky.
The inner screen on the OnePlus Open turns the smartphone into a bonafide option for media consumption, rather than a compromise. When passing through the airport on a recent trip away, I could unfold the phone to watch The Penguin at each point of stoppage before simply snapping it shut and into my pocket when things started moving again – I’d never have bothered with the smaller screen of a slab phone or unwieldy size of my 11-inch iPad Pro. The mini-tablet size means more room for decent speakers, too – the Open is rivalled only by the larger iPhones for the best smartphone speakers I’ve ever heard.
A larger screen means it’s easier to experience this stuff with friends, too. Injecting a smartphone into conversation can be a risk due to the awkwardness of asking someone to squint at a small screen – the Open makes showing a friend a photo or video clip much more enjoyable for all involved, doubly so when trying to share something across a table or across the room. The screen is just large enough to be inviting, and its hinge is a better conversation starter than any app or meme could possibly hope to be. Seeing people experience the fold for the first time still hasn’t gotten old.
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I think there’s also something to be said for the level of intent implied by passing someone a device they need to hold with both hands. In fact, I’ve found myself inspired by the Open to think about the way I use my phone. The cover screen remains useful for checking messages, quick Google searches, and taking photos, but even knowing the inner screen is waiting behind a half-second of effort makes me consider whether what I’m doing is worth throwing onto the big screen, and if not, whether I should put down the phone and get back to the real world.
A couple of compromises
There are, of course, some tradeoffs to using a folding phone. It’s generally accepted that battery life takes a hit, which is understandable if you’re driving the large inner screen more often than not. I found myself needing to charge midway through the day a few times with the OnePlus Open, but could make it through to the late evening most of the time. Additionally, phone makers tend to equip folding phones with objectively worse camera specs than their slab flagship counterparts. For what it’s worth, I found the Open’s camera setup to be very impressive, but photographers may be tempted by the snazzier specs and nimbler ergonomics of a traditional slab phone (see the Galaxy S24 Ultra or iPhone 16 Pro Max).
There are also a couple of issues that come with the territory of being foldable. I found a few apps – especially older games like Professor Layton or Plague Inc. – did not respond well to my folding or unfolding of the phone while they were running, and I even experienced some crashes on Instagram when using the Open unfolded. It’s up to app developers to optimize their apps for the foldable platform, but there’s little incentive for them to do so while foldable devices remain a very small niche. And even as someone with large hands, the Open is undeniably large and heavy – I sometimes felt it weighing on my wrist while using it one-handed, and the unique geometry isn’t always the most comfortable to hold.
Still, though, these feel like small prices to pay for access to a unique, adaptable, and gorgeous device. What surprised me about the OnePlus Open – and what I think probably sets it apart from some of its contemporaries – is just how good it is at being a regular phone. The 6.31-inch cover screen is not much narrower than my trusty old Huawei Mate 20 Pro and certainly feels a lot wider than the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6’s strip of a cover display. The Open’s front screen is a bright, high-resolution, high refresh rate panel and the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset gives the Open reliably fast performance.
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Do you need a foldable?
The foldable experience is not one that’s built on necessity. There’s no real need to have Instagram take up six horizontal inches of screen space, to read articles with two hands, to see such a broad smorgasbord of apps in the app drawer – but it is nice.
Arguably, when it comes to modern ultra-premium smartphones, we’re past the point of thinking about necessity anyway. Are most users actually finding the bottlenecks in the iPhone 16 Pro’s A18 Pro chipset? Do shutterbugs reach for the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra’s 100x zoom as often as they do the 1x wide lens? Is anyone so impatient as to need the Realme GT5 240W’s eponymous charging speed? So much of the joy that comes with improving phone hardware is in how much it improves the small stuff, the things we’ve been doing for years and will do for years to come, and having a mini-tablet display available at a literal flick of the wrist* improves day-to-day web browsing, social media, video, and music much more than I ever expected (*don’t actually open it like this).
We officially transitioned into Spooky Season this week and, between OpenAI’s $6.6 million funding round, Nvidia’s surprise LLM, and some privacy-invading Meta Smart Glasses, we saw a scary number of developments in the AI space. Here are five of the biggest announcements.
Sam Altman’s charmed existence continues apace with news this week that OpenAI has secured an additional $6.6 billion in investment as part of its most recent funding round. Existing investors like Microsoft and Khosla Ventures were joined by newcomers SoftBank and Nvidia. The AI company is now valued at a whopping $157 billion, making it one of the wealthiest private enterprises on Earth. And, should OpenAI’s proposed for-profit restructuring plan go through, that valuation would grant Altman more than $150 billion in equity, rocketing him onto the list of the top 10 richest people on the planet. Following the funding news, OpenAI rolled out Canvas, its take on Anthropic’s Artifacts collaborative feature
Nvidia is making the leap from AI hardware to AI software with this week’s release of LVNM 1.0, a truly open-source large language model that excels at a variety of vision and language tasks. The company claims that the new model family, led by the 72 billion-parameter LVNM-D-72B, can rival GPT-4o. However, Nvidia is positioning LVNM not as a direct competitor to other frontier-class LLMs, but as a platform on which other developers can create their own chatbots and applications.
Seems like being able to speak directly with your chatbot is the new must-have feature. Google announced this week that it is expanding Gemini Live to converse in nearly four dozen languages beyond English, starting with French, German, Portuguese, Hindi, and Spanish. Microsoft also revealed a similar feature for Copilot, dubbed Copilot Voice, that the company claims is “the most intuitive and natural way to brainstorm on the go.” They join ChatGPT’s Advanced Voice Mode and Meta’s Natural Voice Interactions in allowing users to talk with their phones, not just to them.
All the fighting over SB 1047, California’s Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Models Act, was for naught as Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the AI safety bill this week. In a letter to lawmakers, he argued that the bill focused myopically on the largest of language models and that “smaller, specialized models may emerge as equally or even more dangerous than the models targeted by SB 1047.”
A pair of Harvard computer science students managed to modify a pair of commercially available Meta smart glasses so they can identify and look up any person that walks into their field of vision, 404 Media reported this week. The glasses, part of the I-XRAY experiment, were designed to capture images of strangers on the street, run those images through PimEyes image recognition software to identify the subject, then use that basic information to search for their personal information (i.e., their phone number and home address) on commercial data brokerage sites.
“To use it, you just put the glasses on, and then as you walk by people, the glasses will detect when somebody’s face is in frame,” the pair explained in a video demo posted to X. “After a few seconds, their personal information pops up on your phone.” The privacy implications for such a system are terrifying. The duo have no intention to publicly release the source code, but now that they’ve shown it can be done, there is little to prevent others from reverse engineering it.
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Synthetic benchmarks have suggested the MediaTek Dimensity 9400 SoC outperforms Apple’s A18 Pro in a GPU benchmark. However, the multi-core chipset’s CPU cluster and GPU specifications weren’t known.
Reliable tipster Digital Chat Station (DCS) has posted the specifications of the Dimensity 9400 SoC on Chinese social media platform Weibo. DCS has mentioned the Dimensity 9400 will have one Cortex-X925 super-large core clocked at up to 3.626 GHz, three Cortex-X4 large cores, and four Cortex-A720 cores.
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According to GSMArena, MediaTek would have opted for Cortex-A725 CPU cores. ARM recently announced its newest Cortex-A725 design. Hence, it is highly likely that MediaTek would embed a newer and more advanced CPU core.
It is a little concerning to note that MediaTek has reportedly clocked the X4 and A720/A725 CPU cores exactly as they were in the Dimensity 9300 launched last year. Specifically speaking, the Cortex X4 CPU cores are clocked at 2.85 GHz, while the A720/A725 CPU cores are clocked at 2.0 GHz.
The MediaTek Dimensity 9400 SoC is packing an Immortalis-G925 MC12 GPU clocked at 1,612 MHz. Needless to say, this GPU puts the flagship Dimensity chipset on par with some desktop-grade CPUs. This was evident from the chipset recently scoring 3 million points in AnTuTu benchmarks, making it the first mobile chipset to do so.
Will the latest flagship MediaTek chipset beat Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 4?
For several years, MediaTek has been trailing Qualcomm. The Chinese company has been improving its products. However, so far the company hasn’t been able to beat Qualcomm’s flagship chipsets.
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The MediaTek Dimensity 9400 will challenge the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 SoC. But Qualcomm’s upcoming SoC has reportedly been tested at a frequency of 4.47GHz in the Galaxy S25 Ultra. If raw numbers are the deciding criteria, this year’s Qualcomm’s flagship chipset would still reign supreme, especially if MediaTek is using last year’s tech.
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