logo
iOS 18 vs. iOS 26: How Does Liquid Glass Compare to What's on Your iPhone Right Now?

iOS 18 vs. iOS 26: How Does Liquid Glass Compare to What's on Your iPhone Right Now?

CNET25-07-2025
Now that the iOS 26 public beta is available to install, more people are getting a taste of Apple's new design language, Liquid Glass. After a few developer betas, the new design has undergone a few tweaks for visibility -- for the better -- and Apple will likely continue to make tweaks to the latest version of iOS until the final release ships on the upcoming iPhone 17 lineup.
Taking a quick look at Liquid Glass, it looks to be a serious overhaul, but after using it for a while, it actually feels less dramatic, and iOS 26 has plenty of other features we're excited about. Still, it's clearly different from what you'll find on your iPhone today with iOS 18.
Below, we'll go over some of the changes you can expect to see on iOS 26 compared with iOS 18. For more, don't miss the leaked iPhone 17 Pro model colors.
Home screen
Apple kept the new Liquid Glass minimal on the home screen, with only minor changes to the default home screen appearance versus iOS 18's.
Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson
Looking at the home screens, the primary difference you'll find is that in iOS 26 the background of the dock and the search option that sits in between the dock and the home screen icons are more transparent and have a sheen to the edges, whereas in iOS 18, these are slightly darker.
Other smaller changes are that the icons on iOS 26 look slightly larger, and some app icons seem to have been more influenced by the redesign than others, most notably (from the screenshots) Settings, Camera and Mail.
For Liquid Glass to really shine on the home screen, you'll want to opt for the "All Clear" mode, which will create the most dramatic change to your icons and widgets. Going this route could potentially introduce some viewability issues, but the "reduce transparency" setting remedies this quite well.
Control Center
Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson
Things here are largely unchanged. Outside of the new glassy look in iOS 26, the 1x2 and 2x1 controls are more rounded than that of iOS 18.
Lock screen
Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson
It's easy to see the differences that Liquid Glass brings to the lock screen of the iPhone. The digital clock in iOS 26 dynamically resizes depending on the wallpaper and the number of notifications you have at any given moment, which is pretty cool. The clock itself on iOS 18 can be changed, but it won't change in size in response to content displayed on the lock screen.
The background on notifications is clearly different between the two OS versions, with iOS 18 providing more opacity and a black text versus iOS 26's near-transparent background on white text. The controls at the bottom in iOS 26 also appear more like physical buttons with depth and more of a see-through background.
The new unlock effect in iOS 26 is that the motion of unlocking your iPhone will appear as though you're lifting a sheet of glass, highlighted by a shiny edge to give it form when you begin to slide your finger up.
Menus and dynamic tab bars
iOS 26's new Dynamic Tab gives you a cleaner look and more space to view your content.
Apple/Screenshot by Jeff Carlson
A new addition in iOS 26 is the introduction of dynamic tab bars in apps that will change depending on whether you're scrolling or trying to perform a specific action. Apple says this will create a more intuitive experience while freeing up space for your content. If you were to replace the glass effect with heavily saturated colors, no one would blame you for mistaking this new tab bar with what Google's doing in Android 16 in some of its apps -- they look a lot alike. But compared to iOS 18, this new dynamic tab bar should not only reduce sifting through multiple menus, but it looks pretty good in the process.
iOS 26 will dynamically adapt to light and dark backgrounds
In iOS 26, the color of menu icons and icon text will adapt depending on the background.
Apple/GIF by CNET
While it's harder to compare Liquid Glass to iOS 18 here, an upcoming feature is that buttons and menus will adapt depending on the content's background color. For instance, when you're scrolling through an app with a light background, the floating menu options will appear with black text for easier viewing and will automatically change to white upon scrolling to a dark background.
in iOS 18, some apps aspects of the user interface would appear darker depending on the color of the background, but less so than how Liquid Glass handles it now.
CNET/ Screenshots by Jeff Carlson
iOS has had this type of feature show up in a less dramatic fashion before, as you can tell from the photos app screenshots above. Comparing these to what's on the horizon, it's hard not to get excited about the small tweaks Liquid Glass has in store, too.
Those are just a few of our initial findings, and we'll likely add more once we surface them. If you want more about iOS 26, check out three upcoming features that are a bigger deal than Liquid Glass.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Can Super Micro's AI Demand Outpace Profit Margin Fears?
Can Super Micro's AI Demand Outpace Profit Margin Fears?

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Can Super Micro's AI Demand Outpace Profit Margin Fears?

Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ:SMCI) is navigating a complex market landscape as it prepares to report its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings with a significant long-term growth narrative in the AI server space tempered by immediate concerns about market visibility and sustained pressure on profit margins. The company's heavy reliance on key suppliers and a competitive environment, where large-scale deals and component costs weigh on profitability, creates a cautious outlook despite its strong position as a leading beneficiary of rising AI infrastructure spending. Analyst Matt Bryson of Wedbush, in a note released on Monday, reiterated a Neutral rating on Super Micro with a $30 price forecast ahead of the company's earnings report scheduled for August the analyst acknowledged Super Micro's positioning as a key beneficiary of accelerating AI infrastructure spend, particularly in the server market, he expressed caution over near-term visibility and uncertainty around actual demand strength. Bryson noted that Super Micro stands to benefit from secular trends that align with its core strengths. Spending from neocloud providers, AI model builders, and sovereign buyers continues to grow, and these customers are increasingly turning to OEMs like Super Micro and Dell Technologies (NYSE:DELL) to meet their AI server requirements. He added that Nvidia's (NASDAQ:NVDA) apparent prioritization of GB200 deliveries to OEMs, rather than directly to hyperscalers, could serve as a tailwind for Super Micro. Peer company Gigabyte, for example, recently reported a 50% quarter-over-quarter sales surge, a result Bryson attributed to increased AI server shipments. If current market dynamics hold, Bryson sees a long-term path for Super Micro to potentially reach $10 billion in quarterly sales, echoing targets previously laid out by Super Micro CEO Charles Liang. This would be a significant leap from the $5.9 billion revenue consensus for fiscal fourth quarter and the $6.4 billion projection for calendar first quarter. However, Bryson underscored that visibility into Super Micro's actual build and demand trends remains limited. The company's heavy reliance on related parties for component sourcing and manufacturing complicates tracking real-time activity. Additionally, data from third-party sources has yet to reflect the level of demand surge expected from recent AI server trends. While strength in Taiwan-based suppliers like Wistron suggests a robust upstream environment, Bryson's team has not been able to confirm that Super Micro is directly seeing similar momentum in its own sales funnel. Margins also remain a key concern. Gross margins are expected to stay under pressure in the near term due to an increasing share of Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) content in Super Micro's bill of materials. According to conversations with ODMs and OEMs, GB200-based designs leave little room for differentiation, further compressing vendor margins. Management has guided fiscal fourth-quarter gross margins to remain around 10%, roughly in line with the 9.7% margin reported in the previous quarter. The analyst characterized this conservatism as prudent, citing the lower-margin profile of large-scale deals, rising Nvidia component costs, and a lack of meaningful relief in memory pricing. For the fiscal fourth quarter, Super Micro management projected revenue in the range of $5.6 billion to $6.4 billion and adjusted earnings per share between 40 cents and 50 cents. Operating expenses are expected to reach $245 million, with an adjusted tax rate of 16.5%. The fully diluted share count is projected at 642 million, and capital expenditures are guided between $45 million and $55 million. Despite Super Micro's significant share price appreciation over the past few months, Bryson remains on the sidelines. Price Action: SMCI shares were trading higher by 3.88% to $58.84 at last check Monday. Image via Shutterstock Latest Ratings for SMCI Date Firm Action From To May 2021 Susquehanna Maintains Positive May 2021 Northland Capital Markets Maintains Outperform Jun 2020 Northland Capital Markets Initiates Coverage On Outperform View More Analyst Ratings for SMCI View the Latest Analyst Ratings Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? SUPER MICRO COMPUTER (SMCI): Free Stock Analysis Report This article Can Super Micro's AI Demand Outpace Profit Margin Fears? originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

JPMorgan drops 3-word verdict on Amazon stock post-earnings
JPMorgan drops 3-word verdict on Amazon stock post-earnings

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

JPMorgan drops 3-word verdict on Amazon stock post-earnings

JPMorgan drops 3-word verdict on Amazon stock post-earnings originally appeared on TheStreet. Amazon () posted a superb Q2 on paper, but the market was mostly unfazed. Shares pulled back sharply, with investors fixating on Amazon Web Services (AWS) relatively lagging in growth. However, in that cloud of concern (no pun intended), JPMorgan sees an opening, not noise. 💵💰💰💵 Veteran Analyst Doug Anmuth's call effectively cuts through the volatility, while putting fresh focus on how Wall Street's top desks are interpreting Amazon's long-term AI and infrastructure story. Amazon's big AI bet tests investor patience Amazon's Q2 results showed a clear contrast in booming top-line expansion, massive investment on one side, and investor unease on the other. Overall sales jumped a superb 13% amounting to $167.7 billion, beating estimates by an eye-popping $5.60 net income surged, with a $1.68 EPS, blowing past estimates by 36 cents. However, all eyes were on AWS sales, which were relatively uninspiring. AWS sales grew 17.5% to $30.9 billion, but remarkably lagged the headline-grabbing growth at competitors. Putting things in perspective, Microsoft Azure posted a 39% jump, while Google Cloud surged 32%, reinforcing fears that AWS may be losing ground in the AI cloud race. Margins told a similar story. AWS operating margin fell sharply to 32.9%, down from 39.5% the prior quarter. Management attributed the squeeze to its aggressive GenAI investments and infrastructure hiccups, particularly with power, chip supply, and server yields. What turned heads, though, was the spending. Amazon's capital expenditures came in at a record $31.4 billion, up close to 90% year-over-year. That's a remarkably high number, especially with management calling it 'reasonably representative' of what's to come in the back half of the year. However, the goal at this point is clear, and it involves scaling AWS's infrastructure quick enough to support AI ambitions and relieve capacity strain. Wall Street wasn't sold, with concerns centering around AWS's slower growth, thinner margins, and unclear near-term return on the hefty capex. Still, CEO Andy Jassy defended the strategy. He emphasized that Amazon is still in the early innings of its powerful multi-year AI journey and that capacity constraints will ease as new infrastructure comes online. JPMorgan's three-word response on Amazon stock: Buy the pullback As previously mentioned, Amazon may have delivered on paper, but the market didn't see it that way. Amazon stock tanked over 8% on Aug. 1, but it clawed back some of those losses pre-market Aug. 4. Still, the initial drop raises some major questions. Nevertheless, one top voice on the Street isn't analyst Doug Anmuth at JPMorgan feels the dip is exactly when investors should move in. He feels investors should 'Buy the pullback,' backing up his Buy rating on Amazon stock, while boosting his price target from $255 to $265, implying a superb upside of 23% from current levels. So what triggered the drop? According to Anmuth, the culprit was AWS. While AWS revenue jumped 17.5% year-over-year to $30.9 billion, it underwhelmed investors who expected more, especially considering the backdrop of AI-fueled cloud expansion. That's not all. Amazon also reported a record $31.4 billion in capex, which only made matters worse in compounding the pressure on AWS to deliver even bigger growth numbers. Still, the Street isn't backing off. Analysts at Citi also bumped their price target on the stock to $270, noting Amazon's higher spending reflects healthy demand and efforts to fix infrastructure constraints in the cloud. However, it's important to consider that growth lagged peers, and management didn't exactly calm concerns around the AI opportunity. Despite that, the Wall Street punditry believes the selloff doesn't match the broader story. And for JPMorgan, this is the kind of dip worth loading up on. AWS: Amazon's profit engine and AI powerhouse AWS is far from purely a segment; it's arguably the profit core and strategic anchor for the entire business. It's responsible for close to 60% of Amazon's operating income, with AWS running at an annualized sales pace above $123 billion. That scale gives it the profile of a standalone cloud giant, one that underpins the bulk of Amazon's enterprise Andy Jassy has reiterated AWS's incredible competitive moat, noting it's still 'meaningfully larger' than its next-closest rival. Recent data supports that lead. Per the most recent reports, AWS commands roughly 31% to 32% of the global cloud infrastructure market, followed closely by Microsoft Azure with roughly 22.5% to 24%, and Google Cloud at 10% to 12%. Other estimates tend to vary based on methodology, but generally confirm AWS's position at the top, with competitors trailing by a hefty margin. AI is rapidly deepening that role. AWS is investing a ton of money in generative and agentic AI, in serving external clients through the Generative AI Innovation Center. Another key differentiator for AWS is that it effectively originates from Amazon's internal infrastructure needs before commercialization. It comes with embedded efficiency and noteworthy cash-flow sustainability, making it more than a cost center, powering internal tools like Amazon Personalize. That synergy creates a robust loop where AI sharpens retail engagement and fuels more demand for compute. More News: Amazon's quiet pricing twist on tariffs stuns shoppersBank of America flags 3 breakout stocks to watch ahead of earnings Margins may have compressed recently on the back of AWS building its custom infrastructure, including Trainium chips, but those bets are about long-term dominance. JPMorgan drops 3-word verdict on Amazon stock post-earnings first appeared on TheStreet on Aug 4, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Aug 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

TSLA: Tesla Approves $29 Billion For Musk Amid Falling Sales, Legal Chaos
TSLA: Tesla Approves $29 Billion For Musk Amid Falling Sales, Legal Chaos

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

TSLA: Tesla Approves $29 Billion For Musk Amid Falling Sales, Legal Chaos

Aug 4 - Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) is not shy about betting big on Elon Musk. The company just approved a fresh 96 million-share compensation package for its CEO, worth around $29 billion. It's all about keeping Musk locked in, especially after a Delaware court tossed out his original $50 billion pay deal from 2018, calling it unfair to shareholders. Now, Musk is fighting that ruling in court. But in the meantime, Tesla's board put together a new plan. The shares won't vest unless Musk stays in a top executive role through 2027, and even then, they come with a five-year holding period. Tesla also says there won't be any double-dipping if his old package gets reinstated. All this is happening while Tesla faces real challenges. Sales are down, the Cybertruck hasn't delivered, and competition from legacy automakers like General Motors (NYSE:GM), Hyundai (HYMTF), and BMW (BMWYY) is heating up. On top of that, Musk's political moves haven't helped Tesla's brand loyalty. Still, this new award could help steady the ship, at least if Musk sticks around. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store