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Apple iPhone 17 Series: Exactly How The New Designs Will Look

Apple iPhone 17 Series: Exactly How The New Designs Will Look

Forbes2 days ago
Up until recently, it's been easy to choose between different iPhones. But now, it looks like all the iPhones will come in different sizes. The next iPhones will be out soon, likely announced on Sept. 9 , with a Sept. 19 release date — read this for the exact schedule.
Two years ago, the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro had the same screen size, and the iPhone 15 Plus and iPhone 15 Pro Max also matched each other.
Then, last year, the two Pro models grew. This left the regular iPhone with a 6.1-inch display, the iPhone 16 Plus with a 6.7-inch display, while the iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max had 6.3-inch and 6.9-inch displays respectively.
Now, a new leak from Majin Bu on X shows the four screen sizes for the iPhone 17 series, in the form of screen protectors.
As last year, each phone will have a unique screen size, with the wild card this year being the slim phone that's predicted and has been nicknamed iPhone 17 Air.
Seen in series, the four phones, in order of size (though likely not in price) run iPhone 17 (6.1 inches), iPhone 17 Pro (6.3 inches), iPhone 17 Air (6.6 inches) and iPhone 17 Pro Max (6.9 inches).
The Air will be the first-ever iPhone with a 6.6-inch display and may offer the Goldilocks size for those who find the Pro Max too big and the Pro somehow wanting.
Since the other three phones are similar in size to last year's we have some concept of how they will look from the front — completely different camera panels are expected on the rear of the two Pro phones — but the Air will add a different flavor to the range.
Size, as they say, isn't everything: it's thought that at least three of the screens will have ProMotion, Apple's name for the advanced screen tech that delivers, among other things, an always-on screen.
And even the phone thought to lack this, the iPhone 17, may yet include the 120Hz refresh rate that regular iPhones have so far lacked.
Finally: bezels. It's a fair guess that there will be no change between last year's iPhones and this. And since the Air is all-new, it's hard to guess how narrow the frames will be.
All will be known in around four weeks' time.
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Exclusive-US embeds trackers in AI chip shipments to catch diversions to China, sources say

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I've tried out the biggest addition to iOS 26 Maps — here's what I like and what I don't
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Start by tapping either on the Places menu or on the picture of your face by the search bar. In this example, I've opted for the second approach, which brings up a pop-up menu that includes a place option. Tap Places and you'll see the Places screen with a Visited Places section accompanied by a Beta label. (If you tapped Places from the get-go, you'll jump directly to that screen.) The Visited Places section itself organizes the locations you've been to by category — shopping, dining and more — and by city. It's a pretty stylish look, I think, and one that serves a purpose as if you're looking for locations in a specific place, you can just tap that particular city. Below those two sections, all your visits will be listed in a column. Tap on the All Visits header to see them displayed on a map. Having spent some time with Visited Places, I think it's a solid addition to Maps, and I can see the value of the feature increasing over time as I visit more places and need to give my memory more of a jog about where I've been. There's a hidden tool in Visited Places to get even more out of the feature as well as a few ways for Apple to tighten things up. Just having a list of places you've visited would be helpful enough, but you can really make that list useful by adding notations to it. For example, there's a hardware store on my list of visited places where a knife sharpening services stops by once a month — it'd be handy to have that information connected with the location, either so I remember when that knife drop-off happens or so that I can recommend it to friends who ask me where I go to get my knives sharpened. Just tap on the More icon — those three dots — to the right of each entry. A pop-up menu will appear with an Add a Note option. Select that, type in what you care to log about that particular site, and it's there connected to the location for as long as you keep that stored in the Maps app. A fair amount of iOS 26 features require Apple Intelligence to work, but Visited Places isn't one of them. All you need is an iOS 26-supported device like the iPhone 12 I've been using for testing. The feature doesn't work everywhere, though. Right now, you can only access Visited Places in Australia, Canada, Malaysia, Switzerland, the UK, and the U.S. Visited Places is a beta feature that relies on location data and sometimes that location data is wrong. For instance, Visited Places originally listed the name of the knife sharpening service as the place I visited and not the hardware store that hosts that roving service. When a location is added to Visited Places, you've got the option to vet the addition and correct it if it's wrong. The More menu also has a Wrong Location option that you can tap to correct things. 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