logo
These 7 Rumored iPhone 17 Pro Max Features Just Might Convince Me to Upgrade

These 7 Rumored iPhone 17 Pro Max Features Just Might Convince Me to Upgrade

CNET4 days ago
Because photography is important to me, I've always picked the iPhone Pro with its telephoto camera over the regular iPhone models. But each year I'm pulled in two directions: Pick the standard-sized iPhone Pro or the larger iPhone Pro Max? Some years the latter includes photo features not found on the regular iPhone Pro, such as the 5x zoom that was exclusive to the iPhone 15 Pro Max. And as we approach the reveal of the next iPhone 17 lineup, I'm once again waffling between sizes. And based on I'm hearing, this might be the year to go to the Max. (And this also reinforces that now is not the time to buy a new iPhone.)
Here's a rundown of some of the features rumored for the iPhone 17 Pro Max that I'm most curious about.
Making the case to go larger
The iPhone Pro Max models are tanks compared to the rest of the line -- well, they're not on the toughness level of the Samsung Galaxy XCover 7 Pro, so maybe they're more like solid midsize SUVs. But they're notable for their larger screens, bigger bodies and especially for having room for more of everything in an iPhone.
And that includes a larger battery. The Max models already have more battery space than other models, but the iPhone 17 Pro Max could end up being almost half a millimeter thicker, at 8.725mm, according to a May post by 9to5Mac. Has anyone ever asked for a more bulky iPhone? Actually, yes, yes and yes.
The iPhone 17 Pro Max could get thicker.
Apple/Lily Yeh/CNET
Add the new Adaptive Power feature in iOS 26, which uses AI to distribute power more efficiently when demand is high, and we could see a boost in daily use before reaching for a charger. (Then again, Adaptive Power could be a software workaround that could mean longer life using the same physical battery size.)
If you're already committed to carrying a larger iPhone, a tad more thickness and heft isn't too much more to shoulder.
The back of the iPhone 17 Pro case is also rumored to shift the Apple logo down from its current perch. That doesn't seem like a big functional change, but it should help soothe folks who choose to add a clear MagSafe case, since the logo will be centered within the MagSafe area. You can't say Apple doesn't sweat the design details.
A leak on X from Majin Bu purports to show an iPhone 17 Pro case, though it's not clear whether that's something assembled by hand to match rumored specs or is some iPhone knockoff.
Bring on all the camera upgrades
We can't talk about the case without mentioning the camera bump, which could become a more expansive camera island (or maybe on the larger iPhone 17 Pro Max, it will be more like a camera continent) that stretches across the width of the iPhone back, according to CAD renders by Majin Bu. We even got a glimpse of a possible test iPhone 17 Pro in the wild when someone snapped a picture of what looks to be an Apple employee using a phone with a design that matches many rumors (via Foxy Pupy on X).
That expanse may include an upgraded 48-megapixel telephoto camera, which feels overdue for a top-tier camera system. Granted, it will probably take extra steps to capture photos in the full 48-megapixel resolution, as is the case with the current main Fusion camera in the iPhone 16 Pro models, where images are "pixel-binned" with multiple pixels grouped together to enhance light gathering ability. But given the great results we've seen from the 48-megapixel camera in the current models -- the iPhone 16E leans heavily on that resolution using its sole rear-facing camera -- extending it to the telephoto camera would definitely be a win for photographers.
Will the layout and configuration of the cameras change from the iPhone 16 Pro shown here in the new iPhone 17 Pro Max?
James Martin/CNET
Speaking of resolution, a 24-megapixel front-facing camera is expected, up from 12 megapixels, so perhaps my selfies will look better. More likely, it's to boost the next rumored feature.
A movable camera lens
I'm breaking out this camera rumor separately because it would mark a huge change in the iPhone camera system. According to a post at MacRumors, the iPhone 17 Pro could have an 8x optical zoom. Not only that, it's said to be able to move, so perhaps there could be a range of zoom between 5x and 8x that is all optical (versus relying on digital zoom to crop and enlarge the image to fit the same field of view). The 5x zoom in the current iPhone 15 Pro Max, iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro Max uses a "tetraprism" design to achieve its telephoto range while still keeping the camera bump modest.
iPhone 16 Pro 5x telephoto camera
Patrick Holland/CNET
Video recording makes a leap
Cameras on both sides will reportedly work together with dual video recording using the built-in Camera app, a boon for conducting interviews or making reaction videos where you want to see both sides of a conversation. Third-party apps have been able to tap into this capability for some time, but haven't been available as a default option.
Not as important for everyday use, but interesting in terms of advancing the state of the art, the iPhone 17 Pro Max could support 8K video recording, as speculated by MacRumors after reports that 8K was tested for the iPhone 16 Pro. The iPhone is swiftly turning into a production video camera, from features such as 28 Years Later to custom cameras built from iPhone tech in the F1 movie.
An improved cooling system
Recording video in 4K resolution, much less 8K, is a demanding, power-hungry task that leads to heat build up. In already warm environments, it can even overheat the iPhone and temporarily shut it down. So the prospect of a new internal cooling architecture, while being invisible to iPhone owners, has me nerding out just a little.
According to Majin Bu and others, the iPhone 17 Pro models will feature a "vapor chamber" cooling system. As the processor heats up, a small amount of liquid in the chamber evaporates and condenses in cooler areas and is then passed back to the hot areas.
Wi-Fi 7 and fast cellular via a new Apple modem
This is more geeky and less obvious to everyday phone owners, but that's also kind of the point. The iPhone 16E shipped with Apple's C1 cellular modem, Apple's first homebrew cellular hardware it has been trying to build in order to wean its dependence on Qualcomm, which has provided the modem hardware in previous iPhone models.
However, the C1 lacks a faster millimeter wave cellular network and doesn't support Wi-Fi 7, even though it's more conservative about power usage (and still performs well), an acceptable trade-off for the budget phone in Apple's lineup.
The C1 is Apple's first cellular modem. We could see a more capable C2 chip in the iPhone 17 Pro models.
Apple/Screenshot by CNET
But for the iPhone 17 Pro Max, we're talking about the next professional models, and an iPhone Pro in 2025 can't ship without the latest, fastest wireless technology. It would be more realistic to see Apple stick with Qualcomm for the Pro line than include the C1 -- but I suspect a C2 is coming.
According to MacRumors, the Wi-Fi 7 compatibility could be provided by a separate dedicated chip designed by Apple.
An orange iPhone 17 Pro Max
You don't have to be an ardent fan of the Netherlands national football team to appreciate the color orange. Leaker Majin Bu posted renders of the new color lineup for iPhone 17 Pro models, and one of them is gloriously ginger. Not only is this interesting because orange is orange, but because it would be a departure from Apple's recent line of cool, muted colors for the pro lineup. (There are also rumors that the iPhone lineup will include a new sky blue color, about which I have opinions.) I don't hide my iPhone in a case, so being able to show off a bold color sounds like a fun idea.
These aren't the only iPhone 17 Pro rumors we're tracking, but right now they're the ones that have me looking at my calendar and wishing September could arrive just a little faster.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rumble considers near $1.2 billion offer for German AI cloud group Northern Data
Rumble considers near $1.2 billion offer for German AI cloud group Northern Data

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Rumble considers near $1.2 billion offer for German AI cloud group Northern Data

(Reuters) -U.S.-listed video platform Rumble is considering a potential offer of about $1.17 billion (1 billion euro) for German AI cloud group Northern Data AG, according to separate statements from the companies and Reuters calculations. Rumble, also a cloud services provider, said a deal would integrate Northern Data's data center business and GPU cloud business with a significant number of Nvidia GPUs, into Rumble's existing operations. Rumble is considering offering 2.319 shares for each Northern Data share, both companies said. The exchange values Northern Data at about $18.3 per share (about 15.69 euros per share), based on Reuters calculations. This is at a discount of about 32% to the German company's last close. Rumble said its proposed offer assumes Northern Data's Peak Mining unit will be divested prior to the completion of the deal. Tether, the majority shareholder of Northern Data, has expressed support for the transaction, according to the statements. However, the companies said there is no certainty that the discussions will eventually result in a formal offer for the German group. (1 euro = $1.1664)

Trump Administration to Take 15% Cut of Nvidia and AMD Chip Sales to China
Trump Administration to Take 15% Cut of Nvidia and AMD Chip Sales to China

Wall Street Journal

time42 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Trump Administration to Take 15% Cut of Nvidia and AMD Chip Sales to China

Nvidia NVDA 1.07%increase; green up pointing triangle and Advanced Micro Devices AMD 0.21%increase; green up pointing triangle have agreed to give the Trump administration a portion of the sales from their artificial-intelligence chips to China, unusual agreements that deepen their relationships with the U.S. government. The Trump administration will receive 15% of the sales as part of a deal to approve exports of Nvidia's H20 AI chip to China, according to people familiar with the matter. That could amount to billions of dollars given demand for the H20 chips and is the latest example of the White House employing novel tactics to raise revenue.

OpenAI's open source pivot shows how U.S. tech is trying to catch up to China's AI boom
OpenAI's open source pivot shows how U.S. tech is trying to catch up to China's AI boom

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

OpenAI's open source pivot shows how U.S. tech is trying to catch up to China's AI boom

OpenAI, the developer behind ChatGPT, released two bombshell AI developments last week. Last Thursday, it released GPT-5, the long-awaited update to its powerful GPT model. But OpenAI's earlier decision to release open-source versions of its powerful model—the first time it's done so since 2020, may be more consequential. OpenAI's move follows a flood of Chinese AI models spurred by the surprise release from Chinese AI startup DeepSeek. It's a major shift for the U.S. AI developer, now worth $300 billion. Open weight models allow developers to fine-tune for specific tasks without retraining it from scratch. Despite its name, OpenAI has focused on releasing closed, proprietary models, meaning developers couldn't get under the hood to see how they worked—allowing OpenAI to charge for access to its powerful models. DeepSeek tested that strategy. The Hangzhou-based start-up made waves by releasing models that matched the performance of products from Western rivals like OpenAI and Anthropic. By making its technology openly accessible, DeepSeek allowed developers around the globe to experience the power of its models firsthand. Since then, Chinese AI development has exploded, with companies large and small rushing to unveil increasingly advanced models. Most releases are open-source. 'Globally, AI labs are feeling the heat as open source models are increasingly recognized for their role in democratizing AI development,' Grace Shao, an China-based AI analyst and founder of AI Proem, says. U.S. tech stocks have rebounded from the slump triggered by DeepSeek, but the shift to open-source may be more permanent. In March, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman conceded that the developer may have been on the 'wrong side of history' by maintaining a closed approach. The race is now geopolitically charged. Ahead of releasing the open-source models, Altman said he was 'excited for the world to be building on an open AI stack created in the United States, based on democratic values, available for free to all and for wide benefit.' Altman's statement leans into a growing competition over AI–one that developers in the U.S. are worried of losing. 'This plethora of simultaneous open AI models (with published weights and papers about technique) is an 'idea orgy.' The collective innovation should easily soar past anything one company can do alone,' Benchmark general partner Bill Gurley wrote on X in late July. 'It's formidable and should easily win over single proprietary players (anywhere in the globe).' China embraces open-source Chinese AI firms are now aggressively championing open-source. Baidu, once the leader in China's AI development with its ERNIE model, went open-source a few months ago to catch up with Alibaba and DeepSeek. Kuaishou and Tencent have both released open-source video-generation models. Zhipu AI, Moonshot AI and MiniMax–some of China's so-called 'AI tigers'—have also released open-source models in recent weeks. Rather than closely guard their breakthroughs, Chinese developers think an open approach will encourage greater innovation and encourage adoption. 'When the model is open-source, people naturally want to try it out of curiosity,' Baidu CEO Robin Li told analysts in February, soon after the company unveiled its plans to go open-source And there's a business argument too: Alibaba executives, for example, argue that their open-source Qwen models encourage companies and startups to use Alibaba's cloud computing services. Since DeepSeek's release, Chinese companies have rushed to integrate Chinese AI models into their products, including social media platforms, cars, and even air-conditioners. There may also be a psychological element at play. Going open-source lets users around the world see the power of Chinese AI models for themselves, appealing to an up-and-coming tech sector that's long been denigrated by outsiders as a copycat. Export controls China has supported other open-source technologies. Officials back the use of the RISC-V chip design architecture, an open-source alternative to proprietary architectures like ARM and Intel's x86. RISC-V allows Chinese chip engineers to share best practices and ideas, spurring the growth of the broader sector. Beijing seeks to develop a self-sufficient semiconductor sector, in part due to concerns of the U.S.'s control of critical parts of the chip supply chain. The Biden administration's decision to impose chip controls in 2022 intensified China's push for domestic innovation. China's embrace of RISC-V has raised eyebrows in Washington. Last year, the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party recommended that U.S. officials study the risks of RISC-V, and reportedly proposed preventing U.S. citizens from aiding China on the open-source architecture. Leaders vs. followers China's embrace of open-source aligns with the country's initial position as a runner-up in AI. 'If you're an OpenAI, an Anthropic, a Google…if you're really leading, then you have this incredibly valuable asset,' Helen Toner, the director of strategy at Georgetown's Center for Security and Emerging Technology, said at the Fortune Brainstorm AI Singapore conference in mid-July. 'It's easy to understand why they wouldn't want to just hand out [their models] for free to their competitors if they're able to sell access to their closed systems at a premium.' But for followers, who 'can't compete at the frontier,' releasing an open-source model is a way to show 'how advanced you are,' she explained. Open-source models also 'buy a lot of goodwill,' Toner, who once served on OpenAI's board, added. 'What we've seen over the last couple years is how much soft power is available to people who are willing to and organizations that are willing to make their technology available freely,' she explained. The U.S. may now recognize the 'soft power' potential of open-source. 'The United States is committed to supporting the development and deployment of open-source and open-weight models,' Michael Kratsios, director of the U.S. Office of Science and Technology Policy, said in South Korea earlier this week And with OpenAI's decision, U.S. AI is now perhaps put in a rare position: Following, not leading. This story was originally featured on

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