Howâs that knackered-out iPhone holding up? Barely hanging in there, sporting a screen scarred by numerous encounters with the floor, a battery that gives up the ghost at 40% and a home button that stopped working in 2016.
As you line up your badly abused handset for its overdue retirement, youâll no doubt be eager to hear all about the next iPhone youâll be wrapping your thumbs around.
In fact, we know that you are. So, weâve devised a comprehensive guide to all the rumours and leaks to have snuck from Chinese factory floors to the nerdiest corners of the web.
1. Weâll Get three iPhones â and theyâre HUGE
Apple has occasionally pumped out its handsets in groups of three: a fancy flagship in two sizes and a âbudgetâ option for those of us who donât have the coordination or bank balance to be trusted with such an expensive smartphone.
Numerous manufacturing leaks and dodgy photos indicate weâll get three new iPhones this year â and theyâre all massive: a 5.8-inch successor to the iPhone X, a 6.5-inch Plus model and a stripped-back 6.1-inch affordable handset.
Appleâs 2018 iPhone lineup (5.8âł / 6.1âł / 6.5âł)
â Ben Geskin (@VenyaGeskin1)
2. Two of them will be dead nifty
The 5.8-inch and 6.5-inch models are set to take all the features of the current iPhone X up a peg: theyâll feature polished stainless-steel cases and glass bodies with edge-to-edge screens with the Home button firmly ditched. The notch introduced at the top of the iPhone X remains, allowing Apple to squeeze in a new generation of TrueDepth front-facing camera, so you can unlock your phone with Face ID and transform your visage into that of a talking unicorn.
Word has it that both these flagship models will use an OLED display with specs comparable to the current super slick iPhone X. If youâre one for numbers (you big geek), the 5.8-inch model will feature a display with 458 pixels per inch, with an 1125 x 2436 resolution, while the 6.5-inch model will pump out around 480 pixels per inch, with a 1242 x 2688 resolution.
In short, youâll get more bystanders peering in on a flashy Netflix commute.
Estos dos vĂdeos muestran a los iPhone de 6,1â y 6,5â de 2018 â vĂa
â iOSMac (@iosmaces)
The majority of scruffy photos to have surfaced online are from manufacturers playing around with âdummy unitsâ â brick handsets used to help create accessories and cases. They consistently point to the 5.8 and 6.5-inch phones arriving with dual-lens cameras currently taking incredible shots on the iPhone 8 and iPhone X models.
However, the larger âPlusâ model may feature a triple-lens camera, which would give it improved low-light photography and the potential for interesting augmented reality applications (like turning your mateâs face into a super-realistic talking unicorn).
These two flagship phones could also come in the standard black and white finishes, and a new gold version.
3. The budget iPhone wonât be all bad
The runt of Appleâs new phones is built for the smartphone user who doesnât need all the bells and whistles of an AED4,650 phone but yearns for a fresh handset to fill with unanswered messages from the Family WhatsApp group.
New Video Shows iPhone X Plus, 6.1âł iPhone Dummies in Stunning Detail
â iDrop News (@iDropNews)
The much-rumoured 6.1-inch handset sees Apple shave off some notable features to save us some pennies: thereâs no dual-lens camera, but rather a single-lens shooter, while the stainless-steel case is dropped for a cheap-yet-robust aluminium alternative. Another big saving for Apple is the use of an LCD display, comparable to the current iPhone 8, but without the useful 3D Touch feature.
As with the previous budget model of the iPhone 5c, the new 6.1-inch handset could come in a whole rainbow of colour options, including grey, white, blue, red and â for the first time â orange.
Itâs all âgoodâ rather than âgreatâ, with the handset keeping the edge-to-edge screen and front-facing camera for Face ID, continuing in the iPhone X mould of dropping the Home button altogether. Itâll be cheaper, and ideal for anyone looking to upgrade from their iPhone 6 or 7 without wanting to break the bank.
4. The headphone jack isnât coming back
Yep. Weâre gutted too. Thereâs also a strong indication that Apple wonât be supplying a headphone adaptor with the new phones either, as the company that currently makes the parts for that gadget-saving dongle hasnât increased its output ahead of the latest phoneâs arrival. Time to invest in some wireless headphones.
5. The names arenât at all obvious
Weâre stumped on this. Hereâs a rundown of all the names Apple has given its iPhones over the years:
iPhone
iPhone 3G
iPhone 3Gs
iPhone 4
iPhone 5
iPhone 5s
iPhone 5c
iPhone 6 & 6 Plus
iPhone 6s & 6s Plus
iPhone SE
iPhone 7 & 7 Plus
iPhone 8 & 8 Plus
iPhone X
Here are the options that leave us with:
iPhone Xs & Xs Plus (naff, and Apple appears to have ditched the âsâ convention) and the 6.1-inch iPhone SE-X (marketing genius)
iPhone XI & XI Plus (Roman numerals are in) and the 6.1-inch iPhone IX (which would confuse everyone)
iPhone 11 & 11 Plus and the 6.1-inch iPhone 11c
Or maybe, just maybe, weâll see Apple give up on the numerical system and adopt a route used by its other products. The iPhone Pro? iPhone Air? Weâre hoping we things go back to basics: the iPhone, the iPhone Plus and the iPhone⌠Medium.
6. Theyâll launch in September
Apple is a company of habit. Since the iPhone 5, every handset has been revealed in second week of September, either on a Tuesday or Wednesday, with the handsets arriving in mid-September (apart from the iPhone X, which snuck in as a late November addition last year).
That points to a likely reveal date of Tuesday 11 September (although Apple might avoid the date for obvious reasons) or Wednesday 12 September (donât worry, the Champions League kicks off the week after), with the snazzy handsets hitting the shelves the following week.
Lusting after the 6.1-inch basic handset? You might have to wait a little longer: there are some mutterings of issues with the manufacturing process that could push the arrival back to October or November.
And there you have it. Three phones, two good, one less so, all with massive edge-to-edge screens. Hereâs hoping the battery life lasts longer than three hours after six months.