iPhone 8: everything we know from Apple's big software leak | Technology
A week of analysing a leak from Apple has revealed many details about what the companyâs next iPhone will be like: from facial recognition to a smart camera system and a screen that fills the front.
Two developers, Steve Troughton-Smith and Guilherme Rambo, spotted that Apple had made what appears to be an internal software update for employees testing Appleâs upcoming HomePod smart speaker available on the public internet. The update was meant to only be distributed inside Apple and so contained many elements concerning the next version of the iPhone, codenamed D22, which could end up being the iPhone 8, âiPhone Xâ or âiPhone Proâ.
All-screen design
The most obvious change will be a complete redesign of the front of the iPhone. Files associated with Apple Pay within the HomePod firmware revealed a silhouette of the design, which shows a screen that reaches from the top to the bottom of the device, with small bezels all the way around and a notch in the top of the screen likely for the earpiece speaker, front-facing cameras and sensors.
Further digging suggests that the status bar, instead of being a black bar all the way across the top of the screen integrating the cut-out for the sensors, will likely be white or mimic the colour of the rest of the screen, making it stand out at the top of the device.
Whereâs the home button?
Rambo discovered code that appears to confirm that Appleâs long-standing physical home button, which has been in place since the iPhoneâs launch in 2007 and gained a fingerprint sensor underneath it with the iPhone 5S in 2013, will no longer feature â" at least not for the D22 iPhone.
Instead it appears the new iPhone will have a virtual home button, possibly called the home indicator, which will be hidden during some activities. Googleâs Android uses a similar system for its home, back and overview buttons, which sit in a navigation bar at the bottom of the screen and are hidden when viewing full-screen content such as videos, photos and games.
Appleâs iOS already supports a virtual home button as part of its accessibility features, which replicates the function of the home button and is used as a replacement by those worried that the physical button would wear out, or for those phones where the home button becomes non-functional.
Probably no under-screen fingerprint scanner
Apple has long been rumoured to be working on a version of its Touch ID fingerprint sensor that works from underneath the screen, as revealed by patent applications. Until now it has has been embedded in the home button, but a screen-embedded fingerprint scanner would make a spot on the screen read fingerprints for authenticating payments and unlocking the device.
Samsung was also expected to integrate a similar technology into the Galaxy S8, which ditched the firmâs traditional physical home button with fingerprint scanner for a virtual home button and a fingerprint scanner on the back of the phone. Technology firm Qualcomm, which produces processors, modems and other chips uses extensively throughout the smartphone and tablet ecosystem, including most of the top smartphones with Qualcomm Snapdragon processors, recently announced it had an âultrasonicâ fingerprint scanner capable of working through a display, thick glass, metal or even under water.
Troughton-Smith, however, says that such a device in the next version of the iPhone is highly unlikely. Maybe next year.
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