Apple's iPhone 17 Slim is a wrongheaded approach that ignores what people really want
Rumors continue to swirl that Apple will launch a new iPhone 17 Slim in 2025. Why does Apple think anyone wants it?
A render of what the iPhone 17 Slim could look like
In a world where people want their devices to last for longer than ever on a single charge, shouldn't tech companies like Apple focus on bigger, better batteries rather than slimming phones down instead?
The rumors surrounding the iPhone 17 Slim have been around for a little while at this point but the consensus has settled on a couple of notable things. The most is obviously where the name comes from -- the fact the iPhone 17 Slim will be thinner than other models on sale alongside it.
Surely by making the iPhone thinner Apple must also reduce the internal volume that can be filled with battery. Just look at the iPhone 13 mini compared with the iPhone 13 -- Apple's own specs had the former running out of battery a couple of hours sooner than the latter.
And then there are thermal considerations. Apple's iPhone 15 Pro was infamous for getting too warm when pushed -- how will a similar chip perform in something even thinner?
Another aspect is that the iPhone 17 Slim is expected to feature a smaller display than the high-end models, something that might fly in the case of a third rumor that this will be the most expensive option in the 2025 lineup. Will people really pay more for a thinner phone with a smaller display?
For those who want the biggest and the best, the iPhone 17 Pro Max would still have a bigger display and a faster chip, but it would presumably be slightly thicker. That begs the question of just who the iPhone 17 Slim will be for. Notably, the iPhone 17 Thin would replace the Plus iPhone which itself replaced the Mini, two devices that also struggled to find a market of their own.
I realize I'm ringing a premature death knell for the iPhone 17 Slim here, but stay with me here. If people don't want a smaller iPhone and they don't seem to have wanted to pay for a big screen but slower chip, what do they want?
I'd posit that all we really need to do to answer that question is look at what people perpetually complain about with every new iPhone release. In fact, they complain about it whenever any new phone is released regardless of the badge on the back. They complain about battery life.
Could the iPhone 17 Slim offer notably worse battery life based on the reasons I mentioned earlier? Is that a trade-off people are willing to make?
Realistically, nobody looks at an iPhone 16 and thinks that it should be thinner. They wish that it would run for longer on a single charge, no matter how fast USB-C or Qi2 chargers can power them back up again. But making thinner iPhones is the enemy of battery life, the two things just don't get along.
Apple Park and its many offices around the globe are full of undoubtedly talented designers and engineers. Battery life is surely a concern for many of them, and I've no doubt it's high up on the list of requirements for each new device -- an even thinner iPhone, surely not so much.
So I'm here to say this. Apple, please, stop trying to make everything thinner than thin and consider even making them a fraction of a centimeter thicker. Add a couple of extra hours to how long my iPhone can run before I reach for the charger and I'll consider the upgrade worthwhile.
But slimming a phone that I already drop more than I should and can barely feel in my pocket? I think I'll probably just skip that one, thanks. Charging more for it just because there's less of it is just an insult to injury.
As for Samsung, we know it has a history of taking Apple's ideas and running with them if we're being kind, and copying them if we aren't. But I recommend that it sits this one out. I'm sure Samsung fans would, too.
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Comments
I want a folding iPhone w/o a camera bump. Not a thinner phone with a huge bump. Apple has made it clear their focus is on thinning things out. Who needed a thinner ipad?
It's time for a physics lesson. My iPhone 15 pro measures 77mm wide X 160mm tall X 8.3mm thick. The sides of the phone present a surface area of (77*2+160*2)*8.2=3,886.8 mm2. The front and back faces present a surface area of 77*160*2=24,640mm2, or about 86% of the phone's total surface area. To a first approximation, iPhone internal heat will dissipate in proportion to the total surface area, which will shrink far more slowly with decreasing thickness than with decreasing display area. Peak internal temperature rise above ambient, to a first approximation depends on distance from the heat sources to the ambient. The shortest path will generally be through the front and back faces. The distance to those faces will decrease in proportion to the reduction in iPhone thickness, placing the heat generating internals closer to the ambient heat sink. At the same time, the available battery energy will as you've noted, be reduced by thinning the phone.
Reducing the thickness of an iPhone will very likely result in reduced heating.
This rumored 6.6 inch "iPhone Air" has me excited. So, I'm the customer for it. I don't need fancy cameras, just a nice competent one. I'd prefer it if there was no back camera bump at all. I'm not on my phone for 10 hours straight, so having 10 to 12 hours of screen-on time is perfectly fine with me. Heck, my current iPhone 12 battery is at the "Service" stage now at 77% capacity, and I'm barely thinking about getting its battery replaced. I should tho.
And, I'm disappointed that the rumors are saying 6 mm thick. Hoping for 5 mm thick. They did it for the iPP13, so it should be achievable for the iPhone. Just make that thing a nice thin monolithic slab!
iPhone models I think they should have:
- 5.6" model at 9 mm thickness. The "mini" but just a little bit larger at 5.6", 1.5 millimeter thicker for 20% more battery capacity, and a flush back cam
- 6.1" model at 7 mm thickness. The mainstream model. The usuals.
- 6.7" model at 7 mm thickness. The Pro model. The usuals.
- 6.7" model at 5 mm thickness. This is essentially a fashion model. It would be about 40% thinner than the iPP models and about 50% lighter than the iPPM.
- 7.0" model at 10 mm thickness. The "ultra" model. Mx level SoC. 2x the battery capacity of the regular iPPM. Go crazy with the cameras, speakers.
I suppose they can have a folding model, but I'm not sure when flexible and glass like OLED display covers will come.Fun fact: the iPhone SE 2020 was truly terrible in that regard, small battery AND a less efficient processor AND iOS doing it's background madness are a horrific combination.
charging is so fast now that battery is not as important
apple needs to work on fold technology, with your watch for quick glances nothing would be more pleasant than a lees bulky presence in your pocket (or are you just happy to see me😏)
Tim Cook's obsession with thinness and pretty new colors for existing products is embarrassing. He should, or somebody at Apple should, focus on standardizing the interfaces within (and across) Apple's product line. The changes in settings, options, and processes from one product version (and OS) to the next would be laughable if they weren't so frustrating.
Steve Jobs would never, and I mean never, allow Apple's user experience to get so out of control.
“Apple's iPhone 17 Slim is a wrongheaded approach that ignores what I really want”
It's batteries and charging have long been far below best in class but as actual usage times have increased it's been less of a problem.
If you can get through a day of moderate use without recharging, most users will be happy.
That doesn't change the fact that Apple really should be pushing for faster charging and higher density batteries in line with current flagships (or even with those from a few years ago).
Highlanderism var.: There can be only one.