This week on AI: 6.5-inch iPhone in 2018, Apple HomePod delay, UK robbery & more
People planning to get a HomePod for the holidays were disappointed by a surprise delay. We did, however, get a possible glimpse at future iPhones, including a colossal 6.5-inch model rumored to be coming next year.
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Apple delays HomePod launch until 'early 2018'
Apple prepping rear-facing 3D sensor for 2019 iPhone
Apple, Intel engineers reportedly tightly engaged to produce 5G modem for future iPhone
Apple releases iOS 11.1.2 to fix cold weather & video distortion trouble on iPhone X
Apple's Denise Young Smith to leave Inclusion & Diversity post by end of 2017
Robbers smash into Apple's flagship UK store in lightning raid
YouTube promises fix for severe battery drain on iPhones & iPads
Apple working 24/7 to finish downtown Brooklyn store as giant glass pane shatters
iOS 11.2 beta switches on quicker 7.5W wireless charging for iPhone 8 & X
GymKit for Apple Watch makes global debut in Australia
Faster LTE speeds expected from Apple's 2018 iPhones with upgraded baseband chips from Intel, Qualcomm
LTE Apple Watches may be able to make emergency calls without linked iPhone plan
Special delivery: Apple rush orders giant replacement glass for soon-to-open Brooklyn store
Video: The fastest way to unlock your iPhone X with Face ID
Video: One week using Apple's iPhone X vs. iPhone 8 Plus
To keep up on the latest in the Apple world, download the official AppleInsider app, and subscribe to our email newsletter.
Everything you need to know:
- Next year's iPhones could include 6.5- and 5.8-inch OLED models, plus a 6.1-inch LCD device > >
- The HomePod has been delayed until early 2018 > >
- A 2019 iPhone could have a rear-facing 3D sensor > >
- Apple and Intel are allegedly working on a 5G modem for iPhones > >
- iOS 11.1.2 fixed a problem with the iPhone X going "numb" in cold weather > >
- Apple's Inclusion and Diversity head is leaving > >
- Robbers smashed their way into Apple's flagship U.K. store > >
A roundup of all of our hottest stories this week:
6.5-inch iPhone X, 6.1-inch LCD iPhone in the works for late 2018 launchApple delays HomePod launch until 'early 2018'
Apple prepping rear-facing 3D sensor for 2019 iPhone
Apple, Intel engineers reportedly tightly engaged to produce 5G modem for future iPhone
Apple releases iOS 11.1.2 to fix cold weather & video distortion trouble on iPhone X
Apple's Denise Young Smith to leave Inclusion & Diversity post by end of 2017
Robbers smash into Apple's flagship UK store in lightning raid
YouTube promises fix for severe battery drain on iPhones & iPads
Apple working 24/7 to finish downtown Brooklyn store as giant glass pane shatters
iOS 11.2 beta switches on quicker 7.5W wireless charging for iPhone 8 & X
GymKit for Apple Watch makes global debut in Australia
Faster LTE speeds expected from Apple's 2018 iPhones with upgraded baseband chips from Intel, Qualcomm
LTE Apple Watches may be able to make emergency calls without linked iPhone plan
Special delivery: Apple rush orders giant replacement glass for soon-to-open Brooklyn store
Video: The fastest way to unlock your iPhone X with Face ID
Video: One week using Apple's iPhone X vs. iPhone 8 Plus
Comments
IMO in the future, both of these phones (the X and the X Plus) will continue to be premium phones with a higher price tag than we've been seeing with apple's prior flagships.
The 6.1 inch LCD phone will have a screen size and a physical size halfway between those of the x and the x plus, and could have a price between what the 8 and 8 plus have now, or perhaps the price of just a current 8. Kind of taking the place of what our standard flagship has been prior to the X.
Given that so many mid priced competitors have screen sizes close to our 8 plus, I think this approach is very smart and will make apple even stronger in that lower price tier (the old flagship price range) than they otherwise would have been.
The X and X plus could continue to be the place where apple uses the most advanced technologies that are difficult to ramp up to hundreds of millions of units, and that in turn could continue to justify this new premium pricing. Apple has, in the past, had to avoid such technologies, as with their somewhat late entrance into OLED, primarily because their suppliers couldn't have gotten the kinds of volume apple needs. This new premium approach to pricing solves that problem, while the new 6.1 screen size will make that old flagship tier even more attractive than it has been (as with say the 8 and 8 plus), and work for growing market share at multiple price ranges.
There are a lot of problems with Siri, but it does work to some degree with HomeKit and using it for voice control with my Hue lights would be very convenient. Alexa does some limited stuff with my Hues (probably more if I had a Geek card) but the Pod sounds more versatile and promising.