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iPhone 17 Air will have design compromises, but also will debut many engineering changes

A render of what the iPhone 17 Air could look like


The iPhone 17 Air will herald the start of a new iPhone engineering ethos at Apple, with Apple said to have pulled off a herculean effort to come up with its design.

The 2025 iPhone lineup is expected to include quite a few changes. Alongside a radical iPhone 17 Pro camera bump alteration, speculation is that Apple will be bringing out hardware referred to as the iPhone 17 Air or iPhone 17 Slim.

In Sunday's newsletter for Bloomberg, Mark Gurman writes about the model's details, including how it won't look that different from a standard model when viewed from the front. It will have a 6.6-inch display with slim borders and ProMotion, as well as the Dynamic Island at the top.

The 6.6-inch claim is about the same as others about the screen, with the size ranging from 6.55 inches to 6.7 inches, depending on the rumor source.

The side will even have things like the Camera Control button, but there won't be that much space for it. The depth reduction is said to be about 2 millimeters, making it about a fifth thinner than the current-gen iPhone 16 range.

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Making a smaller smartphone required Apple to go back to the drawing board to avoid making too many compromises. That resulted in engineering changes to the display, battery, and even silicon elements, to make it fit.

Not full-bore

While it tried to avoid them, Apple still had to make some choices that marginally reduced the iPhone 17 Air's capabilities. This includes switching to a single 48-megapixel camera on the back, similar to the iPhone 16e.

Though the iPhone range hasn't had a physical SIM card slot for a while in the United States, the new design will also lose the component in other markets. This was previously reportedon, but reaffirmed by Gurman in his report.

Though the drawbacks of the redesign are a problem for the slimmest on-the-way model, it also brings with it some benefits. For example, Gurman believes that the model will use the C1 modem, Apple's in-house design that will save power, but loses out on mmWave 5G support.

The new model will also apparently represent a sea change for Apple, and some technologies made for the Air will apparently be incorporated into future releases, like the long-rumored iPhone Fold.

6 Comments

CiaranF 4 Years · 25 comments

I’m not really sure why  is pursuing this? Why is a phone that’s thinner yet again really needed? Does shaving 2mm really make a difference to everyone’s daily usage or are we going back to the old days of ’s aesthetic over function philosophy again? MBP Touchbar 2016-2020 comes to mind. Reduce ports why? Now look at that replacement. People want ports on a pro models not lack of so it can be slightly thinner. Thrash Can Mac is another example? Seriously , I think people would prefer a phone with a bigger battery that lasts longer and would forsake it being an extra 2mm thicker. I’m confused…. Again. 

I’d like to hear what others think about this. 

2 Likes · 1 Dislike
maclin3 9 Years · 27 comments

It’s the Air model they are rumoring here. Makes sense to make it thin. One would think the pro models will still focus on bigger batteries and won’t skimp on features for the sake of slimming. 

2 Likes · 0 Dislikes
isidore 18 Years · 69 comments

I use a 13 mini. I hate large phones that you can't use with one hand and which when you put in your pocket makes it look like you're packing a Glock. But the real point is why should Apple's range of phones all be identical? Why conform to only one idea of the ideal iphone, just with minor differences in spec? I get a lot of unsolicited positive comments about the mini and I personally think it was a mistake not to continue this design alternative, but I accept that there are many that you would have to pry their phablets from their cold dead fingers. More variety is good for apple's ecosystem.

pulseimages 9 Years · 677 comments

isidore said:
I use a 13 mini. I hate large phones that you can't use with one hand and which when you put in your pocket makes it look like you're packing a Glock. But the real point is why should Apple's range of phones all be identical? Why conform to only one idea of the ideal iphone, just with minor differences in spec? I get a lot of unsolicited positive comments about the mini and I personally think it was a mistake not to continue this design alternative, but I accept that there are many that you would have to pry their phablets from their cold dead fingers. More variety is good for apple's ecosystem.

I bet the iPhone 17 Air will be a sales dud just like the Mini models. 

0 Likes · 1 Dislike
mattinoz 10 Years · 2565 comments

isidore said:
I use a 13 mini. I hate large phones that you can't use with one hand and which when you put in your pocket makes it look like you're packing a Glock. But the real point is why should Apple's range of phones all be identical? Why conform to only one idea of the ideal iphone, just with minor differences in spec? I get a lot of unsolicited positive comments about the mini and I personally think it was a mistake not to continue this design alternative, but I accept that there are many that you would have to pry their phablets from their cold dead fingers. More variety is good for apple's ecosystem.
I bet the iPhone 17 Air will be a sales dud just like the Mini models. 

I still see minis in use daily at various locations.  For a dud product there sure a lot of them in the wild. 

1 Like · 0 Dislikes