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iPhone Air was almost portless, but concerns about EU regulations prevented it

The future iPhone Air was originally planned to rely on wireless charging only.


Apple had originally planned to make the iPhone 17 Air the first completely wireless model, but has apparently changed its mind on that front.

A new report claims that Apple considered making one of its future iPhones completely port-free. The thinner model, for now called the iPhone 17 Air, could have gone without a USB-C port — but Apple has since backed off the idea.

Ultimately, Apple is said to have decided to include a USB-C port for charging after all. This is said to have been done to appease potential concerns from European Union regulators.

The weekly Power On newsletter from Bloomberg suggests on Sunday morning that Apple originally had bigger plans for the alleged iPhone Air, at one point testing a thinner model with a 6.9-inch screen. This was withdrawn for fears of the product being too easy to bend.

Apple has long sought to find a balance between a thinner and lighter iPhone while avoiding making the device too vulnerable to damage. Apple was criticized when it received reports in 2014 that the iPhone 6 Plus could be bent when stored in a tight pocket.

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Apple has allegedly settled on a design for the iPhone Air that features a 6.6-inch screen. This would be roughly two millimeters thinner than the current iPhones — reducing its thickness by about a fifth.

Despite the reduced mass, and design compromises, the iPhone Air is likely to have few sacrifices. It should boast around the same battery life as similar iPhone models thanks to a new battery design.

The thinner and lighter iPhone Air is expected to make its debut as part of the iPhone 17 lineup in fall 2025.

7 Comments

hal301 3 Years · 6 comments

Even if it has a USB-C port, if it is physically constructed only for power delivery and not for data transfer, it could be touted as a security feature.

darbus69 10 Years · 85 comments

 :o 
hmmmm, strange thought…

The EU needs to back off. I am all for regulation, especially when it comes to consumer protection, but what the truck do they believe is the end game for all their frivolous actions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

avon b7 21 Years · 8157 comments

Apple can go portless if it wants.

If there are reservations about EU regulations and they feel it would be problematic then all they have to do is not release it in the EU or release with a port. 

That said, the common charging initiative might reach other markets and eventually lead to the same doubts.

I definitely wouldn't get a phone that could only charge wirelessly if it was limited to current conductive charging. 

1 Like · 0 Dislikes
yyzguy 1 Year · 50 comments

darbus69 said:
 :o 
hmmmm, strange thought…

The EU needs to back off. I am all for regulation, especially when it comes to consumer protection, but what the truck do they believe is the end game for all their frivolous actions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ 

I’m glad the EU forced a standard charging port.   I think the only reason Apple didn’t move from Lightning to USB C sooner is so customers wouldn’t get angry like they did with the switch from the original 30 Pin to Lightning.  Had they done so after just 5 years of Lightning every would say it was planned obsolescence.  I’ll go one step further and say they would have embraced USB-C instead of Lightning had it existed at the time.   The reversible connector was brilliant compared to micro USB.   I recently stayed at a place that had an old JBL speaker with 30 pin connector and no Bluetooth!

M68000 8 Years · 924 comments

Such a non issue,  the port and speakers are on the bottom which is the least looked at part of iPhone or other phones for that matter.  Keep the port!  Options are good and the port gives options.