We’ll almost certainly see the iPhone 14 line-up announced at Wednesday’s “Far out” event. Let’s look at all the latest rumors about the upcoming Apple smartphone.

° Apple plans to bring the classic iOS battery indicator back to the status bar directly on the upcoming iPhone 14 Pro and ‌iPhone 14 Pro‌ Max, taking full advantage of the added screen space at the top of the display thanks to a new pill-shaped notch replacement.

° The always-on iPhone 14 Pro display will feature most lock screen elements.

° The iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max will come in graphite, silver, gold, purple, and green. The iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Pro will come in midnight, starlight, blue, red, purple, and green.

° A new leak suggests the iPhone 14 lineup could gain 30W fast charging, a significant jump from the 20W rating used in the iPhone 13 lineup.

° Apple will base the next-generation iPhone SE on the design it used for the iPhone XR, claims leaker Jon Prosser.

° Ahead of Apple’s unveiling of the iPhone 14 range, a social media poster claims to have shots of its packaging, and believes that all models will have 6GB RAM.

° The iPhone 14 Pro and ‌iPhone 14 Pro‌ Max may start with an increased 256GB of storage, rather than the starting 128GB option previously offered for the high-end iPhone models, according to TrendForce.

° The large pill-shaped combination cutout that’s planned for the iPhone 14 Pro models will display privacy indicators for the microphone and the camera, according to a source that spoke to 9to5Mac.

° Apple plans to begin manufacturing the iPhone 14 in India about two months after the product’s initial release out of China, narrowing the gap between the two countries but not closing it completely as some had anticipated.

° Apple plans to bring the classic iOS battery indicator back to the status bar directly on the upcoming iPhone 14 Pro and ‌iPhone 14 Pro‌ Max, taking full advantage of the added screen space at the top of the display thanks to a new pill-shaped notch replacement




Article provided with permission from AppleWorld.Today