This is how the design of the iPhone 13 Pro will look like


The site Let's Go Digital teamed up with graphic designer Technizo Concept to create a series of images and a video wondering how will the iPhone 13 Pro design. The images are based on what is known so far about the devices, according to rumors circulating among industry professionals.

The design is very similar to the current iPhone 12 Pro, with straight metal sides. At the rear, there is the same set of three lenses and the Lidar of the 2020 model, but the lenses are now covered by a single piece of sapphire, instead of being individual circles that protrude from a square platform. The arrangement resembles the Google Pixel 5 camera module.

The iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max will have the same camera system, and Lidar is expected to be present in all four iPhone models this year. Market analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, specializing in Apple, expects the devices to have a “much improved” wide-angle lens with autofocus.

The 6.1 ″ OLED display will have the same resolution and format as the iPhone 12 but will gain new features such as an “Always On” mode and ProMotion, which varies the screen refresh rate between 1 and 120 Hz according to the content shown on the screen.

The manufacturing technology will be the LPTO, which in addition to allowing dynamic updating also consumes less energy than current LTPS technology. Samsung uses LPTO panels on the Galaxy Note 20, launched last September, and on the Galaxy S21 Ultra, launched earlier this year.

According to Let's Go Digital, Apple will bring back the TouchID sensor, this time integrated under the screen. Although the company announced the advantages of FaceID, which recognizes the user's face, for some years, the system does not work with people wearing masks.

There is still no information on the price of the iPhone 13, nor images of devices in field tests. If Apple follows the tradition, the devices are expected to be announced at an event in September. In 2020, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the launch was made on October 13.

Source: Let's Go Digital

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