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iPhone 18 Pro Rumored to Keep Aluminum Finish Amid Durability Complaints

5 Mei 2026 om 18:41
The iPhone 18 Pro will reportedly carry over the same anodized aluminum finish introduced with the iPhone 17 Pro, despite concerns from some users about its durability.


According to the Weibo leaker known as "Fixed Focus Digital," surface chipping on the โ€ŒiPhone 17 Proโ€Œ has become a common complaint, and that users who have sought recourse from Apple have been told they cannot claim it, with the company classifying the issue as an inherent characteristic of the aluminum alloy material and normal wear and tear. Crucially, they added that the โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ will "continue to utilize this same design approach" despite its weaknesses.

The โ€ŒiPhone 17 Proโ€Œ moved away from the titanium frames Apple used in its Pro lineup for the previous two years, adopting an anodized aluminum unibody design. Surface durability concerns surfaced almost immediately after launch.

Reports suggested that Dark Blue and Cosmic Orange models appeared to scratch more easily than other finishes, with MacRumors forum users describing visible marks on in-store display units within days of availability. A scratch test by YouTuber JerryRigEverything added some nuance, finding that most of the anodized shell holds up well against everyday items like keys and coins, but pinpointing the camera plateau as a clear weak point where the raised, unchamfered edges chip and scratch easily.

A separate issue emerged the following month, when a number of Cosmic Orange iPhone 17 Pro owners reported color shift, with the aluminum frame and camera plateau drifting toward a rose-gold or pink hue and in some cases prompting device replacements by Apple Support.

Rumors point to four color options for the โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ models: Dark Cherry, Light Blue, Dark Gray, and Silver. Dark Cherry is expected to serve as the signature new color, described as a deep, wine-like red that is considerably more muted than last year's Cosmic Orange. The โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ is not expected to offer a black option for the second consecutive year, but the rumored gray option could come close.

The โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ and โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ Max are expected to be announced in September 2026, alongside the first foldable iPhone.
Related Roundup: iPhone 18 Pro

This article, "iPhone 18 Pro Rumored to Keep Aluminum Finish Amid Durability Complaints" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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Apple Manufacturing Academy Hosts AI Showcase

5 Mei 2026 om 15:27
Apple this week held the inaugural Spring Forum for its Manufacturing Academy in East Lansing, Michigan, gathering hundreds of U.S. manufacturers at Michigan State University to demonstrate how businesses are applying AI techniques learned through the program.


The event was the academy's largest to date. Offsite tours formed a central part of the program, with Block Imaging, a Michigan company that services and refurbishes medical imaging equipment including CT scanners and MRI machines, hosting attendees at its facility to show how it has put the academy's training to use on the factory floor. Other stops included the MSU Facility for Rare Isotope Beams and Peckham.

On-campus sessions featured speakers from McKinsey, Magna, LightGuide, and Medtronic on topics including physical AI in manufacturing and the challenges of scaling AI solutions. A poster session closed the day, featuring MSU students and small- and medium-sized business participants.

Priya Balasubramaniam, Apple's vice president of Product Operations, spoke at the forum and took part in a fireside chat with Michigan State University president Kevin M. Guskiewicz, covering AI's impact on manufacturing operations and the skills workers will need in an AI-enabled economy. Block Imaging's director of Technical Training, Katie Runyon, said the program had produced tangible results for her team:

The Apple Manufacturing Academy has had a direct impact on how we operate. The training we've received from Apple engineers and Michigan State experts has given our team practical tools and techniques we've been able to apply immediately on the floor, improving the way we work and the quality of what we deliver to healthcare providers. We keep coming back because the program continues to push us forward.


Launched last year as part of Apple's $500 billion U.S. investment commitment, the Manufacturing Academy is a free program pairing Apple engineers and MSU experts with small- and medium-sized businesses to help them implement AI and smart manufacturing techniques. It is the only such academy in North America and is open to businesses nationwide. To date, it has supported more than 150 companies through dozens of in-person training sessions, and recently added virtual programming.
This article, "Apple Manufacturing Academy Hosts AI Showcase" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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iPhone 18 Might Look a Lot More Like an 'e' Model, Leaker Claims

5 Mei 2026 om 15:01
The standard iPhone 18 and the lower-cost iPhone 18e are said to share components, according to the leaker known as "Fixed Focus Digital," as further evidence that Apple is narrowing the gap between the two devices.


In new posts on Weibo, Fixed Focus Digital said that certain parts are interchangeable between the two models, adding that the information originates from a reliable manufacturing source. The leaker described the component overlap as confirmation that the specification convergence between the โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ and iPhone 18e is real and measurable at the supply chain level. "Take it from me: The standard โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ model has been downgraded and its launch delayed-this decision is final and will not change," they added.

The posts also suggested that if the โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ ships in spring 2027 rather than alongside the Pro models in the fall, September and October will effectively become "flagship season" for Apple, a window occupied by the iPhone 18 Pro, โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ Max, and the foldable "iPhone Ultra." A split launch strategy separating the Pro and standard models has been widely reported since last year, with Ming-Chi Kuo and Nikkei among those to have corroborated the plan.

The component sharing claim builds on a string of downgrade reports over the past two weeks. The leaker first reported that Apple is implementing certain manufacturing downgrades to the โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ as a cost-cutting measure, before adding that display specifications and the chip will both be affected. Apple could be planning to tweak the name of the A-series chip used in the device to obscure the extent of the chip change. Engineering Validation Testing of the โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ and iPhone 18e is said to be taking place simultaneously in June, which aligns with the idea that the two devices now share significant engineering overlap.

Today, the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17e are meaningfully different devices: the standard model features a 6.3-inch display with ProMotion and up to 3,000 nits of peak outdoor brightness, the Dynamic Island, a five-core GPU, an Ultra Wide camera, and significantly better battery life. The โ€ŒiPhone 17eโ€Œ, by contrast, has a smaller 6.1-inch display, a notch rather than a โ€ŒDynamic Islandโ€Œ, no ProMotion, a four-core GPU, and no Ultra Wide camera. If Apple is now sharing components between the โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ and iPhone 18e and reducing display and chip specifications on the standard model, many of those distinctions could shrink or disappear entirely in the next generation.

The โ€ŒiPhone 18โ€Œ, iPhone 18e, and iPhone Air 2 are all expected to launch in spring 2027, with the โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ, โ€ŒiPhone 18 Proโ€Œ Max, and iPhone Ultra anticipated to be announced in the fall.
Related Roundup: iPhone 18
Related Forum: iPhone

This article, "iPhone 18 Might Look a Lot More Like an 'e' Model, Leaker Claims" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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