This week, we saw a couple of images that apparently show the iPhone 12 Pro Max PVT (production validation prototype). The photos suggest that the notch has not shrunk when compared to the iPhone 11 Pro Max and this will probably not be taken well by consumers who have developed a liking for elevating cameras and pinholes seen on recent Android smartphones.
According to display industry insider Ross Young, this could change next year. He claims that the iPhone 12’s successor could come with a hole cut out instead of a giant notch.
IPhone 12s or 13 will have LTPO, much more adaptive refresh, small hole instead of giant notch, hopefully 120Hz at full resolution, big display improvements even though sizes are the same…
— Ross Young (@DSCCRoss) August 26, 2020
Now, the notch on iPhones houses Face ID sensors, and Young claims that the iPhone 13 might do away with them in favor of an in-display fingerprint scanner.
This is partially in line with what analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said last year. Kuo said Apple could bring back Touch ID in 2021 but claimed it wouldn’t replace Face ID completely,
A later report alleged that Apple is planning to squish all the Face ID scanners together so that they would take up less space. This again lends substance to Young’s recent prediction, who says that if Face ID stays, Apple will make the punch hole bigger to accommodate it.
Some recent reports also suggest that Apple is actively trying to make a high refresh rate work on the upcoming iPhone 12 Pro and iPhone 12 Pro Max. The images of the iPhone 12 Pro Max PVT shared by tipsters Jon Prosser and Filip Koroy hint that this would be an adaptive refresh rate, allowing the device to switch between 120hz and 60z depending on the content being displayed.
Only some prototypes support 120Hz and the images don’t seem all that authentic.
Even if the screenshots are legit, they do not guarantee a 120Hz display on the iPhone 12. Apparently, Apple is unable to arrange 120Hz driver ICs required for the 120Hz panels and it is currently trying to make the screen work with 60-96Hz driver ICs. It looks like the quality is still not good enough to commercialize this solution and thus, the company will probably stick with a 60Hz screen this year.
So the fix we have heard about is to make 60-96Hz driver ICs and make them work up to 120Hz by adjusting the refresh rate by 25%…Hope it works…
— Ross Young (@DSCCRoss) August 26, 2020
Alternatively, the company could delay the launch of the Pro models to resolve these issues.
Source: Phonearena
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