It looks like the iPhone 17 will give people some new room to express themselves.
Prominent leaker Majin Bu shared some images on France ArchivesX over the weekend of purported case designs for the iPhone 17 Pro, specifically. The cases themselves aren't all that remarkable, but one thing about them sticks out: a new camera bar that runs the horizontal length of the phone's backside. Not only does this look different on its own, but it opens up some new opportunities for customization, too.
SEE ALSO: Update now: Apple issues emergency iPhone fix for zero-day vulnerabilitiesThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As you can see, the triple lens array is in the same spot as it was on the iPhone 16 Pro, but the LiDAR and flash modules are all the way on the right side of the phone now, with a big camera bump encasing all of that. While its look and shape are not all that similar, it's at least spiritually close to what Google has done with most recent Pixel models. There were also some recent leaked dummy models of the new iPhone lineup that matched this leak in that regard, though the base iPhone 17 model didn't have the extended camera bar there.
That's not all, though. Majin Bu would later go on to share some camera covers you'll be able to optionally put over the camera bar for added customization. Since there's plenty of empty space between the lenses on the left and the modules on the right, you'll theoretically be able to put punchy visual designs in that space now.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This would not only allow people to further express themselves with new camera covers, but it would be a boon to accessory makers, who would now have a fun new thing to sell people. Apple, of course, could also produce its own camera covers and sell them for "premium" prices. Everyone wins.
Topics Apple iPhone
'Loki' Season 2 review: How do you make Loki so boring?You Could Own Edith Wharton’s Sterling Silver Baby Rattle'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for October 4, 2023Alice in a World of Wonderlands: Translating Lewis CarrollParamount uploads 'Mean Girls' to TikTok in 23 installmentsSee Our Art Editor Charlotte Strick Discuss Magazine DesignsMother Approved: My Secret Superpower“Masquerade,” the Puzzle Book That Unhinged a NationPlay Michael Clune’s “Gamelife”: A Memoir That’s Also a GameX Social Media sues Elon Musk's X over the 'X' nameThe Striped Pig, and Other Great Old Newspaper NamesDominic Fike and Zendaya's 'Euphoria' song is finally hereOf Tongues, Teeth, and Mouths: R. D. Laing at Work'Monster' review: Hirokazu KoreOn the Everly Brothers’ “Bowling Green”NYT's The Mini crossword answers for October 4Play Michael Clune’s “Gamelife”: A Memoir That’s Also a GameOn Ham, Eternity, and a Quotation of Dorothy Parker’sHow to watch the 'Halloween' movies in 2023Scary Stories Are Meant to Be Read Aloud Reimagining Masculinity by Ocean Vuong Reading in the Age of Constant Distraction by Mairead Small Staid Trash Talk: On Translating Garbage by Lina Mounzer God’s Wife: An Interview with Amanda Michalopoulou by Christopher Merrill A Letter from New York by Ralph Ellison Redux: One Empty Seat by The Paris Review Silicon Valley Hustling: An Interview with Anna Wiener by Pete Tosiello The Paris Review Staff’s Favorite Books of 2019 by The Paris Review Redux: Your Name Means Open by The Paris Review The Upside of ‘Brandenburg v. Ohio’ On Nighttime by Hanif Abdurraqib The Empty Room by Lucy Sante The Siren Song by Nina MacLaughlin Not Gonna Get Us by Amanda Lee Koe Too Many Cats by Bohumil Hrabal The Most Famous Coin in Borges by Anthony Madrid More UFOs Than Ever Before by Rich Cohen On Classic Party Fiction by Elisa Gabbert Listen to Hebe Uhart, Now That She’s Gone by Alejandra Costamagna How to Imitate George Saunders by Benjamin Nugent
2.6472s , 8200.734375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【France Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network