Apple Breaks All the Rules With This Foldable iPhone
FULL TRANSCRIPT
Welcome to the channel. What if I told
you Apple is about to release an iPhone
that doesn't even look like an iPhone
anymore? No buttons where you expect
them. The biggest battery Apple has ever
put in a phone and an internal design so
extreme that Apple had to rethink
everything. This is not just Apple
making a foldable. This is Apple
breaking its own rules. Stay with me
because once you see what they're
changing, you won't look at the iPhone
the same way again. Take a moment and
imagine this. Apple does not rush. They
never follow trends. They observe. They
calculate. And when the timing feels
right, they strike. Foldable phones have
been around for a while. Samsung,
Google, Huawei, you've seen them all.
And Apple has been completely quiet,
letting others make mistakes and learn
from them. But now, leaks suggest the
iPhone Fold is coming. And it's not just
another foldable. It is a device that
could change the very concept of what an
iPhone is. The first detail that makes
people stop scrolling is the buttons.
For over a decade, Apple has been
predictable. Volume buttons on the left,
power button on the right. Familiar
placement, simple to use. The iPhone F
does something shocking. The volume
buttons are moving to the top right
edge. Let that sink in. Not the left
side, not the middle, the top right
corner. Suddenly, the entire left side
of the phone is smooth. No buttons, no
interruptions, just a clean surface.
Apple is not doing this for style. This
is a solution to a problem created by
the folding mechanism. Foldable phones
are complicated. You have a hinge that
splits the device in half, two displays,
and cables that need to move and flex.
Apple's solution is to put everything
critical on one side. The logic board,
the buttons, the sensors, all stacked on
the right. That way, there are no cables
crossing the hinge, nothing to wear out
or break. The left side becomes free,
and that opens up possibilities that
Apple has not explored in an iPhone
before. One of the most exciting
possibilities is the battery. With the
left side freed from buttons and logic
boards, Apple could put in the largest
battery ever in an iPhone. Leaks suggest
it could be around 5,500 milliamp hours.
That is larger than any foldable on the
market right now and significantly
larger than current iPhones. Foldable
screens use more power than standard
displays. But Apple is known for
efficiency. This could be the first
foldable phone where battery life stops
being a worry. All day usage, heavy
multitasking, long hours without
reaching for a charger. This is a huge
step for a device that some people have
been hesitant to adopt because of
battery concerns. Then there are the
displays. The iPhone Fold is rumored to
have nearly an 8 in internal display
that is close to iPad territory. Imagine
using the screen to write emails,
multitask between apps, watch videos,
and edit photos. When closed, it would
have a smaller 5 and 1/2 in outer
display that still feels comfortable in
one hand. This is not a phone pretending
to be a tablet. It is a device that
combines the portability of a phone with
the power and screen space of a tablet
all in one body. Apple have been working
on large screen software for years and
this is the moment where that experience
could finally shine. Performance will
also be top tier. Early reports point to
a prolevel chip and around 12 GB of RAM.
Foldable devices are not just about
speed. They are about handling multiple
tasks at once. Having more RAM and a
faster chip will make sure that
switching between apps, playing videos
while taking notes, or running multiple
programs will feel smooth and natural.
Apple is clearly positioning this device
as a serious productivity tool. Another
unexpected move is the rumored removal
of Face ID. Instead, Apple could be
relying solely on Touch ID integrated
into the power button. For a foldable
device, Face ID is complicated.
Different angles, screens folding in
different directions. Touch ID is
simple, fast, and reliable. One press,
the device unlocks. Without the Face ID
hardware, the front design can be
minimal. A small punch hole camera,
clean and functional. No bulky sensors
crowding the screen. This can make the
iPhone Fold feel more modern and
purposeful than any other foldable
device on the market. The back design is
said to be simple yet intentional. A
horizontal strip stretching across the
phone with two cameras, an LED flash,
and a microphone. No massive camera
bump, no extra lenses for marketing
purposes, just quality over quantity.
Leaks suggest that this camera strip
will always be black, even if the body
of the phone comes in different colors.
This is Apple signaling that the design
is deliberate, clean, and confident. And
it reinforces the idea that this device
is built for function as much as form.
Price will be high, likely between
$2,000 and $2,500.
That is expensive. But this is not meant
to be a mainstream device. This is Apple
making a statement. A statement that
could set the direction for iPhones in
the future. It is a bold move that shows
Apple is willing to take risks, even if
it means a device is out of reach for
most people initially. The innovations
inside, the rethinking of the internal
layout, the massive battery, and the
foldable screen justify the premium
price for those who want the most
advanced iPhone Apple has ever made.
Apple has never rushed into a market.
They observe, learn, and then redefine
the category. The iPhone F looks like a
device where every decision was made to
solve a problem and to push the envelope
of what a smartphone can be. Buttons on
the right side, a smooth left side, a
massive battery, a large internal
display, a compact external display,
Touch ID, minimal front camera,
restrained back cameras, powerful
hardware. It all points to one thing.
Apple is rethinking what a phone can be.
This device could redefine foldables not
just as a niche gadget, but as something
mainstream consumers might actually
want. The iPhone Fold could show the
industry that a foldable phone does not
have to compromise on battery,
usability, performance, or design and
whether or not it succeeds. It will
influence how every iPhone after this is
built. Apple is not just following the
market. They are trying to lead it. So
now I want to hear from you. Are you
excited to see the iPhone fold in
action? Do you think Apple can pull this
off or are you going to stick with the
traditional iPhone design you already
love?
UNLOCK MORE
Sign up free to access premium features
INTERACTIVE VIEWER
Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.
AI SUMMARY
Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.
TRANSLATE
Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.
MIND MAP
Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.
CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT
Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.
GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS
Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.