Apple is gearing up to launch the iPhone 16 lineup next month, and while we have expectations set for September 10, the company could announce the new products early. It was previously reported that the company is working on its custom modems for future iPhone models but we suspect that it will not arrive with the forthcoming models. However, the new modem will define how the iPhone models will look like in the long run.
Apple has spent billions of dollars in the research and development of its custom modems, but it will take its time to go head-to-head with modems supplied by Qualcomm. This means that the performance of Apple's modems would gradually catch up to the current iterations, according to a new report from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman. He writes in the new Power On newsletter that the modem transition would be unlike Apple Silicon, as it would not house significant benefits for the end user.
We have recently covered that Apple employees "acknowledge that customers don't really care who makes the modem in their phone" and "it's hard to tell how big the benefits will be in the near term." However, Apple will still go ahead with its plans with an aim to bring performance improvements in the long term which will define how the iPhone works and looks.
Gurman's stance on Apple's modems is quite strong, and it makes sense for the company to incorporate everything on a single SoC, as it has done in the past. While initially, it would be posed to some criticism, the technology will improve over time, which will benefit the end user as well as the company in terms of cost.
Currently, modems supplied by Qualcomm are quite expensive for Apple, but it will continue to integrate them before the company can devise its own solution. Apple's
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