Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
69,781
41,170


For the 20th anniversary iPhone due in 2027, Apple is developing a solid-state button system as a wholesale replacement for the device's traditional mechanical buttons. That's the latest claim from Weibo account "Instant Digital," and it's not the first of its kind from the Chinese leaker.

All-Screen-iPhone-2027-Feature-1.jpg

Back in 2022, several reports suggested Apple intended to bring solid-state buttons to the iPhone 15 Pro in 2023 as part of "Project Bongo." However, the plan was reportedly canceled at a late stage. They were then rumored to come to the iPhone 16 Pro, before being shelved indefinitely.

Subsequently in April and May this year, Instant Digital claimed that Apple was still investigating haptic buttons for a future iPhone. They even went so far as to suggest that the project is active not just for the iPhone, but for Apple's "entire product line," including iPad and Apple Watch.

Now the leaker claims that solid-state buttons will debut on the 20th anniversary iPhone or "iPhone XX," which will reportedly feature the biggest design shake-up since 2017's iPhone X. According to the leaker, Apple's solid-state button design has completed functional verification, and includes haptic feedback for the Side button, volume buttons, Action button, and Camera Control button.

Solid-state haptic buttons reduce mechanical wear, while enabling users to differentiate between a light press and a firm press to trigger different functions. The current design reportedly integrates buttons directly into the device frame with zero physical movement when pressed. But Apple wants these haptic buttons to feel like real buttons, not like pressing on a ridged piece of metal. Instant Digital speculates that Apple may adopt a vibration-based sound system that uses the back panel or frame to produce audio, combined with an AI-based sound compensation algorithm.

The rumor adds a new dimension to reports that claim Apple's 20th anniversary iPhone could look like a slab of glass with no cutouts and no bezels. Apple is reportedly working on a display that curves down around all four edges of the device for a borderless visual experience.

If Apple truly intends to release such a device, then traditional mechanical buttons – requiring physical openings in the chassis – arguably become design liabilities. Solid-state haptic buttons could elegantly resolve that tension with a visually uninterrupted design.

With a wraparound display, the edges of the screen could potentially merge into the button zones, creating interaction regions that subtly illuminate or shift depending on context – something that would be impossible with mechanical components.

It's an intriguing prospect, but one we'll have to wait for corroboration from other sources before getting too excited about. Until then, the restart of Project Bongo at Apple remains another unconfirmed rumor.

Article Link: 20th Anniversary iPhone May Replace Mechanical Buttons With Haptics
 
Last edited:
Interesting until you need some kind of recovery for bricked devices - with no physical buttons to press this seems impractical if the phone is dead.

However, Im always impressed how they manage their trackpad haptic feedback - it genuinely feels like you are clicking the trackpad where, when the power is off, its just an inanimate piece of glass. Very clever - so if haptic buttons behave and feel the same then it will be fine on that front.
 
Interesting until you need some kind of recovery for bricked devices - with no physical buttons to press this seems impractical if the phone is dead.

However, Im always impressed how they manage their trackpad haptic feedback - it genuinely feels like you are clicking the trackpad where, when the power is off, its just an inanimate piece of glass. Very clever - so if haptic buttons behave and feel the same then it will be fine on that front.
Bricked devices should be handled exclusively by Apple certified personnel.
 
Interesting until you need some kind of recovery for bricked devices - with no physical buttons to press this seems impractical if the phone is dead.
I have no idea about this stuff but I imagine that the haptic buttons are functional at a firmware level outside of the operating system, meaning they are unlikely to fail due to software issues.

Alternatively I imagine devices can be recovered via the charging cable.
 
Interesting until you need some kind of recovery for bricked devices - with no physical buttons to press this seems impractical if the phone is dead.

However, Im always impressed how they manage their trackpad haptic feedback - it genuinely feels like you are clicking the trackpad where, when the power is off, its just an inanimate piece of glass. Very clever - so if haptic buttons behave and feel the same then it will be fine on that front.
In electronics, a solid state Pizo-electric button, Capacitive button or physical button really doesn't do any difference.
All of them requires that some IC somewhere recognizes an electrical impulse as a button press.

it's not like a lightswitch or ATX-power jumper, where the power is either on or off.

But it feels better to operate, when something is wrong, because a physical button with a clicky switch will give you a physical and audio feedback.
I'f you've efter tried to press on a macbooks taptic trackpad, when there's no power, you know hos wrong that feels.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MikeMo
I have no idea about this stuff but I imagine that the haptic buttons are functional at a firmware level outside of the operating system, meaning they are unlikely to fail due to software issues.

Alternatively I imagine devices can be recovered via the charging cable.
If charging cable is required to recover then it would be insanely difficult to have third party cables that don’t understand apples device reset signals.
Put that aside, Apple simply can’t ever produce bug free software. What Apple might be able to do is to minimise software lockup so much that for most light users, it doesn’t matter. Or they have separate firmware outside of iOS. Maybe buttonOS now?
 
Bricked devices should be handled exclusively by Apple certified personnel.
Sure. Apple should also control when your device is turned on and off. How about letting Apple use iPhone for you?
Apple redefining the smartphone it invented, as always. Watch the Chinese and Korean manufacturers scramble to release phones with half-baked imitations, months earlier.
Lmao. Korean ones I have no idea, some Chinese ones are probably going to be better than apples implementation in some way, design wise. For example:
 
Another phone upgrade here i come. But i still say the next epic update will be in 2030 when the iphone will finally go full screen.
 
Interesting until you need some kind of recovery for bricked devices - with no physical buttons to press this seems impractical if the phone is dead.

However, Im always impressed how they manage their trackpad haptic feedback - it genuinely feels like you are clicking the trackpad where, when the power is off, its just an inanimate piece of glass. Very clever - so if haptic buttons behave and feel the same then it will be fine on that front.

It is right to raise that issue - but there are many possibilities for overcoming the problem.

For example, some sort of magnetic "key" which operates through the case. A single magnet would be fine except it would be prone to being triggered accidentally so a pattern. There's several possibilities as to what actually happens inside the case.
 
I’m impressed with the camera button on my 17 Pro. I was skeptical of haptic buttons before, but it feels no different to me than an actual button. Theoretically, fewer mechanical parts means less to repair.
Except they never failed on any of my phones, while software constantly does. I'd rather repair a button every 10 years than struggle daily with ****** haptics and bugs.
 
Jobs didn't like anniversary editions.
Except this likely will not actually be an anniversary edition.
The iPhone X certainly wasn’t an anniversary addition, neither was the XS or XR.
This will just likely be the 2027 iPhone Pro, that happens to be released on its 20th anniversary, but Apple will never mention it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: rizzo41999
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.