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Which iPhone Are You Ordering?

  • iPhone 17

    Votes: 39 5.5%
  • iPhone Air - Sky Blue

    Votes: 31 4.3%
  • iPhone Air - Light Gold

    Votes: 13 1.8%
  • iPhone Air - Cloud White

    Votes: 46 6.5%
  • iPhone Air - Space Black

    Votes: 33 4.6%
  • iPhone Pro - Cosmic Orange

    Votes: 52 7.3%
  • iPhone Pro - Deep Blue

    Votes: 67 9.4%
  • iPhone Pro - Silver

    Votes: 54 7.6%
  • iPhone Pro Max - Cosmic Orange

    Votes: 136 19.1%
  • iPhone Pro Max - Deep Blue

    Votes: 134 18.8%
  • iPhone Pro Max - Silver

    Votes: 84 11.8%
  • Still Undecided ???

    Votes: 24 3.4%

  • Total voters
    713
Sheldon case landed yesterday! Lovely quality crazy horse leather at a bargain price of £23!


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I’m feeling creative today so I’m presenting you all with a spoiler preview of a some pull quotes from a few of today’s reviews:

Nilay Patel (The Verge):
“A marvel of engineering that somehow still feels like a trap”
“It feels like the future … until it doesn’t”
“The new iPhone is pretty impressive, but in a way that makes you feel worse about everything”

MKBHD:
“This is easily the best iPhone Apple has ever made … but it’s still an iPhone.”
“I’m not crazy about losing the black option but… yeah… fortunately dbrand exists.”
“If you’re upgrading from an iPhone that’s four years old, this will feel amazing. Peace out.”

Joanna Stern (WSJ):
“I tossed it in my purse, dropped it in the kitchen sink, and used it as a coffee coaster and it survived.”
“The camera is great, as long as you don’t expect it to make your life any less stressful.”

iJustine:
(while peeling the protective sticker off): “OH. MY GOD. This is … this is SO. COOL.”
“I’ve taken about a thousand pictures with the new Centre Stage camera and I’m … obsessed? with how crisp every shot looks!”
(while talking about the iPhone 17): “Wow. This lavender colour is SO. nice.”
(while snapping the MagSafe battery to the Air): “WHOA! It just snaps on! That is so neat!”
(while previewing the new TechWoven cases): “This texture? Wow!”

You’re all welcome.
 
I’m feeling creative today so I’m presenting you all with a spoiler preview of a some pull quotes from a few of today’s reviews:

Nilay Patel (The Verge):
“A marvel of engineering that somehow still feels like a trap”
“It feels like the future … until it doesn’t”
“The new iPhone is pretty impressive, but in a way that makes you feel worse about everything”

MKBHD:
“This is easily the best iPhone Apple has ever made … but it’s still an iPhone.”
“I’m not crazy about losing the black option but… yeah… fortunately dbrand exists.”
“If you’re upgrading from an iPhone that’s four years old, this will feel amazing. Peace out.”

Joanna Stern (WSJ):
“I tossed it in my purse, dropped it in the kitchen sink, and used it as a coffee coaster and it survived.”
“The camera is great, as long as you don’t expect it to make your life any less stressful.”

iJustine:
(while peeling the protective sticker off): “OH. MY GOD. This is … this is SO. COOL.”
“I’ve taken about a thousand pictures with the new Centre Stage camera and I’m … obsessed? with how crisp every shot looks!”
(while talking about the iPhone 17): “Wow. This lavender colour is SO. nice.”
(while snapping the MagSafe battery to the Air): “WHOA! It just snaps on! That is so neat!”
(while previewing the new TechWoven cases): “This texture? Wow!”

You’re all welcome.
Honestly, all reviewers say the same thing just in a different way, I’ll be the judge of my own thing, thats why I never cares about the reviews and never will.
 
That leaked review of the Air sounds quite promising. Better than expected battery life. Didn’t mention the speaker though.
It did read very well - they seemed a bit bummed about the camera though. I think anyone who uses 0.5x a lot will be sad. Thankfully I don’t really as I don’t like the barrel(?) distorted edges it makes.

People I know love it though. Out on a night out and the squeals of “DO A 0.5 PIC”, it’s wild but it’s definitely a thing.
 
Honestly, all reviewers say the same thing just in a different way, I’ll be the judge of my own thing, thats why I never cares about the reviews and never will.
Oh totally. I just find the reviewer personalities amusing - especially people like Nilay Patel/The Verge in general with their “I’m not saying the iPhone Air doesn’t need to be this thin. But I’m not NOT saying that either.”
 
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And - perhaps most importantly - no one is to make any jokes about the tracking snake, or to accidentally misspell the word "slot".
I love delivery tracking. It’s so precise. They give you this super helpful delivery slot: ‘Your package will arrive Friday, sometime between 7 AM and the collapse of civilization.’ Oh perfect, let me just cancel all my plans and stare out the window for fourteen hours while the tracker keeps saying ‘out for delivery.’ Honestly, at this point, the package isn’t being delivered—it’s just leading a nomadic lifestyle in the back of a van.
 
What have I missed? leaked review of the 'air'??
I can open and read it via Apple News.

Review: Apple iPhone Air

The ultra-thin iPhone Air is better than you’d expect, but it’s still too high a price to pay for a slim frame.

Incredibly thin and light. Better-than-expected battery life. Great performance. Nice, bright OLED screen with 120-Hz refresh rate. Reliable cellular performance.

Battery life may still be lackluster for some. Single camera is limiting. Not the best value (USB 2 data transfer speeds!). No mmWave 5G. Gets quite hot in one specific spot.

THE IPHONE 17 Pro felt like a brick. I had just gotten used to the featherweight feel of Apple's new iPhone Air after several days of use, but it was time to switch to the iPhone 17 Pro. Suddenly, I didn't want to let the Air go.

It's amazing how a couple of grams and a slimmer profile can drastically change the feel of a phone. There isn’t much to grab on the edges, but the Air's design is whimsical and somewhat paradoxical. It feels like a twig that can snap in a heartbeat, but the sturdy titanium frame dispels any notion of fragility.

I was prepared to hate the iPhone Air. Why make a thin phone with lackluster battery life? A single-camera system for $999? After spending some time with it, I'm pleasantly surprised. I still don't think most people should buy it—it's for early adopters who want to experience Apple's thinnest iPhone to date—but it's a promising blueprint of what's to come.

Thin Air

The iPhone Air is just 5.6 millimeters thick and 165 grams; contrast that with the iPhone 17 Pro, which has a smaller screen yet weighs 206 grams and is 8.75 mm thick. It's a palpable difference. Initially, you might feel like the lighter weight makes the Air seem “cheap,” but that notion quickly disappears. This phone feels strong, durable, and rigid.

I watched Apple perform a bend test on the iPhone Air, and it was able to withstand more than 130 pounds of force with no damage. I gave it a good bend test myself, but it didn't flex. We'll need to see how this phone performs in the hands of a wider audience, but I think you can put your pitchforks away—no #bendgate here. This durability stems from the use of titanium for the frame, along with Apple's new Ceramic Shield 2 protecting the display, and Ceramic Shield 1 layered over the back. Apple says this mixture makes the Air more durable than any prior iPhone.

I can't imagine buying this ultrathin phone and putting a case on it, but I didn't mind Apple's bumper case. The phone still feels light and thin, but the slightly thicker edges of the bumper make it easier to grasp. Annoyingly, despite using a horizontal camera bar like Google's Pixel phones, the camera still sticks out enough that the Air rocks on a table when you tap a corner—a small nitpick.

The 6.5-inch OLED screen once again feels improbable in this thin and light design. It's just unusual to hold such a large screen and not find it heavy. The display now gets brighter, and I had no issues reading it in direct sunlight on clear, sunny days in California and New York. The inclusion of a 120-Hz screen refresh rate on a non-Pro iPhone is long overdue, and it helps this phone feel even more lively.

It's not wrong to say that the Air's thin and light design is pretty much all it has going for it, but that quality shouldn't be undervalued. Using this phone has genuinely been a treat over the usual bulky handsets that come my way. However, just how much you're able to enjoy it depends on what kind of battery life you're used to.

Air Time

Apple is not using a silicon-carbon battery in the iPhone Air, despite rumors leading up to the September event. Instead, there's a high-density traditional lithium-ion battery, along with a raft of optimizations in iOS 26, the A19 Pro chipset, a new power-efficient C1X modem, and a fresh internal design. All this to say: The battery life of the iPhone Air is better than I expected.

The Air was generally able to last a full day with average use for me. I hit around five hours of screen-on time with around 18 percent left by 10:30 pm. This worked for me, but my expectations were also very low. I had to baby the battery so much on the last ultrathin phone I tested, the Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, and I was surprised to find that this was not the case with the Air.

Heavy users will undoubtedly need to top up this phone during the day. On one travel day, I took the phone off the charger at 5:30 am and used it extensively for navigation, music streaming, phone calls, and Instagram Reeling, and I hit 2 percent by 4:30 pm. If that sounds like a very normal day for you, you'll most certainly feel the limits of this phone's battery life. For the most part, I didn't feel as battery anxious as with Samsung's thin phone.

I also tested Apple's iPhone Air MagSafe Battery, and it's nice that it snugly fits the Air's body, but it awkwardly has to sit horizontally on other iPhone models. Unfortunately, it doesn't deliver a full charge. It took around an hour and 20 minutes to completely deplete the thing, returning 68 percent to the Air from 0 percent.

The Apple-designed C1X modem is supposedly 30 percent more energy-efficient than the modem on the iPhone 16 Pro, but how does this new chip affect connectivity? You don't get millimeter-wave 5G support—that's the ultrafast flavor of 5G you'll find in some locations, like dense urban areas, airports, and stadiums. That means the iPhone Air is limited to sub-6 5G, which is what you connect to most of the time, but it's not as speedy as mmWave. It's a little bizarre to spend $999 on a phone and not get both versions of 5G, considering that's just about standard today, but the omission wasn't noticeable in my day-to-day use.

I didn't run into any connectivity issues. In my internet speed tests, the C1X modem delivered download and upload speeds that were sometimes faster than the iPhone 17 Pro Max.

Clear the Air

What's not so great are thermals. Apple spent a great deal of time talking about the new vapor chamber cooling system on the iPhone 17 Pro models, but you'll find none of that here. Perform any intensive tasks on the iPhone Air, and the area around the camera module will feel very hot. I didn't deal with any thermal issues during normal use because most of what I do on my phone doesn't require immense processing. But my benchmark testing delivered interesting results.

The lesser A19 inside the iPhone 17 scored higher in benchmark tests and didn't run as hot as the A19 Pro in the iPhone Air. Mind you, all of these iPhones still got hot, but the iPhone 17 Pro's heat was spread out, so it didn't feel as though one spot was very hot. The other two devices had hot spots, but I measured 110 degrees on the iPhone 17—matching the Pro Max—and 115 degrees on the Air after about an hour of Assassin's Creed Mirage. That extra heat throttled performance a tiny bit, making the game a little more stuttery than on the Pro Max. Another Geekbench test also showed the Air scoring lower than the iPhone 17.

However, Assassin's Creed Mirage performed significantly worse on the iPhone 17 at max graphical settings. It had far more stutters and, dare I say, was a little too annoying to call playable. So while the Air may get hotter and fall behind in some benchmarks, the reality is nuanced. The faster CPU cache, 12 GB of RAM, and other enhancements in the A19 Pro deliver a decent performance boost over the iPhone 17.

Most people aren't going to notice any of this because the A19 and A19 Pro are plenty powerful to handle most apps and games with ease. However, folks who play games with demanding graphics will probably want to look to the iPhone 17 Pro models for the best graphical experience (they also have the best battery life, allowing for longer play times).

The biggest problem with the iPhone Air is its lone 48-MP camera. It feels extremely limiting. Even Samsung was able to stuff an extra ultrawide on the similarly thin Galaxy S25 Edge. In some low-light shots, I found that the iPhone 17's main camera delivered sharper images than the Air sometimes, too. (The sensor on the Air is similar but not identical to the iPhone 17.) While the iPhone 17 can enjoy macro photography, the iPhone Air can't get as close to subjects. You can snap some great photos with the Air—the upgraded 24-MP selfie camera (binned to 18 MP) is nice—but the camera is just not a focal point.

The Air does have the new square-shaped selfie sensor, which lets you hold the phone in portrait orientation and snap photos in either portrait or landscape without changing your grip! Annoyingly, when you manually tap the landscape button to take a landscape selfie, it turns off Center Stage (the auto-zoom-out and auto-rotate). However, when you leave the camera instance and wait a few minutes, Center Stage should turn back on automatically the next time you launch the camera.

As usual, video quality on the iPhone Air remains excellent. I shot several comparison video clips with the Google Pixel 10 Pro XL and Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge, and the iPhones routinely came out on top, whether it was the iPhone Air or the iPhone 17 Pro Max. Dual Capture is another fun new addition that lets you capture video with the front and rear camera simultaneously, and while Samsung has had this feature for years, the video quality is so much better on the iPhone.

The iPhone Air's performance was better than expected, but the asking price is too high. Most people will be better served by the iPhone 17, which has a better balance of power, battery life, and a more versatile camera system. For anyone who wants a thicker phone with better battery life, well, Apple has given you exactly that in the form of the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max. (Also, why does the iPhone Air still only support USB 2 data transfer speeds?)

The Air showcases just what Apple is capable of when it controls the chips, hardware, and software, in a thin and light design that might be a bedrock for a potential folding iPhone. I don't doubt that there will be a demographic of people who don't take many photos or don't need heaps of battery life that will enjoy the thin and lightweight iPhone Air, much like the devoted group that loved the iPhone Mini. We'll have to wait and see if the Air sticks around, or if it will shortly be replaced by (a folding) something else.

Rating: 7/10
From Wired. Was taken down.
 
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Not sure how many folks have ordered through Very but just had this through this morning. Had an absolute mare on release day with Very as they uploaded all the PM models at 1pm, then took them down then they came back as unavailable then they disappeared again, then finally managed to order a blue & orange one several hours later.

Blue PM was showing as 19/09 delivery (and still is in app) the orange PM has been listed as 10/10 or before. Last couple of years Very have under promised and over delivered but seems like this year they’ve struggled for stock
 
Hey all, quick one regarding the move to eSim with EE. Is it done automatically or do I need to call EE?
I am using the eSim in my Apple Watch since it came out and while the first 2-3 years always had issues, it nowadays is fairly easy.
 
From Wired. Was taken down.
Yeah pretty solid and making me seem happy with my decision! Seems it's exactly what Apple marketed it as so that's great. I don't play games on my phone and only take photos of my kids so it seems perfect for my use!

I'm not getting the battery pack but i find it disappointing it only got the Air to 68% from full use for the £99 price point.
 
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Hey all, quick one regarding the move to eSim with EE. Is it done automatically or do I need to call EE?
I am using the eSim in my Apple Watch since it came out and while the first 2-3 years always had issues, it nowadays is fairly easy.
If you have both devices, under Mobile Data settings on iPhone on the new device you can press "Transfer eSIM from another iPhone" or similar. Is that your situation?
 
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Yeah pretty solid and making me seem happy with my decision! Seems it's exactly what Apple marketed it as so that's great. I don't play games on my phone and only take photos of my kids so it seems perfect for my use!

I'm not getting the battery pack but i find it disappointing it only got the Air to 68% from full use for the £99 price point.
I've not bought it yet either but I probably will (unless I change my mind in the first 2 weeks about the Air and exchange for the Pro).

Think of it more like a battery extender than a battery pack. For long days out or whatever.
 
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Happy Reviews Day everyone! Just over 4 hours to go.

And it's just one more sleep until it's one more sleep until the beautiful annual cacophony of "FFS I got DHL" or "Why is my DPD driver literally one street round the corner but '6 hours away'?"

And - perhaps most importantly - no one is to make any jokes about the tracking snake, or to accidentally misspell the word "slot".
I know I am repeating myself, but this forum was lit when the Apple Watch came out... all the tracking, swearing about courier, changes in delivery dates and times... This here is a kids birthday party compared to the Apple Watch release.
... those were the good times... :D
 
I've not bought it yet either but I probably will (unless I change my mind in the first 2 weeks about the Air and exchange for the Pro).

Think of it more like a battery extender than a battery pack. For long days out or whatever.
Yeah but didn't they market it as being able to match the pro max battery life of 40 hours with the battery pack? I was assuming that would have meant when the air was at 100% battery health twice, or maybe that was taking into consideration.

I guess we just need to wait for all the testing videos to drop.
 
I know I am repeating myself, but this forum was lit when the Apple Watch came out... all the tracking, swearing about courier, changes in delivery dates and times... This here is a kids birthday party compared to the Apple Watch release.
... those were the good times... :D
The even better times were when people used to use flight tracking websites, based on various different codes and other tricks, to identify the precise plane their device was on. 😂
 
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Yeah but didn't they market it as being able to match the pro max battery life of 40 hours with the battery pack? I was assuming that would have meant when the air was at 100% battery health twice, or maybe that was taking into consideration.

I guess we just need to wait for all the testing videos to drop.
Remember that the battery pack, being wireless, loses a bit of power while transferring power.
 
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Remember that the battery pack, being wireless, loses a bit of power while transferring power.

Honestly I think it's a non issue for me anyway. Currently have the 16 pro and never had an issue with the battery life. I want to see them go head to head in a real life comparison of battery drainage. If the Air matches the pro like Apple claim i'm golden!
 
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