Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple’s foldable phone could just be an ultra-pricey iPhone Air sandwich

I am excited about the foldable iPhone, but the Air's heat management worries me.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple iPhone Air Light Blue camera
Nirave Gondhia / Digital Trends

When Apple revealed the uber-slim iPhone Air earlier this year, it elicited many hot takes, claiming that the company is back in top engineering form and that it was a glimpse of the things to come. Well, it seems the iPhone Air is, quite literally, a “non-sandwiched” view of Apple’s highly anticipated foldable smartphone expected to arrive next year.  

The big picture

So far, media reports and industry analysts have predicted that Apple’s foldable iPhone will be quite slim, feature a flexible panel that spans roughly eight inches diagonally, and that it will solve the crease (aka vertical groove) problem to a large extent. It seems the phone will also borrow heavily from the aesthetics and engineering of the iPhone Air. 

Recommended Videos

This is what Mark Gurman over at Bloomberg wrote in the latest edition of his PowerOn newsletter:

“As for how the foldable iPhone will look, I am increasingly told that users should imagine two titanium iPhone Airs side-by-side. In other words, it’s going to be super thin and a design achievement.” 

The prediction from Gurman is pretty interesting. On one hand, it is a sign that the foldable iPhone’s engineering is going to be impressive, at the very least. But if Apple is indeed chasing a super-slim chassis for its debut foldable phone, I am somewhat concerned about the thermal situation. 

The big concern 

Let’s not forget how the Titanium-made iPhone 16 Pro fares worse than its aluminum-made predecessors at heat management. Here are a few of the anecdotes about the iPhone Air and its warming problems: 

“In practice, though, the iPhone Air would still get really warm during the simplest of tasks.” – The New York Times.

“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.” / “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.” – WIRED

“A short Diablo Immortal session warmed up the phone considerably, but not enough to impact performance.”- The Verge

On the positive side, we already have devices such as the Oppo Find N5 and the Honor Magic V5, which don’t exactly get toasty despite being astonishingly slim. Let’s hope Apple makes the best out of the increased surface area on its foldable phone and redeems it from the heating woes on the iPhone Air.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is the Managing Editor at Digital Trends.
Android 17 makes it harder for bad actors to guess and crack the PIN on your phone
Thieves only get 20 shots before the door slams shut
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Google is planning on making Android 17 even more secure. The company had previously confirmed that Android 17 will now reduce the number of times someone can guess your PIN or password and add longer wait times between failed attempts.

Now, thanks to a deeper breakdown from Mishaal Rahman, we have a better idea of how aggressive that change really is.

Read more
Acti just turned your smartphone keyboard into an AI assistant
One keyboard that types your words and does your errands. This might be the upgrade your thumbs have been waiting for.
Acti keyboard open on iPhone

Your smartphone’s keyboard is the thing you interact with the most, and yet, it has largely remained the same since it was introduced two decades ago. Yes, it has become better at understanding our typing habits and predicting text, but its function has largely remained unchanged. 

A Singapore startup called Acti looked at the keyboard and the large space it occupies on your smartphone and asked a fair question. Why not make it actually do things? After seeing its keyboard in action, I think the idea has legs.

Read more
Finding photos is so much easier with Siri AI in iOS 27 that I no longer scroll
Natural language photo search in iOS 27 is the kind of feature that quietly becomes essential.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

My camera roll has crossed 8,000 photos, and it got there by capturing random moments (only to forget them later). The problem, however, starts when someone asks me to share something specific. It could be their portrait from last weekend or the food pictures they snapped using my phone.

Finding those pictures usually means scrolling through my seemingly endless camera roll. If the photo is a month or two old, I end up scrolling past hundreds of other images to find it, and that gets old fast.

Read more