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

New iPhone 17 Pro render keeps us guessing on the final design

Add as a preferred source on Google
Apple iPhone 17 Pro Render
kanedacane tweets / X / kanedacane tweets

Apple is to expected to announce the iPhone 17 series later this year, likely sometime in September if previous release patterns are anything to go by. By our calculations, that puts us around five months out, though math is not our strong point – we’re writers here after all. 

What we do know however, is that in the upcoming months we are no doubt going to see more conflicting rumors about what we can expect from the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro models in terms of design. A few months back, it was suggested the iPhone 17 Pro models would feature a new camera bar across their rear, taking on a more Pixel-like approach

Recommended Videos

It was also suggested that they would have a two-tone rear with renders showing the camera bar featured in black, while the rest of the device was shown in a grey color. More recently, Mark Gurman of Bloomberg said in one of his Power On newsletters that he was told “the iPhone 17 Pro won’t have a two-toned rear” and that “the camera area will be the same color as the rest of the device”.

Will it or won’t it have a two-tone rear?

Well, now a render has appeared online supporting Gurman’s suggestion. The render was posted on X (formerly Twitter) by kanedacane tweets (@kdctweets), picked up by PhoneArena and it shows the raised camera bar at top of the device matching the rest of the rear. As with previous renders, the LED flash is position on the right-hand side, along with the LiDAR sensor and the microphone, while the camera lenses are on the left. 

Nothing else is detailed in the post but the render gives you an idea of what the device could look like without a two-tone rear if Gurman is right.

Whether the iPhone 17 Pro models will or won’t have a two-tone rear is something we are very unlikely to know for sure until the devices are officially announced later this year. Unlike Google, Nothing and OnePlus, Apple doesn’t do teasers for the design of its devices ahead of their launch so we have a few more months of guessing ahead us, and no doubt a few more leaks too so watch this space.

Britta O'Boyle
Britta is a freelance technology journalist who has been writing about tech for over a decade. She's covered all consumer…
Did J-Hope of BTS just spoil Samsung’s biggest Galaxy Z Fold 8 surprise?
Did BTS' J-Hope just give us our best look at the Galaxy Z Fold 8?
Computer, Electronics, Mobile Phone

Samsung has spent the past few days building anticipation for Galaxy Unpacked, but one of the company's biggest pre-launch moments may not have come from an official teaser. Instead, it appears to have come from BTS.

During soundcheck ahead of BTS' concert in Paris, J-Hope shared an Instagram Story that appears to show Samsung's upcoming book-style foldable. While the device isn't identified by name, its wider cover display and revised proportions look remarkably similar to the Galaxy Z Fold 8 that has surfaced repeatedly through recent leaks and renders. Given Samsung's close relationship with the BTS member, it's difficult to dismiss the appearance as a coincidence.

Read more
Last-minute Samsung leak spoils all of its next-gen foldable phones
Violet Shadow Ultra. Lavender Fold 8. Pink Flip 8. Samsung's entire foldable lineup is now fully in the wild.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Roughly five days before the Galaxy Unpacked event, renowned tipster Evan Blass (aka @evleaks) has leaked what appear to be the official promotional images of all the eighth-generation Galaxy Z foldables. 

For those catching up, Samsung is expected to unveil three foldables: the Fold 8 Ultra (successor to the Fold 7), the Fold 8 (with a new, wider, shorter design), and the Flip 8 (successor to the Flip 7). 

Read more
Google’s next Gemini upgrade might not arrive as soon as expected
Even Google's AI needs more time to finish its homework
google-gemini-ai-news-accuracy

Google helped kickstart the modern AI race, but staying ahead has turned out to be far more difficult than joining it. According to a new Bloomberg report, the company has fallen months behind its internal schedule for launching Gemini 3.5 Pro, its next flagship AI model, as engineers continue working to improve one of its biggest weaknesses: coding.

The delay isn't simply about polishing another chatbot. It highlights a broader problem facing Google, where massive engineering teams, multiple product divisions and increasingly strict AI safety requirements are slowing the company's ability to respond to rivals that seem happy to move much faster.

Read more