Apple

Apple’s iPhone 17 Air Refuses To Take Any Risks – Forbes


The excitement around Apple’s new iPhone design is palpable. The presumptively-named iPhone 17 Air is expected to launch in September alongside the iPhone 17, 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max. The 17 Air will bring a thin design to Apple Stores around the world and Apple’s faithful fans will no doubt welcome the Air with open arms.

Even if there’s minimal risk and innovation in the package.

The iPhone 17 Air Hardware

There are changes away from the vanilla iPhone baseline. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has reported an increase in the base memory from 8 GB to 12 GB, which will no doubt allow a broader range of Apple Intelligence tools to run on the handset.,Kuo also notes he expects the vanilla iPhone 17 will pick up the 12 GB option.

The Axx series will continue to power the iPhone family. Currently, the A18 runs on the iPhone 17 and 17 Plus, while the A18 Pro runs on the iPhone 17 Pro and 17 Pro Max. The iPhone 17 Air is due to ship with the base A19 chipset, suggesting that the Air is a form-factor replacement over the iPhone 16 Plus—the Plus flavor itself replaced the iPhone Mini flavor).

Naturally, the design will focus on the thin form factor, which is generally accepted to be 5.6mm. As with every dimension specification, we’re only talking about the phone’s main body; don’t mention the expansive and bulky camera bar that will stick out across the top of the Air.

Yet, with all of these changes to bring a thin and capable design to market, Apple is not taking a leadership role in the ecosystem, is not taking any risks, and certainly isn’t disrupting the market.

The iPhone 17 Air’s Competition

The iPhone 17 Air will not launch into a market bereft of thin designs. Samsung signalled its intent in this space last with the launch of the Galaxy Z Fold 6 Special Edition, which trimmed down the size of its flagship foldable. Furthermore, at the launch of the Galaxy S25, it revealed the Galaxy S25 Edge, although it awaits a full release date.

A quick riffle through a library of spec sheets will show that thin and svelte has been on the mood board of every smartphone designer. Oppo’s Find N5 foldable clocks in at 8.93mm in your pocket; Tecno Mobile’s Spark Slim at 5.75 mm, and other slimline offerings are on sale in 2025 from Honor, Xiaomi and Huawei.

And if you want to really stoke the discussions, just bring up the 4.85mm thick Oppo R5… which was launched in 2014.

The iPhone 17 Air’s Market Position

Apple has, of course, a captive market. If you are locked into Apple’s ecosystem—be it through an extensive app library, the peer pressure of compatibility, or the deep connectivity between Apple hardware—then these Android-powered smartphones will not fit in your world. If thin is your thing, then you have no choice but to wait until Tim Cook and his team to decide that they want to offer you a thin iPhone.

That time is coming. I have no doubt that the faithful will flock to the latest from Cupertino and the sash of success will be draped over the svelte smartphone. Yet anyone looking at the wider market will see that Apple’s introduction of the iPhone 17 Air pushes very few boundaries.

Far from setting the agenda, the iPhone 17 Air is little more than a dedicated follower of fashion.

Now read the latest iPhone 17 Air, iOS, and App Store headlines in Forbes’ weekly Apple news digest…



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