The Deepdive
Join Allen and Ida as they dive deep into the world of tech, unpacking the latest trends, innovations, and disruptions in an engaging, thought-provoking conversation. Whether you’re a tech enthusiast or just curious about how technology shapes our world, The Deepdive is your go-to podcast for insightful analysis and passionate discussion.
Tune in for fresh perspectives, dynamic debates, and the tech talk you didn’t know you needed!
The Deepdive
Heavy Is The Crown: Inside iPhone 18 Pro
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
We map Apple’s rumored 2026 plan: a heavier Pro built for battery and satellite, underscreen Face ID with a pinhole camera, and a split release that turns timing into a premium. We also unpack A20 Pro silicon, wafer-level memory, mechanical iris optics, and a possible Apple-run network.
• heavier Pro Max as battery-first design
• split release that prioritizes Pro and Fold in September
• underscreen Face ID and pinhole placement debate
• Dynamic Island as a virtual, vanishing UI
• full 5G satellite internet beyond SOS
• Apple as potential carrier with C2 modem
• A20 Pro on 2nm with WMCM memory fusion
• mechanical iris for real depth of field
• stacked sensor shift and simpler camera button
• foldable form factor and price shock
• earthy colorways with unified materials
• the buyer’s choice between cost and patience
What feature that we talked about today? The underscreen face ID, the mechanical camera, the global satellite internet, what would you pay the premium to get six months early? Or are you happy to wait?
Leave your thoughts in the comments and subscribe for more tech updates and reviews.
Setting The 2026 Stage
IdaWelcome to the Deep Dive, where we dig into the mountainous source material you've sent us and pull out what really matters. Today we're looking way, way into the future. We're talking about Apple's 2026 lineup, the iPhone 18 Pro, the Pro Max, and the big one, the first ever iPhone fold.
AllanYeah, the sources are looking about eight months ahead into early 2026 reports, and the picture they paint is, well, it's one of glorious high-stakes engineering. This is the year Apple really doubles down on the whole premium idea.
The Heavier Pro Max And Why
IdaAaron Powell And we have to start with, I think, the most gloriously absurd rumor of them all. We need to talk about the iPhone 18 Pro Max, which I'm now officially calling the gym membership handset.
AllanYes, the kettlebell phone. It's definitely the easiest thing to poke fun at, isn't it?
IdaI mean, come on. The reports say it's going to hit a record-breaking 243 grams. That is that's a hefty piece of equipment.
AllanIt is. It's significantly heavier than any iPhone before it. But you're right to bring it up first because that weight isn't an accident. It's really the cost of entry for everything else we're about to talk about.
IdaSo what are they cramming in there? What demands that kind of mass?
AllanIt's all about power. That weight is almost entirely about making room for a much, much bigger battery. We're talking potentially up to 5,500 mil R.
IdaWow.
Apple’s Split Release Strategy
AllanYeah. If you're going to power underscreen sensors, a faster chip, and especially the new satellite stuff, you just need more juice. And more juice means more weight, period. Aaron Powell Okay.
IdaSo that weight is a symptom of a much bigger strategy, and frankly, a more controversial one, the split release.
AllanThis is maybe the most important piece of the puzzle. Apple is basically splitting the iPhone launch in two.
IdaYeah.
AllanThe premium stuff, the 18 Pro, the Pro Max, and that new iPhone fold, which is rumored to be well over$2,000.
IdaWell, of course it is.
AllanRight. All of that launches in September 2026, the usual time.
IdaAaron Powell, but and this is the big but if you just want the standard iPhone 18 or the new iPhone Air 2.
AllanYou're waiting. You're waiting until spring 2027, probably around March.
IdaThat's a six-month gap.
AllanA huge six-month gap.
IdaSo isn't that a massive risk? You're telling people who are ready to upgrade during the holidays, hey, sorry, come back in half a year. Aren't they just going to go buy a Samsung? You're creating a vacuum.
AllanAnd that's the bet Apple's making. They're betting that the brand loyalty and the idea that the pro phones are the real new phones will make people either pay up or wait. They're turning availability into a premium feature.
Death Of The Pill And Pinhole Debate
IdaIt definitely punishes anyone with patience. Okay, let's move from strategy to the screen itself, because this is what everyone's been waiting for. The end of the notch, the end of the pill. Are we finally there?
AllanWe are seeing the death of the pill, yes. And it's happening through some incredibly complex engineering. The big rumor is underscreen face ID for the Pro models.
IdaHow does that even work?
AllanThey're using a material described as spliced microtransparent glass, basically a part of the screen that can become see-through when the face ID sensors need to fire.
IdaSo it looks normal, but it's also a window.
AllanExactly. And you have to see this is a stepping stone. The sources all point to the 20th anniversary iPhone 20 in 2027. That's the endgame. A perfect seamless slab of glass with no visible sensors at all. This is the test run.
IdaOkay, so face ID goes under the screen, the big dynamic island cutout is gone. But it's replaced by something, right?
AllanIt is. A single small pinhole cutout, just for the front-facing camera.
IdaFine, I can live with a pinhole, that's way better.
AllanAh, but that's where the new controversy begins. Yes. The rumors are split. Will that little punch hole stay in the center where it looks symmetrical and nice? Or will it move to the top left corner?
IdaNo, no way. Why would they do that? Apple is obsessed with symmetry. Moving it to the corner would look wrong.
AllanAnd that's the point. It's visual segmentation. It's a design choice so polarizing that the moment you see it, you know it's the new model. Yeah. It's leveraging our dislike of asymmetry to make the phone stand out.
IdaThat is just devious. I kind of love it. But wait, what happens to all the dynamic island software features? The live activities, the little bubbles.
AllanThey stay. And this part is actually genius. The dynamic island becomes a purely virtual interface. It'll just expand out from that little pinhole when it's active, you know, for music or a timer, and then it'll completely disappear when you're watching a video or playing a game.
IdaOh, that solves the single biggest annoyance. The permanent black bar is gone. Okay, I'm sold on that. Let's move from what we can see to what we can connect to, because this is arguably the biggest technical leap, the end of the no signal zone.
Dynamic Island Goes Fully Virtual
AllanThis is the revolutionary part. We're talking about full 5G satellite internet for the pro models. And I need to be really clear this is not the emergency SOS texting feature they have now.
IdaSo what's the difference? What does full mean?
AllanIt means everything: full web browsing, high-res maps, sending photos, data, everything you do on a normal 5G network, but via satellite. It means true global connectivity.
IdaSo I could be like hiking in the middle of nowhere and still checking my email.
Global 5G Satellite Ambition
AllanYou could be in the Himalayas checking baseball scores, yeah. It's simultaneously the most impressive and for the average person, most ridiculously overkill feature.
IdaWait, it gets better though. The sources hint at what Apple could do with this. This isn't just about signal.
AllanNo. This is the Trojan horse. If Apple controls the pipe to the satellite, why do they need to rely on ATT or Verizon anymore? The implication is that Apple could launch its own cellular service subscription.
IdaApple as a carrier, bundled into your Apple One subscription.
AllanExactly. It would be the biggest disruption to the mobile industry since the original iPhone itself. The rumors even mention a potential partnership with someone like SpaceX and Starlink to build out that network.
IdaOf course they did.
AllanAnd this all ties back to their in-house chips. They need their own modem to pull this off. And the sources say the C2 modem is finally ready.
IdaThe one that's meant to replace Qualcomm.
Apple As Carrier And C2 Modem
AllanThat's the one. It will finally support the super fast MMA 5G in the US, but more importantly, it's built for power efficiency. You need incredible efficiency to make satellite connections work without killing the battery in five minutes.
IdaBetter connectivity, getting rid of suppliers. Okay, that brings us to the brains of the operation. The silicon.
AllanRight, the A20 Pro chip. This is what'll be in the 18 Pro in the iPhone fold. It's being built on TSMC's next gen 2 nanometer process.
IdaWhich in plain English means it's a big jump.
AllanA huge jump. Up to 15% faster speeds, but more importantly, up to 30% better power efficiency than the A19 before it.
IdaBut there's a geekier detail in there, right? Something about how it's all packaged together.
AllanYes. This is the really cool part. It's a technique called wafer level multi-chip module, or WMCM.
IdaOkay, break that down for me. WMCM, what is that?
AllanThink of it like this. Instead of putting the RAM chips next to the processor on the motherboard, they are baking 12 gigabytes of RAM directly onto the processor wafer itself. They're essentially fusing them into one superchip.
IdaAnd why do that? That sounds incredibly complicated.
A20 Pro, 2nm, And WMCM Memory
AllanIt's all about latency. The time it takes for data to travel between the processor and the memory drops to almost zero. And that provides a massive performance boost for one thing in particular, Apple intelligence.
IdaAh, for the AI tasks.
AllanExactly. For on-device AI, you need that instant communication between memory and processing. This is Apple building a chip specifically to dominate on-device AI.
IdaSo it all connects. The chip is hyper-efficient to run AI and satellite, and the phone is heavy because it needs a giant battery to power that hyper-efficient chip.
AllanRecycling.
IdaAlright, I will grudgingly accept my new kettlebell if it means I get these features. Let's talk cameras, because that's why a lot of people buy the Pro models in the first place.
AllanThe headline feature here is a variable aperture on the main 48-megapixel camera. They're calling it a mechanical iris.
IdaA mechanical iris. Okay, if that's actual DSLR level stuff, why does that matter so much?
AllanIt means you can physically change the size of the lens opening. It's not just a software trick anymore. This gives you way better performance in low light. But the really exciting part is you get real control over depth of field.
IdaThe blurry background, the bokeh.
AllanThat beautiful, natural-looking background blur that you can only get with a real camera lens. You get artistic control that's just not possible with software alone.
IdaThat's a huge deal. But there's other stuff happening too, right? A change in who makes the sensors?
Cameras: Mechanical Iris And Sensors
AllanYes. The reports are pointing to a potential shift from Sony to Samsung for a new three-layer stacked sensor. It's very technical, but it basically aims to give you better dynamic range and less noise, especially in tough lighting.
IdaAnd while they're adding all this complex mechanical stuff to the lens, they're simplifying something else, the camera control button.
AllanRight. The ultimate admission of, oops, we made that too complicated. They're apparently getting rid of the expensive touch-sensitive gestures on that button and just uh sticking to simple, durable pressure sensing inputs.
IdaAaron Powell So they hit the repair cost spreadsheet and said, Nope, make it simpler.
AllanIt seems so. Even Apple has a budget, I guess.
IdaOkay, finally, let's talk about the look of this thing. We have all this revolutionary tack packed inside what I'm now calling the latte aesthetic. The colors are something else.
AllanAaron Ross Powell They are definitely a choice. The two standouts are burgundy and coffee brown.
IdaCoffee brown. Described as being slightly darker than beige. I just I can't picture it. It sounds like a 1970s shag carpet.
Simpler Camera Button And Design Colors
AllanI think sparks debate is the phrase the sources used. It feels like they're moving away from the cold industrial look and toward something more organic.
IdaYeah.
AllanEarthy.
IdaOr maybe just brown. The burgundy, on the other hand, sounds amazing.
AllanYeah, that's being described as a dark, rich, classy shade. It would be the first true red for a Pro Series iPhone, which is a big deal.
IdaAnd they're making the back glass and the frame match better, right? A more unified look.
AllanA cleaner, more seamless design, even if it is coffee colored.
IdaSo let's wrap this up. We've got the iPhone 18 Pro. It's heavy, but it's incredibly powerful with its AI-focused chip. It's the last phone with a camera hole, maybe, but the first one with true satellite internet.
AllanAnd we can't forget the elephant in the room. Or maybe the foldable whale, the iPhone fold. A 7.8-inch screen inside costing over$2,000.
IdaIs that what finally gets people to switch from a normal phone to a folding one?
The Foldable And Two-Track Future
AllanWell, it depends on their patience, doesn't it? Because that's the real story here, this two-track future. The super premium pro and fold models in September, and then everybody else has to wait six months until March.
IdaThe strategy is crystal clear. Segment the audience by how much they're willing to pay and by how patient they are. The best tech is always six months away for most people.
AllanIt completely changes what the new iPhone even means. It's not one thing anymore.
Listener Question: Pay Now Or Wait
IdaWhich leaves the final question for you listening to this. What feature that we talked about today? The underscreen face ID, the mechanical camera, the global satellite internet, what would you pay the premium to get six months early? Or are you happy to wait? It kind of makes you wonder if every iPhone purchase from now on is just a negotiation with your own FOMO.