iPhone 11 (2019): release date, price, news and leaks

Well, folks, 2019 is here and although we’ve got months of waiting before the next generation of iPhones hits us — there are already rumors about them floating about the Web. Never too early for those if your device is hot enough, we guess.
As every year, we expect the iPhone 11 (or however Apple decides to call it this time around) to be announced in September. But, already, we have some juicy tidbits of information about them. Let’s gather it all up!
with a design very, very similar to what we have been getting for the past 4 years. Alongside those two, the company also announced the iPhone X — the first fresh look with radical new changes. Then, in 2018, we saw another trio of new iPhones. This time, all three have the “new” design language and they are the
.
According to rumors and analysts, Apple intends to stick to the triple phone plan this year as well. The rumor mill used to call them iPhone XI, iPhone XI Max, and iPhone XIR — as respective successors to the iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, and iPhone XR — but recent leaks point towards a different naming scheme. Supposedly, the iPhone XR’s successor will be named the iPhone 11. The reiteration of the iPhone XS would be named iPhone Pro, and the biggest one will be called iPhone Pro Max. The names are a bit… meh, but Apple did kind of paint itself in the corner with last year’s naming scheme. Still, the rumor mill could be wrong, or the names could change last minute.
The iPhone 6 – iPhone 8 era showed us that Apple isn’t super-interested in changing its device design all too often. Similarly to its computer and tablet lines, it’s confident that its designs can stand the test of time over periods of 4 years or more. And early reports do say that
in how the 2019 iPhones are going to look.
Earlier in the year, there was some hope for a smaller notch — when a major Apple supplier announced that it has found a way to implement an RGB sensor and an IR proximity sensor under the active pixels of a smartphone’s display, this led to speculation that Apple might shrink the size of the monobrow at the top of the iPhone 11’s screen. However, as the months rolled by and more and more stuff leaked, it’s starting to look like we won’t see much of a change to the iPhone’s front.
What about the camera lump?
We have been getting a steady streams of camera-related leaks recently. Allegedly, the iPhone Pro and iPhone Pro Max will get a third lens on their camera modules.
The Internet was not all too pleased about the appearance of that and there was a bit of a panic online. Soon after, rumors of another prototype, with a horizontally-alligned camera at the top center of the device’s back surfaced. However, it appears as if the latter has been scrapped, since all of the leaks lately keep showing us the square-shaped bump.
Just another leak seemingly confirming my January #iPhoneXI prototype leak accuracy… pic.twitter.com/qVWF59GgKr
— Steve H.McFly (@OnLeaks) March 28, 2019
But for the past couple of months, leaks, alleged official dummies, and pretty much any reputable leakster agrees on this design:
Some rumors do claim that Apple is working on a concealed ToF camera on the back, covering the lens with a paint which is see-through on the camera’s side. Leaksters have speculated that this may be used to cover up the super-wide-angle lens, but we are not sure that makes much sense. Wide-angle cameras usually have smaller sensors and need all the light they can get. Covering it with paint, no matter how see-through it is, would hinder its operation. There’s the possibility for a stealthy ToF camera back there, hidden behind a thin layer of see-through paint, doing its silent work to help out with Augmented Reality features and apps.
It is also rumored that the next iPhones will have a Night Mode in their Camera apps — much like the Google Pixel’s Night Sight and other competitors’ phones, the iOS Night Mode will use a mix of computational photography, multiple shots, and high exposure settings to make well-lit and noiseless photos in the dark. Rumor says it will turn on automatically whenever it’s dark — again, a very Apple thing to do — but there may also be a toggle for the user to enable / disable Night Mode themselves. It’s unknown whether this mode will be exclusive to the premium iPhone Pro series or if it will also bleed down to the XR-successor model.
There are also new rumors suggesting that we will be able to do real-time video retouching as we are recording. Think removing the background and exchanging it with something else straight in the viewfinder. The MacBook laptops already have such effects in the Photo Booth app, so it’s not far-fetched to imagine Apple doing something with the iPhone’s camera.
The iPhone 11 will surely get a slight camera upgrade, though. While 2018’s iPhone XR only had a single camera on the back, reports say that its 2019 iteration will add a telephoto partner for it, giving it the same setup as the current iPhone XS models.
Another colorful explosion
They are not as vibrant as the colors we got on the iPhone XR, but still certainly pretty. We are notably missing the Product RED choice here, so maybe that’s not the full lineup.
As far as the iPhone Pro goes, we heard that there will be a new Rainbow color. Right now, rumors have us imagining it looking like the Galaxy Note 10’s Aura Glow. However, some reputable leaksters insist that it won’t be a Rainbow color… but the Apple logo on the back itself will just have a rainbow color, as homage to the classic 90s Apple logo. We wouldn’t put it past Apple to do a modern version of that — possibly a gradient, reflective Apple logo on the back?
The invitation for the September 10th iPhone event actually features a multi-colored Apple, further giving these rumors some credence.
Connectivity – USB Type-C?
The fact that Apple finally caved in and gave the iPad Pro of 2018 a USB Type-C connector, instead of its proprietary Lightning port, was kind of surprising. Apple loves to keep everything close to the chest, with a tightly-enclosed ecosystem and its own hardware and software solutions for everything.
However, when it comes to putting the “Pro” in iPad Pro, Cupertino silently admitted that the new USB Type-C is the better port to go with.
Now, some speculate (hope) that we might see USB Type-C connectors on the upcoming iPhones as well. We are not convinced this will happen, though.
The Lightning port is still a great source of revenue for Apple due to the fact that any company that wants to make an accessory for the iPhone needs to pay a license to use the connector’s protocols. And there are a ton of accessories.
The iPad Pro might have gotten USB Type-C due to Apple wanting to make it appear more like a hybrid laptop and less like a portable media player. The iPhone doesn’t sit anywhere near that category and we wager it will keep its proprietary Lightning connector.
Wireless charging goes both ways
Water can’t stop me!
So long, 3D Touch, we knew thee well
Why? Well, building displays with pressure-sensitive sensors underneath the glass is a pretty expensive and not a very easy process. On the flipside, 3D Touch never really picked up as an essential feature — most users even forget they have it. Yeah, we think it sucks that 3D Touch might be gone, but the majority has spoken. Or so we are led to believe.
iPhone 11 price and release date
Every year, Apple announces its new iPhones at a special September keynote event. And yes, we do have the date for 2019’s event — September 10th. The handsets themselves go up for pre-order the following weekend and ship a week or two afterwards. So, we expect the first iPhone 11 units to begin shipping around the 21st of September.
And the price? One would hope that the recent slowdown in iPhone sales might give Apple a good indication that maybe it went a bit overboard with the pricing of the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max. On the other hand, Cupertino is not one to backpedal on decisions easily. Really, we expect no major change in pricing — $750 for the iPhone 11 (2019), $1000 for the iPhone Pro, and $1100 for the iPhone Pro Max. But hey, fingers crossed that if Apple does remove 3D Touch on the expensive models, it would at least pass the savings on to the consumers.