The latest about the yet unannounced iPhone 6 includes a video posted
by Russian company Feld & Volk, maker of modified luxury iPhones
and other technology products, featuring an iPhone 6 prototype that the
company's engineers have put together using leaked iPhone 6 parts and
components. Feld & Volk does not claim that the phone featured in
the video is a fully functional iPhone 6 from Apple, although in no way
does it say that this is only the company version of what its engineers
think the product will look like.
Nonetheless, Apple fans who get hold of the video seem to be happy
with Feld & Volk's rendering, which includes a number of features
recently leaked. Notable among them is the super-sleek, super-slim
design seen in the photo renderings obtained from Taiwanese Apple
supplier Foxconn. The video also shows a camera lens protruding from the
back of the device, a feature that, although not so good-looking,
allows users to attach third-party lenses to their iPhones. This
coincides with an Apple patent application for interchangeable lenses
filed in March.
Most remarkable is the mere fact that Feld & Volk was able to
make the assembled iPhone 6 rendering work, at least partially. About 42
seconds into the video, the hacked-together device is connected to
iTunes and surprisingly boots, showing a gear icon briefly before
loading up the Connect to iTunes image. 9to5Mac, however, notes that it
is possible the device is not even running iOS 8, which is still in beta
version for developers but is said to come with iPhone 6 when it ships
later this year.
"Instead of the blue and white iTunes logo from iOS 7 (that you can
see in both devices in the video), iOS 8 features a red/orange and white
logo," notes 9to5Mac's Stephen Hall in his observation.
"Furthermore, the cable graphic on the screen is located far above
the home button, indicating that they may not be using a full-size
4.7-inch screen, either," he continues.
On Saturday, Apple developer Steven Troughton-Smith said on Twitter
that the video posted by Feld & Volk coincides with blogger John
Gruber's argument that the 4.7-inch screen will have 17.5 percent more
pixels in the vertical dimension than the 4-inch iPhone 5 and will have a
double-retina display resolution of 1334 x 750, thus explaining the
connector graphic not reaching the edge of the screen.
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