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The OLED iPad Pro was just the beginning of Apple’s return to thin devices

According to Apple, the thinness of the iPad Pro OLED is just the beginning of Apple’s renewed efforts to create increasingly thinner computers BloombergMark Gurman in Today Power on Bulletin. The company is planning a “significantly thinner” iPhone 17 and is also working on reducing the thickness of the MacBook Pro and Apple Watch, he writes.

This isn’t the first time we’ve heard about the new ultra-slim “iPhone 17 Slim.” information and multiple supply chain analysts have reported that this phone is on the way, likely at a higher price than the existing iPhone 15 Pro Max. I haven’t seen any specific rumors about this How it will be slim, but could have a 6.6-inch display and a smaller Dynamic Island.

Thickness has its advantages.
Photo Amelia Holowaty Krales / The Verge

It’s no surprise that the company wants to get back to the pursuit of leanness, but the key difference – one hopes – is that the company no longer wants to do it seemingly at all costs. This drive created some of the company’s most impressive devices, but it could also lead to bent iPhones, limited port selection, poor battery life, thermal throttling issues, bad keyboards, and lawsuits for Apple itself. However, the company has started to reverse this trend, and today the iPhone 15 Pro and MacBook Pro line are among the thickest categories the company has released in years.

I’ve welcomed these changes, but I’d be lying if I said I didn’t miss that old futuristic feel sometimes. I have my iPhone SE on my desk, and every time I pick it up, I’m amazed at how pleasant it is to use, despite its small screen and taxing processor. I also cast an envious glance at iPhone 12 or 13 Minis when I see them.

Perhaps this time will come back, and without the costs that were once associated with it. The current MacBook Air is incredibly thin—even thinner than the tiny, fanless 12-inch MacBook—yet it’s powerful and so battery-guzzling that I feel comfortable taking it out of the house without a charger most of the time. And I bring it from David Pierce Edge The review of the new iPad Pro found that, while being thinner than the iPod Nano, it didn’t make any major compromises that iPads haven’t made before.

These are encouraging signs that the company may finally have figured this out and hopefully won’t get into trouble again. Because after the last few years, I have no interest in returning to a life of thinness for the sake of thinness; Durability and all-day battery life are now non-negotiable.