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The iPhone 15 lineup has arrived, and here’s everything you need to know

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The iPhone 15 and 15 Pro have officially launched. The biggest change this year is that Apple is finally switching from a Lightning port to a USB-C port, meaning the phones will probably be that much easier to integrate into your charging ecosystem. But the devices have some other notable upgrades as well.

We’ve already learned a lot of fascinating things about the devices, including an entirely new battery setting.

The iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max have switched from stainless steel on their exteriors to titanium, and that translates to lighter devices that should be easier to hold in your hand. Apple also replaced the mute switch in the Pro phones with a new Action Button that you can customize to open the camera, turn on the flashlight, and more. The iPhone 15 and 15 Plus have some notable upgrades, too, including the Dynamic Island that debuted with last year’s Pro lineup and a matte finish on the back glass.

Here’s all of our coverage of Apple’s newest phones.

  • Belkin’s new 2-in-1 charging dock might blend into your bedroom

    A photo of a person bringing an iPhone toward Belkin’s new charging dock.
    Image: Belkin

    Belkin has a new 2-in-1 charging dock that’s all about the looks. Yes, it offers the types of features you’d expect from a $129.95 charger, including letting you fast charge iPhones with MagSafe as well as Apple Watches. But if you do pay up for the new charging dock, you’re probably buying it because it looks great.

    Offered in two neutral colors, sand or charcoal (basically white and black), “the dock achieves a stunning stone-like appearance, blending seamlessly into its environment whether it’s placed on a nightstand, kitchen counter or desk,” Belkin writes in its press release. Take Belkin’s marketing language there with a grain of salt, but I do think the charger has a really nice aesthetic.

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  • Mia Sato

    Oct 26

    Mia Sato

    Apple’s iOS 17.2 beta includes the new Journal app

    Pink Apple logos
    Image: The Verge

    Apple has released the developer beta of iOS 17.2, and it includes the Journal app, a digital daily diary for users to log their activities.

    The Journal app was first announced at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference in June, and the company frames it as a way for users to self-reflect and practice gratitude.

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  • iOS 17.1 arrives with updates to AirDrop, Apple Music, and more

    iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max on a background of metal textures.
    This year’s iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max.
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    Apple has officially released iOS 17.1, the latest version of its iPhone operating system. The update has been available in beta since late last month, during which time its biggest new feature has arguably been the ability to continue AirDrop transfers over a cellular connection if the two connected devices move out of Wi-Fi range after the sending process has started. Apple announced the feature back at its developer conference in June, but it didn’t arrive in time for the main iOS 17 release last month.

    As shown in iOS 17.1’s beta releases, the update includes a handful of other minor tweaks and additions. There’s a new Favorites feature for Apple Music that lets you add songs, albums, playlists, and artists to your library and signal your music tastes to the app’s recommendation algorithms, and the settings menu for the StandBy feature has been tweaked to give you more control over when the phone’s display turns off when used in this smart display mode.

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  • Halide now offers special Action Button features when you’re inside the app.

    When you’re using Halide, the Action Button on the iPhone 15 Pro phones can now, according to the app’s patch notes for version 2.13:

    Toggle manual or autofocus

    Cycle through your lenses

    Switch between auto and manual exposure modes

    Switch between 12 and 48MP capture modes

    Toggle RAW capture

    and even capture a photo! (though, with a delay - we suggest using the volume button instead)

    There are more details in the patch notes, so I encourage you to read them for yourself. Using a Shortcut, you can also use the Action Button to open up Halide, too.


  • Apple addresses iPhone 15 overheating with a new iOS 17 update

    The iPhone 15 Pro (blue titanium) and 15 Pro Max (white titanium) standing next to one another.
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    Over the weekend, Apple blamed several factors for reports of iPhone 15s running hot, pointing to problems with specific apps like Instagram and Uber, post-transfer background processing, and unspecified bugs in iOS 17. Today, the company released a new software update with patch notes saying that iOS 17.0.3 “addresses an issue that may cause iPhone to run warmer than expected.”

    In an update detailing the security fixes for this patch, Apple listed two fixes addressed on both iOS and iPadOS (via 9to5Mac). One is a kernel exploit for an attacker with local access to the device that Apple said “may have been actively exploited against versions of iOS before iOS 16.6,” as well as a fix for a libvpx bug — which CISA issued a warning about — that could allow someone to take over a device remotely, that has also been patched recently in apps like Chrome and Firefox.

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  • Apple’s sweaty iPhone fix might be coming in iOS 17.0.3.

    Apple acknowledged over the weekend that the iPhone 15 Pro can run a little hot, but said it’s an iOS 17 software issue and it would be fixed soon.

    Today, MacRumors reported that Apple is testing iOS 17.0.3 internally; perhaps, as the outlet speculates, that’s the software update that ends our hot iPhone 15 summer. Perhaps.


  • Wes Davis

    Sep 30

    Wes Davis

    Apple blames iOS 17 bugs and apps like Instagram for making iPhone 15s run hot

    The iPhone 15
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    Apple has acknowledged user complaints that iPhone 15 and 15 Pro phones are overheating, reports Forbes, but said that contrary to speculation, it has nothing to do with the phone’s hardware design. Forbes noted an update to Instagram has already rolled out with version 302, released September 27th, to address some of the issues.

    Bloomberg notes an unnamed Apple spokesperson specifically mentioning Instagram, Uber, and the game Asphalt 9 as examples of apps that could cause the devices to “run warmer than normal.”

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  • Make sure to update your iPhone 15 before transferring over data from your old phone

    iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max arranged on a metal background.
    Photo by Vjeran Pavic / The Verge

    If you’ve just picked up a new iPhone 15 device, before you transfer over your data from an older phone, make sure to update that new phone to iOS 17.0.2 first. An Apple support document says that the update, which came out on Thursday, fixes an issue that “may prevent transferring data directly from another iPhone during setup” (via MacRumors).

    Initially, iOS 17.0.2 was only available for the just-launched iPhone 15 phones; the most current software for older iPhones available last week was iOS 17.0.1, which also launched on Thursday and included some big security updates. On September 26th, 9to5Mac reported that Apple released a new build of 17.0.2 with the same release notes available for all iPhones capable of running the current software.

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  • Apple’s Studio Display gets manual controls for its webcam

    The Mac Studio, Mac Studio Display, keyboard, and mouse seen from the front on a wooden table.
    Photo by Becca Farsace / The Verge

    Apple just released macOS Sonoma, and along with the new 14.0 version of its operating system, there’s an update for its standalone Studio Display monitor that addresses some of our issues with its much-derided webcam (via MacRumors). Now, the Studio Display’s camera offers manual control over framing and zoom, which you can adjust by moving the image back and forth or in and out within the video preview window.

    From Apple’s update notes:

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  • Emma Roth

    Sep 25

    Emma Roth

    iFixit has good news and bad news about the iPhone 15 Pro Max’s repairability

    While Apple may have made the iPhone 15 Pro Max easier to repair physically, a teardown from iFixit reveals it still comes with the same parts pairing constraints as its predecessors.

    Like the iPhone 14, iFixit found that the iPhone 15 lineup has a redesigned midframe that you can access by removing the device’s screen or back glass. However, iFixit notes that the internals on the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max live behind the screen, rather than the back glass, as is the case with the base iPhone 15 and 15 Plus as well as the iPhone 14 lineup.

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  • The iPhone 15 Pro is teaching me to embrace digital zoom

    Hand holding iPhone 15 Pro showing camera preview on screen.
    I promise digital zoom isn’t as icky as it used to be.
    Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

    If you want to hear a love story, ask any photographer about their favorite lens. 

    They’ll probably get a little glimmer in their eye as they tell you about the fast 35mm they carry everywhere or the long portrait lens with the bokeh that hits just right. Camera bodies come and go, but your favorite lens is a lifelong relationship.

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  • iFixit tears down… Apple’s FineWoven cases

    iPhone 15 Pro Max with FineWoven case showing visible scratches.
    Photo by Nilay Patel / The Verge

    The new FineWoven iPhone cases are very bad,” according to my colleague Allison Johnson, so you probably shouldn’t buy one. Still, I’ve been curious to learn more about them, and iFixit’s new teardown just gave me even more information than I could have thought to ask for: it put one of the new cases under a microscope, tested how it stood up to things like hot sauce and coffee, and tore the thing apart — and, best of all, photographed every step of the way.

    There are some incredible zoomed-in photos of the fabric, for example; that black thing in a post from iFixit CEO Kyle Wiens is a human hair included for scale! Another photo shows how the fibers are affected when cut by a knife — it’s not pretty.

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  • Apple iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max review: by the numbers

    There are very few surprises from new smartphones these days. Breakthrough new features? Astounding new camera hardware? Get out of here. That’s the stuff of early 2010 mobile technology.

    The iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max are no exception to recent trends: they’re not seismic shifts; they’re just a bit better than the things that came before them in a lot of small but meaningful ways. 

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  • This retractable cable can help make the iPhone USB-C transition easier

    The Asicen retractable 3-in-1 charging cable plugged into a phone and laptop.
    Lightning and USB-C, oh my.
    Image: Asicen

    Did you hear the iPhone 15 has USB-C now? That’s a great thing and long overdue, but it does mean that there will be a period of transition where some of us end up having to deal with both Lightning and USB-C iPhones in our lives, particularly if we live with someone who isn’t buying the new iPhone right away.

    This is particularly cumbersome if you share a vehicle and want to use CarPlay in it — you’ll need a way to hook up your new USB-C iPhone and maintain a Lightning connection for the other person using the car. You could do this with multiple cables, of course, and switch it every time you get in the car, but who needs that hassle? For the past couple of years, I’ve used this three-headed cable to use Apple CarPlay and Android Auto in the same vehicle, depending on who is driving, no cable swap necessary. (It also comes with a Micro USB port on one side, but I can’t say I’ve ever used it.)

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  • If you just got an iPhone 15, make sure to update it before transferring data over from your old iPhone.

    The iPhone 15’s latest update is iOS 17.0.2, and Apple says it fixes an issue that “may prevent transferring data directly from another iPhone during setup” (via MacRumors). Take a few minutes to update your new phone before setting up that transfer to avoid issues.

    (By the way, the latest update for older iPhones iOS 17.0.1, so don’t look for iOS 17.0.2 on those devices.)


    About iOS 17 Updates

    [Apple Support]

  • Apple’s faster Haptic Touch is as close to a 3D Touch comeback as we’re gonna get

    A screenshot of iOS 17’s haptic touch duration setting.
    Screenshot by Chris Welch / The Verge

    As excited as I am to pick up a new iPhone 15 Pro Max later today, every release day for Apple’s latest phones brings back a nagging feeling: I still miss 3D Touch. Introduced on the iPhone 6S and lasting through the XS and XS Max, this feature could determine how much pressure you were applying to the screen with each finger press, and software could respond differently based on the level of force.

    I remember having my mind blown by the live wallpaper animations, which would play (and then rewind back in reverse) based on how hard or softly I was pressing down. 3D Touch also brought other useful tricks like “peek” and “pop,” which let you preview a link or other content with a light press and then fully open it with a firm one.

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  • Explaining the lossless, low-latency audio link between the USB-C AirPods Pro and Apple Vision Pro.

    In an interview with Brian Tong on the Apple Blitz XL podcast, Apple VP of sensing and connectivity Ron Huang explains that while the second-gen AirPods Pro earbuds also have the H2 chip just like its new USB-C model, the new ones are capable of communicating at 5GHz instead of just 2GHz.

    He says that’s why the new USB-C AirPods Pro earbuds have enough bandwidth to do lossless audio wirelessly when combined with the upcoming Vision Pro.

    Apple:

    The H2 chip in the latest AirPods Pro and Apple Vision Pro, combined with a groundbreaking wireless audio protocol, unlocks powerful 20-bit, 48 kHz Lossless Audio with a massive reduction in audio latency


  • Tim Cook literally opened Apple’s Fifth Avenue store today.

    Seriously, he had to unlock the door to greet customers. Amusing start to iPhone 15 launch day.


  • The iPhone 15 Pro’s killer new feature is a fart button.

    Smelt it dealt it.

    (The app to do it is call Thwip.)


  • Calling all Shortcuts sickos.

    The iPhone 15 Pro is shipping today and I want to know what y’all are doing with the Action Button. Mine runs a shortcut that orders my favorite fall coffee beverage — but what will you do with your one, wild, and precious Action Button? Set it to dispense treats from your automatic pet feeder? Program it to unleash the robot vacuums?

    Reply in the comments on this quickpost or hit me up on Threads, and I’ll round up Verge readers’ best, most unhinged Action Button shortcuts next week.


  • You asked, and we answered your burning iPhone 15 questions

    The iPhone 15 Pro in hand.
    Who you gonna call when you have very specific questions about the new iPhone?
    Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

    Ever since our reviews for the iPhone 15 and 15 Pro went up on Tuesday morning, you’ve had a ton of questions to ask about the phones — in comments, on The Vergecast, on Threads, an Instagram App, and in a live Q&A.

    So we thought we’d put all that information together in a nice little smorgasbord of nerdy tidbits and philosophical pondering and pick out a few favorites in the process.

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  • The titanium edges of the iPhone 15 Pro can get discolored by your hands, but Apple says not to worry.

    According to an Apple support document, you just need to wipe the edges with a lint-free cloth to get things looking good again (via MacRumors):

    For iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, the oil from your skin might temporarily alter the color of the outside band. Wiping your iPhone with a soft, slightly damp, lint-free cloth will restore the original look.


    The side of an iPhone 15 Pro showing smudges from fingerprints.
    You should be able to just wipe off the fingerprints, Apple says.
    Photo: Nilay Patel / The Verge
  • The iPhone 15 has a new optimized charging setting — here’s how it works

    The iPhone 15 Pro in hand.
    You can limit the battery charge to 80 percent on the iPhone 15 and 15 Pro. This is apparently in response to complaints about the iPhone 14 Pro’s battery capacity issues.
    Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

    Apple has detailed how the iPhone 15’s new 80 percent charging limit setting works in an update to a support document.

    Here’s Apple’s explanation of what you can expect if you enable the setting:

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  • Emma Roth

    Sep 21

    Emma Roth

    An early iPhone 15 Pro teardown looks inside Apple’s new flagship phone

    Want to get a look at the inside of the iPhone 15 Pro? The flagship handheld hasn’t even started shipping yet, but the folks over at PBKreviews have already taken apart the device, revealing the redesigned midframe chassis, along with all the components nestled beneath the iPhone 15 Pro’s screen and glass backing.

    The video starts with the careful removal of the display using a screen disassembly device and a plastic pick. From there, PBKreviews disconnects the screen from the body of the phone and removes a series of cables. That’s when we get a good look at the iPhone 15’s camera assembly, which has three Phillips screws holding it down.

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  • How to customize the iPhone 15 Pro’s Action Button

    Hand holding an iPhone will illustrations in back.
    Illustration: Cathryn Hutton / The Verge

    If you pick up an iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max, you’ll notice one thing missing: the mute switch. It’s been a fixture on iPhones since the very beginning, but the 15 Pro models have swapped it out for a new button that’s dubbed the Action Button

    Like the Action Button on the Apple Watch Ultra series, you can customize it to do almost anything you want. It can open up a specific mode on your camera, turn on your flashlight, and, if you’re crafty, even order your favorite seasonal beverage from your neighborhood Starbucks. 

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