Hotly tipped iPhone 15 upgrades are dropping like flies, and now one of the biggest looks is certain to miss the cut.
Apple’s much-hyped in-house 5G modem will no longer debut with the release of the iPhone 15 range in 2023, and it signals a major setback for Apple’s modem division. The news emerged following comments from Apple modem supplier Qualcomm in its earnings report yesterday.
Picked up by Bloomberg, Qualcomm told investors that it will continue to supply the “vast majority” of modem chips for Apple’s iPhone 15 range in 2023. The company said it had previously expected to provide just 20% of iPhone 5G modems by this time, given Apple’s ambitious roadmap for its own 5G modems.
Despite working on the chip since 2020, Bloomberg reveals that Apple has suffered significant setbacks, which have caused the delay. In July, it reported prototypes have been “overheating over the past year.”
Respected industry analyst Ming-Chi Kuo went even further, saying development of the modem “may have failed,” claiming Apple may be forced to rely on Qualcomm for the foreseeable future. Last month, Haitong International Securities analyst Jeff Pu agreed, stating that Apple’s modem may miss iPhone launches in both 2023 and 2024.
But this is the first time we have heard from an Apple partner, and Qualcomm’s announcement adds considerable weight to these pessimistic projections. Such a delay would have seemed unthinkable when Apple bought Intel’s 5G modem business for $1BN in 2019. Intel was already shipping smartphone modems, and Apple used them in the iPhone 11 range.
As such, it is difficult to comprehend why the project has proved so challenging. Apple is famed for its tight component integration, so if I were to hazard a guess, this is where I suspect problems have arisen.
On the flip side, Qualcomm’s next-gen 5G modems are extremely impressive, and early leaks suggest there’s still a lot to like about Apple’s iPhone 15 plans. Including redesigned standard models and an all-new iPhone 15 Ultra with titanium chassis and dual-facing front cameras. USB-C is also hotly tipped, but far from certain.
Either way, Apple looks determined to cause a splash in 2023 after underwhelming sales of the iPhone 14 and iPhone 14 Plus.