A $59 Android phone dressed up as an “iPhone Ultra Mini” isn’t something you stumble across every day. Clocking in at just 3.8 inches, this tiny gadget, put through its paces by Zack Nelson of JerryRigEverything fame, is out to prove a cheap smartphone can still take a beating.
Apple’s iPhone 17 Air is gearing up to turn heads in September 2025, and a new video from Front Page Tech (FPT) gives us the best peek yet at what might be the sleekest iPhone ever.
Apple’s MacBook lineup has always been the shiny gold standard—sleek, smooth, and yeah, pricey enough to make your bank account sweat a little. But word on the street, thanks to supply chain guru Ming-Chi Kuo, is that Apple’s got something fresh in the works: a 13-inch MacBook running on the iPhone 16 Pro’s A18 Pro chip, aiming to bring a wallet-friendly laptop to the table without skimping on that classic Cupertino flair.
A little slip-up on Amazon India has the internet talking, and it’s all thanks to Spigen, the case maker that might’ve just spilled Apple’s big 2025 plans. Their listing for a screen protector casually name-dropped the iPhone 17 and iPhone 17 Pro, hinting that both phones will rock a 6.3-inch screen. That’s a bigger canvas for the regular iPhone, which has been stuck at 6.1 inches for years.
A tech enthusiast named PatRyk recently pulled off a wild feat that feels straight out of Steve Wozniak’s workshop: getting Apple’s iOS to fire up on a first-gen Nintendo Switch. Yep, the same handheld built for Mario Kart and Zelda is now posing as the “world’s slowest iPhone.”
A short film pops up, not from Hollywood’s massive soundstages, but from the compact magic of an iPhone 16 Pro. Big Man, helmed by Oscar-winning director Aneil Karia and featuring UK rap star Michael “Stormzy” Omari, packs a 20-minute story that rivals any theater blockbuster.
The iPhone 17 is still months away, but rumors of the iPhone 20 are lighting up feeds and forums. Leaks from heavyweights like Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman to random Weibo insiders sketch a phone that could flip the smartphone game. Codenamed “Glasswing,” this could be Apple’s daring shot at a future where design and tech melt into one game-changing package.
Adobe has unveiled Project Indigo, a free iPhone camera app that reimagines smartphone photography with a blend of computational wizardry and professional-grade control. Available now on the App Store for iPhone 12 Pro and above or iPhone 14 and newer, with an Android version promised soon, Indigo delivers a natural, SLR-like aesthetic while leveraging advanced computational techniques.