Video: first hands-on experience with iPhone 8 simulator

Apple's new iPhone 8 should feature a completely redesigned design with a screen covering almost the entire front

panel, curved OLED screen format 2.5D, without a physical Home button, an in-display fingerprint scanner and many other innovations. Earlier this week, well-known whistleblower Benjamin Geskin posted on the Internet video files of an iPhone 8 simulator made on a computer-controlled machine.

No need to read between the lines of this article.in order to fetch any additional information - we are talking only about the iPhone 8 simulator, it is only worth looking at it on the screen. This is not a real working device and not even one of the prototypes of the future iPhone 8.

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Video here:

Let the Apple logo onback panel: this is just an imitator of the future model, made on the basis of information voiced at this point in time in numerous leaks and rumors.

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With this in mind, the video clip gives goodan idea of ​​what the future iPhone 8 will look like with a screen on the entire front panel. Be sure to check out another iPhone simulator, which was published last week, which also claims to be the final approved design of the iPhone 8 anniversary model.

It is claimed that Apple has tested 10 different prototypes of the new iPhone model.

On some of them, most likely, the sensorTouch ID was located on the rear panel, in case Apple attempts to integrate the next generation of fingerprint sensors in the display are unsuccessful. To get a clearer picture of what the iPhone 8 device looks like with the sensor located on the back, we suggest viewing photos of the iPhone 8 clone from China.

Now we can only say one thing – It's highly likely that Apple will unveil its lineup of new 2017 iPhone models at a special event in September.

In addition to the new redesigned design andOLED screen on the entire front panel, it is expected that iPhone 8 will be able to wirelessly charge the battery, a 3D scanner for recognizing the user's face, the A11 processor, made by a 10-nanometer process and developed by Apple, augmented reality and, of course , iOS 11, which Apple will unveil at WWDC next month.