Apple’s Next Big Leap: Clues Point to Foldable iPhones and Touchscreen MacBooks
ऐपल के फोल्डेबल आईफोन और टचस्क्रीन मैकबुक के मिले संकेत
Recent software updates suggest Apple is finally preparing to break its own design rules with flexible displays and touch-enabled computing.
For years, Apple has maintained a rigid distinction between its mobile and desktop ecosystems. While competitors flooded the market with foldable screens and hybrid laptops, Cupertino stayed the course with the classic, non-touch interface. However, the latest evidence buried deep within the code of iOS 27 and macOS 27 suggests that the status quo is about to be shattered.
The Software Breadcrumbs
The clues were hidden in plain sight. Developers digging into the latest software updates found explicit references to hardware capable of supporting multiple displays—a prerequisite for foldable technology. Even more telling is the new "iPhone Mirroring" feature on Mac, which has been expanded to support larger, more complex screen layouts. This isn't just about convenience; it’s a foundational change to how Apple handles screen orientation and adaptive sizing.
Apple is now actively pushing developers to create applications that scale fluidly across any screen size or orientation without breaking. This push toward a responsive, universal UI is a clear signal that the hardware supporting these apps is about to change shape.
Finally, a Touchscreen Mac?
Perhaps the biggest shift is the emergence of touch-friendly gestures within macOS 27. For a company that once famously dismissed the idea of a touchscreen laptop as "ergonomically terrible," this represents a massive pivot. If these software hooks are any indication, the next generation of MacBooks might finally allow users to interact with their screens as intuitively as they do with an आईफ़ोन.
Why It Matters
This isn't just about adding a hinge or a digitizer to a screen; it’s about Apple acknowledging a shift in how we work. With global consumers increasingly demanding devices that bridge the gap between tablets and traditional workstations, Apple’s rigid silos were starting to look dated.
By testing these features in software long before the hardware hits the shelves, the company is ensuring that when they finally launch a foldable device, the ecosystem will be ready. For users in markets like India, where mobile-first computing is the norm, a foldable device that doesn't sacrifice the power of a Mac could change the game entirely. We are likely looking at a future where the line between your pocket device and your workstation blurs into one seamless, foldable experience.
We expect to see more leaks as the hardware development cycle matures. Until then, these code-level hints are the most concrete evidence we have that Apple is finished playing it safe with its industrial design.
Ananya Iyer covers global affairs with an Indian lens for PoliticalPedia.