The iPhone 20 in 2027 with a big turning point in the 20th.
The iPhone 20 in 2027, with a big turning point in 20 years, when Apple may cut all its dumping buttons and change the world with a seamless glass machine.
If back in 2017, the world had already been stunned by the coming of the iPhone X that had cut the Home button once, but in 2027, the iPhone's 20th anniversary agenda, there was a wave of news that Apple was preparing to do even more challenging things by skipping the iPhone 19 model to the iPhone 20 with a design known as the All-Glass Unibody.
Imagine a phone with a whole mirror, no metal edges, no wire holes, and, importantly, no push button. This is not only a matter of beauty, but of engineering reasons. Because the glass allows 5G signals to be transported better than metal, and the absence of a button gap will help with complete dust resistance, as well as reduce the likelihood of button mechanics losing long-term use.
The behind-the-scenes technology is Project Bongo, which uses a vibrating system to simulate the feeling that we really press a button when the surface is smooth, like the Home button on the iPhone 7 that we used to use, but this will be used on the whole machine, including trying to hide the Face ID system under the screen to get a really notched screen.
However, coins always have two sides. In the corner of the user, the first concern is durability. Because when the machine is a mirror and the screen curves to the edge, this means that there is no space for impact from the metal frame. If dropped, the likelihood of heavy damage to the machine is very high, including cooling problems, because the glass conducts heat worse than aluminum, which may affect the operation of AI that requires heavy processing in the future.
For Thais, the thing to consider is a repair that should cost more according to complexity, and finding a case to wear that will become a difficult problem. Because if the case is too thick, it may not touch the dummy button system. There is also a difficulty for the visually impaired person that relies on touching the real button to indicate the location of use. Smoother touch systems may be more difficult to answer this problem.
So the conclusion of the iPhone 20 is not just a specification upgrade, but a reset of how to use the smartphone again, as Apple has done in the past. But the key question is, on a day when technology is far ahead, are we ready to trade the same convenience and durability for these risky innovations?













































































