On Thursday, Kuo said in a research note that Apple is expecting to use the sort of Type-C connector of this year's iPhones. The note signifies particularly opposes a questionable claim that was made earlier this week, which reported that Apple could discard the Lightning port with the current iPhone 8, instead of changing to the same USB-C port found on the company's recent MacBooks.

According to CNBC, the new iPhone will be expected to show up at Apple's tenth anniversary release of the notable device in September, which will use the Type-C Power Delivery for a quicker charging. But one of the potential advantage for changing to USB-C is a quick transfer of HD videos.

Kuo also noted that the safety and stable of data transmission during a quick charge are vital feature for Apple to nail in the switch. Kuo believes that the company will embrace the power administration from Texas Instruments and power display chips from Cypress.

Apple Insider added that the Lightning port is marginally thinner that USB-C that permits Apple to gather royalties on its Made for iPhone program, which licenses the use of the Lightning port. After the informative notes and nailing predictions of the previous Apple items, Kuo gained a lot of respect in the tech community.

Aside from the quick charging though Lightning, Apple is additionally expecting to welcome the contact-based wireless charging for each of the three iPhone models this year, including iPhone 7s and iPhone 7s Plus. The addition will permit the clients to extract the device by simply setting it on a perfect charging cushion.

The forward-facing camera is expected to see a major update with a progressive 3D facial recognition technology, taking into another secure biometric login strategy. The device is also expected to ditch the physical home button that has been found on each iPhone to date by replacing it with a display function that will be placed underneath the OLED panel, which dedicated to the system capacities with virtual buttons.