iPhone 17 Pro might add a charging trick that fixes iPhone 12’s folly

News Bureau February 19, 2025, 2:13 pm News

As per a fresh leak coming out of China, the iPhone 17 Pro will be able to charge other devices via reverse wireless power transfer.

Scosche MagicMount without MagSafe Charger fitted.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The iPhone 17 Pro will bring a more versatile flavor of wireless charging. One that not only allows topping up the phone’s internal battery pack, but will also allow accessories — such as earbuds, smartwatches, or even another iPhone — to draw power in wireless mode.

As per a fresh leak coming out of China, the iPhone 17 Pro will be able to charge other devices via reverse wireless power transfer. If the rumor turns out to be true, Apple would essentially fix an oversight that it hasn’t addressed across its smartphone portfolio launched within the past half a decade.

By the time Apple launched the iPhone 12 with MagSafe wireless charging tech, a regulatory filing had spilled the beans on a rather exciting feature. The documents mentioned support for wireless power transfer (WPT), which would technically mean the phone would support two-way wireless power exchange. More patent filings were spotted in 2022, but nothing ever materialized.

Apple MagSafe Battery pack with an iPhone 12 Pro
Apple

Charging another device by pulling juice from the phone’s battery was indeed possible across the iPhone 12 series, but only if you bought one of Apple’s MagSafe wireless power banks. Unlike Samsung phones, which can charge wireless gear such as earbuds via wireless power transfer, Apple never offered that convenience. Not even for its own ecosystem of products.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The upcoming flagship phone from Apple might fix that mistake. As per leakster Instant Digital, Apple has reportedly tested 7.5W wireless power transfer on the iPhone 17 Pro. That’s half the peak wireless transfer rate currently allowed for Qi2-certified wireless charging devices.

Technically, Apple could have implemented this feature years ago and done it better than rivals. For example, Samsung’s latest Galaxy S25 series phone can reach the peak Qi2 wireless power transfer rates, but they lack magnets above the wireless charging coil.

Charging Galaxy Watch 4 with Galaxy S22 Ultra
This could be the future on iPhone 17 Pro. Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

As a result, whatever device you place atop the rear panel, it tends to slip off, unless the surface contact is flat between each device. I loved the convenience of charging my Galaxy Watch by simply placing it atop the Galaxy S22 Ultra, but I had to keep the two in a spot where they can rest still due to the bulging biosensor assembly on the smartwatch’s underside. Wireless earbud cases, on the other hand, worked just fine.

Apple’s smartphones have had a magnetic ring that can technically allow a more secure power transfer experience for years now. If Apple had enabled reverse wireless power share for its ecosystem of devices, the experience would’ve been much better than any of its Android rivals.

Look no further than the neat wireless power transfer system between the Apple Pencil and iPads, which also involves magnetic bonding between the two devices so they don’t slip off and remain locked in place. It would be interesting to see how Apple implements reverse wireless charging on the iPhone 17 Pro, assuming it happens in the first place, later this year.

Nadeem Sarwar

Nadeem is a tech journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started writing…

Apple’s Visual Intelligence coming to iPhone 15 Pro

Using Visual Intelligence on an iPhone 16 Pro showing Google search results.

Visual Intelligence is one of the standout features that debuted with the iPhone 16 and iPhone 16 Pro series last fall. This feature was widely believed to be limited to iPhones equipped with Camera Control (and Apple Intelligence), as no previous iPhone models had this capability. However, the newly announced iPhone 16e also supports Visual Intelligence despite lacking Camera Control.

Now comes the word: two other phones, the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, will soon support Visual Intelligence. This news comes from Daring Fireball’s John Gruber, who says Apple indicated the feature will launch in a future iOS update, probably iOS 18.4.

Read more

Apple missed a cute, fitting opportunity with the iPhone 16e’s name

A group of iPhone 16e phones arranged in a pattern.

The names of our smartphones matter. Too clunky and we forget, too wordy and we don’t remember, or too bizarre and we won’t say it. They don’t have to mean anything at all, but they need to fit. The new iPhone 16e’s name fits, far more so than the expected alternatives, and it was one of Apple’s best decisions with the phone. But there’s another name I would have preferred even more.

You’re family now

Since rumors began more than a year ago, it was assumed the iPhone 16e would be called the iPhone SE 4, or the iPhone SE (2025), which mostly followed the trend of previous devices in the range. The original iPhone SE was followed by the iPhone SE (2020), then the iPhone SE (2022), so either name was a logical path for Apple to take.

Read more

The iPhone 16e hints at 5G limits for the iPhone 17 Air

Apple C1 modem

Apple announced the iPhone 16e earlier this week. As expected, the company's latest budget smartphone features its first custom-designed modem chip, known as the C1. However, this chip does not support ultra-fast mmWave 5G technology, indicating that another upcoming iPhone model may also lack this capability.

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, the ultra-thin iPhone 17 Air, expected to launch this fall alongside the rest of the iPhone 17 lineup, is also likely to include the C1 chip. This suggests that it too will probably not support mmWave 5G.

Read more