Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

iPhone 17e is eyeing three key upgrades without a price hike

Add as a preferred source on Google
A person holding the Apple iPhone 16e.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Apple may be ready to refresh its cheapest iPhone without raising the sticker. Bloomberg reports the iPhone 17e is lined up as the next entry model, with three upgrades in the works and a $599 starting price expected to stay put.

Those changes are straightforward on paper, a move to the A19 chip, MagSafe returning, and a shift to Apple’s newest in-house cellular and wireless chips. The idea is simple, make the budget iPhone feel closer to the mainstream lineup while keeping it easy to buy.

Recommended Videos

The 17e is framed as a volume phone aimed at emerging markets and enterprise fleets, where price stability and predictable hardware matter as much as any single spec.

A19 should do the heavy lifting

The A19 upgrade is the most obvious win. A newer chip typically brings smoother daily performance and a longer runway for iOS features that lean on on-device processing. It won’t turn the 17e into a Pro, but it should make the basics feel faster.

It also gives Apple room to keep other parts of the phone conservative while still claiming a real generational jump where most people notice it.

MagSafe makes accessories easier

MagSafe coming back is the practical upgrade, especially if you already own MagSafe chargers, stands, or car mounts. It reduces friction, you buy accessories with confidence and you get a cleaner charging routine without hunting for compatible cases.

For shoppers comparing midrange Android phones, it’s a reminder that Apple’s accessory ecosystem is part of the value, not just the handset.

The connectivity swap is the wild card

The most strategic change is the move to Apple’s newest in-house cellular and wireless tech. That could improve efficiency and consistency, but the report doesn’t pin down which regions see the biggest gains, or how battery life shifts.

Rivals may not push hard at the low end this cycle, with Google’s next Pixel a-series update expected to be modest and Samsung focusing higher. If you’re shopping, the smart move is to wait for launch timing, then watch early modem and battery testing before you buy.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Meta’s Ray-Ban Display now types messages from your finger movements
Neural Handwriting is a really cool feature, but Meta opening the Ray-Ban Display to developers is the quiet announcement that turns a clever wearable into a platform with immense possibilities.
Meta Ray-Ban Display and EMG Band.

Six months into its life, the Meta Ray-Ban Display is starting to look less like an experiment, thanks to what is arguably the most significant update Meta has ever pushed for the device. 

The headline feature is Neural Handwriting, which is now available to every Ray-Ban Display owner, having spent its early months in limited access for Messenger and WhatsApp users. 

Read more
WhatsApp is testing disappearing messages that wait for you to actually read them before vanishing
WhatsApp's new After Reading timer deletes messages only after the recipient reads them.
whatsapp-disappearing-messages-after-reading-timer

WhatsApp has always let you send messages that vanish on a timer, but the clock starts the moment you hit send, not when the other person actually read it. That means a message could sit unread for hours and still disappear before anyone sees it.

This is why WhatsApp is testing a new feature called 'After Reading' timer for disappearing messages, spotted in the latest iOS beta update by WABetaInfo.

Read more
Samsung PenUp adds new stylus tricks to your Galaxy phone, if it support an S Pen
Galaxy S Pen users now have more brushes to mess around with
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra in hand

Samsung’s PenUp app is getting a useful creative upgrade for Galaxy users, especially those who use the S Pen for casual digital art. For those unaware, PenUp is Samsung’s app for sketching and coloring templates. It works with touch input, but the latest update should be most useful on Galaxy phones and tablets with S Pen support.

The latest PenUp update, version 3.9.22.23, adds 53 new brushes through the “Download more brushes” option. It also adds Dual brush, a new tool that lets two strokes work together for layered effects.

Read more