Wozniak: White Apple iPhone 4 Coming Soon

The white iPhone 4 could be coming soon, as manufacturing problems are resolved, according to Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak suggested in a live interview that the white iPhone 4 had encountered manufacturing problems, dovetailing with persistent rumours behind the smartphone variant’s persistent delays.

In a 30 January studio talk with Engadget, Wozniak said he thought the white iPhone 4 would nonetheless ship soon. “They’re going to become available,” he told the audience, after repeatedly suggesting that he had scarce information about Apple’s inner workings. “All indications from Verizon and GSM suppliers” are that “white iPhones are coming”.

Photo problems

Wozniak’s own white iPhone 4, conveniently on his person, had been assembled from parts ordered online from a teenager. “It takes bad flash photos,” he said. “The picture with flash was like taken through cellophane.” If that wasn’t bad enough, the smartphone’s proximity sensor is also faulty.

The white parts in Wozniak’s kit had apparently come from someone at Foxconn, which manufactures iPhones and other Apple devices. Although the black iPhone 4 remains a front-and-centre part of Apple’s product lineup, the option to purchase a white iPhone 4 disappeared from the company’s website some time ago.

In December, the blog 9to5Mac reported that the white iPhone 4 would appear in spring 2011, based off a photograph of alleged Apple Store signage with the words, in small type: “The white iPhone 4 will be available Spring 2011.”

Delays

Despite repeated delays, Apple has kept silent on the reasons behind the white iPhone 4’s supposed manufacturing difficulties. In October, “a source with connections at Apple” told the blog Cult of Mac that ambient light leaked into the white iPhone 4’s case, affecting its ability to take “accurate pictures”. Apple planned on delaying the smartphone, the blog continued, until the camera sensor had been isolated.

The iPhone 4’s body incorporates two panes of chemically strengthened aluminosilicate glass, rimmed by a stainless-steel band. Other sources attributed the smartphone’s delay to issues with whitening the glass to the desired thickness and opacity.