After Apple was able to sell a combined unit figure of 10 million 
iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus units in just three days, the company will no
 doubt be contemplating on how it is going to break its sales record 
when it gears up to launch the successor to its flagship device, the 
iPhone 7.
Rumor has it that the iPhone 7 is also going to be called the iPhone 6s and
 compared to the upcoming device's predecessors, it will possess an even
 slimmer form factor, which might worry future customers due to past 
incidents of the expensive iPhones being bent after enough force was 
exerted on them.
However, it is expected that the company will be retaining the same 
screen sizes as the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus, which means that it is 
possible that the iPhone 7 will also be shipping out in two variants, 
although this has not been confirmed by Apple. However, as far as future
 smartphones go, they are always assimilated with better performing 
components so for the iPhone 7, the chipset is likely to be none other 
than the company's A9 SoC, which is reportedly being produced by 
Samsung.
After the Cupertino tech giant replaced TSMC with the South Korean phone maker as
 its chief manufacturer and supplier, the performance delivered by the 
upcoming device will likely obscure everything that the iPhone 6 and 
iPhone 6 Plus were able to achieve. It has been reported that TSMC will 
be making 20 percent of the company's chips while Samsung will be making the remaining 80 percent.
The iPhone 7 will most likely be given a 2 GB upgrade when RAM is concerned. It has also been suggested that Apple will be increasing the maximum storage capacity on its iPhones from 128 GB to 256 GB,
 although those devices will undoubtedly be stamped with a ridiculous 
price tag. As for the platform, the iPhone 7 will most likely be running
 iOS 9 out-of-the-box, and Apple is speculated to maintain the same 
timeline that it undertook for the release of its large screen iPhones 
(September).

 
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