Apple is reportedly preparing big changes for its 2020 iPhone screens

Apple's iPhone release strategy used to be extremely predictable until just a couple of years ago, when the company's first notched model broke the monotony, expanding the family from two to three variants. 2017's iPhone X was followed by two OLED bad boys and a single LCD model in 2018, but Apple even reportedly considered switching to an all-OLED lineup.
The same story was rumored to happen this year for a short while, although most reliable insiders and experienced analysts claimed from the get-go this ambitious plan was unlikely to come to fruition earlier than 2020. Digitimes today supports that theory, already adding expected screen sizes for Apple's next iPhone generation after the next one into the gossip mix.

No changes this year, big 2020 transformation
Even though this publication's "sources from Taiwan's handset component supply chain" have proven notoriously fickle over the years, sometimes getting their predictions right and sometimes not, we have every reason to trust the forecast for Apple's 2019 iPhone screen technology and diagonal sizes. That's because this is by no means the first time we're hearing the company plans to release an iPhone XR sequel with a 6.1-inch LCD panel and iPhone XS/XS Max OLED follow-ups measuring 5.8 and 6.5 inches respectively.
What we absolutely cannot be certain of is Apple's 2020 game plan. Digitimes points to three OLED models with 5.42, 6.06, and 6.67-inch displays, which means the iPhone XS would go a lot smaller, the XRwould essentially stay the same (while leaving the inferior LCD technology behind), and the XS Max would further max out with a screen size trudging towards tablet territory.
Does something like that make sense? It's hard to say without knowing more about notches or bezels, and unfortunately, Digitimes isn't making any educated guesses on those two fronts. If you ask us, 2020 should definitely be the year of true "all-screen" handsets, so there's a good chance that extra-large 6.67-incher will be able to squeeze the added real estate into a smaller body than last year's XS Max. Which still doesn't explain why Apple would want to go as low as 5.42 inches for one 2020 OLED iPhone model. Isn't bigger better in the company review.
Samsung for the win
It's no big secret that Samsung's prosperity is connected to Apple's, but while recently shrinking iPhone sales numbers have caused trouble for both tech giants, their collaboration is unlikely to be perturbed by LG or BOE's small OLED progresses. Apparently, Samsung is looking at taking the lion's share of OLED panel supplies for 2019 and 2020 iPhones after holding a monopoly until not long ago.
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