This week, Apple has quietly kicked off the public beta of its latest iPhone software, marking a major milestone in what could be the most visually ambitious and AI-integrated update in the company’s history.

Even though the final build won’t officially drop until September, the early access version is here for the bold and the curious.

A Design You Can Feel

The update arrives roughly six weeks after its Worldwide Developers Conference debut, staying true to Apple’s annual release rhythm.

However, the public beta came slightly later than usual, which drew speculation about internal polishing and system compatibility adjustments (TechRadar).

This is a clean philosophical shift and quite possibly Apple’s most experimental swing since iOS 7’s polarising flat design.

The main feature of iOS 26 is a new design style that is called “Liquid Glass.” Apple says that it feels modern and exciting. Every screen in iOS 26 looks shiny and smooth and the app icons seem to float; the clock looks see-through and stretched, and the homescreen feels like something made for Apple’s Vision Pro headset.

The new look of iOS 26 will either amaze you or confuse you, depending on who you ask. But Apple clearly believes that this shiny and smooth design will soon feel normal for everyone.

AI That Stays On-Device And Out of Your Cloud

Behind the shiny design is something much more important, and that is Apple Intelligence. Apple’s long-awaited step into AI has finally arrived and now, it’s doing more than ever expected.

With iOS 26, Apple is building AI features right into the iPhone itself. You can now rewrite, summarize, translate, and even write things together with ChatGPT, which is now smoothly built into Siri and other tools that are across the system.

And if that sounds too good to be true, Apple’s AI mostly runs directly on your iPhone. That means that it doesn’t always need the internet or send your data to the cloud. It keeps things private and at the same time it will do smart tasks like creating custom emojis (Genmoji), translating speech in real time, even when you’re offline and much more.

The Catch (Not Every iPhone Gets the Future)

Many of the flagship Apple Intelligence features are locked behind the A17 Pro chip or newer, which means that only iPhone 15 Pro users or the soon-to-launch iPhone 17 lineup will experience the full package. For owners of the older iPhones, this beta feels more like a goodbye.

From a performance standpoint, the public beta feels surprisingly stable. Some testers have reported lag when they use Liquid Glass in tandem with accessibility features, while others note their battery drains faster when they use the new features. That’s par for the course with any beta, but with this much visual overhead and machine learning working in the background, the bugs may hit harder than usual.

Apple’s Real Move

But here’s the twist. For all its beauty and power, this beta feels like Apple is chasing Apple, specifically the version of itself that dares to define what comes next. The Liquid Glass aesthetic could easily become the foundation for visionOS and macOS unification.

The on-device AI framework hints at a future where your phone works like a personal assistant that will help you do most of your work.

Beta as Trailer, Not Just Test

One thing is clear that the iOS 26 public beta is a glimpse into the future Apple envisions for the iPhone, iPad, and perhaps every screen-based device it touches.

Judging by this week’s rollout, users should brace for a September packed with intelligent features and a flood of bold opinions.


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