The launch of the IPhone 7 is without doubt the event of the year as far as smart phone users and Apple fans are concerned, as a result the date from which they can pre-order the phone is naturally a huge deal for all concerned. In a piece of news that will certainly create ripples among IPhone fans, Apple watcher Evan Blass has today confirmed via his Twitter account that the company would be taking pre-orders from September this year for the IPhone 7. He tweeed, "Confirmed: Pre-orders start on the 9th. You can extrapolate the launch event date from there." It was a follow up to an earlier tweet in which he had stated that pre-orders will start on 'the week of September 12'.
He had tweeted the information on the 28th of July but the news has been picked up by mainstream tech publications today and considering his track record on the matter, there is hardly any doubt that the pre-order dates would indeep be the 9th of September. TheTechNews reported, "The Apple iPhone 7 is a standalone news amongst all the lined up smartphones this year it even surpasses the Galaxy S7 Edge and Note 7 in popularity, and Evan Blass has recommended that the smartphone may be up for pre-order on September 9th. The LEAKSTAR posted a tweet which said, "Confirmed: Pre-orders start on the 9th. You can extrapolate the launch event date from there." Blass had prior tipped the smartphone to be released in the week of September 12th and later determined the date to be September 16th. This matches up to the shipping of the iPhone 6S and 6S Plus, which were additionally released around the same time a year ago,"
The report went on to add, "It was also rumored a Pro version of the iPhone 7 alongside with the standard and the Plus version. It was rumored to have a dual camera lens on the Pro version of the latest iPhone 7! However, images purported to be of the iPhone 7 Pro has been posted online and it speculated a powerful chip and RAM to provide the dual camera function. The new iPhone 7 will have the 32GB of built-in storage instead of the 16GB which kills most of the storage from the beginning."