Skip to main content

Apple patents strange iPhone-MacBook hybrid charging dock

A recently published patent revealed that Apple has been exploring the idea of a new iPhone and iPad dock. But this would be no ordinary dock — according to the patent filing, the accessory would look a lot like a MacBook.

Recommended Videos

The patent depicts a couple of versions of the dock: one for an iPhone, and one for an iPad. In both cases, you place your device into the housing of the dock, which then charges your device and incorporates it into a MacBook-like experience.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

In the iPhone version, the phone is slotted into the palm rest area, taking the place normally occupied by a MacBook’s trackpad. In such a situation, the iPhone itself would become the trackpad. The iPhone’s display is mirrored onto the charging dock’s screen, and you can control it with the in-built keyboard. The other version depicted in the patent uses an iPad as a display, fitting it into the vertical side of the dock.

The interesting thing about these ideas is that both the iPhone or iPad and the charging dock would work together, each shouldering different workloads. Apple explains in the patent that the dock could have “limited or no data processing resources,” allowing the processor in your iPhone or iPad to power the whole setup. At the same time, the dock could include a GPU, memory, speakers and a display to enhance and extend the typical iOS experience.

As the patent explains, “The electronic accessory device [i.e. the charging dock] can be considered a ‘thin’ device, in that it extends the functionality of another device but is inoperable by itself as a stand-alone device.” This is not a new kind of laptop that pairs up with your phone — it’s a strange, hybrid device that sits halfway between an iPhone and a MacBook.

That sets Apple’s patent apart from a similar idea tried a couple of years ago by Razer. The company’s Project Linda also incorporated a phone into the body of the “laptop” but in Razer’s case, the phone was intended to be a trackpad-touchscreen hybrid (sort of like the Touch Bar in Apple’s MacBook Pro). All the processing power in Project Linda was to be provided by the laptop.

Seeing as this is a patent filing — and a very experimental one at that — it may never see the light of day. If it does ever get released, it’ll be one of the most unusual devices Apple has ever produced. Keep your eyes peeled.

Alex Blake
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
Apple hid one of the best features of the M4 MacBook Pro
Someone using a MacBook Pro M4.

Apple's new M4 MacBook Pro is great. It earned a rare Editors' Choice badge in our M4 MacBook Pro review, and it's cemented itself as one of the best laptops you can buy. Even with so much going for it, Apple hid one of the most exciting developments it made with its new range of laptops -- the use of quantum dot technology.

Like the last few generations of MacBook Pro displays, the M4 range is using a mini-LED backlight. There's no tandem OLED like we saw on the iPad Pro earlier this year. However, according to Ross Young, CEO of Display Supply Chain Consultants (DSCC), Apple added a layer of quantum dots to the M4 MacBook Pro. This, according to the display expert, offers better color gamut and motion performance compared to the solution Apple previously used.

Read more
MacBook Air vs. MacBook Pro: how to easily decide which to buy
Apple's 15-inch MacBook Air placed on a desk with its lid closed.

When it comes to picking the best MacBook for you, the eternal debate between the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro rages on. Both laptops are at the top of their game right now, and that can sometimes make the decision between the two even trickier, especially when you consider the timing.

Choosing between options as extreme as the 16-inch MacBook M4 Pro and an M1 MacBook Air isn't where the problems lie. It's probably obvious which of those is right for you based on the thousands of dollars separating the two.

Read more
Google Gemini arrives on iPhone as a native app
the Google extensions feature on iPhone

Google announced Thursday that it has released a new native Gemini app for iOS that will give iPhone users free, direct access to the chatbot without the need for a mobile web browser.

The Gemini mobile app has been available for Android since February, when the platform transitioned from the older Bard branding. However, iOS users could only access the AI on their phones through either the mobile Google app or via a web browser. This new app provides a more streamlined means of chatting with the bot as well as a host of new (to iOS) features.

Read more