Apple is reportedly building a "DSLR-style camera mechanism" into the iPhone 18 Pro — and production has already begun.
Your iPhone Is About to Eat Your DSLR's Lunch
Someone on a factory floor is currently assembling what could be the most consequential shift in phone camera hardware in a decade. A new leak indicates production of the iPhone 18 Pro is officially underway, with a completely redesigned camera system described as a "DSLR-style mechanism" at its core.
The language here is deliberately vague, but the implications are significant. A DSLR-style mechanism points toward real optics solving real physics problems — a substantially larger sensor, a true variable aperture for optical depth-of-field control, or an advanced zoom system that doesn't lean on computational tricks to fake reach. For years, smartphone cameras have won by making software do what glass couldn't. This leak suggests Apple is now changing the hardware itself.
If the claim holds, the gap between the phone in your pocket and the camera in your bag shrinks to almost nothing.
Gobble's Take: If your phone can finally produce authentic optical background blur, your favorite f/1.8 prime is about to become a very expensive keychain.
Source: Geeky Gadgets
Canon's APS-C Comeback: 39 Megapixels, Stacked Sensor, Rumored for Mid-2026
Crop-sensor cameras were supposed to be the boring middle child. Canon apparently didn't get that memo. The latest supply chain rumors point to a late May or early June 2026 launch for the Canon EOS R7 Mark II, and the rumored spec sheet reads like a wildlife photographer's wishlist.
The headline figure is a purported 39-megapixel stacked BSI CMOS sensor in an APS-C body — resolution that until recently belonged exclusively to full-frame flagships. "Stacked" is the critical word: stacked sensors allow dramatically faster readout speeds, which means less rolling shutter distortion in video and burst rates that make the original R7's already-rapid fire feel leisurely. Pair that pixel density with the APS-C crop's built-in reach advantage on telephoto lenses, and Canon may be building the most capable wildlife camera at its price point.
Canon is betting that the future of fast doesn't have to be full-frame.
Gobble's Take: 39 megapixels on a crop sensor means you'll be cropping into frames so hard you can read the mood of the bird, not just its species.
Source: Cameraegg
DJI Pocket 4 Missed Its Own Launch Date — Then Leaked Anyway
April 20th came and went with no DJI announcement. What arrived instead was arguably better: a warehouse worker with a camera gave the internet a full unboxing tour of what appear to be final production Pocket 4 units, stacked on pallets and ready to ship.
The leaked photos reveal a new 35mm-equivalent f/1.8 lens — a meaningful optical upgrade over its predecessors that brings more cinematic framing and noticeably better light-gathering in low-exposure situations. Pallet-scale quantities in the warehouse suggest the launch window isn't close, it's already here. DJI just hasn't said so officially yet. Whether the specs live up to the leak will matter, but given how recent DJI launches have gone, availability in key markets may end up being the more interesting story.
The best pocket gimbal camera of 2026 might already be sitting in a box somewhere, waiting for someone to flip a switch.
Gobble's Take: Leaked pallet photos are the new press release — DJI's marketing team is basically redundant at this point.
Source: NEW CAMERA
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