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The Korean based ETNews is reporting that Apple’s next-gen iPhone, tentatively dubbed the iPhone 5, will utilize “liquid metal” alloys as a means to produce a device that is thinner, lighter, and more importantly, more durable in the face of drops and other damage inducing event...
Apple's next iPhone is once again rumored to sport a metal back using tech Apple's had a license to since 2010, but has not used much.

Will the next generation iPhone 5,1 switch from glass and stainless steel to something infinitely more cool — Liquidmetal? Who know, but that’s what’s making the rumor rounds this morning. It’s easy to see why: Apple purchased perpetual, exclusive consumer electronic righ...

Liquid metal could make your next iPhone silky smooth and incredibly strong. While it may look pretty, Apple’s decision to build the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S almost entirely out of glass means that the handset isn’t really cut out for the dings and drops that our smartphones often have ...

A rumor surfacing Wednesday has both Apple and Samsung turning towards exotic materials for their next-generation smartphones. Apple would purportedly take advantage of its Liquidmetal patent deal, ETNews said, to get a shell that was both thin and light but resistant to external damage. The desi...

Liquidmetal is in the process of shipping commercial parts to "several of its customers world-wide," according to a press release. The customers are unidentified, but Liquidmetal says that it in fact began delivering parts in December, and has more shipments scheduled into the future. Production ...

Apple partner Liquidmetal Technologie has begun shipping commercial parts to "several" customers, but the company hasn't named any specifically, reports "Appleinsider" (http://www.appleinsider.com).Liquidmetal revealed that delivery parts actually began to customers in December. B...

Last year, Apple signed an exclusive agreement to use Liquidmetal - a high-strength metal that is light and can be processed like plastic - in their future products. An ex Liquidmetal exec thought Apple would make iPhones out of it. A source speaking to MacTrast, though, says that Apple’s ...
Last August, it was announced that Apple had signed an exclusive partnership With Liquidmetal Technologies for the use of the Liquidmetal in the field of electronics. That alloy has exceptional proprieties because it is amorphous once it has cooled down, while other metals keep a crystalline stru...

Posted by Dennis SellersApple is hiring a number of experts on amorphous metals, as the company looks to create hardware constructed from a newly licensed, super-durable custom metal alloy known as “Liquidmetal,” reports AppleInsider.