When director Joseph Kosinski and cinematographer Claudio Miranda set out to film the upcoming Apple Original film F1: The Movie, they faced a unique challenge. How could they capture authentic point-of-view racing footage from inside Formula One cars without compromising the vehicles’ precise engineering specifications? The solution required Apple to build something that never existed before — a custom camera module using iPhone components that could withstand the extreme conditions of professional racing, according to new report. And so were born custom iPhone cameras in F1.
iPhone parts go into custom cameras for F1 racing scenes
Photo: Apple TV+
June 17, 2009: Apple releases iPhone OS 3, the third iteration of its mobile operating system (and the last before a name change). It adds Cut, Copy and Paste functionality, among the most requested features since the original iPhone shipped in 2007.![Elevate your iPad with this lightweight origami case/stand [Review] ★★★★☆ Moft Dynamic Folio](https://www.cultofmac.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Moft-Dynamic-Folio-review-a-1020x574.jpg)
June 16, 2010: Apple reports a massive surge of interest in its latest smartphone, with iPhone 4 preorders racking up 600,000 sales on their first day.
June 15, 2011: Three people get sentenced to prison in China for leaking information about the iPad 2 prior to its release.
June 14, 2007: Paul McCartney sings his new song “Dance Tonight” in an iPod + iTunes ad, the latest in a series of Apple spots starring music industry legends.