An iPhone 16 Pro prototype running an internal build labeled "iOS 19" has apparently leaked, offering a rare glimpse at the operating system Apple developed before scrapping the name entirely and introducing the controversial Liquid Glass design with iOS 26.

First reported by AppleInsider, the prototype appears to reveal what iOS 26 could have looked like if Apple had stuck with sequential numbering and skipped the controversial visual overhaul. The device runs an InternalUI build designated "iOS 19.0" that looks almost identical to iOS 18, with none of the glass-like transparency effects that defined Apple's WWDC announcement in June.
The prototype includes Apple's Livability app, an internal tool engineers use to toggle feature flags during development. Screenshots suggest the app contains references to features apparently planned for WWDC 2025, fall 2026, and even further into the future. Notably, flags for "Solarium" and "Sensitive UI" appear in the build – these are both said to be internal codenames tied to Liquid Glass, but enabling them produces no visible changes to the interface.
Another intriguing find is the presence of PurpleRestore 4, a mobile version of Apple's internal firmware restoration tool that has never been documented on an iPhone before. PurpleRestore was previously thought to have been a Mac-only utility used by Apple engineers to flash firmware to devices, but its mobile equivalent suggests Apple used it to develop its iOS 18 feature that enables the use of another iPhone or iPad to restore a device.
The prototype also reveals feature flags for WWDC 2026 and 2027 development milestones, pointing to planned improvements in Accessibility, Messages, Photos, and Wallet. References to Apple Watch's Workout Buddy feature and various Apple Intelligence testing utilities also appear in the build.
Apple ultimately jumped from iOS 18 straight to iOS 26 at WWDC 2025, as part of its decision to adopt year-based numbering across all its platforms. This prototype appears to confirm that iOS 19 was an active internal designation, suggesting Apple made the rebrand relatively late in the development cycle.
The leaked device also raises questions about exactly when Apple committed to the Liquid Glass overhaul. With the visual redesign code already present but disabled in this iOS 19 build, it appears Apple was testing both the new interface and a more conservative iOS 18-style design in parallel, before making a final decision.

















