As part of the America 250 celebrations, a time capsule has been buried in Philadelphia and is set to be reopened in a further 250 years. When our ancestors in 2276 crack open the 900lb parcel, they’ll find an iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange. Hoping that an iPhone can turn on in 2276 so historians can look through the “digital artefacts” in the Notes app is optimistic, but the challenges faced by the future highlight Apple’s restrictive practices today.
iPhone Battery Chemistry and Long-Term Storage Risks
The lithium-ion battery currently powering the iPhone 17 Pro represents a fundamental failure point for long-term data archival due to chemical degradation.
250 years is a long time for a battery to be sitting inside a consumer electronics device. While it may not be going through regular charging cycles (which preserve battery chemistry and reduce the risk of damage) without careful management, it’s unlikely to be usable in 2276. Typically, lithium-ion batteries can stay “on a shelf” for four years, but even then will suffer from capacity loss. It is recommended that any batteries in devices that will be stored for significant periods should undergo a maintenance routine to maintain their health by charging them to half capacity every six months.
Apple has made it easier to replace a battery in the current iPhone models, although you will need to break into the device, remove and replace the adhesive around the screen to disconnect it, leverage it away from the frame, and then unscrew five different sizes fo screw to gain access. Once replaced, you need to connect to the internet, install the latest version of iOS, and run the proprietary Repair Assistant software to refresh the digital tethering demanded by Apple.
Unless they are still making iPhone 17 Pro batteries in the 2270s, our future iPhone owners won’t be able to turn on their new phone without assistance from Apple’s online service.
Proprietary Verification Gateways and iPhone Platform Control
Apple’s mandatory server-side activation requirements transform modern smartphones into dependent nodes that cease to function without persistent connectivity to proprietary verification gateways.
Assuming the battery is fine (and all the other electrical components and solder have survived the long journey through time), how will the iPhone be activated? To get the full benefit of an iPhone, Apple requires you to activate the smartphone. This is typically done by taking the iPhone online, or pairing it with another Apple device that can connect to Apple’s servers.
Without a connection to Apple, the iPhone is going to be a mere shadow of itself. Offline apps and functions will still be accessible, but anything that requires working outside the phone will be locked down. Potentially, this is why the digital artefacts in the time capsule are only in the Notes app; there’s no need to ask Apple for permission to access the iPhone’s core functionality to open them.
iPhone App Store Infrastructure and Centralized Software Survival
The centralized architecture of the App Store creates a single point of failure that prevents third-party software from surviving beyond the lifecycle of Apple’s own service support.
Apps are the biggest addition to the iPhone; arguably, it is apps that define what the iPhone can achieve. Without apps, the iPhone is little more than a glorified PDA that offers less functionality than 1991’s Psion Series 3. Not only does the iPhone need to be activated, it also needs the App Store infrastructure to be sitting there waiting.
Apple examines each application and each update of every third-party app, and if these don’t meet Apple’s definition of acceptable, then they are not allowed to be installed. Alternative app stores still require Apple to notarise every single app before they can be made available. If there are no Apple App Store services in 2276, our historical iPhone 17 Pro has another insurmountable problem.
iPhone’s Time Capsule Adventure Highlights The Question Of Ownership
Perhaps the iPhone 17 Pro has not been included in the time capsule to show the wonders of the iPhone and an American company’s technological innovation. Perhaps it’s in the time capsule to show that, while millions of Americans owned iPhones in 2026, they all required Apple’s tacit permission to do anything with them.
Apple has gifted an iPhone to 2276, but it has kept the keys to unlock it. That’s a problem not just for our future, but for today. Keys issued by Apple can be revoked by Apple.










