Showing posts with label rumours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rumours. Show all posts

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Updated: iPad 3 rumours: what you need to know

The Apple iPad 2 has been out for almost a year now, so it's nearly time to say hello to iPad 3.
The web is teeming with rumours about the new iPad 3 processor, cameras and display, so we've gathered together as many details as we can on its possible specifications.
Of course, some of these can be taken with a pinch of salt, but there's definite patterns occuring and we'd say the final iPad 3 release won't be that far removed from many of these rumours
So what's the word on the street about the next iPad?
The iPad 3 release date looks set for March or April 2012, with an iPad 3 announcement in March to coincide with the release of iOS 5.1.
Website YourDailyMac has unearthed iOS 5.1 carrier profiles which carry the possible iPad 3 release date of 9 March 2012 in their names.
However, we'd expect the iPad 3 announcement to be in February, with the iPad 3 US release date in early March and the iPad 3 UK release date in late March.
Apple news site iMore says the announcement will be 7 March, citing sources "which have proved reliable in the past" have confirmed the date ahead of any official announcement from Cupertino.
Digitimes reported in late November 2011 that panel makers had already started shipping panels for the new iPad 3 - a million in October and two million in November.
Foxconn, Apple's major manufacturing partner, is said to have started production of the iPad 3 in January. 2012. A source at one of Apple's partners also told Bloomberg also stated that the company began production of the iPad 3 in January, with a view to reaching full volumes in February.
Digitimes says the new model is expected to meet the heady heights of 9.5 to 9.8 million units over the course of Q1 2012.
It's probable that the iPad 3 will have a brand spanking new processor, Apple's A6 - which will surely be a quad-core ARM-based processor. Quad-core designs are coming from various ARM partners and the Tegra 3 has already been launched by Nvidia, as well as the Snapdragon S4 from Qualcomm.
According to the Korea Times in November 2011, the A6 processors are to be manufactured by Samsung, despite the companies' ongoing patent battles.
A retina display was widely predicted for the iPad 2, but of course the current iPad doesn't have a double-resolution display: for now, that's something you'll only get in the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4S. Could an iPad 3 Retina Display be on the way? It's the very first thing on our iPad 3 wish list.
The exciting news is that it looks as though it is happening, with Apple reportedly testing suppliers' current shipments of 2048 x 1536 resolution 9.7-inch displays. Now that iBooks 2 has been launched (as of 19 January 2012), we've also seen further references to 2x iPad screen images - these will, most likely, be for iPad 3.
However, it's not always been plain sailing for the display - rumours continued over the summer and autumn of 2011 that the retina display in the iPad 3 was continuing to be a challenge.
Back in May 2011, we reported that the iPad 3 could launch with a Samsung-made AMOLED screen, following rumours that Apple was in talks on the matter with Samsung execs. There have also been more LG and Samsung rumours, too.
However, according to the Wall Street Journal in late November 2011, Sharp will manufacture panels for the device. Apparently Apple is investing in infrastructure at Sharp's LCD plant. Further rumours said that Apple is looking to implement some nifty dual LED lightbar technology into the iPad 3, apparently in a bid to counter-balance the brightness issue that the Apple tablet may have, due to its super-high pixel density.
A part leak in early December again pointed to a Sharp-manufactured 2048x1536 retina display and dual lightbar.


iPAD 2: We wanted a retina screen, but didn't get it - what about for iPad 3?
An iPad case maker in China, Chinee, has started to sell a cover for a device it's calling 'iPad 2S'.
Case manufactures have a good history of being on the money when it comes to pre-empting Apple's hardware plans, with last year's iPhone 5-gate being an exception to the rule.
There is no confusion of where the iPad 2S name derives from – following the way of the iPhone as we saw Apple announce the iPhone 4S last year.
According to several rumours the iPad 2S will sport the same look as the 2, with a boost in internal gubbins but slightly more portly in depth.
Persistent rumours suggest LTE support will be provided for the US. Great for the US, though it will leave the UK behind as there's no 4G connectivity as yet. Cnet.com believes that the new iPad may feature a Qualcomm 4G LTE Gobi 4000 chip.
On 14 February 2012, the Wall Street Journal reported that: "Verizon Communications Inc. and AT&T Inc. will sell a version of the coming iPad that runs on their newest fourth-generation wireless networks, according to people familiar with the matter."
Alongside the much anticipated iPad 3, Macotakara sources seem convinced we'll see iOS 5.1 come out of beta in March too.
A casing supposedly for the iPad 3 was posted online in February, with its size suggesting we're in for an increase in battery and graphics power in the new Apple tablet. Some say the new casing appears to accommodate a larger battery.
Parts previewed on some websites indicate that, although the iPad 3 will still have a 30 pin dock connector, the packaging is streamlined. Well, if this is true, we knew it would happen sooner or later.
Apple's very interested in Near Field Communications, and one particularly tasty rumour at Cult of Mac suggests that the iPhone 5 will use NFC to take over nearby Macs, enabling you to use your data and settings with a flick of the wrist.
The iPad 2 has the familiar 16/32/64GB storage options. A 128GB option for the iPad 3 isn't impossible - although that might depend on the situation in Asia, where natural disasters caused chaos in parts of the electronics industry last year.
Two generations of USB-free iPads suggest that Apple just isn't interested in adding one, but the new Thunderbolt port found in the 2011 MacBook Pro and MacBook Air could be another story: it's a combined accessory/display connector with astonishingly fast performance.
TUAW says the iOS 5 code features new code files for USB devices in the iOS 5 firmware, Through this, TUAW found references to an iPad 3,1 and an iPad 3,2. Is this latter variant the LTE version?
The iPad 3 might be bulking out, reportedly so it can house a higher-resolution display than the iPad 2, and the extra girth is all down to pixel density.


THICKER?: Could iPad 3 be thicker than iPad 2?
This was widely predicted for the iPad 2 and, like the Retina Display, didn't materialise. One for version 3, perhaps? Using a separate adapter to read camera cards is rather inelegant and clunky.
The rear-facing camera on the iPad 2 isn't brilliant: an iPhone 4S-style camera and flash would do nicely.
Several reports are suggesting the new device will have an 8MP camera.
Could the iPad 3 have Kinect-style gesture controls? We're not so sure, but rumours suggested so in late October 2011.
Apple has hired a carbon fibre expert, senior composites engineer Kevin Kenney, fuelling speculation that the next iPad could be encased in the lightweight material.

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Monday, February 27, 2012

Updated: Google tablet rumours: what you need to know



The rumour mill says this, not the iPad, is Google's target. We think the rumour mill's right

We know that Google is working on a tablet, and we know when it's coming out - not because of internet rumour-mongers, but because of ex-CEO Eric Schmidt.

This won't be a me-too Android tablet, but something very different. So what can we expect?

The Google Nexus Tablet release date will be summer 2012

That's what Eric Schmidt says, anyway. "Noi nei prossimi sei mesi contiamo di mettere sul mercato un tablet di altissima qualita," he said, because he was in Italy. In English, that's "we'll bring a tablet of the highest quality to market in the next six months", or perhaps "I'll have the pasta, but hold the parmesan".

UPDATE: On 24 February 2012, analyst Richard Shim said that Google will launch its 7-inch (1280x800) Google tablet running Ice Cream Sandwich with production starting in April. Shim added that initial production would be between 1.5 million and 2 million units.

The Google tablet specs will be more Kindle-y than iPad-y

Everybody assumed that Google's tablet would be an iPad rival. The fools! There are already stacks of iPad rivals running Android and costing roughly the same amount of cash, and it's hard to imagine what Google can bring to that party beyond heavy subsidy.

It makes much more sense to believe DigiTimes - yes, that DigiTimes, the one with the rather patchy track record when it comes to predictions - and its claims that Google is going after the Kindle Fire.

That means the Google tablet specifications will include a seven-inch screen rather than a ten-incher. OLED-display says the panel is coming from Samsung, and will run a resolution of 1024 x 600.

It's a much bigger potential market, and one that Apple isn't in at all. Unless it drops the iPad 2 price out of sheer badness when the iPad 3 comes out.

The Google Nexus tablet will be a media tablet

Again, think Kindle Fire - but with Google Books, Google Music and YouTube instead of Amazon content.

The Google tablet will be called the Google Nexus tablet

That's what most people think, anyway: Google already uses Nexus for its reference smartphones, although we suppose it's always possible that they might call the Google tablet something else, such as the Google Boogle.

The Google tablet operating system will be Android 4.0

This one's a no-brainer: Google's Nexus tablet will come with the most up-to-date version of Android, and if it's going to ship by the summer that means the Google tablet OS will be Ice Cream Sandwich, aka Android 4.0.

The Google Nexus tablet user interface will be Holo

Google's laid down the law on this one: All future Android 4.0 devices must feature its default theme, Holo. It's hardly going to dig out MS Paint and ruin the UI for its own super-tablet.

The Google tablet price will be below ?200

There's no point competing with the Kindle Fire if your product is more expensive. That means a heavily subsidised US price of no more than $199, which works out as a UK price of ?150 to ?199.

Like Amazon, Google's going to lose money on each one it sells - and like Amazon, it hopes to make the money back from other sources of income. For Amazon that's media sales; for Google it's media sales and advertising.
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