RELATED ARTICLES
- Ruby on Rails Security Flaw Severe, but Not Widespread: Researcher
- Google Dodges FTC Antitrust Charges, Will Change Business Practices
- A Divided Vote
- Lenovo, EMC Launch Joint Venture for New SMB Servers
- Lexmark Buys Acuo to Expand Vendor-Neutral Medical Image, EHR Platform
Apple is already testing iOS 7, according
to reports. The timing is in sync with reports of an early summer,
rather than fall, debut of the next iPhone.
Apple is working on iOS 7, the next version of the software run
by its iPhone, something that may shock few people to learn.
Devices running a pre-release build of iOS 7 visited
AppleInsider on various days in December, the tech site reported Jan. 2. The day before,
The Next Web
blogged that it had been contacted by developers who said their logs
showed visits from devices with new iPhone identifiers. The iPhone 5,
for example, has iPhone5.1 and iPhone5.2 identifiers, depending on the
Long Term Evolution (LTE) model of the device and which band it runs on.
The developers reported seeing an iPhone6.1 identifier.
"From the developer logs that we have seen, the app requests originate
from an IP address on Apple's Cupertino campus, suggesting that members
of Apple's software development and app teams are compatibly testing
some of the more popular or well-know applications already on the App
Store," reported
The Next Web.
"Although OS and device data can be faked," it added, "the unique IP
footprint leading back to Apple's Cupertino campus leads us to believe
this is not one of those attempts."
Evidence that Apple was at work on iOS 6 surfaced around March 2012,
AppleInsider pointed out, suggesting Apple may have a quicker timeframe planned for its next iPhone release as analysts have forecast.
While Apple introduced the iPhone 5 in September 2012, Apple's reduced
orders to its suppliers "indicate an earlier launch of new iPhone
products in the June quarter," Canaccord Genuity analyst T. Michael
Walkley wrote in a December 2012 research note.
Walkley added that while the firm believes an earlier launch of the next
iPhone is planned, it wasn't unusual to see order reductions at that
time of year.
Additionally, Walkley said the firm is expecting new iPhone 5 models.
"We believe Apple could launch a refreshed iPhone 5 along with a more
mid-tiered priced competitive iPhone for pre-paid oriented international
markets this summer," he wrote.
In a Jan. 2 research note, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster opined
about Apple's more distant future, writing that the company will
"eventually" introduce wearable products.
"We believe technology could progress to a point where consumers have a
tablet plus wearable computers, like watches or glasses, that enable
simple things like voice calls, texting, quick searches, navigation,
etc., through voice control. Longer term," wrote Munster, "
screens in glasses or projectors could replace the necessity of a screen from a smartphone or tablet."
Samsung-owned
Samsung Display plans to show off a 5.5-inch flexible display at the Consumer Electronics Show later this month.
Nokia has also filed patents for a thin, flexible smartphone display
that could take the shape of a wrist cuff or a tent (picture a
place-setting card) that could sit on a desk, acting as a timepiece when
not in use. The shape the device takes, explained the patents, would
relay use information to the device. Unbending the device, for example,
could serve as an instruction to answer a call.
All of this is speculation, as Apple reveals its work only when an executive, standing on a stage in a crowded room, decides to.
No comments:
Post a Comment