terça-feira, 4 de outubro de 2011

Hotest: The iPhone 5/4S: The Complete Rumor Rundown





















In techcrunch

The iPhone 4S Will Be A Less Expensive iPhone
Argument: Numerous leaked SKU line ups with iPhone prototypes that are made of just plastic rather than glass and aluminum found in Brazil.
Apple would completely disrupt Android and Windows Phone 7 by selling a new iPhone at $100 or less.
The iPhone 4 still packs enough computing power for most users.
Objections:
Unsubstantiated leaks cannot be trusted
Judgment: The stars just seem aligned for this one. The iPhone 4 is still a hot phone despite being over 15 months old. Apple just needs to repackage the current hardware into a less expensive body to completely demolish the competition.

Redesigned, thinner iPhone 5
Argument: Countless thinner cases have leaked over the previous months all purportedly built for the next iPhone.
Every successive iPhone has been thinner than the previous.
Apple likes to keep design cues constant between products and so the next iPhone will look similar to the iPad.
Objection: None, it’s a pretty solid claim
Judgment: Apple has never released a product thicker than the previous model and won’t start with the next iPhone.

Larger screen
Argument: The iPhone 4's 3.5-inch screen is tiny compared to recent superphones from Motorola, Samsung, and LG.
Leaked cases signal that the next iPhone will be physically longer and wider. A larger screen is logical if the size of the iPhone is increasing.
Our own research has shown that a larger screen is “likely.”
Objections: Larger screen could mess with apps designed for the smaller screen
Judgment: Apple cannot ignore the current popular trend of larger screen sizes. As long as the phone is thinner, a larger screen will not make the phone feel any bigger.

Edge-to-edge glass
Argument: Apple has always pushed the limit with its LCD implementation.
Edge-to-edge glass would give Apple something to tout over just using a larger screen.
Objections: Likely higher manufacturing cost, which would cut into the profit margin
Could lead to more broken screens
Judgment: Not likely just yet. Apple pushes the limit but only as far as its financially viable.

NFC Chip
Argument: NFC is the next big thing and already a feature on leading Android handsets
An NFC-equipped iPhone would further the advancement of mobile payments
Objection: Current NFC radios are separate microchips and not integrated into a unified communication chip, which requires PCB real estate and extra battery power
Apple could be waiting until the payment companies make a lucrative offer to them
Judgment: Apple tends to incorporate non-proprietary tech only after its viability is proven. So that’s a “No.”

Dual-core A5 CPU
Argument: Apple tends to include a faster CPU with each iPhone release
iOS 5 will likely benefit from a faster, dual-core CPU
Objection: More powerful CPUs tend to decrease battery life
Judgment: It’s very likely the next major iPhone will have the A5 CPU. However, Apple might stick with the A4 for a mid-model refresh like the rumored iPhone 4S

New home button
Argument: Leaked cases and bezels show an elongated opening/button
Touch-sensitive bezels allows for new controls, multitouch gestures
Objections: Completely changes Apple’s “Keep It Simple, Stupid” design
Could break current apps
Judgment: Don’t start designing your next Kickstarter iPhone case project around this rumor. Apple will likely stick with its traditional home button.

8MP camera
Argument: MP count has increased with every new iPhone release
An 8MP photo previously appeared with iPhone 5 metadata
Megapixel counts are unfortunately a comparison point between different phones
Objections: Higher megapixel counts does not necessarily improve picture quality. Apple knows this. Hopefully.
Judgment: Camera sensors are constantly shrinking in size while increasing in MP count. Expect a higher count sensor but not necessarily an 8MP version.

CDMA/GSM dual-mode radio
Argument: The next iPhone will use Qualcomm Gobi Baseband and run on both GSM and CDMA networks
Dual-mode phones have shown up in developer’s usage stats
Would allow Apple to makes/sell just one version, decreasing manufacturing costs
Allow Apple to sell a completely unlocked iPhone. Buy one from the Apple Store and activate it however you want
Carrier independence is a huge selling point
Objection: Dual-mode mobile radios are still very rare
R&D cost could make it financially unfeasible
Judgment: It’s hard to say. The upsides are huge for both Apple and consumers, but dual-mode radios are not widely used. Apple tends to use highly-available and therefore, high margin components.

Extensive voice controls
Argument:The next iPhone will have powerful voice controls built by Siri called Assistant, which Apple bought last year for $200m
The voice controls would outclass Android’s with more natural navigation paths
These function would need beefy hardware like the rumored A5 CPU, which creates an up-sell point for iPhone 4 owners
Objections: None, really. Seems like a logical step for iOS.
Judgment: It’s hard to predict future iOS features, but more beefy voice controls are probably on the road map.


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