iPhone 5 'to launch in September'
 
           
Apple's iPhone 5 will have the same form factor as the iPhone 4, according to reports. Photograph: Eric Thayer/Reuters
Apple is on track to release an "iPhone  5" in September, according to reports from component suppliers in Asia  who are gearing up to build the next generation of the company's  smartphone. Although reports vary on the naming – with some  sources suggesting that it will be called the iPhone 4G or 4S – the  Guardian has been told that the form of the device is very similar to  the existing iPhone 4, which was released in summer 2010. The  suppliers are also understood to be preparing for another iPhone  release during 2012, though the timing on that is less certain. Some are  suggesting that the next model could come out in March. The  Guardian understands that while the new version will look very like the  iPhone 4, it may dispense with some of the visible buttons on the side  of the device for volume control. Other reports on Bloomberg  suggest that the new phone will use an A5 processor like that included  in the iPad 2 released in March and feature an 8MP camera (compared with  5MP in the iPhone 4). Some reports suggest that it is testing a  higher-resolution or larger version of the screen than that in the  present model. The new devices will include Apple's new iOS 5 software, which includes its iCloud capability  to synchronise data between devices, and to activate and update phones  without requiring connection to a computer, as well as offering photo  sharing and Twitter messaging across many apps. Richard  Windsor, global technology marketing analyst at Nomura Securities, said  he expected the version sold in September to have the same price as the  existing one, which Apple sells for about $600. "We think there will be  an iPhone 5 in September – the suppliers have been ramping up for it,"  he said. The key question, said Windsor, will be whether  Apple introduces a mid-range phone at about $300 in order to capture a  larger share of the market. If that happens, he suggests, Apple's share  of the smartphone market – currently about 19% of the 100m devices sold  per quarter – could explode as the market itself grows in this year and  2012. But Windsor said he has not seen any sign that Apple  is preparing a "mid-range" phone so far for launch early next year,  which would be needed to capture a significant slice of the market. Phones  running Google's Android operating system have taken a dominant share  of the smartphone market in the past six months, with a 31% share in the  first quarter. Android pushed ahead of Nokia, whose Symbian operating  system had been the leading smartphone platform for years, in the first  quarter of this year. Apple is in third place, though analysts expect  Apple to pass Nokia in the current quarter which ends in just over a  week. The smartphone market is expected to grow 55% this year to 472m and to hit 1bn units by 2015, according to the research company IDC.  With Android devices and, from October, Nokia devices running  Microsoft's Windows Phone software competing for that market, it may  become imperative for Apple to produce a mid-range device to capture  more revenue, as it did in the music player market when it launched the  iPod Mini, iPod Nano and iPod Shuffle.more.

 
 
 
 
 
 6/22/2011 10:15:00 AM
6/22/2011 10:15:00 AM
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