iPad 5 features that are coming your way
Summary: When is the updated, 5th-generation version of Apple's flagship tablet coming? It could be next month, sometime in June or even as late as October. But the real question is not when the product is going to be released, it's what's going to be in it.
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Industrial Design: Look... it's a iPad maxi!
Recent leaks of purported iPad 5 parts coming out of China strongly seem to indicate that the updated version of Apple's flagship, full-sized tablet will share the industrial design of its smaller sibling, the iPad mini.
Tightening of the bezel area as well as using a slimmer casing will result in a lighter product as well as update a basic design that hasn't changed fundamentally since the iPad 2.
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Talkback
Apple's improvement mantra - Lighter, Thinner and more Powerful; same cost.
For the longest time, you have projected an OS X/iOS software and hardware merger based upon the ARM architecture.
How's 2014, or 12 months from now, looking for the first 64 bit ARM SoC based MacBook Air with IGZO, Liquid Metal and improved battery and electronic's synergy resulting in a laptop design that is just a smidgeon thicker than the current iPad 4 and having a 12 hour battery life between charges sound?
Or, do you want to play it safe and project this possibility becoming reality in 2015?
Just curious.
Some might argue that Apple failed to follow this mantra w/the iPad 3 or 4
Nothing better than a Apple product
My Opinion
Lighter, thinner, CPU that's more powerful = lower battery life
Fifteen years ago would make it about 1998. Memory lane time
http://www.computerhope.com/history/1998.htm
For example. Did you recall that in 1998:
Intel released the Celeron processor and eMachines was founded. Sorry, but I wouldn't trade my iPad 3 with it's software for any 1998 eMachine Celeron based desktop with it's software.
Apple releases iMac and Bill Gates is hit in the face with a cream pie. I doubt the two 1998 events were related. Grin.
Sun releases JavaStation and Windows 98 is released by Microsoft. Actually, I used both software efforts but I really enjoyed my Amiga systems during 1998. IMO, AmigaDOS incorporating a version of IBM's script language REXX called ARexx was way more advanced than those other two software systems. But I'm partial and I'm biased in my objectivity regarding this issue.
And, not last and not least of the 1998 hit parade, Valve Half-Life is released as a FPS game. That last one was for my old online friend, NonZealot. I hope he's doing well.
Mac.Netbook
Re: The ARM architecture has no performance/power efficient over the 5 year
It is?
Apple and Convergence
They won't even let you make phone calls or run passbook on an ipad.
You can be pretty certain Apple won't make an OSX tablet/touchscreen Mac.
They aim to have every Apple user buy the iphone/ipad/macbook trio which is why they have the triple setup in Apple stores.
Mac sales have dropped 25%. It is becoming less relevant for Apple just like Mac Pros. It is not a growth area for Apple, and facing insurmountable hurdles to make an OSX tablet or an ARM Mac line is expending a lot of resources and expense for no potential benefit to the bottom line.
Apple is all about the bottom line at user's expense, never the other way round.
Grow up
Apple already made an OSX tablet. They gave it a touch interface and gave the touch interfaced OSX the name iOS. They called the tablet iPad.
Microsoft wasted years trying to pretend that you could just stuff WindosXP/VISTA/7 on a tablet and have a worthwhile device.
Apple is not facing insurmountable hurdles to do the same, because it knows that it's a stupid thing to even try.
Apple is all about giving the best possible user experience, because if you give the customers something that delights them, the bottom line will look after itself.
Shame Microsoft never thought of that.
err, mac sales dropping
Last quarters Mac sales got hammered by introducing new models with nothing in the pipeline. It wasnt until end of January/beginning of February that they have been fulfilling orders at a reasonable rate. Also add in EU silliness about the MacPro case design that mandated no more EU sales of MacPros (until a new version is released).
You may be on to something.
1998 and iPad 5
good comments .. tempus does fugit. For those of us who bought the first "little Mac" in March 1984 (over $2,000) and then IBM 20286 in August (almost $3,000) it has been an exciting ride.
Interesting to read and hear the complaints about HIGH prices for this terrific gear. 2012 over twice 1984 :-0
As for non-zealot, missing him is like missing a bad tooth. Hopefully he is sucking his thumb somewhere >> else.
Altair 8080 start
ARM transformation of the Mac
And...
Who says all those cores must reside on ONE ARM chip?
As in interim compromised hardware solution, system engineers COULD incorporate multiple ARM chips on a single motherboard design to achieve the desired massive parallelization output.
Another thought did occur while reading your excellent comments, Jason. That is, I remember that when Apple announced it's intent to switch to Intel processors, Steve Jobs revealed that from "Day One", OS X was running on the Intel chip platform. I also tend to recall published "rumors" around the time of the first iPad release that an ARM MBA prototype existed and was running core OS X apps.
I suspect that OS X has been able to run on ARM processors from "Day One" as well and that the only reason Apple has not made the move yet not because of any software or hardware platform concerns but rather from business and political ramifications concerning their ongoing relationship with Intel.
A hypothetical "switch to ARM from Intel" gambit could still be acting as a type of Sword of Damocles Apple option regarding their relationship with Intel.
They don't "Have to" reside on one chip.
As to the "Day One", sure, I bet they are actively porting peices in the labs. But there's a LOT of software to port and a lot of unit testing that needs to be done, and this is not just any port. Architectually a large number of things would need to be altered, not just going from CISC back to RISC.
Just to add
Ummm...
So what *brought on* the actual dark ages...what *caused* the downfall of the Roman Empire?* Its moral malaise, primarily. Anyone not seeing that today?
*The long-acknowledged authoritative historical resource on this: "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire", by Edward Gibbon.