Rumours are once again swirling of a low cost, contract-free iPhone, as Apple prepares to reveal its third quarter financial results.
Apple launched the iPad 2 in the first half of the year, and the thin tablet proved to be a bestseller device. Based on the strength of that and other devices in its portfolio, most analysts expect Apple will post a solid set of earnings for the quarter.
At the same time, they’re already turning their attention to the second half of the year, when the company is expected to release a host of new software – including the Mac OS X “Lion” and iOS 5 operating systems – along with a new iPhone.
“The concern on [Wall Street] seems to be more about the outlook for the third quarter, ongoing supply constraints for the iPad and the timing of the iPhone introduction,” Tony Ursillo, an analyst with Loomis Sayles & Co, told Reuters 15 July.
For many, questions (and buzz) are growing around the nature of that iPhone rollout. The blog Boy Genius Report, citing “new information from an incredibly solid source,” posted 18 July that Apple is planning to launch a no-contract iPhone priced at $350 (£217).
To be fair, Boy Genius Report has made wrong predictions in the past. What’s indisputable, though, is that Apple faces a serious threat from manufacturers of Google Android smartphones, which are swallowing up share at both the high and low ends of the market. Apple’s ability to blunt that spread could not only help determine its ultimate placement within the increasingly competitive smartphone market, but also have a serious effect on its bottom line.
For the moment, at least, most of the blogosphere’s attention is focused on Apple’s next-generation iPhone, popularly dubbed “iPhone 5.” Boy Genius Report previously cited August as a possible start date for that device’s launch. “According to our source, Apple may hold an event in the beginning or middle of August to announce the new iPhone, with availability to follow in the last week of August,” read a 21 June posting, which predicted that Apple will utilise a “radical new case design” for the smartphone.
Morgan Stanley analyst Katy Huberty recently stated in a note to investors that the next iPhone “will begin production in mid to late August and ramp aggressively.” Her information apparently came from talks with unnamed sources in Taiwan.
Bloomberg also reported 21 June that the next iPhone will debut in September and include the company’s faster A5 processor, along with an 8-megapixel camera and the recently introduced iOS 5 mobile operating system. In addition, that report claimed Apple is developing a smaller, cheaper iPhone that utilises “chips and displays of similar quality to today’s iPhone 4.” The latter device will apparently embrace the iPhone 4’s design aesthetic.
Meta says it will stop targeting personalised Facebook ads at UK woman after legal battle,…
Nine EU countries led by the Netherlands push European Commission for follow-up to 2023 EU…
Former Cruise chief executive Kyle Vogt reportedly raises $150m for The Bot Company at $2bn…
Gotbit founder Aleksei Andriunin pleads guilty to manipulating tokens' trading volume and price after extradition…
ByteDance's largest US investors reportedly in talks for majority stake in US TikTok spin-off, with…
Apple reportedly reassigns Siri development to executive behind Vision Pro after acknowledging delays to much-hyped…