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Apple Debuts IPhone 4S With Faster Chip in Tussle With Android










Oct. 4 -- Apple Inc., in its first product unveiling since Steve Jobs resigned as chief executive officer, introduced an iPhone with a stronger processor to help it vie with Google Inc.'s Android.
The A5 chip in the iPhone 4S will be seven times faster than the processor in the old model, Apple said today at a press conference at its headquarters in Cupertino, California.
The update of Apple's best-selling product marks an early test for Tim Cook, CEO since Aug. 24, who hasn't yet shown he can match his predecessor's skills at product design and marketing. While the iPhone is the world's most popular smartphone, Google's Android software is more widely used, showing up in devices from Samsung Electronics Co. and HTC Corp.
Apple also demonstrated iCloud, a new service for storing files such as pictures and music on Apple's remote servers. That means they can be accessed through iPads, iPhones and Macs, and mobile devices no longer have to sync up to a computer. Apple will give away advertising-free e-mail as part of the service, which comes out Oct. 12.
Apple showed off other new software features, including an integration with Twitter Inc. that lets users quickly post updates to the social-blogging service. Apple's new iOS operating system, which runs its mobile devices, also will be available for free on Oct. 12.
App Store
The iPhone accounted for almost half Apple's sales in the most recent period. Combined, the iPhone, iPad tablet and iPod Touch touch-screen media player have sold 250 million units in total, Apple said today. There are now more than 500,000 applications in the company's App Store, which has generated $3 billion for developers since its debut in 2008.
“In three years, customers have downloaded 18 billion apps -- and it's accelerating,” Scott Forstall, a senior vice president in charge of iPhone software, said at today's event. The rate is now over 1 billion per month, he said.
The company also is making inroads with corporate users. Ninety-three percent of Fortune 500 companies are testing the iPhone for use by their employees, and 92 percent are trying out the iPad, Apple said today.
At stake is leadership in the market for smartphones, which is projected to double by 2015, when 1 billion of the handsets will be sold, according to research firm IDC. While Apple is the single biggest smartphone maker, the Android coalition leads the market, accounting for 41.7 percent.
It's been 16 months since the last iPhone release -- a longer lag than the usual. The pent-up demand may help Apple sell a record 25 million iPhones during the December quarter, according to estimates by Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos.
Stock Gains
The success of the product has helped Apple's stock weather market turmoil and the resignation of the CEO who made Apple the world's most valuable company. The shares had climbed 16 percent this year through yesterday, though they pared those gains today. Apple fell $5.70, or 1.5 percent, to $368.90 at 1:45 p.m. New York time on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
The company is looking to China to fuel a new wave of growth. Apple plans “a lot more” stores for the country, Cook said today. The company's retail outlet in Shanghai had 100,000 visitors on its opening weekend, he said.
Apple also gave updated figures on its Mac computer division. The new OS X Lion operating system has been downloaded 6 million times, and the Mac business has an installed user base of 58 million, Cook said.
Apple's iPod, meanwhile, remains an important business, Cook said -- even as the iPhone cannibalizes some of its sales. The company introduced a new $129 version of the iPod Nano and a range of iPod Touch models starting at $199.
The iPod, which made its debut 10 years ago, has reached sales of 300 million units globally.
“It took Sony 30 years to sell 220 million Walkman cassette players,” Cook said.
Source - [ news.businessweek.com ]

iPhone 5 launch: live coverage of Tim Cook's speech


Tim Cook
iPhone 5: what new features will Apple's Tim Cook unveil at the launch event? Photograph: Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters
6.18pm: And so we turn to iPad. Will we get any knocking of Android? Note there wasn't even a mention of Android (or Windows Phone) in the mentions of mobile phones just now.)
"iPads in schools.. can change how teachers teach and children learn and many educators agree with us. Every state in the US now has an iPad deployment scheme in place."
(Observation: his voice isn't as mellifluous as Jobs's; Cook's is more of a croak, with a Texan twang. Jobs's would range up and down the scale, but Cook's is more direct. It's less relaxing to listen to.)
6.14pm: iTunes started in April 2003, now has 30m songs, 16bn songs downloaded. "It's mind-boggling. And that's our music business, we're very happy with our music business."
"Next: iPhone. This may be the reason why the room is full now." Now: "iPhone 4 has sold almost half of the total iPhones sold." Gartner 2Q numbers show iPhone 125% growth, smartphones 74% growth. So outpacing the market. (Yes, yes, but what about the third quarter? Any analysts want to kick in?)
Now a big graph of "very satisfied" for different manufacturers - 70% iPhone, next is HTC with 49%.
Notable thing: Cook does his slides in different colours from Jobs. He uses greys and blues, where Jobs was greens and greys and blacks.
More broadly: iPhone is 5% of the whole mobile phone market, of 1.5bn units: "it's an enormous opportunity for Apple."
6.12pm: Music: "for us this is iTunes and iPod.." A shot of the 2001 iPod. "It reminded all of us how much we loved music." (Sort of, but the iPod was the result of an internal study - if the cards had fallen differently it might have been video or photos.)
Cumulative iPod sales over 300m; "it took Sony 30 years to sell 220,000 Walkman cassette players." OK. "The MP3 player market is a mature market. We sold 45m iPods in the last year ending in June." (Note he's giving no numbers for just-past quarter; financial quiet period.) Almost half go to people as their first iPod.
6.08pm: Updates time. OSX Lion. "The reviews have been incredible." Walt Mossberg of the WSJ is cited. Digital download only, 6m have been downloaded: "this is 80% more than Snow Leopard, our previous release." (That doesn't so much to me. Anyone else?)
Measuring installed base: took Windows 7 a total of 20 weeks to reach 10% of installed base; 2 weeks for Lion. (Um, yeah, smaller base to reach, Tim.)
Now looking at the computers which are "the best we've ever shipped". Well, yes... "iMac and Macbook are best-selling notebook and desktop in the US. Points to Mac growth of 23% over the last four quarters v 4% for the (Windows) PC market.
"We are now approaching 60m users around the world." That's about triple what it used to be back in 2000 or so, I think. (Any cites for Steve Jobs and the 20m users numbers?)
6.04pm: Showing stores in China - Nanjing. Largest store in Asia. It's a bit amazing - 100,000 visitors on the opening weekend. (By comparison in LA they got 100,000 in a month.) "There is amazing momentum here."
The Hong Kong one is in the airport. Getting the idea that this is going to be pushing the China connection. That's where the real volume is to be had.
Video already. Tai-chi, baby.
6.01pm: Crowdsource results time... over at the poll. Here's they're just starting. Applause of course and it's Tim Cook: "this is my first producdt launch since being made CEO.. I'm sure you didn't know that. It is a pleasure to host you today... I consider it the privilege of a lifetime to have worked here almost 14 years."
Welcomes folk to the campus: "a sort of second home to some people." They're in the Town Hall where they launched the original iPod ten years ago.
6.01pm: CA: I'm installed in the Apple Store in Covent Garden, where Apple has gone to a lot of trouble: four-way power adapters at every chair, including Continental adaptors: plenty of European journalists here. Apple, one senses, is treating this as very big indeed.
Latest expectations: Siri, a "virtual personal assistant", to make some sort of appearance in the new software. As long as it's not as dire as the "Knowledge Navigator" personal assistant in those way-off Apple imaginings of the future from 1987.
5.53pm: Just in! Among the leading lights at Cupertino is Dick Costolo, chief executive of Twitter, according to his Twitter page. Smartphones running Google's Android software have stolen a march on iOS with deep Twitter integration – expect Apple to launch a riposte.
5.50pm: Journalists, commentators and plain-old fashionistas are filing into Apple conference halls in Cupertino and Covent Garden, London. Our man on the ground, Charles Arthur, is setting up his stall in central London, while myself (Josh Halliday) and Juliette Garside, the Guardian's telecoms correspondent, will keep you fully informed from the office.
Mark Mulligan, the former Forrester analyst, is one of the privileged few invited to Apple's biggest store in Covent Garden. Surprisingly, he reports that it's a "very intimate sized" event for Apple announcements. Well, certainly, it's no Cupertino ampitheatre.
5.35pm: Welcome: and is your popcorn popping? It's iPhone 5 launch time. It seems so long since we were last here.
We know some details already: there's going to be an iPhone 5. Given that at WWDC in June, Steve Jobs described the next version of the software powering the iPhone as "iOS 5", and since every launch of a new number of iOS has seen a new version of the phone (3G, 3GS, 4 –see Wikipedia), the idea that there won't be an "iPhone 5" just doesn't hold any water.
Then there's the question of whether the crowd has managed to figure this out ahead of time – if you're reading this before 6pm UK time, then our crowdsourcing experiment is still open (and if you're reading it later, it's closed: tick off the results as they come by).
We also know that:
• the phones will be in the UK from 14 October: reserve your place outside the stores now;
• "iTunes in the Cloud" (so you can get your purchased music on any iOS device, without syncing with a PC or Mac) is coming to Europe, and to the UK first. Why no iTunes Match to sync all your music library? Still being negotiated with record labels, we understand.
We suspect that the iPod Classic is for the chop, but that's not certain. Sales of iPods are tailing off at about 5% annually, and iPod Touches (the app-enabled ones) taking more and more share - now up to 50% of iPod sales.
There's a huge amount at stake today. Apple is presently the world's largest mobile phone company (by revenue; Samsung is expected to be the biggest in terms of shipments). It's possible that Samsung will have overtaken it in smartphone shipments in the third quarter (July-September) just ended; it will be interesting to see if Cook announces any iPhone shipment numbers for the quarter, because this should be the "quiet period" ahead of the financials. Possibly he'll announce "iOS shipments", which would be iPod Touch, iPhone and iPad.
Being biggest is no guarantee you'll continue, though: just look at Nokia, which just one year ago could claim the title. Now it's plunged into loss and we're still waiting for its first Windows Phone device.
Everyone knows that with Steve Jobs having stepped down as chief executive, Cook needs to keep the executive team and the staff weaving the magic that has made Apple the biggest company by value in the world. That's no small order. Everyone will be looking for the slightest flaw.
And now, on with the show...

Source - [ guardian.co.uk ]

Apple iPhone 5 and iPhone 4S Show Up on Cincinnati Bell


We’re just two days away from the most speculated event of the year, the launch of the Apple iPhone 5/4S. The placeholder for the Apple iPhone 5 has just shown up on the website of Cincinnati Bell.
The leak shows that few of the rumored specifications might be true after all. The specifications mentioned for the iPhone 5 are:
  • 32GB
  • 8 Megapixel Camera
  • 4″ Screen
  • 4G Data Speeds
The price is shown to be 639.99 US $ which we expect to be the price of the unlocked/sim-free version.
A second screenshot for the Apple iPhone 4S was also leaked. The price for it being 99.99 US $ The specifications mentioned include:
  • 5 Megapixel Camera
  • A5 Processor
  • 3.5″ Screen
Source - [ fonearena.com ]

Apple leaks "iPhone 4S" product name in latest iTunes beta


With just days to go before the company is expected to detail its latest iPhone offerings, Apple has let slip references to an Phone 4S in its latest iTunes beta.


References to the much-used iPhone 4S moniker could be found in the Info.plist file of the MobileDevices bundle that was included with the ninth beta of iTune 10.5 released Friday. 
Specifically, device preferences for Item 7 and Item 8 in the Info.plist file describe a black and white iPhone 4S whose display icons (below) depict models that look identical to the existing black and white CDMA iPhone 4 introduced earlier this year.
The discovery can be seen as further evidence that Apple is gearing up to introduce iPhones next Tuesday, Oct. 4th that bundle an 8MP camera, 512MB of RAM, support for HSPA+ and the iPad 2's A5 processor and dual graphics, but do so in a the current CMDA iPhone 4 design.


However, the new iPhone 4S is expected to be a dual-mode phone, meaning the same iPhone 4S can be used on either CDMA or GSM networks. Currently, Apple markets separate iPhone 4 models for CDMA and GSM networks.




Talk of Apple taking a dual-route strategy this year by releasing both an iPhone 4S and a more advanced iPhone 5 began to cool off this week, with leaked parts and casings all pointing to a product dubbed iPhone 4S.


In addition, insider Ming-Chi Kuo reported that his industry checks turned up no sign of a redesigned iPhone 5 in the pipeline. Instead, he told AppleInsider that Apple was manufacturing a model that looks largely the same as the current iPhone 4, only with an improved antenna design.


Dubbed "N94," the new iPhone model will reportedly also use the same Gorilla glass for its back panel. Kuo also said it will be available in both black and white models at launch, and 60 percent of units assembled so far have been of the black variety.




Echoing a report from earlier this month, he also said that Foxconn will be responsible for manufacturing 85 percent of Apple's fifth-generation iPhone units. The other 15 percent will reportedly be assembled by Pegatron.


Each will run iOS 5, which is rumored to bundle new voice recognition technology in the form of a new application dubbed Assistant, which will allow users to speak to their iPhone and accomplish a number of tasks through natural language, like sending text messages, looking up information, or scheduling an appointment. 


The functionality is believed to stem from Siri, a "personal assistant" application for the iPhone that Apple purchased in April of 2010.


In all Apple is said to be building 30 million fifth-generation iPhone units by the end of calendar 2011. If Apple were to meet that goal and sell all of the handsets in the holiday quarter, it would easily best the record 20.34 million iPhones Apple sold in its June 2011 quarter.


Source - [ appleinsider.com ]

Otterbox Apple iPhone 4s cases already flocking AT&T stores?

Not long after we heard the somewhat disappointing buzz about only an Apple iPhone 4S model this year, rumor mills suggest that new Otterbox and Speck cases for the aforementioned handset have started appearing in AT&T stores. But irrespective of what the company releases and what users expect, Apple has managed to create quite a buzz in this terrain.
There are no sightings of the actual case as of yet, but leaked photographs of the packaging have let out some tidbits. The new cases which have started to appear are not drastically different from earlier ones which were seen. Although, there are some minor yet noteworthy changes including the rear camera opening which has been widened a little, reports BGR. This certainly fuels rumors about an improved camera with sensor in the next iPhone, probably even an 8MP one.
According to other speculations, these cases are nothing but a refreshed batch to compensate for the prior lot meant for the iPhone 4, which had to be returned due to complaints from customers regarding the LED Flash and button alignments. Hopefully, there will be a final answer to all assumptions from the company’s side soon, if the allegedOctober 4 event sees a release of a host of new devices by the new CEO Tim Cook.
Whatever the case, these new accessories easily diminish the chances of a brand new iPhone 5, or even a highly revised iPhone 4S.


Source - [ mobiletor.com ]

Apple iPhone 4S arriving this year in place of iPhone 5?



With the frenzy of the iPhone 5 rumour mill now working itself to a head, we're hearing more disappointing (but still speculative) news on the fate of Apple's iPhone 5.

More bad omens for those of you still keeping both fingers crossed that October will bring with it redesigned iPhone 5 launch: according to tech bloggers Pocket-Lint, we may only be in store for nothing more than a souped-up iPhone 4 - the iPhone 4S.
Pocket-Lint picked up the story from Greek tech site DigitalLife, who claim that anonymous sources close to the situation (aren't they always?) have confirmed that the next generation of iPhone will be more like the transition from the iPhone 3G to the 3GS, than from the 3GS to the iPhone 4. Tweaks reportedly include an updated camera, this one snapping 8MP stills and recording video at 1080p, and the dual-core A5 processor currently powering the world's iPad 2s.
Rumours about the iPhone 4S are beginning to pick up traction, with keen-eyed Apple fans yesterday spotting what appear to be iPhone 4S protective cases that reveal a form factor similar to the iPhone 4, and rumours of screen manufacturing problems delaying the iPhone 5. We're not saying we wouldn't love a nippier version of the iPhone 4, but with all the massive-screened Android handsets foisting themselves upon us these days, that 3.7-inch iPhone screen is going to start feeling pretty pokey in comparison.
Source - [ t3.com ]

iPhone 5 release date imminent hints Sprint CFO, plus budget iPhone 4S

Like a cat which keeps peeking out of the bag, Sprint is a bit too excited about the fact that it’s landed the iPhone 5 in time for the device’s release date. This time it’s Sprint’s CEO popping out of the bag to once again confirm that the iPhone 5 is in the bag with him, and dropping hints that it’ll be paired with a low-cost iPhone 4S to replace the current Verizon-AT&T segretated iPhone 4, which will place short term pressure on the carrier’s margins even as he makes clear that the release date is a mere stone’s throw away…


Sprint, which would have been the last major U.S. carrier not to have the iPhone with T-Mobile on the selling block while AT&T and Verizon already have it, has already been leaving a trail of evidence that it’ll share in the iPhone 5 pie. Sprint workers have been caught installing signal booster equipment around Apple Stores so as to ensure the iPhone 5 gets an ample Sprint signal when would-be buyers are making a decision on which carrier to go with. Sprint has also apparently informed Best Buy that it’ll carry the iPhone 5, with the retailer having accidentally leaked to its employees that a Sprint iPhone 5 is coming. But about that iPhone 5 release date, the grand prize among unknown iPhone 5 details…


Sprint has repeatedly pointed to the iPhone 5 arriving within the next month. The signal boosting wouldn’t have been done in such haste if the iPhone 5 weren’t about to pop out of the cake. The Best Buy leak pointed to a Sprint iPhone 5 the first week of October. And now Sprint’s CFO, simply by opening his mouth about the iPhone 5, is tacitly admitting that it’s around the corner for all carriers. If the iPhone 5 were still off in the distance, Sprint execs wouldn’t be talking about it; by admitting that there will be a Sprint iPhone 5, the carrier is hurting sales of its existing smartphones in the mean time, and it knows that. So how does the iPhone 4S play into all of this?


If Apple were merely releasing an iPhone 4S and nothing else, it would have happened months ago. The release date delay alone confirms that a redesigned iPhone 5 will be the company’s new flagship smartphone. But there’s been little evidence to suggest that a lower cost iPhone 4S will appear alongside it, taking the place of the existing iPhone 4 on the bargain end. However, Sprint’s comments regarding the iPhone offering lower margins for the carrier point an iPhone 4S happening after all, and a cheap one at that. Furthermore, Sprint is banking on the 4S selling well enough to impact margins in spite of the higher margin iPhone 5. But as the CFO pointed out, iPhone users tend to be so satisfied with their device that they stick with the platform for generations to come, thus ensuring that Sprint customers remain loyal to Sprint rather than blaming the carrier for selling them a disappointing phone and jumping to Verizon or AT&T, which has been taking place with Sprint’s Android line for the past couple years. 


Source - [ beatweek.com ]



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