Friday, July 19, 2013

This Week's Apple Rumors, Ranked from Dumbest to Most Plausible

Each week, there are dozens of Apple rumors, reports, and patent filings that hint at what's coming out of Cupertino next. Some are legit, but most are totally bogus. We parse the week's rumors for you, ranking them in order from "utterly ridiculous" to "Duh, of course." First up...


DON'T COUNT ON IT: Leaked photos of the iPhone 5S shell, plus specs A Chinese-language site called C Technology (reposted by BGR) published pictures of what could be the iPhone 5S shell. There's no way to verify these photos as being accurate, as they look pretty much identical to the iPhone 5, and we've seen how easy it is for other manufacturers to ape the iPhone.


As for specs, a "4-inch IGZO display with the same Retina resolution as the iPhone 5, an A6 processor clocked a bit faster than the current model, quad-core SGX 554MP4 graphics, 2GB of RAM and an upgraded LTE radio," they sound pretty reasonable, but simply can't be verified at this point.


DON'T COUNT ON IT: Apple may delay the introduction of the iPhone 5S Apple could be upgrading the next iPhone to a 4.3-inch Retina display screen, and that could delay the launch of the next handset until the end of the year, according to the Taiwanese newspaper the Commercial Times (as reported by Bloomberg).


Apple just upped the screen size of the iPhone last year, giving developers a new 4-inch screen size to accommodate. Apple is also revealing a revamped iOS 7 interface in the fall that will require a lot of app developers to redesign their apps so they fit in with the new look. So, another form factor for developers to have to wrangle? No. It's too soon. Apple also traditionally iterates on the form factor every other generation, which would mean the next iPhone would share the same design cues and dimensions as the current iPhone 5.


VERY DOUBTFUL: Apple patent details in-display fingerprint technology - and it's delaying the iPhone 5S Apple patent filings are hit or miss. A patent could be an indicator of a technology the company is dedicating significant resources towards, or it could be a decoy to lead competitors (and the press) away from what it's actually working on. One of the latest is that Apple is working on in-display fingerprint sensing technology. Apple's been rumored to be including biometrics in upcoming iOS devices since it acquired fingerprint security firm Authentec in the fall of 2012. It's possible that Apple could include this technology in an iOS device this year or next.


A related report suggests that iPhone 5S production is delayed because of poor fingerprint sensor yields, pushing the launch of the next iPhone into September. September, you say? The same month the iPhone was released in 2012? Wow, it really does sound delayed.


ASK AGAIN LATER: Apple pitching ad-skipping as part of its new TV service This report lands in the middle of the list because well, Apple's TV doesn't exist yet, but the source is strong. Former WSJ reporter Jessica Lessin writes on her own blog that Apple has been talking with cable companies and television networks about allowing users to skip the commercials, as long as those skipped ads are paid for.


Apple's been coy about its endeavors in the TV space, and various rumors and reports have been swirling since 2011. It seems the major snags holding up the platform's launch are in deals with TV and cable networks, if all the rumors and reports are to be trusted.


SIGNS POINT TO YES: Apple is aggressively hiring for its smartwatch project Apple is on a hiring spree to dedicate personnel and resources to its rumored smart watch project, says theFinancial Times (via MacRumors).


The smartwatch project itself is akin to Apple's television project - a lot of signs are indicating there's something in development, but there's no hard proof yet. However, based on Apple's recent hirings, it does seem the company is working on a wearable device of some kind. 9to5Mac detailed a number of sensor and fitness experts that have gone to work for Apple recently. Apple also snatched up former Yves Saint Laurent CEO Paul Deneve to work on "special projects."


WITHOUT A DOUBT: Apple is ramping up next-gen iPhone production According to Jefferies analyst Peter Misek and sources familiar to AllThingsD, Apple is kicking up production levels for its next iPhone. Considering the last iPhone was released in September 2012, and Apple seems to have moved to a fall release date for its flagship handset, this report is spot on with where we'd expect Apple to be at this point in the year. Or: Duh, of course Apple is ramping up iPhone production right now.


Related, Digitimes reports that Apple's integrated chip orders are also ramping up. If Apple is ramping up overall iPhone production, then yeah, integrated chips are a part of that, too.


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