March debut of 'iPad 3' a sure bet, says analyst
Higher-resolution screen, Siri are certainties, says expert, who also expects a 7-in. tablet from Apple this year
Computerworld - Apple will introduce a new iPad the first full week of March, and will start selling it the following week, according to reports and industry analyst expectations.
The March debut of the iPad 3, as some have called it, was first reported today by AllThingsD, the blog owned by Dow Jones, the publisher of the Wall Street Journal. Citing unnamed sources, the blog said Apple will host a launch event the first week of March, likely at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, a regular venue for the company's press announcements.
Last year, then-CEO Steve Jobs returned from medical leave to lead the launch event of the iPad 2 on March 2. Apple started selling the new tablet on March 11, 2011 via its online store.
If Apple follows the same timeline, it will probably conduct the event the week of March 5-9, and begin selling the new model the following week.
It's possible that Apple will trot out a new iPad on one of the first two days of March -- Thursday, March 1 or Friday, March 2 -- but Apple usually hosts events earlier in the week.
Next month's iPad introduction, if it does take place, will be the first without Jobs, who died last October at the age of 56 of complications from his long-running battle with pancreatic cancer.
Rumors have been circulating for weeks about the next iPad, with many claiming that Apple's next tablet will boast several important changes, ranging from a quad-core processor to a higher-resolution screen.
Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research, dismissed the former but said the latter was a certainty.
"[The next iPad] will have a higher-resolution screen that Apple will call a Retina display, even if it's not," said Gottheil, talking about the term Apple uses for the iPhone's 326 pixel-per-inch (ppi) screen. "That's important to them because it means the iPad will work well in their home theater play, since it will display full HD. And it's an important differentiator [between the iPad and rival tablets] going forward."
The iPad 2's 9.7-in. screen has a resolution of 1024-by-768 pixels, or 132 ppi.
An iPad with a screen similar to the Retina display on the iPhone would have to have a resolution of approximately 3,220-by-2,060 pixels. Most of the chatter about the next iPad's screen, however, has pointed to a resolution of 2,048-by-1,536 pixels, exactly double that of the iPad 2.
It's possible that Apple will up the iPad's processor to a quad-core, acknowledged Gottheil, but he said that was a long shot because of the power requirements. More likely is that Apple has settled for a faster dual-core system-on-a-chip, perhaps one designated A6 to mark improvements over 2011's A5 that powers both the iPad 2 and the iPhone 4S.
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