Early
in this past week, we published an article suggestive of that in
addition to production issues; Apple may have delayed the release of
the iPhone 5
in order to entrance time to build more features to the smartphone,
given that the iPhone 4 is still selling very well.
A
slide-show titled "10 Reasons Why Apple Should Delay the iPhone
5 until 2012" from Don Reisinger on week shares our sentiments.
As
to the release date, hundreds of articles, quoting various sources,
including "people familiar with the plans," or "sources
inside Apple", or "a supplier who refuses to be
identified," have been saying that Apple will start selling the
iPhone 5 in September or October (depending which source you
believe).
A
report this week from 9to5mac.com,
quoting sources inside Apple, says that the Cupertino, Calif.-based
company has been deciding between an Oct. 7 or Oct. 14 launch date
but since pre-mass-production line is moving along nicely, Apple is
leaning towards the earlier launch date of Oct. 7.
Latest
iPhone 5 rumors point to 4G LTE support
New
evidence recommends that Apple's iPhone 5 could have 4G LTE support,
and land in stores as early as October 7. And iPhone
Application Development
Company is putting the forecast challenge that the next iPhone is so
close, we can almost smell it.
Apple’s
much-anticipated fifth-generation handset is leaving a trail in the
form of two new rumors that give us a fragment more lucidity about
what we should expect in upcoming iPhone products.
In
short, there are plenty of reasons to believe that Apple and other
iPhone
application developer
companies are testing the 4G waters — of course they are — but
nothing concrete to show that the next iPhone will have that
capability. We are still skeptical that Apple will place too much
weight on a wireless infrastructure that is still very much under
development, but anything’s possible.
The
iPhone 5 has spent the past few months not being able to get a date.
A release date, that is. But that’s changed now that we’re
entering that stretch of the calendar year in which the gig is up by
default: Apple doesn’t introduce new products any later than
September and doesn’t put them on sale any later than October,
meaning you’ll get yours ASAP.
In
fact the odds are good that you’ll need to wait until the iPhone 6
before Apple finds its way onto either of the nation’s second-tier
major carriers, each for a different practical reason.
The
Smart Group of iPhone Team
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