New iPads - 22nd of October
BeethovensPiano
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d.People familiar with Apple's plans tell AllThingsD that the company will hold its next invitation-only event on Tuesday October 22. The focal point of the gathering will the latest updates to the company’s iPad line, but new Mac Pro and OS X Mavericks will likely get some stage time as well, I'm tol
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Beyond a spec bump, not sure what's coming to iPad Maxi?
I'm more interested by advancements to the Macbook Pros. Using Iris graphics on the 13" allows them to redesign the SoC and make the whole package slightly smaller again whilst boosting graphics performance and battery life.
From what I've read, believable or otherwise, there are limited supplies of the smaller retina screen.
And of course the spec bump will include the awesomeness of the 64 bit processor to give desktop class processing ...
I've had an iPad1 since they came out but it's getting a bit slow now as apps become more power hungry and fewer are available for it anyway. Shame really as it still works just fine and the tech is only 3 and a bit years old. But it's going to a good home to someone who just wants it for mail and surfing
I can understand the appeal of a graphical spec bump as the ipad becomes an important gaming device. CPU bump nice for extra smoothness in the glassy iOS7 era (funny as windows 7 was also quite glassy).
But what are we going to do with desktop-class processing? We're not running desktop-class applications and Apple don't currently display any intentions of converging use cases between Macs and i-devices.
In fundamental "experience" terms, I don't see what new the iPad 5 could bring to a glass-fronted slate where the screen is your output and input component beyond even higher resolutions (2880x1800 anyone?), being thinner, lighter and longer battery life - all worthy improvements but pretty marginal in experience terms.
Major experience improvements right now would need to be on the software and services front but we've already got iOS7...
The ipad5 is getting slight design changes in line with the iPad mini, which is a good thing.
My wife would like to update her iPad, and my kids think that is what they are getting foe Xmas. Hopefully they will be in short supply:)
Remember how everyone thought the iPhone 5c would be a 'budget' phone..? :rolleyes:
Completely agree. The desktop class soundbite is rather ... strange. What do most people do on desktops? Browse the web, write documents, spreadsheets .... even in the enterprise a lot of applications are now browser based. Virtually everything that is "desktop class" can already be done on almost any tablet.
Of course the new iPad won't add anything fundamental to the experience, it'll be faster, flashier and ultimately a slightly better version of whats gone before.
When AMD brought 64 bit to the desktop, Intel had to comply to be still perceived ahead.
I'm more interested by advancements to the Macbook Pros. Using Iris graphics on the 13" allows them to redesign the SoC and make the whole package slightly smaller again whilst boosting graphics performance and battery life.[/QUOTE]
Me too, I have enough Ipads to last me a lifetime.
I'm waiting for news of Macbook Pros.
"The Loop's Jim Dalrymple has seconded the October 22 date with one of his famous "Yep" confirmations. "
He has never ever been wrong.
I am interested in the Ipad Mini, so hope the new one comes out soon!
Apple increase battery life in the Air by using a TN panel.
That won't happen here but will they use an Izgo or that 3200x1800 screen already on the strangely named ATIV Book 9 Plus.
edit - seems these displays are ten a penny. Plus Fujitsu have an Izgo one in their laptops.
The new Nexus 7 changed everything. A 'god awful' 2010 display simply will not do, unlike the 5s, which, when all is said and done is just a phone.
No, the Air has always had a TN panel so you can't say that caused increased battery life. Just not changing it didn't harm battery life.
Increased battery life was a combination of: Haswell processor, bigger battery, using Haswell performance gains by underclocking the processor so comparable performance provided but even more battery life.
Personally, windows laptops got it right for me, 7ish hours battery life with haswell but 1080p or HiDPI IPS displays.
Yes the Air always had a cheaper TN panel, but it also has a tiny battery. It is also worth noting that LED back lights get more power efficient year by year. Another fundamental change, alongside Intel belatedly adding more power conservation.
64-bit is pointless on the iPhone 5S and iPad 5. The only benefit with going 64-bit is so you can access more than 4GB of RAM (not to be confused with storage).
Since the iPhone and iPad don't have more than 4Gb of RAM, there's no point, except for marketing.
You can install more than 4Gb on a desktop/laptop so 64-bit make sense but not on a mobile or tablet.
New iPads are only announced on the 22nd October, they won't be on sale until 1st November at the earliest.
I know its (currently) pointless, I missed the big smiley. Its all about marketing and perceived advantage in the "publics eye".
My laptops running an i7 with 8gig of ram and windows 7. It responds about as well as an older Dell laptop I've got with Ubuntu.
They happen to have a a 64-bit ARM CPU - so why not start building for this - for the future if for no other reason!!!! If eveything (development suite, libraries etc) go 64-bit NOW it will avoid problems down the line!
64 bit also gives a nice speed boost by all accounts, so far from pointless IMHO. (Particularly in the full size iPad.)
64-bit doesn't necessarily give any speed improvements. As above, even Apple haven't claimed it does.
Apple however do seem to have re slanted the truth wth regards to their M7 co-processor. It is cheap Big.Little. Like an A15 the likely used Cortex A57 is simply power hungry used by itself. (technical information)