As this is Apple we are talking about, so the rumours are not thick on the ground, but we can expect a new processor from the company’s A series range of chips in a quad-core or octa-core layout with said cores split in two sets; one for high power apps and another for less demanding software to balance compute horsepower against battery consumption.
Read More: A visual history of the iPad
A higher resolution display would also be on the cards, with Apple potentially bringing in a third-generation Retina display, perhaps with the lofty 4K resolutions forum in many televisions in the market.
Setting master hardware designer Jony Ive into action, the next iPad will likely feature lightweight materials and complex-sounding manufacturing techniques to make sure the fondle slate is light and easily portable despite housing powerful innards.
We would not be surprised to see Apple refresh its entire iPad range, including boosting the iPad Mini models and potentially amalgamating its iPad Air with the iPad Pro models to streamline its range of tablets and deliver a more focused set of iPads to iOS fans.
The use of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 821 system-on-a-chip and the debut of the Google Assistant helped make the Pixel phones compelling. So Google will likely want to replicate that success with in its Pixel 2.
We can predict it will feature another top-of-the-line chip, an improves virtual assistant and virtual reality capabilities, but we would hazard a guess that Google may use the Pixel 2 as a means to better bridge the gap between its Android and Chrome operating systems, possibly enabling the Pixel 2 to connect to a smart adapter that in turn connects to an external keyboard, mouse and monitor to turn the smartphone into a new take on the Chromebook.
But Apple will no doubt be looking at how it can give the smartwatch a good nip and tuck to make it more functional, more frugal on battery consumption and thinner and lighter.
Given the constraints we doubt the Apple Watch will become a computing powerhouse but it a third iteration will doubtlessly usher in a new version of watchOS, more integration in terms of hardware and software control of third-party apps, and more scope for the wearable to be used in both work and leisure activities.
But under the careful eye of Satya Nadella and missive of Microsoft to integrate its products and technology together, we can predict updates to Windows 10 that really give the software new levels of functionality, including better Cortana integrations, more adaptable user interfaces to fit all manner of devices, and the use of baked-in machine learning algorithms to surface relevant data for users in a seamless fashion that seems natural rather than mildly intrusive.
We also expect to see Windows spread to Internet of Things (IoT) devices, especially if it is re-worked to run well on ARM based reduced instruction sets rather than traditional x86 architecture from Intel.
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