The latest from the Apple rumour mill is that a smaller version of the iPad is on its way and will be with us in a few months time.
according to a report from KGI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo that was picked up on the Apple-centric blog MacRumors, Apple will launch its long-rumored iPad mini sometime in September.
As reported on the site, Apple will debut a 7-inch iPad tablet after a production ramp-up in August, and Kuo said he expects sales of just 1.8 million units in the third quarter, which will balloon to more than 13 million units in the following quarter, overtaking sales of the full-side iPad.
“Though shipments of iPad mini’s components will start in August, the new iPad line will end production, ready for transition to a modified New iPad line. As such, component shipments will drop in August as iPad mini’s components shipments growth will be offset,” the report stated. “On a side note, the modified New iPad shares the same exterior as the original model, but contains modifications to correct its thermal dissipation problem and lower-cost components.”
Rumour and speculation have long swirled around the possible production of a 7-inch iPad, and, with a March IHS iSuppli report predicting that said a 7-inch version of the iPad was being planned for a release during the winter holiday shopping season. The tablet would likely carry a lower price point than that of the 10-inch iPad, which starts at $499 (£322), putting it in direct competition with low-cost Google Android tablets.
In the 7-inch tablet market, a sub-$200 (£129) price is seen as a key point of entry to success. Pricing for the Nexus 7 starts at $199, which puts Amazon’s 7-inch Kindle Fire, which also retails for $199, most obviously in its cross hairs.
The media-focused Nexus 7 – which Google says was designed for Google Play, the company’s online content portal – is likely to also affect sales of Barnes & Noble’s 7-inch Nook and Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 2 7.0. An iPad mini would also indicate Apple has changed direction since the passing of co-founder and former CEO Steve Jobs, who was adamant that the company would never delve into the mini-tablet market.
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