The Apple iPhone has seen a number of improvements since its arrival back in 2007, but its screen size – 3.5 inches on the diagonal – has remained consistent.
However with the sixth-generation iPhone, which most industry observers are calling the the iPhone 5, that is about to change.
Giving in to a trend for growing Gorilla Glass real estate, the iPhone 5 will feature a display that’s at least 4 inches on the diagonal, the Wall Street Journal reported 16 May.
Apple, says the Journal, is working with at least three screen makers, LG Display in South Korea and Sharp and Japan Display Inc in Japan. People familiar with the matter told the Journal that Apple has ordered larger screens for the iPhone – measuring “at least”4 inches on the diagonal.
Samsung, following a very opposite strategy from Apple’s with its popular Galaxy line of Android-running smartphones, has proven a formidable competitor. During the first quarter of 2012 it became the world’s top-shipping phone maker, stripping Nokia of its crown and ending the Finnish phone maker’s 14-year reign. In the tallies of smartphones exclusively, Samsung finished on leader Apple’s heels, by IHS iSuppli’s count, shipping 32 million smartphones to Apple’s 35 million iPhones. By IDC’s count, Samsung bested Apple, with shipments of 42.2 million smartphones to Apple’s 35.1 million.
While Apple arguably strives for perfection in a single device, Samsung’s strategy has been to offer a phone, and a display size, for every taste. Its Stratosphere Galaxy S phone features a 4-inch display, its Galaxy S II a 4.52-inch display and the Galaxy Nexus a 4.65-incher. Its popular line of Galaxy Tab tablets come in 7-, 7.7-, 8.9- and 10.1-inch models, and in February it stepped into the “phablet” – half phone, half tablet – space with the introduction of the 5-inch Galaxy Note.
There’s no word yet that Apple plans to get into the options game and offer more than one display size, but its reported decision to move to 4 inches (at least) suggests Apple isn’t evolving in the face of clear and not-disappearing trend. Indeed, while Apple’s late CEO Steve Jobs was vehemently against the idea of 7-inch tablets, Apple is said to be preparing one for the year’s holiday season.
IHS iSuppli, in a 7 March research note following the introduction of the newest iPad – which defied convention by shunning, for no terribly good reason, the iPad 3 moniker – reported that Apple wasn’t yet finished with its 2012 introductions.
“Reports from component suppliers point to a smaller version of the iPad, which reportedly would use a 7.85-inch, XGA display,” said the IHS report. “Apple has yet to confirm that such a product will be part of its product strategy, but suppliers anticipate its release in the fourth quarter.”
Rhoda Alexander, IHS senior manager of tablet and monitor research, praised Apple in the report, pinpointing just how it makes up for what it might lack in size options.
“Apple constantly pushes the performance envelope, which is a key part of its ongoing success. While not always first to market with a particular feature, Apple engineers are careful to select new attributes that are sure to improve the overall end-user experience,” said Alexander. “This design philosophy and capability to execute sets Apple apart from the pack.”
Global Equities Research analyst Shaw Wu, in a 16 May research note, anticipated that Apple’s refresh of the iPhone is likely to take place in the “September-October timeframe.”
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