Apple has plans to release two next-generation handsets next year, to include a bigger screen and curved glass, according to Bloomberg.
The report notes the new handsets, to be 4.7- and 5.5-inches in size, will be available in the second half of 2014 to users around the world. We can deduct Apple will stick with its September release time-frame, making for a yearly upgrade pattern like usual. The glass on the displays will curve downward, a first for the iPhone line.
Apple is also working on sensors that will be able to distinguish between hard and light touches, according to Bloomberg. The new technology isn't suspected to land on Apple's 2014 line, however.
Past screen size, specifics for the handsets - suspected to be iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C replacements - haven't been named. If Bloomberg's report is to be believed (the publication has had solid Apple scoops in the past), Apple will be changing its iPhone line heavily from the 4-inch design its stuck close to for so long and jumping on the phablet craze Apple fans have once mocked. Bloomberg isn't the first to report larger displays out of Apple: The Wall Street Journal and analyst reports have noted the same.
Samsung was actually the first company to debut a curved screen smartphone last month, followed by LG. Apple's handsets sound like they'll curve on the edges, rather than the whole screen, though. Specifics for Apple's iOS 8 haven't been named, but we can speculate the software will take advantage of the curved glass, and of course, Jonny Ive will probably throw in a few other surprises.
The downfall to Bloomberg's report? Your iPhone 5S now feels old.
The report notes the new handsets, to be 4.7- and 5.5-inches in size, will be available in the second half of 2014 to users around the world. We can deduct Apple will stick with its September release time-frame, making for a yearly upgrade pattern like usual. The glass on the displays will curve downward, a first for the iPhone line.
Apple is also working on sensors that will be able to distinguish between hard and light touches, according to Bloomberg. The new technology isn't suspected to land on Apple's 2014 line, however.
Past screen size, specifics for the handsets - suspected to be iPhone 5S and iPhone 5C replacements - haven't been named. If Bloomberg's report is to be believed (the publication has had solid Apple scoops in the past), Apple will be changing its iPhone line heavily from the 4-inch design its stuck close to for so long and jumping on the phablet craze Apple fans have once mocked. Bloomberg isn't the first to report larger displays out of Apple: The Wall Street Journal and analyst reports have noted the same.
Samsung was actually the first company to debut a curved screen smartphone last month, followed by LG. Apple's handsets sound like they'll curve on the edges, rather than the whole screen, though. Specifics for Apple's iOS 8 haven't been named, but we can speculate the software will take advantage of the curved glass, and of course, Jonny Ive will probably throw in a few other surprises.
The downfall to Bloomberg's report? Your iPhone 5S now feels old.
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