Apple CEO Steve Jobs took to the stage June 7 at the company's 2010 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco to reveal the much-expected next-generation iPhone. Although many of the details of the new iPhone, including a larger battery and A4 processor, corresponded with those of prototype devices leaked over the past few months, Jobs also rolled out some as-yet-unrevealed creations, including FaceTime, which lets users make video calls via WiFi. Although the iPhone continues to dominate much of the mind-share for the consumer smartphone market, it faces rising competition from devices running Google Android.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs took to the stage June 7 at the
company's 2010 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Francisco to
announce the much-expected next-generation iPhone. The device represents
Apple's hopes of staying ahead in the consumer smartphone market, where it
finds itself challenged by not only traditional competitors such as RIM's
BlackBerry franchise, but also the rapidly growing family of Google Android
devices.
After updating the keynote audience on iPad sales (2 million
and counting), tweaks to its iBooks feature, and Netflix for the iPhone, the
turtleneck-clad Jobs then moved to what many considered the day's main event:
breaking down the features of the new smartphone, dubbed iPhone 4. Those hoping
for a radical revamp to the device were likely not disappointed, and those who
followed news of the leaked iPhone prototypes earlier this year were definitely
not surprised, by the new iPhone's features: a larger battery, a thinner body,
a proprietary A4 processor under the hood, a front-facing camera for video
conferencing, and a 5-megapixel camera paired with a rear illuminated sensor.
Jobs termed the new smartphone "the biggest leap since the
original iPhone,"
according
to a live transcript of the event, adding: "This is beyond doubt one of the
most precise, beautiful things we've ever done." The larger battery supposedly
offers seven hours of talk time, 300 hours of standby, 40 hours of music, 10
hours of video, six hours of Web browsing with a 3G connection and 10 hours'
browsing with WiFi.
For users, the device seems to pack a lot of visual
firepower. The iPhone 4's camera can shoot 30-frames-per-second HD video at
720p, and the screen boasts a resolution of 326 pixels per inch-the latter a
feature called Retina Display. "Once you used a Retina Display, you can't go
back," Jobs reportedly joked, before comparing the new device's screen clarity
to that of the iPhone 3GS.
The iPhone 4 also includes a built-in 3-axis gyroscope, for
refined location data. While gyroscopes have commonly been used in a number of
non-consumer devices such as ballistic missiles,
their
integration into smartphones potentially opens the door to a number of
applications and features, including boosted camera stabilization,
gesture-based user interfaces and dead-reckoning aids for GPS.
Jobs revealed a new feature called FaceTime, which lets
users make video calls via WiFi. While using FaceTime, the screen can be tilted
into landscape mode, to better frame a pair of people at one end of a
particular call; Jobs suggested that Apple was in talks with carriers about
offering a 3G-enabled version.
The iPhone 4 will be available in either white or black,
starting June 24. The 16GB version will retail for $199, and the 32GB version
for $299, with a two-year contract through AT&T.
The iPhone 4's operating system, previously dubbed "iPhone
OS 4," received a name change: iOS4, with 1500 new APIs and user features such
as multitasking. The platform's other notable element, "iAd,"
will
allow developers to deliver mobile advertisements within apps themselves.
"There is definitely a market for your applications," Jobs
told the audience, which featured developers attending the WWDC for technical
sessions in creating programs for the iPhone, iPad and Mac franchise.
Despite the high-profile slickness of Apple's presentation,
a few snafus did occur. When The New York Times app failed to load during a
Web-browsing demonstration, reportedly because too many devices were using the
local wireless network,
Jobs
reportedly voiced his displeasure: "Well, Jeez, I don't like this."
"Verizon!" someone in the crowd yelled,
according to USA
Today. But given that Jobs was trying to access a WiFi network, as opposed to
3G, the app's failure was one thing that couldn't be laid at the feet of Apple's
exclusive carrier in the United States.