Apple iPhone and iPod Rumor Round-Up
The whispering about new features on Apple's iPhone and iPod touch
products is growing louder, as blogs, financial analysts and Apple
insiders debate the veracity of unconfirmed reports and unnamed
sources. The latest buzzing regards the iPod touch, which may or may
not be getting a camera (and 802.11n Wi-Fi capability) when the device is upgraded.
As programmers slice apart the 3.0 software operating system for the
iPhone, features such as stereo Bluetooth-audio streaming are
surfacing. A report by Lazard Capital Markets semiconductors analyst
Daniel Amir, which was picked up by AppleInsider, suggests production of two versions of iPhones will be introduced this year, debuting in June.
One version is thought to be a "high-end" model, aimed at the North
American market, and a low-end iPhone, which will be marketed to
Russia, China, India and Brazil. In the report cited by AppleInsider,
Amir said the high-end version has an improved camera that would allow
video capability and 32GB of storage. The low-end version drops the
video function and lowers storage capacity.
Amir also mentions the low-end model might lack Wi-Fi, a decision made
to appease Chinese wireless companies. Regardless of features, Apple is
going to ramp up production capacity, Amir reports. "Our checks suggest
that March iPhone shipments have been much stronger than previously
expected and may reach 1.5 million units, which is the highest level
over the past five months," he is quoted as reporting on AppleInsider.
"Total iPhone shipments in [first quarter of 2009] are therefore
tracking slightly higher than Street expectations of 3-3.5 million
units and could reach 3.8 to 4 million units."
In addition, Amir predicts total April iPhone shipments to increase 40
percent to 50 percent month-over-month, and expand another 20 percent
to 30 percent month-over-month in May. "Accounting for the new versions
of the iPhone shipping in April, total iPhone shipments in [the second
quarter] could reach 7-8 million units, which equates to approximately
3-4 times last year's shipments during the same period," he wrote.
On Monday, CNN reported
on an analysis by Barclays Capital's Ben Reitzes, who raised his target
for Apple shares to $143 from $113 and is also expecting Apple to ramp
up iPhone production and expects iPhone sales to reach 17.4 million
units this year, up from an earlier estimate of 13.3 million. In 2010,
Reitzes expects sales to top 20 million units.
The unofficially dubbed "iPhone 3.0" or "iPhone 4G" is also rumored to
offer video editing software, a built-in FM radio and support for
802.11n Wi-Fi networking. The last feature, suggested by AppleInsider,
would make sense considering Apple is transitioning hardware such as
Macbooks and AirPort Base Stations to 802.11n. The current versions of
the iPhone and iPod Touch support 802.11a networks (5GHz), or 802.11b/g
networks (2.4GHz).
