Apples iPad 3 will resemble its predecessors, right down to the circular home button and a camera hole in the top bezel.
That information comes from Chinese Website Sina Weibo, which offered up a purported image of the iPad 3s front assembly. That image found its way onto Apple-centric blog MacRumors Feb. 21.
The part appears nearly identical to that of the iPad 2, the blog reported, with the major distinguishing feature being a relatively long ribbon cable extending up the side of the display as opposed to a shorter cable with a sideways orientation seen in the iPad 2.
With pundits and tech media widely expecting Apple to unveil the iPad 3 during the first week of March, the rumor mill surrounding the next-generation tablet has kicked into full gear. Among the predicted features: a higher-resolution screen and more powerful processor and camera. On Feb. 9, AllThingsD reported that the iPad 3s screen would feature 2,048 by 1,536 resolution, along with an improved graphics processing unit paired to a faster chip.
As a whole, the iPad franchise enters 2012 in a particularly strong market position. Throughout 2011, other tablets have plunged into the tablet arena with huge advertising budgets and the stated aim of becoming an iPad killer, only to find apathetic customers and a general lack of buzz.
Our checks indicate modest sales of most competing tablet offerings, including the Motorola Xyboard, RIM PlayBook, HTC View 4G, Samsung Galaxy tab and several other Android based devices, T. Michael Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, wrote in a Jan. 24 research note. Also consistent with our checks, the Amazon Kindle Fire did not adversely impact iPad sales but more likely had a greater impact on e-reader sales.
Apples next big tablet challenge might come in late 2012, when it will face Windows 8 on Microsoft and its manufacturing partners. Whatever features are included with the iPad 3, they will need to prove capable of beating back that challenge, in addition to keeping Android at bay.
Apple is also wrestling with some controversy over the iPads manufacture. In late January, The New York Times published a series of reports about working conditions at Foxconn, which builds Apples bestselling products. The workers assembling iPhones, iPads and other devices often labor in harsh conditions, read the papers Jan. 25 piece, which partly drew its information from unnamed factory employees. Problems are as varied as onerous work environments and serioussometimes deadlysafety problems.
Those reports drew a fair amount of negative attention to Apple. In January, it became the first technology company admitted to the Fair Labor Association, and its suppliers apparently opted to cooperate fully with a special voluntary audit by the organization. We believe that workers everywhere have the right to a safe and fair work environment, Apple CEO Tim Cook wrote in a Feb. 13 statement.