Asia-based sources will not quit with speculation about a "revised" design which will fix a few of the disadvantages of the third-generation ipad.
This is the issue: the third-generation iPad's 2,048x1,536 Retina screen needs double as many backlights as the ipad 2, which will potentially make it operate hotter and necessitates a larger battery to achieve roughly exactly the same battery life as the Apple iPad 2.
That bulked up backlight set up also leads to a somewhat wider, bulkier style than the Apple iPad 2.
Raymond Soneira, the owner, President, and Ceo of DisplayMate Technologies, outlined the challenges that Apple experienced with the third-generation iPad to CNET back in May.
Apple's first plan, as outlined by Soneira, were to utilize a new technology known as IGZO from Sharp -- that would hypothetically allow Apple to produce the third-generation Apple iPad as thin as the Apple iPad 2 -- but that did not transpire due to the fact Sharp's display wasn't quite ready on time.
"There is no doubt that this ipad 3 is Plan B. Apple pushed amorphous silicon display tech to a greater pixels per inch compared to anyone else. Even so the light throughput isn't good. So it has roughly twice as many Leds, and in addition they had to have a 70 percent bigger battery," Soneira stated at that time.
Lately, at least a handful of Asia-based reports have claimed that Apple is going to resolve this using a revised design. The result: a brand new model will turn up in time for the christmas season as slim as the Apple iPad 2 and having a Sharp IGZO display (with less backlights compared to the existing Retina iPad tablet).
Nevertheless this is when the speculation can get iffy. That is akin to General Motors announcing a 2012 Chevrolet Volt using a sixteen kWh battery, after that deciding mid-year to drop in a 20 kWh electric battery and a more fuel-efficient engine. People who purchased the previous model would feel cheated.
Having said that, Apple's advertising team could always envision a clever way to spin a new design. But that will acquire genius that I am not certain even Apple possesses.
This is the issue: the third-generation iPad's 2,048x1,536 Retina screen needs double as many backlights as the ipad 2, which will potentially make it operate hotter and necessitates a larger battery to achieve roughly exactly the same battery life as the Apple iPad 2.
That bulked up backlight set up also leads to a somewhat wider, bulkier style than the Apple iPad 2.
Raymond Soneira, the owner, President, and Ceo of DisplayMate Technologies, outlined the challenges that Apple experienced with the third-generation iPad to CNET back in May.
Apple's first plan, as outlined by Soneira, were to utilize a new technology known as IGZO from Sharp -- that would hypothetically allow Apple to produce the third-generation Apple iPad as thin as the Apple iPad 2 -- but that did not transpire due to the fact Sharp's display wasn't quite ready on time.
"There is no doubt that this ipad 3 is Plan B. Apple pushed amorphous silicon display tech to a greater pixels per inch compared to anyone else. Even so the light throughput isn't good. So it has roughly twice as many Leds, and in addition they had to have a 70 percent bigger battery," Soneira stated at that time.
Lately, at least a handful of Asia-based reports have claimed that Apple is going to resolve this using a revised design. The result: a brand new model will turn up in time for the christmas season as slim as the Apple iPad 2 and having a Sharp IGZO display (with less backlights compared to the existing Retina iPad tablet).
Nevertheless this is when the speculation can get iffy. That is akin to General Motors announcing a 2012 Chevrolet Volt using a sixteen kWh battery, after that deciding mid-year to drop in a 20 kWh electric battery and a more fuel-efficient engine. People who purchased the previous model would feel cheated.
Having said that, Apple's advertising team could always envision a clever way to spin a new design. But that will acquire genius that I am not certain even Apple possesses.
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