New versions of mobile software (be it iOS
or Android) can often be as feature-packed and exciting as new phone models,
and frequently kick a lot of new value down to older hardware. As for the iPhone 5 features and release time, Apple made no clear announcement.
The question is, can we look into the new
features of iOS 6 to peer upstream at what Apple's next iPhone might be like? Well,
here’re some guesses about the features of the next Apple iPhone, iPhone 5?
Maybe.
Mobile
Wallet
Passbook doesn't introduce much that isn't
already available via other apps, but it's Apple's first baked-in commitment to
digital ticket/coupon/account consolidation. The ability to add QR codes and
other frequent-user cards may sound small, but if Apple can help pull the
general public into using the iPhone as a digital wallet, then this could be
the first step toward unlocking NFC and other swipe-to-pay functions in the
next iPhone.
4G
LTE
Obviously, the next iPhone will have 4G
LTE. Duh. FaceTime will support cellular calls, seemingly just in time for
these new 4G iPhones. Will FaceTime also support 3G calls? It should, since
Skype already does, too.
Siri
and Eyes Free: The new Siri
Last year, Siri was packaged as one of the
main selling points of the new iPhone. This year, expect an improved, more
integrated Siri and Eyes Free voice-control integration in certain cars as
another new selling point. Some may have felt burned by Siri's lack of
responsiveness or utility in the past, but it seems that Apple is set on making
Siri indispensable.
Turn-by-turn
navigation
Don't underestimate this feature. Apple's
move to own turn-by-turn, rather than offload the responsibility to an app,
makes the iPhone (like the 4G iPad) a true navigation device right out of the
box. Some of the iPhone's new features, like Siri, have recently been more
about software than hardware. Imagine Apple ads this fall focused on lost
people finding their way, and so on.
A
larger screen?
A bigger screen means better video
enjoyment on iPhone 5, like watching HD videos on iPhone 5. Apple's new Maps app has impressive 3D flyover effects that
could do with a bigger screen. Maybe this and Safari's new offline reading-list
feature could point the way to the new iPhone being touted as "better for
reading" or "better for navigation." A new screen is overdue;
most of the Android and Windows 7 phone landscape has long since adopted larger
displays. Apple would be playing catch-up to the rest of the big-screen phone
industry.
I heard about apple will be launching ios 6 and which is great news to hear as in october 2012 iphone 5 will be launch. People are all love multimedia options of iphone and i think apple will provide more better multimedia solutions in iphone 5.
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