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New iPhone likely out in September: Nikkei

11 Comments

Apple is to release its newest iPhone in September, with higher resolution and bigger screens, a report said Friday, its latest salvo in the smartphone wars where it has lost global market share to rivals such as Samsung.

The new handset, expected to be called the iPhone 6, is to come in two versions with a 4.7- or 5.5-inch screen, both bigger than the current four-inch panel, the respected Nikkei business daily said, without citing sources.

Apple is ordering its higher-resolution liquid crystal display screens from Japanese electronics giant Sharp, Japan Display and South Korea's LG Display, it added.

Apple released the iPhone 5 in September 2012 and newer versions in the series last year.

A Japan-based spokesman for the California tech giant could not be immediately reached for comment on the Nikkei report, which was widely picked up by a string of technology news websites.

The Nikkei story comes after Taiwan's Commercial Times said this month that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co had started producing chips for the next iPhone.

That news fed rumors that Apple is reducing its reliance for parts on South Korean giant Samsung, its main competitor in the mobile phone market and a bitter rival with which it is contesting several copyright court battles globally.

Samsung in February unveiled its new flagship Galaxy S5 smartphone armed with a fingerprint scanner and a built-in heart rate sensor, as it tries to cement its leadership of the multibillion-dollar market.

However, the South Korean giant voiced annoyance after domestic telecoms operators released its latest smartphone ahead of schedule in order to dodge sales restrictions imposed by regulators. The world's biggest mobile phone maker had planned a worldwide debut of the Galaxy S5 on April 11.

Samsung made about 30% of all smartphones sold globally last year, nearly twice the share of Apple.

A survey by International Data Corporation (IDC) last month said Google's Android system -- used by Samsung among others -- extended its gains over Apple's iPhone in the last quarter of 2013, and Windows Phone grabbed the number three market position.

But other challengers are moving up the ranks with Taiwan's HTC Corp having launched an update of its HTC One smartphone while Sony has seen strong sales of its Xperia offering.

Global shipments of smartphones last year topped a billion for the first time, up 38.4% from the 725.3 million shipped in 2012.

Apple, however, had the lowest year-on-year increase of all major smartphone makers even though its 5S and 5C models were available in more countries, according to IDC.

While record iPhone and iPad sales pushed Apple's fourth-quarter revenue to a new high investors have been concerned over weaker profits in fierce mobile gadget markets.

The California-based tech giant reported net income of $13.1 billion on revenue of $57.6 billion in the quarter that ended December 28, helped by selling 51 million iPhones.

The profit was the same as Apple reported in the same quarter a year earlier when its revenue was $54.5 billion.

The firm is leaning on the potentially huge Chinese market as its looks to power future growth.

In January, that goal got a boost as China Mobile, the country's biggest wireless provider, started selling the iPhone to millions of customers nationwide, ending a six-year wait in a crucial market.

China Mobile has a 760 million-strong customer base and its plans to roll out the world's largest 4G (fourth generation) network have both companies forecasting a fruitful union.

© (c) 2014 AFP

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

11 Comments
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Is that the release date in the US or in Japan? If it's the US, they may as well be saying it'll be April 2015 here.

-8 ( +0 / -8 )

Remember when Steve Jobs used to mock large phone screens?

1 ( +2 / -1 )

The screen on my iPhone 5 is on the small side but I'm just about to finish paying off the plan to buy it and have no wish, need or money to waste buying the latest one.

It also fits snugly inside my pocket, waist pouch, and backpacks. Just the right size. If I want a bigger screen, I'll use my iPad. Or use a cable to show whatever app I'm using on my TV.

3 ( +4 / -1 )

I totally agree with Reformed...I grabbed a Galaxy S4 for a while withou any prejudice, and I thought it was way too big for me. Even if Apple releases a ultra-large screen, I won't want that.

-2 ( +1 / -3 )

@Smith - Actually both the iPhone 5 and the 5s went on sale in Japan the same day as in the US. Just saying ... lol

4 ( +4 / -0 )

I'm happy for Apple, as well the the smartphone market as a whole, but if the most expensive and top-of-the-line iPhone in the States continues to cost less than the cheapest entry-level bottom-rung iPhone in Japan (now about $400), I'm certainly not going to pay Apple Japan (and the Japan telecoms) the prices they are demanding.

A thousand dollars, and a two-year contract? No thanks.

What are you going on about? They give away iphones at softbank....they are free as in no money (0yen for the 16gb or 430 yen for the 32gb version)

-1 ( +1 / -2 )

I do think Apple will roll out a circa 4.8-inch (122 mm) diagonal screen iPhone this September. Not only a bigger screen, but now it can display five columns of icons, unlike the four now.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

"Samsung made about 30% of all smartphones sold globally last year, nearly twice the share of Apple."

" Apple, however, had the lowest year-on-year increase of all major smartphone makers even though its 5S and 5C models were available in more countries, according to IDC."

Losing ground. The 5C is now available for free. Can't hardly give it away. Unless the next product is actually innovative, not just marketing nonsense, they'll continue to lose ground left, right, and center. Like Blackberry.

1 ( +2 / -1 )

"New" iPhone. Lol!

0 ( +1 / -1 )

Bye Bye, Galaxy.

-3 ( +0 / -3 )

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