2 posts tagged “wwdc”
So Apple's WWDC 2008 is upon us this week, in particular the Steve Jobs keynote is today @ 1800 GMT. Based upon the incredulous hype over the past few days everyone is fully expecting the 2nd generation iPhone today, along with lots of other goodies like .Mac/MobileMe.
Me? I'm not so sure now...yes I wrote a piece last week all about how Apple could ship 3m iPhones worldwide and launch simultaneously, I still stand by it, just not the timeframe in which it will happen.
WWDC is a developer conference, not for consumers. Developers want to hear & learn about Leopard features, iPhone OS features and network with their peers who are also greating great apps.
Yes, everyone and their granny wants the 2nd gen iPhone however I think it's going to be a few weeks yet - 24th June is my bet (there we are I said it, 24th June is when the 2nd gen iPhone will be launched). I reckon the .Mac/MobileMe reworking will be central to this as well.
The new iPhone is a big, big event. Steve will want to demonstrate every single new feature to death (including how tightly integrated it is with .Mac/MobileMe with OTA syncing etc) - he simply can't do that in 90 minutes or less given all the other good news he will want to tell us.
So what will we get at WWDC today?
I think it will be something targetting Windows developers, maybe along the lines of the recently rumoured Apple Mac Fusion. I don't buy the form factor as it's too slim, however I do buy the concept.
I can see a lot of these being shipped to developers to let them try out OS X development at low cost (kind of like what the Mac Mini was meant to do), with perhaps a small number of variants targetting existing Mac Mini owners, gamers etc.
Again, only time will tell...
I've been quietly observing the rising hysteria and rumor-mongering about the next iPhone (iPhone 2 or 3G iphone or whatever) and whether or not it will launch during/after WWDC 2008...
- Apple have built a truly global iPhone.
- They have built millions of them already.
- Each and every iPhone is the same - there is no difference between a US iPhone and an Australian one.
- Apple have pre-installed every iPhone with a bootstrap firmware that only allows it to boot and sync with iTunes.
- Each iPhone will ship with an empty SIM tray. You will decide at purchase time which carrier you want and receive the appropriate SIM to install (for countries like the UK where there is only one carrier you will obviously not get a choice).
- Buyers of the new iPhone have to therefore have to put the SIM in the phone then connect it to their iTunes to get the iPhone OS installed & activated.
- The iPhone OS will then be customised to the country & carrier required, perhaps using iTunes & SIM information (language settings, 3G network parameters, ringtones & wallpaper will be installed at this point). These customisations would permit the carriers some flexibility in getting their brands onto the iPhone (future customisation updates could also be carried out through this process).
- For Apple, this allows them to develop and fine tune the iPhone OS right up until launch time.
- Furthermore by having a bootstrap firmware Apple ensures that all iPhones (either on contract or pay-as-you-go) have to be activated. This stops the "bootleg" iPhones that have flooded the market, raising the revenue stream for carriers AND Apple.
- What about power? Well, Apple will remove the power adaptor from the package and have charging by USB (they'll declare that most of their users probably don't use the separate charging plug, that it reduces the packaging and makes it more environmentally friendly).
- Apple can build as many of these global iPhones as they like, distribute them wherever there is demand and the user that buys it actually completes the build of the iPhone.