Washington: As Samsung dominating the tablet market now Apple is aiming to launch second generation of its flagship tablet Apple iPad Air 2.
We have seen Apple iPhone 6 leaked on several occasion and now Apple iPad Air is starting to proceed in the news.
The fifth generation iPad is a great device but even brilliance can be built upon, so there’s still room for improvement.
Apple is rumored to launch bunch of devices including iPhone 6, iPad Air 2, iPad Pro, iWatch and iPad Mini 3 but most prominent of them all is Apple iPad Air 2.
The original iPad Air debut in 2013 with slim design but now Apple is aiming to launch iPad Air 2 with much slimmer design.
The iPad Air 2 release date is likely to be the beginning of November, with the launch happening at the start of the month or the week after.
It’s not going to drop in cost if Apple’s past performance is anything to go by, and we can’t see the design changing that much either given the recent change in the larger iPad’s chassis last year.
The launch of iOS 7.1 contained some mentions of two newer models of iPads, according to 9to5Mac, noting iPad 4.3 and 4.6 models, which could reference the new iPad Air and iPad Mini 3.
There’s always a tradeoff between portability and screen size, but the success of some competing tablets shows that there is a market for devices larger than the iPad.
Recent rumors have raised the spectra of a 12.9-inch iPad, significantly larger than the current 9.7-inch screen and running at 2K or even 4K resolution.
While the current Retina display running at 2,048 x 1,536 pixels could arguably already be described as 2K or very close, having a physically larger screen would be good for movies and photo editing, and Apple likes to boast about statistics when it suits.
Current rumors are pointing to a more ‘pressure sensitive’ display, which would allow for better reception of prods from your digits and even that much-fabled iStylus that could do everything but make the tea for you.
As the iPad gets more powerful it becomes a more realistic proposition as a work machine, with current models inching closer to being dubbed true laptop replacements. The only problem is that touch input just isn’t as accurate as mouse input for some tasks.
Adding support for mice or graphics pen-style devices over Bluetooth could make the iPad a more usable device for more complex tasks, especially when it comes to graphics apps.
This would be quite a step for Apple since it touts touch as easy and intuitive, but it would nonetheless be welcomed by some users.
iPads have had a front-facing camera for ages, and the Camera app is already able to detect faces when focusing.
So it would be nice to have some means to unlock or authenticate your device by simply holding it up as you normally do and having the camera recognise you. However, there’s a big caveat here: Apple needs to do what it did with Touch ID and make the system work instantly, and be very hard to spoof.
There are other possibilities instread, such as eye tracking, scrolling pages depending on your eye movements, or pausing movies when you look away. Again, we’ve seen these already, so we’d be looking to Apple to make the system flawless.
Like the Mini, the iPad Air still lacks the Touch ID sensor found in the new iPhone 5S. This seems a little odd for an expensive flagship device, and in future you can expect to see fingerprint sensing used for more than just unlocking a device, so putting it in the iPad would enable easier downloads, logins and even user switching.
With games and bigger music and video apps easily eating up 1GB or more, the base 16GB iPad can quickly fill up, especially if you’re going to be away from your computer and unable to re-sync new content easily.
So if it’s not a card slot (which it won’t be, unless the moon suddenly turns into a banana and gravity inverts) then some other ability to sync content – be it a digital locker, a Lightning port connector with card slot that can do more than just photos, or some other idea that multiple intelligent bods can dream up.
Touch is pretty amazing though we all take it for granted now. An interesting way for Apple to go could be to use a pressure-sensitive haptic screen in its iPad lineup.
As well as providing better interaction for painting and drawing apps, it could surely leverage the extra input information for other purposes like pressing hard on a link to open it in a new tab.
This is more of an iOS wish than specifically an iPad one, but iOS currently provides no real access to a file storage or manipulation area.
Sure, third party apps do this, each in their own way but if Apple implemented it at a system level it could standardize the process of downloading files (not currently supported by Safari), saving documents and storing stuff so that all developers could provide a better overall experience – and would facilitate expandable storage in some form, as we mentioned earlier.
Apple wants you to use iCloud to sync all this kind of stuff but that presumes that you always have a network connection and that users will happily pay to upgrade the measly 5GB of standard iCloud storage associated with each Apple ID.
It’s true that Apple’s dual core A7 performs better than most quad core mobile CPUs in everyday use and this is down to the fact that by making the processor and the software and tightly controlling both, it can optimize everything very well.
But just imagine that level of expertise being applied to a quad core CPU. Track counts and frame rates would go up, render and load times would go down – it’s going to happen at some point, and the boon in creativity, already one of Apple’s taglines to buying it tablets, would be immense.
So a quad core iPad seems likely, though the timing is less clear. The physically larger battery available would mean the Air likely went quad core before the iPad Mini ever could – but would Apple really want to switch out its strategy?.
The iPad’s two cameras are good, but there’s no real limit on how good people would like them to be.
It’s not just about screen sizes, since the Air already shoots in HD, but improving the quality of the image, the zoom and stills performance would all be welcome and seem likely contenders for inclusion in future versions of the iPad, since camera technology is constantly improving.
And by the way, we don’t mean the rear camera. That can go down to 2MP if it would make the design better, as it might discourage the scourge of tablet photography. We mean the front camera, improving it for use as a video conferencing tool and taking self portraits for social networks.
By live, we mean the ability to have two apps on screen at the same time. Imagine streaming iPlayer while checking your email, and not having to switch out of one to see the other.
There would have to be limits, like not allowing two apps to play sound at the same time, but it seems plausible enough on the larger screen of the Air, and with its significant processing power.
Again some other manufacturers have tried this with limited success, so it would be up to Apple to show them how to do it right – ideally it would be contextual or even Siri-driven, allowing you to be working on a spreadsheet or watching a movie and say ‘Siri, is my train delayed?’ and have what you were doing staying front and center with the information subtly popping up.
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