Apple iPhone Confirmed at Foxconn

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According to reports, Apple's much talked about iPhone has been confirmed for mass production at Hon Hai Precision, otherwise known as Foxconn. The report was issued today when sources close to Foxconn told reporters in Taiwan. If the sources are correct, Foxconn secured the order from Apple to produce roughly 12 million iPhone units.

Apple is expected to launch the iPhone sometime in the first half of 2007. The product has been long in waiting and is expected to combine the functionality of Apple's popular iPod with the communications capabilities of a mobile phone. Some analysts are expecting that while the first generation iPhone units will lack smart phone features, Apple will follow-up with an "iPhone Pro" for business folks.

DailyTech previously reported that the iPhone trademark was officially filed by Apple roughly a month ago, but the iPhone domain has been around for quite some time. Earlier reports also indicated that Apple entered into a partnership with Cingular Wireless to launch the iPhone as a Cingular exclusive product -- Apple is expected to make the phone available at its retail locations as well.

Expectations are high for Apple's iPhone. Analysts predict that Apple will gain roughly 1 percent market share of the mobile phone space in under a year's time, equating to roughly $2 billion. No further details of Apple's contract with Foxconn for the iPhone was released.

DailyTech - Apple iPhone Confirmed at Foxconn
 
A MAKER of entertainment gear called Apple has placed an order with a Taiwanese manufacturer to build 12 million mobile phones.

According to Red Herring, the order will mean that Steve Jobs will probably pull off one of his evangelical product launches to the faithful at the Macworld religious gathering in January.

Hon Hai Precision, whose customers include Apple, Cisco, Dell, Nokia, and Sony, received the order and had to file the information to various investment bodies

Apple orders 12 million iPhones
 
A WALL STREET analyst claimed Apple has two iPhones on the drawing board.

According to Fox News, Shaw Wu, an analyst with American Technology Research said that although it has been known that Apple will launch an iPhone fairly soon, he thinks there will be two different types.

The second iPhone will have instant messaging capabilities and will work with its iTunes software.

He claims this will improve the use of the iChat feature on Macs and give punters instant messaging capabilities. Wu claims it will be called the 'iChat mobile' and will look like the iPod Nano.

FOXNews.com - Analyst: More Than One Apple iPhone Being Developed - Technology News | News On Technology
 
Apple Patent Posits the 'Zirconia' iPhone

Yet another Apple Patent filing seems to confirm plans to release an iPhone. Bloomberg News' first revealed a new patent for an enclosure for such a device that would be conductive enough for RF signals. The new patent seems likely to cover a device that combines a phone with a music player. Its revelation has sparked yet another wave of optimism that the iPhone may debut - perhaps in January 2007.

The patent was filed in August and published by the US Patent Office yesterday. It is focused mainly on the development of a new type of enclusure for such devices, based on ceramic material, Zirconia. Many will already be familiar with Zirconia - it's a material used to create fake jewellery.

"The enclosure includes a structural wall formed from a ceramic material that permits wireless communications therethrough. The wireless communications may for example correspond to RF communications, and further the ceramic material may be radio-transparent thereby allowing RF communications therethrough."

At a later point, the filling remarks: "There is a need for improved enclosures for portable computing devices," the filing explains. "Particularly, enclosures that are more cost effective, smaller, lighter, stronger, and aesthetically more pleasing than current enclosure designs."

Commenting on the news, Roger Kay, president of the market-research firm Endpoint Technologies, told Macworld: "Everyone had already triangulated that this was likely – it makes a lot of sense. "The only market larger than computers is the phone market. Phone companies have the potential to eat the media player market, so Apple can't leave that base uncovered."

Apple patent posits the 'Zirconia' iPhone - iPod/iTunes - Macworld UK
 
So apparently last night Kevin Rose, of Digg and Diggnation fame, apparently confirmed information he knew about the iPhone on his eponymous vidcast. According to Kevin, who, to his credit, accurately predicted one of Apple's most secretive and hyped launches of 2005, the iPod nano, the iPhone will feature the following:

January launch on "all" providers, both CDMA and GSM
Extremely small form factor
Two battery design (with single charger) -- one for playing music, the other for phone functions
Flash memory: 4GB for $249, 8GB for $449
"Slide-out keyboard"
Possibly touchscreen

There's obviously a lot there to process -- some new rumor, some old rumor, and some which does and does not jibe with what we've heard. According to a trusted source of Engadget's, whose iPhone information has gone heretofore unpublished, it's pretty safe to say it won't have a QWERTY keyboard (although it may be a slider), touchscreen is out, and it's only going to be GSM with 3G at launch, going with a singular carrier in the US (guess which). So that covers basically all of the rumors we've already heard anyway. We can confirm we've also heard about this dual battery design which powers the flash music player and phone portions separately, but that's about all we've got that crosses over with Rose's information. Either way, we don't want to bark up the wrong tree with this one because insider and rumored information is so often totally inaccurate, even if only because radical design changes are known to be made, especially by Steve "Loose Cannon" Jobs. Guess we'll have to settle in for our usually wait until January.

Kevin Rose confirms iPhone? - Engadget
 
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One of the main attractions of Apple's upcoming iPhone is how much integration it will have with OS X. Being able to sync your calendar, contacts, tasks, email, files, bookmarks, and whatever else with your Mac is a dream for many Apple users today. But how much integration and how heavily Apple is counting on this to sell the phone is that hasn't quite been explored. AppleInsider spins a yarn. The project originally started about three years ago along with Mac OS X Tiger (10.4). Apple put something together from its proprietary hardware and software and started showing it to wireless partners.

The main selling point was to integrate with OS X, with one application being the ability to control .Mac services from the road. Others were iTunes integration, video ringback tones that you set through Address Book, being able to send a video to the person you called that plays before the call was answered, and full iChat integration (video conferencing). During the tour, Apple was reportedly both talking with T-Mobile and analyzing MVNO possibilities. The deal may not have panned out yet, but they've "become very good friends". An interesting tale, one which we'll get to see the fruits of firsthand come January.

Apple's iPhone Depends Heavily on OS X Integration - Gizmodo
 
CNET: Apple's iPhone will fail

I just looked at the calendar and realized that:

(a) It's only a few weeks to Macworld, where Apple Computer is expected to release a smart phone similar to the BlackBerry, and:

(b) I haven't antagonized Apple fans in a while. It's my birthday this week, after all, and I need to get more fun out of turning 45 than just counting the new moles on my back.

So, anyways, Apple is slated to come out with a new phone. Reports say that it will have a slide-out keyboard, 4GB or 8GB of storage, and work on CDMA or GSM cellular networks. It will start at $249 before subscription rebates.

And it will largely fail.

Initially, of course, it won't look that way at all. As with any Apple product release, it will be ushered into the world on a wave of obligatory gushing. "It's the greatest advance in communication since cave painting," some will proclaim. "Like Star Trek, but without the clingy Qiana shirts."

It's predictable. If Apple got into medical devices, people would come out of Steve Jobs' speech proclaiming "The iBag is the easiest, most user-friendly colostomy device I've ever encountered."

Sales for the phone will skyrocket initially. However, things will calm down, and the Apple phone will take its place on the shelves with the random video cameras, cell phones, wireless routers and other would-be hits. Remember the Mac Mini? It was supposed to ignite a revolution for small computers. It didn't. The flat-panel iMac? Some predicted that Apple's price tag would drive other prices higher. Whoops.

Why won't the Apple phone succeed? It will be a great piece of hardware that, if I wasn't the cheapest man in North America, I might buy. The entire strategy, however, is based on what I call "iPod magic." Apple succeeded with the iPod, the theory goes. Therefore, they can break into other categories and turn them upside down.

Single shot?
But the iPod looks like it may turn out to be a non-repeatable experience. Look at the historical record. When the iPod emerged in late 2001, it solved some major problems with MP3 players. At the time, such music devices came either equipped with a nominal amount of flash memory--like 64MB or 128MB--or a large 2.5-inch hard drive. Sony, the once-king of portable music, remained in love with portable CD players.

Apple opted to adopt the 1.8-inch hard drive, a piece of hardware spurned by other manufacturers. That was the world's mistake. The 1.8-inch drive let Apple put a huge amount of storage--the real problem with MP3 players--into a small form factor. The first iPod sported 5GB of storage, or nearly 40 times as much as the upper crust of flash players. The company even locked up supply of 1.8-inch drives for a while, so no one could copy it.

The iPod also conquered the problem of small screens and cheesy navigation. With its newfound popularity, the company was also able to get music publishers to agree to its terms.

Unfortunately for Apple, problems like that don't exist in the handset business. Cell phones aren't clunky, inadequate devices. Instead, they are pretty good. Really good. Why do you think they call it a Crackberry? Because the lumpy design and confusing interface of the device is causing people to break into cars? No, it's because people are addicted to it.

Samsung has scoured the world's design schools and hired artists on three continents to keep its phones looking good. Motorola has revived its fortunes with design. KDDI, a Japanese carrier, has a design showcase in the teen shopping area of Tokyo just to be close to trends. And Sharp doesn't skimp when it comes to putting LCD TVs on its phones.

Apple, in other words, won't be competing against rather doltish, unstylish companies like the old Compaq. The handset companies move pretty quick and put out new models every few weeks.

Second, Apple has to face the issue of trust. Music players are fairly easy. Songs come out of memory and must be amplified. With cell phones, consumers care mostly about quality of service. Who, really, doesn't expect a new company to conquer all the static and connection issues with their phones? Granted, Apple will use contract manufacturers to assemble their phones, but designing these phones takes experience and talent. And the cell carriers are far deeper into it here.

So when consumers get to that counter at CompUSA, they will debate buying the Apple phone, and even hold it up for a look. But when they whip out the credit card, they'll probably opt for a Motorola.

The Apple phone flop | Perspectives | CNET News.com
 
Last week, a quick and nondescript post on Gizmodo said that the iPhone would be announced today. Of course, such a word was met with equal amounts of skepticism and excitement from Apple fans. It turns out that much of the riff-raff surrounding a mobile phone device from the Mac-maker was completely misplaced. Yes, the iPhone is officially real today, but it’s not from Apple – The iPhone was announced today by Linksys as its new line of VoIP devices.

Products in the iPhone product line integrate Skype and Yahoo! Messenger with Voice and can toggle between the VoIP calling options and traditional landline service with the click of a button.

More here : DailyTech - iPhone Officially Announced :bleh:
 
Iphone looks different from the above mentioned pic.IMO,it has a decent change of success since people don't prefer carrying a seperate phone and mp3 player and would ideally like both the functions on a single device.
 
well just because it has "I" prefixed it doesn't mean its going to succeed :p. the ipod's design was great,this im afraid is quite the opposite :|
 
I kinda agree with Iphone not doing that great. SE has already a good hold in the music phone industry with its W series phones.

And all Nokia N-Series phones with the Ad-15 accessory outputs sound quality equivalent to an Ipod itself.
 
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