• TSMC Begins Testing Apple’s A6 Processor with 28-nanometer Technology


    Taiwan Economic News is reporting that local Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (TSMC), the world’s largest semiconductor foundry by market shares now, has started trial production of the A6 processor in cooperation with Apple Inc., with the production design to be taped out in the first quarter of next year and scheduled to be publicly unveiled in the second quarter at the earliest, according to industry sources.

    TSMC has applied its newest 28-nanometer process and 3D stacking technologies to produce the next-generation processor A6, which is based on the ARM architecture and will undergo TSMC’s cutting-edge silicon interposer and bump on trace (BOT) methodologies. Industry insiders said that the manufacturing will help to pump considerable momentum into TSMC’s business growth starting next year, though the company has yet to comment on the deal for the moment.

    We already reported that Apple and TSMC have begun testing in July, however, both reports suggest that the next iPad 3 could be the first to sport the new processor in 2012.

    Let us wait and see how this will affect Samsung as Apple keen to shift most of production away from the korean company as Samsung has emerged as Apple’s toughest competitor in the smartphone and tablet market.

  • Apple iPhone 5 Features Speculation Roundup


    There’s still a few weeks in which talk about what new features will drive the future iPhone 5. Here is a great collection by Jonny Evans who sums up a good amount of features and specifications rumored or said to be included in the upcoming iPhone 5.

    Poker face

    The fifth-generation iPhone (iPhone 5, or, possibly, the iPhone 4S) is a very important release. Not only will it be a major attempt by which Apple hopes to consolidate its lead on the smartphone biz, but it is also likely to spark renewed competitive peaks within that business.

    The game is Apple’s to lose: it now dominates both by revenue and model sales. With that in mind here’s the current speculation, roughly in order of likelihood:

    1Ghz Dual-core A5 processor

    There have been some reports that production has been delayed by problems with heat dissipation on the new models. It’s impossible to say if that’s true, but Apple does seem likely to pop its most recent A-series processor inside its new phone.

    What does this mean? It means the new iPhone will be blazingly fast — twice as fast as the previous version and with up to nine times the graphics processing power, if the iPad 2 improvements be seen as guide.

    iOS 5 inside

    Apple has been very busy working on iOS 5, which, among other things, will offer support for the new ‘Find My Mac’ feature I predicted last May. And will also integrate tightly with iCloud for a computing anywhere style experience.

    A better camera

    Omnivision made waves this week with news that it has produced camera modules that are 20 percent thinner than before. The new iPhone is expected to boast an 8-megapixel Omnivision camera with an improved LED flash system. The front camera is also expected to improve.

    Bigger screen

    Replacement of the mechanical Home button with a capacitive controller could enable Apple to equip the iPhone 5 with a bigger 3.7-inch (or, perhaps, 4-inch) display.

    Better speakers

    Apple continues to improve the speakers it places inside its mobile devices. You’ll be able to drown out those tinny phones the kids at the back of the bus use with these.

    World class

    The iPhone 5 is expected to host a combined hybrid GSM/CDMA radio possibly by qualcomm. This means you’ll be able to use one device on most available networks. This also means you can expect iPhone 5 to hit Verizon and AT&T simultaneously, and to reach CDMA networks (such as those in China) pretty soon after Apple’s manufacturers begin to meet US demand.

    Screen resolution, RAM, storage

    1,280-x-720px Retina Display, 367ppi. 512MB RAM and available in models equipped with up to 64GB storage

    Thinner, too

    That’s right, the new iPhone’s expected to be thinner — given Omnivision’s news and potential use of a Thunderbolt connector, it could be considerably thinner. (10 percent?)

    A teardrop phone

    All those purported leaked case designs suggest that the new iPhone will have a teardrop-style chassis, thicker at one end than another.

    Voice Control

    The new iPhone will boast voice control using an app called Assistant. This will let you speak your music requests, send texts and make Facetime calls. Based on Siri, it will also make simple requests, for example, “Where’s my nearest Starbuck’s?”.

    Wireless Sync

    This has been confirmed as a feature within iOS 5. You won’t need a computer in the post PC smartphone era.

    Available in September

    That’s the deal following news that Pegatron has secured orders to deliver 10 million units of iPhone 5, beginning in September.

    Bluetooth 4 and/or NFC support

    Apple has been working away at NFC for several years, but it is possible the company will instead choose to implement Bluetooth 4, which includes some specifications which could theoretically support secure payments.

    iPhone HD — TV on demand

    The iPhone 5 will support Full HD, just like the iPad. AirPlay movies to your Apple TV, or connect it to an HDTV for a high-res viewing experience. (And don’t get me started on those shiny new TV streaming services claims).

    No LTE 4G phone

    The sad truth here is that while LTE is much-discussed, it hasn’t really seen wide deployment globally at this time. This means that there isn’t yet a sufficiently wide market to justify the expense of including support for the standard in this edition of the phone.

    I’m predicting LTE in the next-generation, when networks in key markets (eg., the UK) have upgraded their infrastructure to support the new standard.

    A new antenna

    Apple will not repeat antenna-gate. Jobs was not happy — recall the subsequent resignation of Mr Papermaster? Be prepared for a metal, rather than a glass back to the new device.

    A nice price

    I’m expecting the new device to come in at approximately the same price as the current models, though this will be tempered by local taxation changes and any unpredictable scarcity in component supply.

    An iPhone nano?

    I’m the biggest proponent of this device. Apple’s gone enigmatic on the matter.

    RBC Capital’s Mike Abramsky met with Apple this week, and writes, “Apple’s primary criterion for launching a lower-end iPhone is an innovative, category-killer experience.”

    That’s neither a yes or a no, and is a response which will keep competitors guessing, I suspect. Wait and see.

    Apple Maps?

    Perhaps next year. Or the C3 Technologies?

    And Smart Covers

    Will the iPhone 5 have its own set of Smart Covers?

  • Apple Releases iTunes 10.5 Beta 5, iOS 5 Beta 5 for iPhone 4, 3GS, iPod Touch, iPad


    Apple has released iOS 5 beta 5 to developers in addition to the fifth beta of iTunes 10.5 needed to synch the beta.

    Warning: These beta version are intended for developers only other people might not be able to install the beta sooner or later.

    Official change log for iTunes 10.5 Beta 5:

    • The version of iTunes that comes with beta 5 cannot sync devices that have the beta 4 software installed. To avoid this problem, do the following:
      1. Sync any devices that have beta 4 installed to the version of iTunes that came with beta 4.
      2. Upgrade iTunes to the version that comes with beta 5.
      3. Connect the device and install the beta 5 software. (Understand that you might see a failure to sync error when you first connect the device.)
      4. After installing the beta 5 software, restore from your the backup you made in step 1.
    • Videos purchased from the iTunes Store do not play on a 2nd generation AppleTV over AirPlay with iTunes 10.5.
  • New Cydia Tweak Adds Speedometer to iPhone Maps App


    Numerous noteworthy Cydia tweaks out there that let customize iPhone’s user interface but few are available for the Maps stock app. Here is a new tweak in Cydia, Speed for Maps, a simple tweak that adds a speedometer overlay, very unobtrusively, in the bottom corner of the stock Maps.app

    No new icon is added, but you can configure the output in the settings app. Changing between MPH, KPH, FPS, and even Knots.

    Speed for Maps is available free in Cydia. Go get it. This is one of the little things Apple should have thought of.