Wednesday, February 15, 2012

IPad 4G? Apple To Release LTE IPad On AT&T And Verizon, Says WSJ

In a report on the next-generation iPad from February 9, the New York Times wrote that "[i]t’s unclear whether the product will be called the iPad 3."
Could it be that this iPad will be not the iPad 3, but the iPad 4G?The Wall Street Journal is reporting that, "according to people familiar with the matter," the newest iPad will feature 4G LTE technology, enabling the tablet to connect to the faster networks on AT&T and Verizon.
The iPad 3 -- or whatever it's called -- is widely rumored to be announced on March 7th, according to a report from Rene Ritchie at Apple blog iMore. Reporters from The New York Times, The Next Web, and Wall Street Journal-owned All Things Digital have all pegged the first week of March as the timeframe in which Apple will unveil it's new iPad.
Most rumors about the specifics of the next iPad have side-stepped 4G and have focused on the tablet's display: Apple is widely expected to be aiming for a so-called Retina Display, with a resolution so crisp that a user is unable to make out the individual pixels on the screen before him.Several reports have cited troubles on the supply chain in mass producing these displays, but Apple is still supposedly on track to include the Retina Display in its product launch next month.Though many Apple pundits have suggested that the next iPad will feature 4G technology, theJournal's report is the most definitive and persuasive evidence yet that 2012's iPad will indeed be 4G compatible.
By wide margins, Apple makes both the most popular smartphone and the most popular tablet in the United States; neither the iPhone 4S nor the iPad 2 are 4G connective. The inclusion of 4G in Apple's popular slate computer would be a huge boon to both AT&T and Verizon: The battling mobile giants are the two largest carriers in the United States in terms of customers, and the two have beenspending billions of dollars to bolster their 4G networks. Both companies have launched nationwide advertisements attempting to lure new customers with the high speeds of their new fourth-generation cellular networks -- all the while doing so without a 4G Apple product.

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