Yeah... excluding the possibility of a "nano", which many people find laughable here, I'm actually hoping there's no major hardware changes this summer. LTE is rolling out in most parts of the world at the end of 2009 and beginning of 2010, with the first major commercial distribution of this being done in Vancouver in time for the 2010 Winter Olympics. Why change now when new tech is right around the bend?
It would make sense for Apple to introduce a "speed-bump" upgrade in summer, or simple upgrades like expanded storage and a matte plastic model, so they can hold out for a much more substantial upgrade with "iPhone LTE", rather than making us wait the whole one-year life-cycle of a full upgrade to take advantage of LTE services that will go live much sooner than that.
2010 is also when Apple's contract with AT&T is up, meaning they can offer an LTE-based iPhone through Verizon, who seems more gung-ho about LTE than AT&T by a wide margin. Not to mention that ALL of Apple's wireless partners in the rest of the world seem ready to jump on the tech, from Softbank in Japan to Vodafone and O2/Telefonica in much of Europe to the rumored Chinese partner China Unicom.
I imagine the big feature for the iPhone LTE, aside from LTE, is worldwide support for mobile phone point-of-sale use (known to our Japanese friends as osaifu-keitai) thanks to a standardization of that technology to make it functional worldwide and trials already beginning to test consumer readiness for the tech.
2010 is going to be the year that iPhone really takes a chunk out of its competitors, it'll be interesting to see.
It would make sense for Apple to introduce a "speed-bump" upgrade in summer, or simple upgrades like expanded storage and a matte plastic model, so they can hold out for a much more substantial upgrade with "iPhone LTE", rather than making us wait the whole one-year life-cycle of a full upgrade to take advantage of LTE services that will go live much sooner than that.
2010 is also when Apple's contract with AT&T is up, meaning they can offer an LTE-based iPhone through Verizon, who seems more gung-ho about LTE than AT&T by a wide margin. Not to mention that ALL of Apple's wireless partners in the rest of the world seem ready to jump on the tech, from Softbank in Japan to Vodafone and O2/Telefonica in much of Europe to the rumored Chinese partner China Unicom.
I imagine the big feature for the iPhone LTE, aside from LTE, is worldwide support for mobile phone point-of-sale use (known to our Japanese friends as osaifu-keitai) thanks to a standardization of that technology to make it functional worldwide and trials already beginning to test consumer readiness for the tech.
2010 is going to be the year that iPhone really takes a chunk out of its competitors, it'll be interesting to see.