Apple ‘iPhone 5’ rumors continue to fly

As we ease into August, the rumors about Apple’s next iPhone continue to circulate — especially as folks debate whether they should wait for Apple or pull the trigger on an Android smartphone.

Lots of the chatter right now is more about what may not be in the next iPhone than what will be in it.

Multimedia

WASHINGTON, DC. MAY 21, 2013:   3-D Display with Haptic Touch Screen can be applied to medical and robotics, at Microsoft TechFair in Washington, DC on May 21, 2013. ( Photo by Jeffrey MacMillan )

Microsoft showcases new technologies in D.C.

The software giant displayed some of its most cutting-edge innovations at a fair this week.

More tech stories

Google faces new FTC probe over display ads

Google faces new FTC probe over display ads

Federal officials have monitored firm’s conduct since its acquisition of digital ad company DoubleClick.

The terrifying rise of the political entrepreneur

The terrifying rise of the political entrepreneur

There seems to be a new breed of entrepreneurs whose greatest skill is playing a political game similar to the corporate stooge.

Google X is acquiring high altitude wind startup Makani Power

Google X is acquiring high altitude wind startup Makani Power

This is the first time we’ve heard that Google’s secretive moonshot lab has bought an outside company.

There will be no pre-installed YouTube app in the next version of the operating system, according to a report at 9 to 5 Mac that was subsequently confirmed by the Verge.

Apple said that its license from YouTube to include the app in iOS has expired, though users can watch YouTube through the Web browser. YouTube will be developing its own app for devices running iOS 6, the company told 9 to 5 Mac, and Engadget reported that the current YouTube app will still be available on all devices running iOS 5.

This could actually be good news for Google, which has updated the YouTube app on Android devices to showcase its channel initiative and make the whole video-watching experience a little crisper. But there’s a case to be made that Apple is deliberately pulling away from its partnership with Google.

Apple has already introduced its own maps program for its next operating system, taking over for Google Maps. So while Google continues to make several prominent apps for iOS devices — Chrome, Google Drive and Gmail being just a few examples — it looks like it won’t be nearly as baked-in as it was before.

TechCrunch’s MG Siegler even raises the suggestion that the company might pull away from Google services completely and change its default search engine to Bing: “Microsoft needs Apple to make Bing relevant. Apple needs Microsoft in order to stop paying Google billions,” he wrote. “This is so obvious. I think we may see a Google-free iPhone sooner, rather than later.”

Apple is expected to release its new mobile operating system, iOS 6, in the fall — possibly alongside a new iPhone and an mini-iPad.

All of this is unconfirmed, of course but as of last week Apple-watchers have a date to circle (in pencil) for a release event: Sept. 12. The date was first reported by the blog iMore last week and then corroborated by unnamed sources to All Things Digital.

More technology news from The Post:

Sprint drops price of iPhone 4S

Refugee from Facebook questions the social media life

Apple’s deep ties to Samsung becoming more apparent, even as the two clash in court

Apple v. Samsung: What to expect in federal court

Loading...

Comments

Add your comment
 
Read what others are saying About Badges