iPad&iPhone user

2020 iOS prediction­s: iPad Pro and so many iPhones

Things could get more interestin­g in 2020. Jason Snell reports

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All told, 2019 was a relatively quiet year for the iPhone and iPad. Apple brought back some old favourites to round out the iPad product line, and a new batch of incrementa­lly improved iPhones was released in the autumn, as anyone could have predicted. But quiet years aren’t really quiet. They generally mean that at Apple Park, there are

projects coming to fruition, only to be sprung on an unsuspecti­ng public the next year. And so, once again, I present one man’s attempt to guess what projects will finally become products in 2020.

iPhone: More of the same?

The iPhone 11 Plus is the third iteration of the iPhone X and the iPhone 11 is the second iteration of the iPhone XR. Unless Apple has a surprise iPhone redesign up its sleeve, 2020 is due to bring us the not-entirely-exciting third and fourth iterations of those familiar products.

The truth is, Apple can’t reinvent the wheel every year, as much as the media and many iPhone fans would like it to. (Apple would like it, too – sales tend to spike when there’s an appreciabl­y new iPhone design, and sag when the designs start to get old. 2020 is shaping up to be a sag.)

Still, rumours from the supply chain suggest that Apple is planning on countering iPhone ennui with volume, volume, volume – namely two new iPhone models designed to nestle among the three familiar existing ones. One of these isn’t exactly new – it’s the long-anticipate­d return of the iPhone SE concept.

Unfortunat­ely for fans of small phones, the actual iPhone SE concept isn’t a small phone, but a lower-cost phone that uses the previous-generation body style. That’s why it make more sense that a new iPhone SE will take the internals from an iPhone 11 and place them in the familiar iPhone 6/7/8 case. That gets Apple a lower-priced entry phone again without needing to keep selling the iPhone 8. This seems like a sensible strategy, and I’ll go on the record as predicting that this

phone will simply be called the iPhone SE. And it’ll sit at the bottom of the iPhone price list for a few years, just as its predecesso­r did.

More intriguing is the rumour that Apple’s preparing a smaller version of the iPhone 11. Size is relative – this rumoured fourth core iPhone would have a 5.4in diagonal screen, meaning it would be bigger than the 4.7in iPhone SE, but it would be the smallest iPhone X-class phone yet – and could possibly be a relief among people who upgraded to the iPhone X, XS, or 11 Pro reluctantl­y because of the size difference. (Presumably with an edge-to-edge screen, the 5.4in iPhone would be about the same overall size as the iPhone SE.)

Another interestin­g rumoured move for Apple is taking the iPhone Pro Max even further, upsizing it to a 6.7in diagonal screen. I love this move, because the

users of the Pro Max are people who clearly want the biggest iPhone they can get.

With five phones in the product line, it’s going to be important for Apple to keep the naming simple. That’s why I suspect Apple will simply increment the number from 11 to 12, providing us with an iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Max, iPhone 12 Pro, and iPhone 12 Pro Max, along with the aforementi­oned iPhone SE. I also predict that Apple will continue to be aggressive on iPhone prices, with the new iPhone 12 starting at £649. (I wouldn’t be surprised if an iPhone 12 Max is priced at £749 rather than the iPhone 11’s £729, though.)

What will be new in the iPhone in 2020? The rumours say a new depth-perception camera to aid in use with augmented reality applicatio­ns, and while I find AR to be a snooze, Apple is really excited about it – or wants to make all those years of research into augmented-reality glasses pay off. Besides which, you should never bet against camera and photograph­y upgrades in new iPhones.

Will this be the year that an iPhone gets support for the Apple Pencil? I feel like we’ve gone so long that the answer is going to be ‘no’, eternally, but that enormous 6.7in iPhone 12 Pro Max could be a great companion for a stylus.

iPad: Let’s get Pro

After a year with surprising new releases of the iPad Air and iPad mini, it’s time for our attention to turn back to the iPad Pro. This will be the second iteration of the current iPad Pro design, so don’t expect any major redesigns. Rumours suggest the depth-enhanced

camera sensors due on the iPhone 12 will first appear on the iPad Pro, which seems perfectly reasonable.

I’m also curious how Apple will expand the definition of ‘Pro’ in the iPad Pro, in order to keep it differenti­ated from the cheaper iPad devices that now support the Smart Connector and the Apple Pencil. One thought

I had – and I realize I’m wishcastin­g here, but it’s my article and I’m allowing it – is that perhaps Apple could up the iPad Pro accessory game this time around. Could Apple offer a second Smart Keyboard, one with more

traditiona­l keys? It would be heavier, but the success of the Brydge Keyboard suggests that some users would prefer a more laptop-like feel on their iPad keyboard.

Though Apple has tentativel­y introduced support for Bluetooth mice in iOS 13 as an accessibil­ity setting, that feature seems a little too limited to be supported by a Smart Keyboard that includes a trackpad. But if iPadOS 14 ships this autumn with improved cursor support, maybe it could be an option?

And here’s a wacky idea: what if the iPad Pro gained an SD card slot? I know, I know, Apple adding slots to anything seems unlikely – but on a device like the iPad Pro, it might almost make sense. Now that the Files app can read external storage devices, Apple could add a card slot to its top-end iPad and please photograph­ers and anyone else who ends up with large media files on little tiny cards.

iOS and iPadOS 14: The refresh that pauses?

You could argue that Apple’s most surprising move of 2019 was it rebranding iOS on the iPad as iPadOS. The implicatio­n there is that iPadOS 14 will actually contain iPad focused features, and not essentiall­y ignore the iPad as iOS 8, 10, and 12 did. I don’t think Apple can take a year off from the iPad now that iPadOS exists, but the past track record is not good. Apple’s choices this time will reveal whether the creation of iPadOS was a real commitment to the iPad as a platform, or if it’s just a hollow marketing phrase. (I think Apple will prioritize at least one banner iPad feature in order to justify the name, but it won’t be as iPad-focused a release as iPadOS 13 was.)

In general, I think Apple will slow down the pace of iOS developmen­t a little bit in order to regain stability. iOS 13 was a mess, frustratin­g developers and users and – perhaps most importantl­y to Apple – reducing the ability of app developers to embrace new Apple technologi­es because they were so busy dealing with bugs and incompatib­ilities.

Still, what is an iOS update cycle without new features? I’m hoping for upgrades to Shortcuts, improvemen­ts to Safari for iPad, and a bunch of features that improve the experience of Apple’s paid services – iCloud, Apple TV+, and Apple News+, to name three. It also feels like Apple needs to refine the share sheet and the tap-and-hold contextual menus (now that

3D Touch has left the building) to be more consistent and powerful.

What’s the wild card?

I’d like to predict something completely wild and unexpected, but 2020 seems like it will be very much a stay-the-course year for iOS. But I’ll once again suggest that Apple could consider whether iOS is robust enough to support a laptop-shaped device. Not everyone wants or needs a MacBook, but the laptop form factor is popular and familiar. Could Apple build an iPadOSrunn­ing laptop? Sure, but it would have to want to, and it’s shown no sign of that.

If I ran the zoo, though, I’d consider beefing up iPadOS’s cursor support and building a new iPadOS device – let’s call it iBook, because I’m in charge now and won’t be denied – with attached keyboard and trackpad. An iOS laptop. All the pieces are in place. I’d love to see it – but alas, I don’t really think it will. 2020 is a weird-sounding year, but an iOS laptop is too weird even for 2020.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone 11 Pro, and iPhone 11
iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone 11 Pro, and iPhone 11
 ??  ?? 11- and 12.9in iPad Pros
11- and 12.9in iPad Pros
 ??  ?? iPadOS
iPadOS

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