iPad&iPhone user

iPad 2020 rumours

Triple-lens camera on the iPad Pro? Not a surprise, but a welcome new feature. Leif Johnson and Macworld Staff report

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It’s been over a year since Apple released the current 11- and 12.9in iPad Pros, so they’re due for an update – which means the rumour mill for these products is going to start churning more frequently.

Triple-lens cameras for the iPad Pro

OnLeaks (aka Steve H. McFly) believes that the next iPad Pros will come with a triple-lens camera. He says that the dimensions of the 11in iPad Pro could be the same as the current model. No informatio­n was provided

about the dimensions of the 12.9in iPad Pro. But since the iPads will have the triple-lens camera, it’s possible that the tablets will be a bit thicker.

Time-of-flight 3D

We’ve heard plenty of rumours that suggest the 2020 iPhone will have time-of-flight 3D sensors for its rear camera, but a new report from South Korea’s The Elec (via MacRumours) suggests we’ll soon see them in the 2020 iPad Pro, too. We may even see them sooner, as the report claims Apple plans to release the models in March of 2020.

Derkwoo Electronic­s of South Korea is rumoured to start mass-producing some of the components for the time-of-flight sensors sometime later this year. If Apple does end up sticking with the March release

date – which seems iffy considerin­g previous iPad Pro release dates, but not implausibl­e – that means we’d see the sensors on the iPad Pro around half a year before we see them on the iPhone.

Time-of-flight sensors measure the time it takes for LED beams to bounce off objects in front of them, which allows for much greater accuracy for AR than what you’ll get with the machine-learning methods employed by the rear cameras in current iPhones. The TrueDepth sensors on the front-facing cameras on current iPhones are wickedly accurate, but they use a different technology that isn’t as effective past a few feet.

It may seem a little out of character for Apple to debut such important hardware on the iPad Pro rather than the iPhone, but the fact is that Apple tends to use its tablets over its phones when it demonstrat­es AR tech during keynote presentati­ons. Apple seemingly sees the technology as better suited to the iPad, and it’s possible it believes reliable sensors could make both the iPad and augmented reality grow in popularity.

Still, it’s really hard to imagine Apple taking away some of the iPhone’s thunder. For that matter, there are conflictin­g reports. The usually reliable Bloomberg claims that Apple will refresh the iPad Pro line-up later this year – the current models dropped in November – while Japanese site Mac Otakara recently claimed we’d see iPad Pros with triple lenses this October.

If there’s any truth to The Elec’s report, it could mean that Apple now plans to wait to release the new iPad Pro until next year.

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 ??  ?? It’s thought that the next iPad Pros could have a triple-lens camera on the rear
It’s thought that the next iPad Pros could have a triple-lens camera on the rear

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