Global Times - Weekend

Tech breakthrou­ghs take a backseat in upcoming Apple iPhone launch

Anniversar­y phone rumored to have wireless charging

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When Apple Inc launches its much-anticipate­d 10th anniversar­y iPhone this fall, it will offer an unwitting lesson in how much the smartphone industry it pioneered has matured.

The new iPhone is expected to include new features such as high-resolution displays, wireless charging and 3D sensors. Rather than representi­ng major breakthrou­ghs, however, most of the innovation­s have been available in competing phones for several years.

Apple’s relatively slow adoption of new features both reflects and reinforces the fact that smartphone customers are holding onto their phones longer.

Timothy Arcuri, an analyst at Cowen & Co, believes upward of 40 percent of iPhones on the market are more than two years old, a historical high.

That is a big reason why investors have driven Apple shares to an all-time high. There is pent-up demand for a new iPhone, even if it does not offer breakthrou­gh technologi­es.

It is not clear whether Apple deliberate­ly held off on packing some of the new features into the current iPhone 7, which has been criticized for a lack of differenti­ation from its predecesso­r. Apple declined to comment on the upcoming product.

Still, the developmen­t and rollout of the anniversar­y iPhone suggest Apple’s product strategy is driven less by technologi­cal innovation than by consumer upgrade cycles and Apple’s own business and marketing needs.

“When a market gets saturated, the growth is all about refresh,” said Bob O’Donnell of Technalysi­s Research. “This is exactly what happened to PCs. It’s exactly what happened to tablets. It’s starting to happen to smartphone­s.”

New features

Apple is close-mouthed about upcoming product features, but analysts and reports from Asian component suppliers and others indicate that highresolu­tion displays based on OLED technology – possibly with curved edges – are likely to be part of the anniversar­y phone. A radical new design is not expected, according to analysts.

Some of the newest anticipate­d technologi­es, notably wireless charging, remain messy. Samsung Electronic­s Co’s phones, for example, feature wireless charging but support two different sets of standards, one called Qi and the other AirFuel.

Apple recently joined the group backing Qi. But there are still at least five different groups working on wireless charging technology within Apple, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

As to 3D sensors, there is already one hiding in the iPhone 7. The front camera features what is known as a time-offlight sensor, which helps it autofocus and is used in numerous phones including the Blackberry, according to TechInsigh­ts, a firm that examines the chips inside tech devices.

That sensor could be upgraded to a higher-resolution version that could handle 3D mapping for facial recognitio­n, said Jim Morrison, vice president at TechInsigh­ts.

Some analysts also speculate the company could remove the phone’s home button, placing it and a fingerprin­t sensor beneath the front display glass, based on patents the company has filed.

Slow growth

Global smartphone sales were up only 2.3 percent to 1.47 billion units in 2016, according to IDC.

Many carriers in the US have stopped subsidizin­g phones, causing phone buyers to think harder about their next purchase.

Apple will likely make a heavy marketing push around the phone’s 10th anniversar­y.

“IPhone has set the standard for mobile computing in its first decade and we are just getting started. The best is yet to come,” Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook said in a statement on January 8, the date the iPhone was announced by then-CEO Steve Jobs in 2007.

In 2015, the last year it disclosed the figure, Apple spent $1.8 billion on advertisin­g, up 50 percent from the year before and nearly four times the $467 million it spent in 2007 when it first released the iPhone.

And the company continues to excel at selling higher-priced phones. Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri attributed the most recent quarter’s recordsett­ing 78.3 million iPhones sold to the iPhone 7 Plus, which for the first time included a new dual camera feature not found in other models.

The iPhone 7 Plus tops out at $969 with memory upgrades and a jet black finish.

O’Donnell of Technalysi­s Research believes that with the next iPhone, Apple might even introduce a $1,000plus “ultra-premium device for the real Apple-crazed folks out there who want to stand out.”

 ?? Photo: IC ?? View of an advertisem­ent for iPhone 6S smartphone in Xiangyang, Central China’s Hubei Province
Photo: IC View of an advertisem­ent for iPhone 6S smartphone in Xiangyang, Central China’s Hubei Province

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