Apple iPhone 6 models with bigger screens on the way, reports say
3rd quarter results show iPhone sales still strong, but pressure is on to produce a new product
Apple is expected to release the next generation of its smartphone, the iPhone 6, which is rumoured to have a larger screen size.
The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that Apple has asked its suppliers to produce "between 70 million and 80 million units combined" of the devices, with 4.7-inch and 5.5-inch screens, by Dec. 30. The paper cited "people familiar with the matter."
The report is consistent with images and videos of the "iPhone 6" leaked in recent months on technology websites that suggested Apple is making new models with bigger screens than the 4-inch iPhone 5, which was released in 2012. That model was replaced with the iPhone 5C and iPhone 5S in 2013.
Apple today reported quarterly profits of $7.7 billion, or $1.28 per diluted share for the third quarter, up from $6.9 billion, or $1.07 per share a year ago.
The improved profit picture was driven by its sale of 35.2 million iPhones in the quarter, an increase of 13 per cent from the same time in 2013, with China sales powering ahead by 48 per cent.
However, Apple is facing a competitive market for both phones and tablets with sales of its iPad tablet computer down for the second quarter in a row to 13.3 million. That has increased pressure to produce a breakthrough product.
Sites such as MacRumours, TechRadar and AppleInsider say they expect the new smartphones to be released in September, although there are some who suggest the larger, "phablet" model may be released later.
Some of Apple's competitors already make larger screen models.
One of them, Samsung, released a new ad this week, poking fun at Apple's rumoured larger-screen iPhones.
The ad for the Galaxy S5, which has a 5.1-inch screen, is titled "screen envy," and features a man with an iPhone asking a friend with a Galaxy S5 if he's heard a rumour that iPhone might be getting a bigger screen.
A voiceover goes on to suggest that iPhone users have been waiting "for like two years," and that, in fact, the Galaxy S5 is "everything you've been waiting for."