iPhone 5S Hitting Shelves Mid-2013 After WWDC Unveiling
Apple’s Asian suppliers are preparing for
massive component orders as the Cupertino giant is engaging in a more
fast-paced refresh cycle on the smartphone front. Taiwanese news outlets
are reporting that Apple might roll out the iPhone 5S at WWDC 2013.
Apple has shifted its annual iPhone refresh cycle from summer to fall,
yet the next refresh will put the iPhone back on stage at WWDC,
according to Taiwanese trade publication DigiTimes citing market observers.
These people say that contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing Company (TSMC) and packager Advanced Semiconductor
Engineering (ASE) have both entered Apple’s supply chain for the
next-generation iPhone.
The unconfirmed device has been dubbed by the media “iPhone 5S,” in
accordance with Apple’s incremental refreshes (iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4S).
Both suppliers are expected “to report particularly strong results for
the first quarter of 2013,” says the Taiwanese site. The reason?
“Apple is expected to introduce its next-generation iPad and iPhone
series around the middle of 2013, which will boost demand for ICs in
particular communications related chips during the latter half of the
first quarter,” according to market observers cited in the report.
Component orders from Cupertino will rise between March and April, the
observers indicated, kicking off iPhone 5S manufacturing for its WWDC
2013 debut.
Apple next year might break its annual refresh tradition to unveil not
one, but two new iPhone models, some company watchers have said.
As Samsung and other rivals continue to churn up numerous handset models
within seasonal timeframes, Apple is being forced to step up its game.
The Cupertino giant is now refreshing OS X annually, instead of once
every two years. Who’s to say it can’t do the same with the iPhone?
Considering it will be a minor incremental release, the so-called iPhone 5S may still bolster Apple’s portfolio.
For example, it could use a faster A6X chip and some WiFi improvements –
enough to sell a couple million units until the iPhone 6 arrives on the
scene.