The iPad mini. It's been
the subject of rumor and speculation. Its size has been labeled as DOA
by no less than Steve Jobs himself. Its very existence has been doubted,
and not without reason. Yet the iPad mini is real. 7.85-inches and not
crippled by smartphone software stretched out, but made powerful by
tablet software at scale. The iPad mini is an iPad, only slightly
smaller and thinner, and much, much lighter. And Apple will likely be announcing it on October 23.
iPad mini timeline
Apple has been experimenting with smaller form factor tablet for while, perhaps as far back as the original Safari pad project that ultimately yielded the iPhone in 2007, and certainly since Apple SVP Eddy Cue helped warm Apple's late co-founder, Steve Jobs to the idea back in 2011.
Back in March of 2012,
iMore learned that Apple had decided to go ahead with the iPad mini,
that it would be running the iPad version of iOS, that it would cost
around $200-$250, and that it was tentatively planned for an October
2012 release.
Since then more details have emerged, and the release has gone from
tentative to likely. While nothing is ever certain, much less confirmed,
until Apple holds it up on stage, here's an updated run through of what
we think we know to date.
The iPad mini form factor
With a screen that diagonally measures 7.85 inches across, the iPad
mini may not seem that much smaller than the current 9.7-inch iPad.
That's exactly the points. It's not supposed to be a major compromise in
screen size or usability. It's supposed to be a major compromise in
overall volume and weight. It'll be a similar type of optical illusion
to the one Apple achieved with smaller-but-larger, less-of-it-but-more
of it iPhone 5. The iPad mini
will seem impossibly thin and light, yet the screen will still look
relatively big, especially with the reduced bezel around the sides.
That thinner bezel is made possible by the iPad mini's relative
thinness and lightness, just like the iPod touch's thinness and
lightness allows for almost no side bezel. As the physical size shrinks
from iPad to iPad mini to iPod touch, so can the side bezel, without
overly effecting usability.
The important thing to remember in all this, however, is that the
iPad mini won't be a big iPod touch. That's makes for a huge difference.
The iPad mini finish and colors
The iPad has always had an aluminum back, unlike the iPhone and iPod
touch which only joined that particular club this year. The iPod touch 5
even comes in multiple colors now, including blue, red, yellow, and
pink, just like the iPods nano and shuffle.
Because the iPad mini is a lower-cost line, like the iPods, it's
tempting to think Apple might release them in fun, flashy colors as
well. The current iPad was black only in the first generation, and the
more upscale and traditional white and black only in the last two
generations. So, while it's possible the iPad mini could go
polychromatic at some point, it probably won't be this year. What's more
likely is that Apple could use the new finishing processes found in the
iPhone 5 and iPod touch 5 to make for an incredibly precise if not
incredibly scratch resistant iPad mini enclosure.
The iPad mini purpose
Neither the 7 inch BlackBerry PlayBook, nor the 7 inch Amazon Kindle Fire, nor the 7 inch Google Nexus 7
have taken the world by storm. In fact, most of them aren't even that
usable outside the U.S. due to the lack of content RIM, Amazon, and
Google can provide internationally.
Apple won't have that problem. They already have the iTunes Store at
global scale, and they already sell the current iPad in over 90
countries world wide. The iPad mini will be the same story, only with
lighter, less expensive hardware. And that's important. Even considering
the current iPad's incredible market lead, some customers may simply
not be buying it because it's too heavy or too expensive. With an iPad
mini,
Apple's goal is to mainstream computing. They want to sell hundreds
of millions of devices that delight exactly the type of consumer usually
left frustrated and alienated by technology. The iPad mini removes two
large, expensive barriers of entry.
It will also, frankly, step on Amazon and hard. If Apple chooses
to put a heavy emphasis on books for the iPad mini, that pressure only
intensifies. Right now, chances are if you walk onto an airplane you
might see some Kindles mixed in with the iPads. The iPad mini is aimed
at fixing that.
The iPad mini interface
The original iPhone interface had 44 pixel touch targets at 163 ppi.
The original iPad kept the same 44 pixel touch target but at a lower
density, 132 ppi. That made them physically bigger. Scaling the 9.7-inch
iPad interface down to 7.85-inches simply returns those 44 pixel touch
targets to 163 ppi, the same physical size as the original iPhone. It
will be slightly big for one handed use, slightly small for two, but it
will be eminently workable. The "slack" that currently exists between
3.5-inch iPhone interface elements and 9.7-inch iPad elements would just
disappear, and you'd have the same basic iPad look with the same basic
iPhone usability. Here's how it would work:
The iPad mini display
On one hand, it's hard to imagine Apple releasing a non-Retina iOS
device at this point. The current generation iPhone, iPod touch, and
iPad are all running at Retina resolutions. On the other hand, no iOS
device has ever been introduced with a Retina display. The original
iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad were all launched with standard displays,
and later received Retina displays as part of their upgrade cycles.
Rumor has it, Apple experimented with a Retina display in the 2011
iPad 2 but due to price and yield issues, had to wait until the 2012
iPad to ship it. Arguably, 2048x1536 is right at the edge of what the
9.7-inch iPad can handle. Even with a slightly more modern chipset, a
smaller device might not have the room for a battery big enough to power
it.
It's possible Apple has experimented with a Retina display for the
iPad mini, and may well introduce one in a future model, but for cost
and performance issues, a standard, iPhone 3GS density display sounds
more likely this year.
What's more interesting, however, is whether or not Apple will
use the same new in-cell technology as they do in the iPhone 5 and iPod
touch 5. With the touch sensor combined into the LCD, two layers become
one and the pixels get closer to the surface than ever before, and it
could make for the best looking non-Retina panel ever.
The iPad mini and LTE
There have been some rumors saying Apple won't include cellular
connectivity in the iPad mini in an effort to either keep costs down or
artificially differentiate the iPad mini from the current iPad. Keeping
costs down is a non-reason. The current iPad has a low cost, Wi-Fi only
option, and a $130 up-sell for cellular. Apple could and likely will do
the same here. And since there's a real differentiator, namely size,
Apple doesn't need an artificial one.
Sure, the iPod touch has never had a cellular radio, but this is an
iPad mini, not an iPod maxi. The Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire 7 are useless
to anyone who needs cellular data. It's highly unlikely Apple will ship
an iPad mini -- an even more mobile iPad -- that isn't great at being
mobile.
Put the new, iPhone 5-class cellular radio in the iPad mini, and you have an international data powerhouse.
What Apple could call the 7-inch iPad
"7-inch iPad", "iPad mini", "iPad Air", or something else entirely,
whatever name Apple chooses for the new, smaller iPad will influence how
the public understands the device and its place in the iOS lineup.
Apple's branding is typically as succinct as Occam's Razor. Earlier
this year, they took it a step further and rebranded what would have
been the iPad 3 as simply the (new) iPad. While we probably won't see
Phil Schiller on stage beneath a slide reading "the small iPad", we
probably will see him beneath one reading something similarly simple.
Here are the possibilities:
Could Apple sell a $200 iPad mini?
Apple has a long history of successfully marketing the same form
factor at multiple sizes. Just look at the MacBook Pro and Macbook Air
lines. You have 11-, 13-, and 15-inches options (and until a couple of
months ago, 17-inches as well). Tablets could just as easily come in
multiple sizes. Once you pick an aspect ratio, the size should just be
an option.
An 8GB iPad mini with a 7.85-inch screen is a legitimate
trade-off against a 16GB iPod touch 4 with a 3.5-inch screen at $2xx
dollars. A higher capacity iPad mini is also a legitimate trade-off
against a higher capacity iPod touch 5. For Apple, lack of size isn't a
discountable feature. Mobility is a sellable feature.
Nothing other than what Apple thinks is the best balance between what
will drive the highest revenue and gain the most marketshare will
determine the price point.
iOS 6.x + apps
Rumors have persisted that Apple has more plans for iOS 6 than were
unveiled at WWDC 2012 or were made publicly available in the iOS 6.0 release version
that shipped back on September 19. Whether or not that's true, and
whether or not Apple intends to show off more to coincide with the iPad
mini and the release of iTunes 11, it's absolutely true that Apple believes software is the heart and soul of any new device.
In the past, when Apple released new versions of iOS alongside new
iPhones in the summer, iOS x.1 releases followed new iPod touches in the
fall. Last year it took until the spring. If Apple wants a software
story to go along with the new iPad mini hardware, however, if they want
Scott Forstall up on stage, showing off something other than iPad OS 6
but smaller, then we could well see iOS 6.x sooner rather than later.
Taking on Amazon means taking on books, however, and more boldly and
broadly than ever before. So if Apple is serious about iBooks, we could
also see the next phase of that alongside the iPad mini.
iPad mini release date
November 2nd makes a lot of sense. It's the next Friday after the
event, which has been the traditional launch day for Apple hero devices
in recent years, and it would give Apple as much time as possible to
sell the iPad mini during their strong holiday quarter.
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