That Apple will release a new iPhone this summer seems almost certain. The rumor mill is grinding and the evidence is trickling in, and if Apple’s iPod release schedule is anything to go by, we should expect an updated model 12 months after the last one.
So if we step back for a second and take a look at the collected “evidence” so far, what does it point to?
Radio
IPhone 2.0 will be 3G. If it is to stand any chance in the as-yet untapped Japanese market, a fast data connection is a must. The official line from both Apple and AT&T is that a 3G iPhone will ship this year, and as two launches in one year are unlikely, we can only assume that there will be one international 3G iPhone. Certainly, the Infineon chipset expected to power the new phone will work on both HSDPA and WCDMA networks, as well as continuing to support EDGE for customers outside of good 3G coverage.

Camera
The iPhone’s camera sucks. It offers the user no more than the most basic functionality and only captures a measly two megapixels. It’s so bad that a range of unofficial software upgrades have already been released, adding new features and even video. The Infineon chipset mentioned above has support for cameras of up to five megapixels and also video capture using Apple’s codec of choice, h.264. So more pixels and video seem very likely, but what of video calls? Apple’s Mac application iChat has had video conferencing for some time. It would be a perfect match for the iPhone’s big bright screen, but that would entail a second camera. I’d give this one a 50/50 chance.
Hardware
The current iPhone is so simple that it can hardly be improved. Expect the changes to be small, and then only cosmetic. It looks a little chunky next to the svelte iPod Touch, so the new model will likely be thinner. There are rumblings in the internet that the body will be black plastic instead of aluminum, which seems very unlikely. The current iPhone is surprisingly tough, so we’d expect Apple to stick to glass and metal. The only sure thing thing is that as soon as you see the new model, your old iPhone will look inexplicably clunky.
Software
Software is arguably the most important part of the iPhone. Ever since its launch last year, seemingly every cellphone maker has released a touch-screen phone. None of them come close in ease of use, because none of them understand that the interface is everything.
The currently beta iPhone SDK shows us that the v2.0 operating system will be an incremental upgrade, adding niceties such as search, and, if we’re lucky, copy and paste. With the iPod, Apple has often held new features back from older models in order to drive sales. Part of this is the accounting model it uses: In order to comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley (or Oxshit) laws, Apple won’t add new features to old hardware. The iPhone, though, like the Apple TV, is accounted for on a subscription basis. Expect the v1.0 iPhone to run the exact same software as the new one, exempting features which utilize new hardware.
Now it’s your turn. What do you expect to see? Suggestions in the comments. Q we are waiting in anticipation for a word or two on this toy!!!! GTO