This Is Apple's Next iPhone (via @Gizmodo)

You are looking at Apple's next iPhone. It was found lost in a bar in Redwood City, camouflaged to look like an iPhone 3GS. We got it. We disassembled it. It's the real thing, and here are all the details.

While Apple may tinker with the final packaging and design of the final phone, it's clear that the features in this lost-and-found next-generation iPhone are drastically new and drastically different from what came before. Here's the detailed list of our findings:

What's new

• Front-facing video chat camera
• Improved regular back-camera (the lens is quite noticeably larger than the iPhone 3GS)
• Camera flash
• Micro-SIM instead of standard SIM (like the iPad)
• Improved display. It's unclear if it's the 960x460 display thrown around before—it certainly looks like it, with the "Connect to iTunes" screen displaying much higher resolution than on a 3GS.
• What looks to be a secondary mic for noise cancellation, at the top, next to the headphone jack
• Split buttons for volume
• Power, mute, and volume buttons are all metallic

What's changed

• The back is entirely flat, made of either glass (more likely) or ceramic or shiny plastic in order for the cell signal to poke through. Tapping on the back makes a more hollow and higher pitched sound compared to tapping on the glass on the front/screen, but that could just be the orientation of components inside making for a different sound
• An aluminum border going completely around the outside
• Slightly smaller screen than the 3GS (but seemingly higher resolution)
• Everything is more squared off
• 3 grams heavier
• 16% Larger battery
• Internals components are shrunken, miniaturized and reduced to make room for the larger battery

Heavy US sales means international launch of iPad delayed by a month

Apple says that although it has “delivered more than 500,000 iPads during its first week” the demand for the iPad in sales and pre-orders is “far higher than we predicted”. The upshot of all these US sales? The international launch – that’s including us here in Europe folks – will be postponed by one month, until the end of May.

However, make a date in your diary as Apple says it will announce international pricing and begin taking online pre-orders on Monday, May 10.

Full release can be found on CrunchGear.

I guess we’ll just have to go and get a WePad instead huh.

Note by Robin Wauters:

At the recent unveiling of the iPhone OS 4.0, someone inquired about the success of the iPad in the U.S. potentially threatening the ‘late April’ launch date for the rest of the world. The response of Apple head honcho Steve Jobs to that question?

“No, we said we’re launching internationally later in April, and we’re launching later in April.”

For the record: that was merely six days ago.

 

An estimated 700,000 iPads bought on day one -- plus a Steve Jobs sighting in Palo Alto

jboudreau@mercurynews.com

The iPad arrived in Silicon Valley on Saturday with the usual Apple flourish: stores perfectly prepped for fired-up fans, some of whom waited in lines throughout the night to get their hands on the highly coveted tablet.

A number of Apple apostles did experience more than the thrill of holding a new shiny object: They got a serendipitous jolt of tech royalty. In San Jose, overnighters and early-risers got to hobnob with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, who joined the pre-iPad vigil at 6 p.m. Friday at Valley Fair mall. In Palo Alto, Apple CEO Steve Jobs sauntered unannounced into the University Avenue store shortly before noon to drink in the scene.

Many in the crowd pulled out cameras and iPhones to capture the most magic of Silicon Valley moments. Jobs chatted with a handful of other shoppers, but even his 30-minute invasion did not get in the way of their serious business — the buying of and playing with new iPads.

Some in the tech industry question whether the iPad, and competing gadgets to be rolled out in coming months, will ever be more than a niche product. Others, though, see the mouse-less slender slab as an inflection point that could redefine the portable computer industry. The device, with its sensitive multitouch screen, allows users to access videos, book catalogs, newspapers and all that is on the Web with a swipe of a fingertip.

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class="subhead">Amazing touch

Among the early iPad buyers was Dr. Kathy Corby, an emergency room physician from Hollister who made the 90-minute drive to Palo Alto to buy an iPad, though she had to start a 13-hour work shift later in the day.

"Have you touched one?" she said after being asked why she showed up at 7:30 a.m. at the Apple store. "It's going to change everything about how you live. You are going to be connected to everything. You are 30 seconds away from anything you need to know. It's really amazing."

Apple's powerful pull was on display Saturday as the company rolled out iPads that run on a Wi-Fi network and are priced starting at $499. The most expensive iPad, equipped to run on both Wi-Fi and 3G networks, sells for $829. The company is expected to start selling 3G iPads within a few weeks. Already, Wi-Fi iPads have popped on Craigslist; a 64-gigabyte version, for example, which retails for $699, had an asking price of $1,000.

Apple did not provide details of opening-day sales. But Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster, who had predicted that as many as 300,000 iPads would be sold this weekend, revised his numbers upward Saturday to between 600,000 and 700,000 units purchased on the first day. That contrasts with 270,000 iPhones sold during that product's initial launch.

In what has become a ritual, people lined up by the thousands across the country to get their iPads and be part of an Apple product launch.

Jason Slack-Moehrle and his wife, Annette, were the first in line outside Apple's Valley Fair store. The two showed up at 1 p.m. Friday. And they had company from the world's most famous Apple fan, Wozniak, No. 4 in line, who arrived at 6 p.m.

When the couple walked into the store, they were greeted by a gauntlet of cheering Apple employees. A little after 9 a.m., they emerged from the store flushed with excitement and carrying two iPads.

"We got them," Jason Slack-Moehrle said. "Yeah, it was awesome."

"It's a big rush," his wife said.

Twelve-year-old Joshua Elefteratos, who had pre-ordered his iPad, was first in line among those who had reserved their tablets. His father secured the top spot by showing up at midnight; Joshua joined him at 7:30 a.m.

As the two left the store 15 minutes after it opened, Joshua Elefteratos held his tablet over his head. "It's like I'm holding the Bible," the Saratoga boy said.

High-tech fame

For Parth Dhebar, a budding entrepreneur at age 15, the decision to show up so early was a business one. His Web site, www.simple-reviews.com, provides reviews of iPhone apps. With the arrival of the iPad, he has to expand his offerings.

"We need to expand to review iPad reviews," he said. "But without an iPad, we couldn't do that." Thus, Dhebar, who lives in Cupertino — "right next to Apple headquarters," he was quick to explain — lined up at the mall and, it turned out, in front of Wozniak, an "awesome experience."

The ever-buoyant Wozniak brought along his Segway, which he used to cruise the empty mall halls. "To me, the waiting in line is like reliving the days you waited in line for concert tickets in college," Wozniak said. "Yeah, I could easily arrange to get an iPad in different ways. But I like to do this like everybody else."

In Palo Alto, the presence of Apple guru Jobs gave everyone a brush with the highest of Silicon Valley high-tech fame.

Wearing a black hoodie and jeans, Jobs, who came with his wife, Laurene Powell-Jobs, and daughter, scanned the displays of tech goodies and watched Apple employees give iPad how-to demonstrations. And he drew amazed gazes from shoppers already expressing excitement overload.

"I love the iPad," one 20-something female shopper blurted out to Jobs. To which he happily replied, "Good!"

Contact John Boudreau at 408-278-3496.