Rumours flourished throughout 2006 about the release of a mobile phone from
Apple. The
existence of the device, which came to be known as the 'iPhone', has yet to be
confirmed by Apple.
Still, the Apple mobile phone was one of the most anticipated new devices in
2006. Fuelled by a reports of Apple patent applications, bloggers, analysts and
reporters speculated that the device will have everything from a
touch-screen
to a full
keyboard to a case
made out of
zirconium.
Rumours of the impending release first
began to
surface in April, when an analyst said that the odds were "extremely good"
that Apple would release the device some time during the Spring of 2006 to
coincide with the launch of Helio, a combination 3G/VoIP service. The product
was, of course, not released with Helio.
Predictions began afresh in July, when an
Apple
executive was quoted as saying: "We do not think that the phones that are
available today make the best music players. We think the iPod is. But over
time, that is likely to change, and we are not sitting around doing nothing."
The comment, made by chief financial officer Peter Oppenheimer, led many to
anticipate the iPhone's arrival at the WWDC summit in August and later at
September's
Apple
Showtime event.
Again, Apple made no mention of a mobile phone project. In November, however,
rumours again surfaced that seemed to indicate the imminent release of a mobile
phone.
Factories in Taiwan and Japan had reportedly received an order to produce
two million
phones for Apple.
According to the report, two models were to be made, one containing a full
keyboard and video capabilities, and another more suited to playing music.
The reports have led to the
latest
speculation that the phone may be introduced by Steve Jobs at January's
Macworld expo.
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