Apple is
looking to increase the iPhone’s screen size from 3.5 inches to at least 4
inches, according to a Wall Street
Journal report, a move
that’s presumably being made because of stiff Android competition. This is not
the first suggestion Apple will put a bigger screen on the iPhone this year. In
fact, such speculation has been rumored for some
time, yet Apple has consistently kept the iPhone display at 3.5
inches for every iteration of the device since its launch in 2007. As the Apple
hype machine is put in motion with just a few weeks until the company’s Worldwide
Developers Conference in June, talk about what the new iPhone will bring is intensifying. Since
Apple didn’t do any radical changes to the iPhone design last year, a revamped
look is expected to come this year. The Wall Street Journal report does not
give any specifics on how big the screen of the new iPhone would be, saying it
would measure “at least 4 inches diagonally,” which indeed would be bigger than
the current 3.5-inch display. But if it’s any indication, an earlier report
from Reuters put forward the more precise diagonal
measurement of 4.6 inches.
Perhaps what fuels the interest in a larger-screen
iPhone is that in the past couple of years Android manufactures have been
pushing the size of their phone displays
close to 5 inches, in a bid to differentiate themselves. With a
bigger-is-better mentality, the Samsung Galaxy Nexus has a 4.65-inch screen,
all the way up to 4.8 inches on the Galaxy S III or 4.7 inches on the HTC One
X. As my colleague Jared Newman
explains, many snub the idea of a bigger iPhone display because easy
one-handed operation is a big part of the iPhone's design, and that's just not
possible with a display of around 4.6 inches. In defense of a larger-screen
devices, Android manufacturers have found that that allows them to create
thinner designs on phones. By making the screen bigger, Apple also would be
able to deliver a more radical redesign of the iPhone. The question is, will
Apple manage to maintain the highest pixel density
phone display on the
market if it decides to go big?
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