iPhone 6 with 4.7 or 5.7 inch screen and 1080p resolution is presented as being ready for release in 2014

  Yesterday I told you that American analysts are firmly convinced that iPhone 6 it will include a larger diagonal screen next year, but they are not the only ones, because a researcher of Display Search believe the same thing. In fact, he tells us that iPhone 6 with a 4.7-inch screen and 1280 x 720 resolution or a 5.7-inch screen and 1920 x 1080 resolution would be ready for launch, the information coming from partners Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC),. Considering the source of the information, it is as clear as possible that Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC), is testing prototypes of such terminals, but even the company does not know if they will end up in the hands of consumers.

Based on supply chain research, we believe Apple is planning to revamp almost all of the displays in its products over the next year. In reality, changing to a bigger display or a higher resolution is not as simple as changing the screen. The graphic processing unit (GPU) and operating system match the display hardware. A device with high-resolution screen but without high-resolution GPU and OS capabilities is like a soldier driving a powerful tank but using a sword to fight. What Apple does better than any company is integrate the hardware and software, as well as the implementation of the user interface, and finally the content ecosystem.

  Separate from the new iPhones with giant screens, Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC), would present a tablet this year iPad 5 cu Retina Display, but also a tablet iPad Mini 2 with the same type of screen, its size being smaller. The diagonal that would be chosen for a new version of the iPad tablet is not very small, those from Display Search being convinced that Apple would be interested in producing a model with a 12.9-inch Retina Display, which would have a resolution of 2732 x 2048, one that would put most application developers in difficulty.

  Although some specifications look interesting, I find it extremely difficult to believe that Apple will complicate its line of iDevices so much, and the company's strategy in recent years has demonstrated that the chaotic implementation of new technologies is not part of Apple's DNA.