iPad Pro Rumoured to Have A9 Processor and Larger Than iPad Air; Release Date Leaked

By

The iPad Pro is rumoured to be larger than the iPad Air version of Apple, with a rumoured display measurement around 12.9-inch. As Apple planned to produce more of iPad line up with a larger screen tablet, rumours speculating around social media that Apple is referring to the iPad Pro.

According to a report around August last year, the release of iPad Pro will be around early 2015 as Apple planned. But, another report around October last year, negates the plan of early 2015 release of iPad Pro due to focusing on the production of iPhone 6 plus units in order to meet the demand. Base to an online report, Apple is targeting September 2015 in starting the mass production, speculating it would be released around Apple's usual October update cycle.

Recent rumours have suggested that the 12.9-inch iPad Pro display have a 2732 x 2048 and 265 ppi (pixel-per-inch) resolution. With that display, iPad Pro will probably be dwarfing other devices in the iPad line up.

In recent months, Apple has been flagging Force Touch features in many of their devices. To this extent, iPad Pro could possibly be included with Force Touch capabilities. Just a little background, Force Touch is capable of identifying whether its soft or hard touches on the screen, having pressure sensitivity into the devices. Recent Apple watch and 13-inch Macbook pro with Retina display have Force Touch capabilities.

In the past few months, there are rumours suggesting the iPad Pro would ship with a faster and more efficient next gen A9 processor being produced using a 14 to 16 nanometer process than the iPad Air 2 with the triple core A8X processor.

Until now, Apple haven't had an official announcement update regarding the iPad Pro. Probably, as what rumours spreading around the internet, the iPad Pro should offer more high tech specs and awesome features.

Tags
IPad Pro release, Ipad pro specs, Ipad pro rumors

© 2024 VCPOST.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Join the Conversation

Real Time Analytics