Yesterday we told you that a series of rumors indicated that Apple would celebrate the anniversary of the presentation of the first iPad - which was unveiled on January 27, 2010 - with the release of not one, but two new tablets.
It would, therefore, be on January 26, within the framework of the MacWorld event, when those from Cupertino showed a couple of devices: the iPad 2S and the iPad 3. Now we will return to this, but first, we have to update you, and echo what was published by the site The Loop, where they specifically emphasize that in January Apple will show the new terminals.
According to The Loop, they say they have reliable information that appears to come from the Cupertino company itself, and which denies that the firm will make device presentations at the January event. Where there has been a radical pronouncement was in the section of the number of terminals we would see in 2012 from the hand of Apple.
Remember that the rumor that the company could present an iPad 2S that would significantly update the current iPad 2, as well as an iPad 3, which would represent the true high-end revolution of the firm for the catalog of tablets.
However, keep calm, especially knowing that the story tastes like deja v a . In the run-up to the iPhone 4S presentation, there was also talk of the arrival of two mobiles - the iPhone 4S itself and the iPhone 5, with assigned roles similar to those attributed to the unreleased iPad 2S and iPad 3-; a prediction that was left in borage water when the existence of a single terminal was known.
That is why it is convenient to quarantine the information that bets on the launch of two tablets during the first quarter of 2012. It is true that those from Cupertino could have configured a strategy that involves maintaining a high range while living with a more affordable one, with a view to expanding the range of their market - just as they have done with their portfolio of smartphones , where three generations of phones coexist -, although for this it would not be necessary to put into circulation two new terminals, but to maintain the iPad 2 at a cheaper cost.