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iPad 2i - Firefighting Retina Display Signal?

 

If you can believe the rumors, another version of the iPad2 could come soon.

 

 

It’s almost certain that there won’t be an iPhone 5 these days, because it is Apple Lossless Audio CODEC (ALAC), postponed the appearance for various reasons. It could almost be believed that there would be no hardware novelty at WWDC from the Cupertino company. However, Steve Jobs couldn’t stop doing this to the point of throwing in a quick fix as a rescue idea, so the iPad 2i was born.

What does this mean? How can the goodness of the Apple tablet with hyper-super hardware just released be further enhanced? The answer is simple: what many expected in the first round and yet missed out on it is now given to the high-profile: this is something like the Retina Display, to which they have even added a new color variation. In addition, the iPad 2i is exactly the same as the "smooth" iPad 2.

This has never been the case before: another version of the same device in a short time - a surprising drag on the part of the apple company. Plus, you have a slightly peeling aftertaste after a bunch of people have bought the base type, some may not positively appreciate that there’s already a better version here. Of course, this extra isn’t given for free, you have to ring $ 2 more for the iPad 150i with a retina display compared to the base model. Anyone who hasn’t upgraded to a second-generation iPad so far may want to rethink which version to buy.

The video below already shows this particular iPad 2i, which will be available in black, white, and for the first time in carbon black. If all goes well, the novelty will be unveiled on June 6th.

Of course, it might just be a fiction, and Geohot joked about us, fell asleep on the first of April, and tried to humorize with a few days of phase delay. Sooner or later it will turn out anyway.

About the Author

s3nki

Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.