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Apple Rumor Patrol: What To Expect At WWDC 2012

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Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference starts next week with a Tim Cook keynote, so the rumor mill is spinning frantically. Here's what it's spitting out.

wwdc

All New Macs (Except The Mini?)

Apple sometimes reveals new hardware, sometimes concentrates on software at WWDC nowadays, but there's been a growing sense the company will reveal a slew of updated Macs next week--borrowing heavily from the MacBook Air blueprints and bringing retina displays from its iPhone and iPad to the computers. Now the excitement about this is reaching fever pitch and it seems Apple may rejig most of its Mac lineup...with the exception of the Mac Mini.

At least two configurations of the 15-inch MacBook Pro are expected, according to sources speaking to 9to5Mac, along with retina MacBook Airs at 11-inches and 13-inches, and an iMac that may sport a slightly thinner case--along the lines of Apple's new display hardware. New Intel Ivy Bridge chipsets, USB 3.0 ports, uprated graphics powers and other tweaks, including a bunch of new accessories will come with the package.

All in all, it seems Apple may try to unify its Mac line with skinnier bodies, better resolution screens and perhaps more support for solid state storage and less emphasis on DVD drives. The moves are designed to reinforce Apple's lead in the ultra-portable computing market and the threat of Intel powered Ultrabooks.

Entry Level MacBook?

Having described the new Macs above, it was a surprise to see a purportedly leaked 13-inch MacBook Pro spec sheet showing very little change to the machines--no retina screen, no design change, no SSDs. This should cause a good amount of skepticism, as it's easy to mock this info up.

Mac Pro

There's been serious nervousness about the Mac Pro for a while--it's Apple's flagship desktop machine, beloved by audio and video engineers the world over, but Apple hasn't updated it in years. Now there are reports via MacRumors that supplies of the machine in-store are constrained. That could imply Apple's chosen wound up the entire line (after all, we do know it has a very short 5-day inventory cycle time). But 9to5Mac has it on good authority that several new editions are coming, perhaps in a new rack- and stack-friendly format.

The new Mac Pros may also help Apple tackle the hole it left in the professional market when it ceased X-Serve production.

Siri Gets Serious

Siri is very much a beta product, although Tim Cook promised exciting improvements were en route when he spoke at the AllThingsD conference. That, along with other rumors, has refocussed attention on Siri--the core technology Apple used to promote the iPhone 4S (where "S" stands for Siri). New information suggests that iOS 6, the next-gen operating system for iPhones and iPads almost certain to get a reveal at WWDC will bring enhanced Siri functionality and spread Siri powers to the iPad.

A Siri boost is a definite lock-in, and though we cannot know exactly what's planned it would seem sensible for Apple to add third party app support for Siri so that the voice-control system can be still more useful and integrate into more and more apps--and between them too, so a Siri request will perhaps trigger a tweet and a calendar update. Teaching the necessary natural language basics may be a task for some of the mysterious "to be announced" sessions due next week.

Nuance, believed to be the tech behind Siri, recently showed a teaser of how its voice recognition systems could work to recognize users individually and activate more apps:

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Apple's Own Mapping Magic

Apple and Google haven't had the, ahem, easiest relationship since Android and its thermonuclear implications for the iPhone. According to the Wall Street Journal Apple's now set to make a very decisive step away from Google by including its own mapping solutions in the iPhone and iPad.

This may finally bring turn-by-turn navigation instructions natively to iOS, a facility that it's said Google witheld from the device, along with a Streetview-quashing 3-D imaging solution that may be among the most visually impressive smartphone users have yet had. Sensitive to this change, Google's even scheduled a press release ahead of WWDC to reveal its own 3-D imaging system.

Apple TV Apps

There's a lot of uncertainty here, but some rumors are saying Apple may also reveal a refreshed Apple TV system at WWDC, making use of the TBA'd sessions to explain to app developers what's what. The new operating system, a variant on iOS, would bring third party app functionality to the $99 piece of set-top hardware, transforming it into a hugely powerful platform for video and audio functionality, social networking, gaming and so on. It's also a relatively simple play for Apple that would position it against the threat of rivals like the ever-stronger Xbox. We've long suspected this is a natural move.

But the rumors concerning the Apple TV are also mixed up with suggestions Apple will choose the WWDC to reveal its own HDTV solution. That's a bit of a stretch in crediblity...it just doesn't seem like there's enough chatter to marry up with an imminent launch of such a prominent piece of hardware.

Mountain Lion Growls

As well as some more OS X-like smarts shown in iOS 6, we can expect a lot of attention devoted to the next Mac OS, OS X Mountain Lion--and we'll probably hear of how it's borrowed even more lessons from the iPhone and iPad. Will Siri surface on Macs? Don't expect a full reveal, however--Apple likes to keep some features hidden right until the last moment before launch.

What Not To Expect...

...in fact there's a short list of things that you shouldn't get too hopeful about. iOS 6 isn't expected to arrive until later in the year, so we'll probably only get a partial feature-set revealed next week. That way Apple can keep details of the next iPhone (due in September?) a secret. It also probably won't even be a dramatic overhaul in terms of how iOS looks and works--no Metro-like revelations here. Also don't expect any of the weirder rumors to be confirmed--like Apple launching its own phone network.  

Chat about this news with Kit Eaton on Twitter and Fast Company too.



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