EDN Senior Technical Editor Brian Dipert exposes, analyzes and
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Jun 15 2009 10:41PM | Permalink |Comments (15) |
While I was traipsing around Taiwan last week, Apple rolled out (among other things) the long-rumored latest iteration in its iPhone family back here in the States. By virtue of its evolutionary-versus-revolutionary nature, the iPhone 3G S hardware specs aren't as eye-popping as, say, those of the Palm Pre. But considering that 'S' supposedly stands for speed, the company clearly made some enhancements beyond the device's first- and second-generation forbearers.
Apple was forthright with some of the 'speed' details, specifically the iPhone 3G S's support for the 7.2 Mbps flavor of UMTS/HSPA, even if the company's sole US carrier partner, AT&T, is a laggard in this regard. Apple's website explicitly mentions only HSDPA support, but since the prior-generation iPhone 3G reportedly handled higher upstream bandwidth HSUPA, I'd be surprised if this design doesn't also comprehend it. However, as with the 2nd-generation iPod touch (which bumped the CPU clock to 532 MHz, from 412 MHz on its first-generation predecessor along with the first two iPhone generations), Apple was mum on several other notable silicon improvements this time around.
Courtesy of an inadvertent slip by the Netherlands division of T-Mobile, we know that the iPhone 3G S contains a 600 MHz CPU and twice the DRAM of its precursor (now 256 Mbytes). And the claims of Anand's anonymous contacts (curses, well-connected Anand! Just kidding...) further open the kimono, indicating that Apple's made yet another ARM CPU evolution (to a Samsung-implemented Cortex-A8 core...the Cortex-A8 in the Palm Pre comes from Texas Instruments) as well as migrating to a next-generation Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX graphics core with hardware support for v2 of the OpenGL ES API.
Questions: