What we know
What we think know
Rumors currently point to an October 15 event.
According to pictures posted by Sonny Dickson, the fifth-generation iPad isn't too dissimilar from the current design of the iPad Mini. The case is narrower than the iPad 4, has thinner bezels, with more-rounded edges, and according to KGI Securities analyst Mingchi Kuo, it's said to be about 15 percent thinner and 25 percent lighter than the iPad 4.
Although Apple is reportedly testing larger screen sizes -- up to 13 inches -- for future versions of the iPad, it would appear that we wouldn't see a release of a larger iPad until 2014 at the earliest.
With the iPhone 5S, Apple kept its normal pricing structure -- a $199 starting price for the subsidized model -- and if pricing history is anything to go by, the base-level 16GB Wi-Fi-only iPad 5 will start at $499.
Probably early November, same as last year.
What we want to see
The iPhone 5S' A7 is a powerful piece of silicon, but if history is anything to go by it will pale in comparison to the iPad 5's expected A7X. With a larger higher-resolution screen, the iPad 5's GPU has more pixels to render, which means more work and a higher bandwidth requirement.
Look, much to my embarrassment, people still use their iPads to take pictures in the exact manner as they would their smartphones. It's not going to stop, so Apple might as well lean into it and give these budding awkward-looking photographers something to get excited about.
As demand for a thinner lighter iPad increases, so does the difficulty in fitting a larger longer-lasting battery in its casing. Apple gave the iPhone 5S only a slight bump in battery life over the iPhone 5, so I'm keeping my iPad 5 battery life improvement expectations low.
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