Apple to unveil iPhone 3.0 software at March 17th event

Posted:
in iPhone edited January 2014
Apple on Thursday announced plans to hold a special media event for journalists on its Cupertino-based campus that will offer a sneak preview of the next-generation iPhone operating system dubbed iPhone 3.0.



The event will take place at 10:00 a.m. Pacific time on Tuesday March 17th in the intimate setting of the Apple Town Hall -- the same venue used to introduce the company's new unibody MacBooks last fall and the original iPhone Software Developers Kit (SDK) last March.



ArsTechnica was amongst the publications invited and has posted the following image from the email invite.



At this juncture, there's no indication that Apple will use the gathering to divulge details of next-generation iPhone handset hardware, which is expected to be unveiled several months later at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference or another event of its choosing.



iPhone 2.0



Last year, Apple staged a similar event to unveil its plans for iPhone 2.0, which was known in advance to include a new Software Development Kit for developers, but also added surprise Enterprise features, including support for push messaging and remote wipe using Microsoft's Exchange ActiveSync as well as support for WPA2 and 802.1X wireless authentication protocols and Cisco IPsec Virtual Private Networking for secure remote access.



When the iPhone 2.0 software was actually released in July, Apple also included support for its own push services as part of the .Mac rebranding of MobileMe, added extensive language support for global sales, and added geotagging to its camera application. Seven software updates have been released in the months since then.



What to expect in iPhone 3.0



At last year's WWDC, Apple announced plans to provide a Push Notification Server for third party apps, allowing developers to send updates to their users' phones through central servers operated by Apple. The new system was intended in part to account for the fact that third party apps are not allowed to operate in the background; the notification system would allow the apps to alert the user of new messages or outside changes without actually listening for them itself, a task that would be handled by the iPhone system software instead.



The Push Notification Server was expected in September but never arrived; support was included in a developer beta before being later pulled, making it a obvious candidate for inclusion in iPhone 3.0. Parallel efforts to add push messaging in the forthcoming Snow Leopard Server may have been part of the reason for the delay.







Apple also released updates for Core Location to support determining the cardinal direction and velocity of an iPhone 3G using GPS, features required for providing turn by turn driving directions. Apple may leave that area to third party developers, or could enhance directions within Maps to support turn by turn features itself. A year ago, Apple filed a patent for the concept of server generated direction and map packages called podmaps.



Apple has already added traffic overlays and transit and walking directions to Maps based on Google's service, as well as Street View, a feature Google first debuted in showing off the mapping capabilities of its Android platform.



iPhone 3.0 wish list



A variety of other features may also make it into iPhone 3.0, including support for advanced Bluetooth profiles outside of the basic hands free and mono headset. Existing iPhones have high speed Bluetooth hardware capable of supporting A2DP stereo headsets, a software feature Apple has already delivered for desktop users in Mac OS X Leopard. Other Bluetooth profiles could enable iPhone users to quickly beam files to each other (such as address book vCards) or support the use of Apple's own Nike+ (were it to supply a Bluetooth version) or the company's wireless keyboard, which could turn the smartphone into a basic netbook replacement for business travelers.



Apple could also add support for a Dashboard-like layer of user-creatable widgets built using its existing DashCode app from HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, enabling users without Cocoa programming skills to build or install widget apps that could all run together without the launching delay of a full blown iPhone app. This would also take the wind out of the sails of the Palm Pre's new webOS, which is designed to 'multitask' multiple simple widget at once rather than running heavy duty applications. The ability to run self contained web applications, if only just within the phone's Safari, is also a distinct possibility, given the existing support in the desktop flavor of Safari and the iPhone's existing support for HTML 5 features.



Other features Apple has already alluded to or depicted in its patent filings include a global information page that shows updates such as incoming messages and alert updates on the wake screen for quick reference; global search features; a copy and paste mechanism; support for mobile syncing of playlists and file information from a home computer's iTunes library and then only downloading specific songs when requested; improved push features, including support for syncing tasks and notes; and "Back to My Mac" support for accessing remote files.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 181
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    Did you guys really think Apple has been sitting back doing nothing all this time
  • Reply 2 of 181
    galleygalley Posts: 971member
    Wow, I didn't see that coming (at least not this quickly).
  • Reply 3 of 181
    stubeckstubeck Posts: 140member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Galley View Post


    Wow, I didn't see that coming (at least not this quickly).



    You thought they wouldn't release a new OS every year?
  • Reply 4 of 181
    WOOHOO



    engage in wild speculation!



    Here's some not-so-wild speculation -- GPS turn-by-turn
  • Reply 5 of 181
    olternautolternaut Posts: 1,376member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Galley View Post


    Wow, I didn't see that coming (at least not this quickly).



    Its just a preview. I think they want to give the SDK to developers now so that they will have time to come out with some apps by June's WWDC.



    I'm crossing my fingers for multitasking and a major update to the iphone GUI so that you can go from app to app.

    Plus copy and paste!

    I would be kinda cool if Apple is able to upstage Palm's WebOS and come out with something better. That would take the wind out of Palm's sails. And it would make McNamee shut up.
  • Reply 6 of 181
    Just as the rest think they're closing in it's time for Apple to once again let them bite the dust.



    It's going to be interesting - they hint at major changes with 3.0 (instead of 2.3 or something).
  • Reply 7 of 181
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Galley View Post


    Wow, I didn't see that coming (at least not this quickly).



    They aren't Microsoft or Palm you know - they UPDATE their stuff!
  • Reply 8 of 181
    postulantpostulant Posts: 1,272member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Olternaut View Post


    I would be kinda cool if Apple is able to upstage Palm's WebOS and come out with something better. That would take the wind out of Palm's sails.



    Is Palm's WebOS out?
  • Reply 9 of 181
    video calling
  • Reply 10 of 181
    Nex-gen GPS FTW!!!!1!11
  • Reply 11 of 181
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,523member
    Lol, Redmond watch out iPhone software 3 is on the way, btw hows Win Mobile 6.5 looking?
  • Reply 12 of 181
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    All Apple has to do is implement the new functionality of HTML 5 and allow web apps to have local access to system resources and that's pretty much most the advantages of Palm Pre.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Olternaut View Post


    I would be kinda cool if Apple is able to upstage Palm's WebOS and come out with something better. That would take the wind out of Palm's sails. And it would make McNamee shut up.



  • Reply 13 of 181
    eh270eh270 Posts: 60member
    So we'll finally get to hear their CTO explain why their push notification has been MIA.
  • Reply 14 of 181
    3.0 is quite a big jump in terms of number as oppose to .something so does that mean this will come with a new iphone with new hw as well?
  • Reply 15 of 181
    tulkastulkas Posts: 3,757member
    Push Notifications before iPhone OS 4.0 would be sort of nice...
  • Reply 16 of 181
    Wouldn't rolling out the 3.0 SDK to devs tip their hand on the next iPhone's updates?

    Then again, I don't know what the point of this event would be if they didn't.
  • Reply 17 of 181
    dimmokdimmok Posts: 359member
    Hell yeah.
  • Reply 18 of 181
    Apple Insider you are slow I even posted this news before you.
  • Reply 19 of 181
    foo2foo2 Posts: 1,077member
    Now all the announcements can be made and rumors can be leaked.
  • Reply 20 of 181
    jeffdmjeffdm Posts: 12,951member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by TenoBell View Post


    Did you guys really think Apple has been sitting back doing nothing all this time



    I don't know why you would ask or say that. The news is that there is a date for an event promoting the next version, not so much that they've been working on the next version.
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