The company has applied to register the name of what experts believe will be its first gadget in the post Steve Jobs era
It is the first official hint that Apple has a new gadget in the pipeline: the notoriously secretive company has applied to register the iWatch name as a trademark.
The
anticipated wrist-computer – which may be akin to a television, so
little firm information about it is available – will be Apple's first
new product of the post Steve Jobs
era. Apple has filed for ownership of the "iWatch" trademark in Japan
and, assuming it is a watch, it would be a further demonstration of
Silicon Valley's growing interest in wearable computing.
The field is a hot new frontier for technology firms, as shown by the considerable interest in the Google Glass project, where futuristic spectacles can trawl the internet or take pictures on the move.
Apple iWatch: designers are already predicting what the new gadget will look like
Speculation over the iWatch has gathered pace this year after Jobs's
successor as chief executive, Tim Cook, described wearable products as
"profoundly interesting." His rivals clearly feel the same way, with
Google and Microsoft already developing watch-like products, setting the
stage for a battle royal already described as "the new platform war".
Nitin
Bhas, senior analyst at Juniper Research, said: "Apple has been hinting
for some time that it has a big product in the works, this could be
it." The speculation filling the void of Apple's studious silence is
that the iWatch will link to other Apple devices, offering another way
to access text messages or check email. Bhas added: "But that won't be
enough. Apple won't offer something that just connects to your
smartphone."
Bhas predicts any wearable iWatch will offer a new
way to pay for shopping, carry airline or concert tickets and will
function like a wrist-worn digital wallet. It may also take on
health-related wearables from companies including Nike, Fitbit and
Jawbone.
Apple reportedly has a team of 100 specialists looking at
ways to take advantage of recent developments in hi-tech curved glass,
cheaper sensors and better voice recognition software.
Wearable technology
is a small market, but research firm Juniper estimates that it will
generate $800m (£500m) in revenue this year and $1.5bn in 2014 with
interest form the big three tech firms likely to ramp up the commercial
windfall.
Apple has never felt the need to be first to market,
relying on its ability to offer better designed, and pricier, takes on
the latest technology. But that lead has been eroded in recent years and
Apple needs a new hit to prove it is still a maker of must-have,
innovative products.
The company's share price hit an all time
high of $700 last September but is now around $400, driven down in part
by fears that its days as the world's most inventive technology business
are over.
Elsewhere, the iPhone's lead is being chipped away by
Samsung, which uses Google's Android mobile operating system, while
Amazon and Google are attacking iTunes. Apple is also a victim of rising
expectations, coming under increased presure having launched no new
device since last October.
The application for the iWatch
trademark was made in Japan on 3 June, according to the Wall Street
Journal, and made public on 27 June. Russia's Izvestia reported that
Apple applied for the same trademark there in June. It does not appear
to have registered the name in Europe, where an Italian company owns the
trademark, but registering a trademark is usually an essential step
made ahead of the launch of a product.
The name of Apple's iPod
was first discovered from trademark filings ahead of its launch in
October 2001. The name iWatch has been trademarked several times in the
US although Apple trampled over Cisco's "iPhone" trademark in 2007 when
it launched its phone that January. The two companies later came to an
agreement.
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