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Rumor: Sony, Hitachi Shipping 4-Inch iPhone 5 Displays

 & Damon Poeter Reporter

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Apple is still working out the kinks with its new iPhone 4S, but that's not stopping the rumor mill from generating speculation about the next smartphone due out at a time and place unknown from the Cupertino tech giant.

The next iOS handset may or may not be called the "iPhone 5"—recall that's what everybody thought the 4S was going to be dubbed—but when it does appear, the Japanese blog Macotakara reports that it will have a 4-inch display.

Hitachi and Sony have "started to ship 4-inch LCD [displays] for [a] new iOS device," the blog reported Sunday, citing an anonymous source. And that's not all—the two companies are also shipping LCD screens for the iPad 3, according to Macotakara. Rumor has it that the next-generation tablet will be the first iPad to use Apple's high pixel-density Retina Display technology.

If Apple is sourcing next-generation iOS device displays from Hitachi and Sony, it would mean the company is abandoning the Taiwan-based display makers it currently uses to supply such parts. Currently, TPK supplies about two-thirds of the touch panels for the iPhone 4S, while Wintek makes about a quarter, and Chimei Innolux makes the rest, according to reports.

Hitachi and Sony are part of a trio of Japanese companies set to merge their mobile display businesses in the first half of 2012. Toshiba is the third member of a proposed merger that is officially set to form "Japan Display" sometime in the spring.

Meanwhile, SlashGear takes note of earlier leaks that point to Apple lengthening the iPhone 5 by about 8 millimeters, another clue pointing to a larger screen for the next iOS handset.

There's also some gossip floating around that the iPad's teardrop-shaped case design won't be used for the iPhone 5 because it wouldn't accommodate an LTE 4G chip plus a battery large enough to power it.

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About Our Expert

Damon Poeter

Damon Poeter

Reporter

Damon Poeter got his start in journalism working for the English-language daily newspaper The Nation in Bangkok, Thailand. He covered everything from local news to sports and entertainment before settling on technology in the mid-2000s. Prior to joining PCMag, Damon worked at CRN and the Gilroy Dispatch. He has also written for the San Francisco Chronicle and Japan Times, among other newspapers and periodicals.

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