Saturday, April 20

Why you should time iPhone, iPad purchases to calendar


On Tuesday, Apple will host a product event to introduce… something.

You can get a good hint from outside reporting by the likes of Bloomberg’s well-sourced Mark Gurman (who got the March 8 date right in advance), which points to an updated iPhone SE and iPad Air. But you can also look at Apple’s archive of recent product events to get guidance about this – and whatever Apple showcases come later this year.

Last April, Apple staged a well-produced online unveiling of an updated iPad Pro and a new line of iMac desktop computers; a year earlier, the Cupertino, California-based, company introduced the current iPhone SE but dispensed with a physical or online production on account of the pandemic.

Apple has been even more predictable in late summer and early fall, when it’s introduced new iPhones every year for the past nine years – Accompanied in recent years by Apple Watch updates.

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The pattern is clear: “iPhones and Apple Watches in September and iPads in March (or so),” wrote Adam Engst, publisher of the long-running Apple newsletter tid bits. He cited the underlying sources of demand for fall and spring product launches: for the holiday season, “make sure there are products in the pipeline for ordering in November/December.” And the education buying season in the summer? “Make sure there are products that can be bought in June/July.”


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