iProd 1,1 Could Be The Apple Tablet, iPhone Nano, Verizon iPhone, Or New iPod Touch
When the iPhone OS 3.0 was leaked in January, it contained a file which showed evidence of an iPhone 2,1. We all know that the original iPhone (2G) was leaked as the iPhone 1,1, then the iPhone 3G was leaked as the iPhone 1,2. Eventually, the iPhone 2,1 became the popular iPhone 3GS. After a while, in March to be come accurate, a file called USBConfiguration.plist contained evidence of a so-called iPhone 3,1, and iProd 0,1, and other unreleased products iPod 2,2 and iPod 3,1.
At the moment we don’t know what these products are, but the USBConfiguration.plist has been updated with the release of the iPhone OS 3.1 and iProd 0,1 is now accompanied by a device called iProd 1,1. When Apple updates a product from “0,1″ to “1,1″ it means that the product is very close to being released. The change was notified by an iPhone developer, and it was reported in ArsTechnica.
With a lot of rumors concerning an Apple Tablet that should be unveiled in September and released in November, all we can say is that iProd 1,1 is the mysterious Apple Tablet. Although it would be hard to get the iPhone OS 3.1 to work with a 10-inch screen tablet, Apple might pull this off.
The iProd 0,1 has a product ID of 4757 and standardMuxPTP as the ConfigurationDescriptor, while the iProd 1,1 has a product ID of 4762, and standardMuxPTPEthernet meaning that it will support high-speed networks.
There are a lot of rumored products, and the iProd1,1 might be one of them. Is it the Apple Tablet? Is it the next-gen iPod Touch? Is it the iPod nano with camera? Is it the iPhone nano, the smaller-sized iPhone that was rumored months ago? Or is it the Verizon iPhone? Many iPhone users are disappointed with AT&T and their policy of rejecting too many apps from the App Store, and an iPhone for Verizon Wireless would be welcomed by millions of consumers.
I guess we have to wait, and see what Apple has prepared for use in one-month time when the company usually unveils a new iPod touch.
via ArsTechnica











