By  now you must be used to all the pictures and sketches that hit the web  before a hot product launch. We’ve shown you iPhone 4G concepts before  and today we have one more for you. The iPhone in the picture above is  not dubbed as the iPhone 4G but as the iPhone Pro, a handset that wants  to be, simply put, “just better.” More after the break...
The  iPhone Pro is supposed to offer us an even slimmer design which will  pack inside a better camera and better audio and a front facing camera  for video calls. The iPhone Pro is supposed to run on iPhone OS 3.2 and  feature a larger screen too. More importantly, looking at the iPhone Pro  we will discover two slide-out “paddles” which are touch-friendly and  bring us dedicated gaming controls. A new MagSafe power port is found on  the back which means the regular 30-pin port will not be required  anymore.
So what do you say, folks? Are you impressed  or what? As for me I have to protest against a few features described  here. Sure the design is impressive but we already have an iPhone Pro.  It’s called the iPad and although it doesn’t have dedicated gaming  buttons it will act quite nicely as a mobile gaming platform. It has an  even bigger screen which means we’ll be able to use the iPhone for  communication-related matters and the iPad for games and apps. That does  make sense, right?
And what about that crazy power plug? There are tons of docks made for iPhones and iPods that use the 30-pin port. Why should Apple change the port and thus render all those products useless? In case the iPhone Pro was real then users would need special MagSafe to 30-pin connectors for their docks, wouldn’t they?
And what’s the deal with iPhone OS 3.2? We’re looking forward for iPhone OS 4.0 for the next iPhone versions, aren’t we?
Naturally  the device in the pictures here is just a concept so I’ll understand  that designers can take all the freedom they want when imagining  next-gen products like the iPhone Pro or the iPhone 4G. But I’d like to  see these designers approach the matter from a realistic point of view  and create next-gen gadgets that would be based on available Apple  technology (at least what we know of so far) and thus could actually be  feasible for the near future.







