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ipod_touch_camera Sometimes Apple’s surprises are not pleasant. Starting back in March—when Apple made a job posting “looking for a Camera Engineering Project Manager (EPM) to drive the design, development and integration of camera modules across iPhone and iPod”—and lasting up until a few days before Wednesday’s Apple event, it was taken for granted that the 3rd-generation iPod Touches would have an iPhone-style camera. Third-party cases were manufactured with a hole for the camera.

Then, shortly before the event, rumors started circulating that the camera would be a no-show—manufacturing issues pushed it back. And sure enough, when the “rock and roll” had faded, no iPod Touch camera was to be found.

Jobs told the New York Times that the reason for this was Apple wanted to concentrate on lowering the price and pitching the Touch as a handheld game console. “We don’t need to add new stuff. We need to get the price down where everyone can afford it.” (Though strangely enough, only the 32-gig and 64-gig Touch models—not the “affordable” $199 8-gig—support OpenGL, a graphics engine much beloved of gamers and game companies.)

So was the talk of a camera in the Touch just a wild rumor with no basis in fact? Not so fast, says AppleInsider. Citing unnamed sources close to Apple, AppleInsider suggests that leaving the camera out for launch was a last-minute decision forced by a batch of faulty camera parts—and as soon as Apple gets its hands on some good cameras, there might be a 3.5th generation of the two more-expensive Touches with cameras added.

CNN Money tech blogger Philip Elmer-Dewitt compares these two stories, wondering if Steve Jobs “spun” the New York Times. (An earlier version of the headline and URL wondered if Jobs had “lied to” the Times—undoubtedly hastily changed by CNN’s legal department.) I would be willing to bet that yes, indeed he did.

Not that he had much of a choice. If he explained that a model with a camera would be coming out soon, it would chill the sales of the current 3rd-gen Touches as everybody decided to hold off and wait for the camera-equipped version. This way, he gets to launch another one of his trademark “one more things”—a few weeks or months after the fact.

The downside, of course, is that when Apple finally does come out with a camera-equipped model, there will probably be a lot of angry customers who believed Jobs’s “no camera” spin and bought the no-camera version. If this does happen, I would hope Apple will offer an upgrade program through AppleCare for consumers to send in their iPod Touches and get them back with cameras attached.

So if it is important to you that your next iPod Touch have a camera, I would not give up hope just yet—and I would not buy yet, either.

 
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