In one of the presentations during the Keynote (maybe the Adobe one, I seem to remember it being an external dev versus one of the Apple execs), the presenter clearly mentioned one of the benefits of the iPad Pro beings its increased memory (as opposed to the memory bandwidth and flash access upgrades mentioned by Schiller separately). That had me expecting 4 GB.
It may be futile, though, trying to re-watch for the segment in the presentation for confirmation since Apple apparently has a team standing by right after the live show to get the presenters to re-record any mistakes/slips they made and then replace it in the archive. I discovered this myself last year in the Pixelmator (I think that's what it was called) iPad Air 2 presentation. This year, Schiller slipped up once when he used the term Force Touch instead of 3D Touch at one point. That's probably already been edited in the archived video.
I don't take the possibility of anything other than 2 GB for the new Apple TV and iPhones seriously this year. I felt like that about the new iPhones last year, though... so anything's possible I guess. It would be more counterproductive to the evolution of their platforms this year, though, to stick to 1 GB, so I seriously doubt it. A TV platform with some level of focus on games needs more RAM, and the new iPhones with less RAM would splinter the dev targets too much.
The Watch, iPad Pro, and new Apple TV seem to miss the mark in my eyes as products. I'm not expecting big things from any of them. I feel Apple did a great job with the hardware of the iPad Pro: its display, form factor, A9X CPU and GPU, memory specs, and peripherals all turned out impressively. Still, it won't sell to the growing number of people who require a personal computer for specific, established productivity purposes and want a device that makes for both a great tablet and laptop. It's left to be an oversized iPad, which hadn't been selling to their expectations already.
My guess for the A9X is 667 MHz GT7800 + 2 GHz tri-core Cyclone v3. For that to work instead of a lower clocked hypothetical 12 cluster "GT7850" combination, the benefit of the memory bandwidth and promised architectural upgrades from Series 7 and on the CPU side would've really needed to deliver.
My guess for the A9 is a 500 MHz GT7600 + 1.5 GHz tri-core Cyclone v3.
3D Touch (terrible name to use especially when they already established Force Touch) will be great for enhancing the already solid gesture based navigation. I especially like how I could swipe in from the left side of the screen to go back a page in an app or simply push a little harder now and go back between apps themselves, creating an intuitive extension to what they've already built. I'm overall fairly impressed with the new iPhones and plan to pick up the 6s Plus for the new processor platform. Apple didn't seem to highlight much in the way of 6s Plus exclusive features versus the regular 6s this year, so I wonder if a marginally higher GPU clock will be there. Maybe just the higher throttling point this year.
It may be futile, though, trying to re-watch for the segment in the presentation for confirmation since Apple apparently has a team standing by right after the live show to get the presenters to re-record any mistakes/slips they made and then replace it in the archive. I discovered this myself last year in the Pixelmator (I think that's what it was called) iPad Air 2 presentation. This year, Schiller slipped up once when he used the term Force Touch instead of 3D Touch at one point. That's probably already been edited in the archived video.
I don't take the possibility of anything other than 2 GB for the new Apple TV and iPhones seriously this year. I felt like that about the new iPhones last year, though... so anything's possible I guess. It would be more counterproductive to the evolution of their platforms this year, though, to stick to 1 GB, so I seriously doubt it. A TV platform with some level of focus on games needs more RAM, and the new iPhones with less RAM would splinter the dev targets too much.
The Watch, iPad Pro, and new Apple TV seem to miss the mark in my eyes as products. I'm not expecting big things from any of them. I feel Apple did a great job with the hardware of the iPad Pro: its display, form factor, A9X CPU and GPU, memory specs, and peripherals all turned out impressively. Still, it won't sell to the growing number of people who require a personal computer for specific, established productivity purposes and want a device that makes for both a great tablet and laptop. It's left to be an oversized iPad, which hadn't been selling to their expectations already.
My guess for the A9X is 667 MHz GT7800 + 2 GHz tri-core Cyclone v3. For that to work instead of a lower clocked hypothetical 12 cluster "GT7850" combination, the benefit of the memory bandwidth and promised architectural upgrades from Series 7 and on the CPU side would've really needed to deliver.
My guess for the A9 is a 500 MHz GT7600 + 1.5 GHz tri-core Cyclone v3.
3D Touch (terrible name to use especially when they already established Force Touch) will be great for enhancing the already solid gesture based navigation. I especially like how I could swipe in from the left side of the screen to go back a page in an app or simply push a little harder now and go back between apps themselves, creating an intuitive extension to what they've already built. I'm overall fairly impressed with the new iPhones and plan to pick up the 6s Plus for the new processor platform. Apple didn't seem to highlight much in the way of 6s Plus exclusive features versus the regular 6s this year, so I wonder if a marginally higher GPU clock will be there. Maybe just the higher throttling point this year.