Anand views the gamut as good news because this means that the Retina display's gamut is considerably larger than the gamut of the old iPad and iPad 2. He's right on that being good news, but the near-sRGB gamut is also good news for technical reasons. Ironically, the near-sRGB gamut is good news for photographers because of something Apple left out of the iPad - color management. It's not well known outside of the relatively small group of people that have actually written imaging code for the iPad, but iOS essentially has no color management. There are color management functions documented in technical reference manual, but actually they do nothing(!). And no, I'm not kidding.
Now if you don't have color management, then what you need is for the color space of your image to be a match to your display's color space. With the new Retina display, the 2012 iPad is a lot closer to that ideal than the previous iPads - good news for photographers.
There have been some reports of the new iPad having a "yellow tint". Not everyone agrees with that, and some sources on the net are suggesting that the tint, if it exists, goes away as the adhesive in the display cures. No doubt the yellow tint question will become clearer over time.
And yes, for those interested, a new version of PhotoRaw (3.4.0) is already available on the App Store, optimized for the new Retina display. So you can now display and edit your raw files at 100% full pixel-by-pixel size, and with the full benefit of the new Retina display's wider gamut. The new version of PhotoRaw is, of course, a free upgrade for existing users.
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