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DragonSVD
27-01-2010, 19:27
After months of rampant speculation, Apple Wednesday announced a touchscreen tablet computer, the "iPad" for consumers who want to take their movies, TV shows, music, games and reading with them, be it around the house or on the go. Pricing starts at $499, and it should be available in 60 to 90 days."We want to kick off 2010 with a truly revolutionary and magical product," CEO Steve Jobs told a packed audience at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco on Wednesday.
The wireless device can be used with Wi-Fi, as well as run on AT&T's 3G, or third-generation, wireless network. AT&T has been the exclusive carrier of the iPhone in the United States since its release in 2007, and some were hoping that Apple's new tablet would also work with other carriers' networks, including Verizon Wireless.

The iPad will cost $499 for a 16-gigabyte model, $599 for a 32 GB version and $699 for a 64-gigabyte model with Wi-Fi only, and will be available in 60 days. It will cost an additional $130 for units that also can use 3G, which should be out in 90 days, making the most expensive model $829. Jobs said AT&T will charge $29.99 a month for "unlimited use" and $14.99 a month for up to 250 megabytes. There will be no contract with AT&T required for the plans, he said.

"So far it really looks like an oversized iPod Touch," said Avi Greengart, Current Analysis analyst, blogging from the event itself for Reuters news service.
The iPad weighs about 1.5 pounds, is 0.5 inch thin, has a 9.7-inch display and should have a battery life of 10 hours, Jobs said. It uses what he called Apple's own 1GHz A4 chip, and flash memory, ranging from 16 to 64 gigabytes. The tablet has YouTube in high-definition built in to the iPad and Apple's online iTunes Store, which will add an "iBooks" for purchase.
"Well, it's official. Apple is competing with Amazon," said Ross Rubin, director of industry analysis for The NPD Group research firm. Apple will use the "ePub" format, "joining Sony, Google and Barnes & Noble, he said.
The tablet uses multi-touch finger gestures and swipes like the iPhone, but the iPad's "larger screen requires less swiping to navigate," said Rubin. "That's a big plus from the iPhone."


Several uses of the tablet were shown during its unveiling, including e-mail, games, video and reading The New York Times on it. Martin Nisenholtz of The Times, on stage, said that the newspaper’s iPhone app “has been downloaded 3 million times,” and that the company wanted to “create something special for the iPad … We think we’ve captured the essence of reading the newspaper” on it.
Apple's new product comes at a time when e-readers, like Amazon's Kindle and others from Barnes & Noble and Sony are on the market, with more coming this year from companies such as Samsung and the Hearst Corp.
Last year, about 3 million e-readers were sold. Estimates are another 6 million will be sold in 2010 according to the Yankee Group. The Kindle, which has a 6-inch screen and sells for $259, has the bulk of the e-reader sales.
"There are about 6 million people who are gearing up this year to buy an e-reader. And they’re going to spend between $250 and $700 on it," said James McQuivey, Forrester Research principal analyst. "They are already people who care about media, and who are willing to spend money on media."
"So, if you can say to them, 'Gee you can spend $350 on a dedicated book reader, or you’re going to get this amazing Apple device at twice the price, but with the ability to do much more than read books,' " then Apple's tablet has a good chance of success, he said.
While many of the tablet's functions — Web surfing, movie watching, music listening — can be handled on netbooks, lighter and relatively inexpensive laptops, Apple isn't viewing its tablet as a laptop without a keyboard, McQuivey said. "Apple sees this as a personal media experience that they can create."
The tablet's "most revolutionary impact is on the way people consume media in the home," he said. "You take it from room to room, you dock it next to your bed, it becomes your alarm clock. You dock in the living room, it’s a photo frame and a video server for your TV; you dock it in the kitchen, and it displays your recipes for you."
Other major companies are coming out with their own tablets, with many of them announced at the Consumer Electronics Show earlier this month.
HTC and Google are reportedly jointly working on a tablet. HP and Dell are each planning their own tablets. Microsoft may be too, although during CEO Steve Ballmer's speech at the Consumer Electronics Show, he shared an HP slate prototype, not Microsoft's talked-about "Courier" tablet (Msnbc.com is a joint venture of NBC Universal and Microsoft.)
Pen-based tablet computers have been tried over the past decade with little consumer success, although they have made inroads in the business world.
Strong sales of Apple's device are not guaranteed, especially with a still-shaky economy and netbooks — with prices of between $300 and $400 — continuing to be popular.
What may help Apple, said McQuivey, is that the company "isn’t thinking" of tablets as "selling laptops without keyboards," as other manufacturers do; "Apple sees this as a personal media experience that they can create."
In pricing the iPad, Apple surprised some, who expected the device to cost up to $1,000. ChangeWave Research, which surveyed 3,314 consumers this month, said there is "strong consumer interest" in an Apple tablet, and that 75 percent of those who are interested say they'd be "willing to pay $500 or more," and 37 percent say they would pay more than $700.
Shopping site Retrevo.com's survey of 500 consumers found that 70 percent of them said they will not spend more than $700 for an Apple tablet. Also, 44 percent said they would not buy such a device if it requires a monthly data plan for Internet access.



And while the iPhone and iPod have been huge sellers for Apple, the company has had its share of product launches that went "thud."
Among them, the 1993 release of the Newton MessagePad, a pen-based tablet that cost around $800; the Power Mac G4 Cube in 2000, and Apple TV in 2007, a set-top box for streaming audio and video to a TV from a computer's iTunes program

DragonSVD
27-01-2010, 19:35
and here is the official site for it:

http://www.apple.com/ipad/

Saundie
30-01-2010, 18:51
This is the device that dreams are made of. I'll be ordering the 64GB + 3G version as soon as it's available.

Such an amazing device.

Varnos
01-02-2010, 07:34
You will, Saundie? I was actually quite appalled with how little it could actually do. Think on this:

-Except for the bigger screen and bigger HD, what can it do that the iPhone can't?
-It still does not use standardized ports (i.e. USB, DVI etc.)
-It still uses the extremely closed-boarded-up system of the application store, forbidding any sort of application not approved by apple
-From all accounts, it still can't run flash or java applets(!)
-I have not seen any sort of dedicated feature for the iPad that would immensely boost its value, such as a drawing application (and with that, I mean a serious one, not the simple sketches you might think of
-it boasts nomultitasking whatsoever, holding to the iPhone approach that does not allow multiple programs to run

Though I am an avid mac/ipod user, I honestly cannot fathom why one would want to throw money at this... Device.

(/disgruntledrant)

Shyne-Bryght
01-02-2010, 09:26
Doesn't look far from the iPhone, agreed.

Saundie
01-02-2010, 09:59
You will, Saundie? I was actually quite appalled with how little it could actually do.
...
Though I am an avid mac/ipod user, I honestly cannot fathom why one would want to throw money at this... Device.It's not what functionality it has that that makes it so extremely appealing, it's the social cachet that ownership of it brings; much like the Apple Macbook Pro range, and the original iPod. When you pull it out of your brown leather attaché in Cafe Nero and perch it on your knee, people looking in your direction will automatically assume that you are a successful person.

The fact that there are superior products in terms of raw functionality and value for money is not something anybody buying Apple products ever considers. HP released a tablet PC in 2004 that had a faster processor, more RAM and greater storage, running a full operating system, but it failed miserably because of the poor marketting and the lack of "coolness" of the HP brand. The Apple iPad takes the Tablet PC form factor and makes it easier for Joe Average to get to grips with.

Damalatorian
01-02-2010, 10:24
So it's just a big iPhone that you can't make phonecalls on? :)

Jock
01-02-2010, 10:33
So people buy these so strangers will 'think' they are succesful.......strange.

I'd have thought they would be better off spending their money on something that will actually help them be succesful but there you go.

Saundie
01-02-2010, 10:42
So people buy these so strangers will 'think' they are succesful.......strange.

I'd have thought they would be better off spending their money on something that will actually help them be succesful but there you go.Well, it's a fashion statement, much like designer clothes and premium cars.

Perhaps it's time to come clean. I was pretending to want the iPad, for comedic value. Acting like an Apple fanatic is hard work!

DragonSVD
01-02-2010, 12:18
Ok, sarcasm is what I expected from you. I on the other hand , have one of your previously mentioned hp tablets, btw they were marketed originally as a hp compaq, and I also have an iPhone. I was very much waiting for this as the first mac i would buy. I am a microsoft guy through and through, but i also love my iPhone. I want a blend of functionality and high entertainment value. This was supposed to be the next best thing for me. BUT apple didn't deliver on the functionality for me by making a bigger iPhone. I need the ipad to run office apps, if it did this, it would be perfect for me. I also love gadgets, but I am having a hard time convincing myself that the ipad is worth the expense. I will wait for more apps and accessories come out before deciding on buying, but I probably will.

TheMunster
01-02-2010, 13:29
Dragon - same here, love my iPhone but the iPad just isn't what it should be in my opinion.

Would be nice to get my hands on one and try to hack attack leopard install.

dinozo74
01-02-2010, 18:07
Hmmmm, I just can't see what's the interest of this ...
It looks like 4 iPhones together
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010/01/28/article-1246801-08103FC5000005DC-202_306x423.jpg

DragonSVD
01-02-2010, 18:37
Nice, that gave me a laugh! But hey, that's a cheap way to get 4 iPhones!!!

Panzer
04-02-2010, 12:30
The fact they're selling it on fashion and "art" rather and a product, puts me the hell off Apple. Yes, some of their stuff is excellent. Its the fanboy association I cant forgive, and Apple encourage it. just so someone can have the pleasure of thinking everyone around them is looking at them and how awesome they are when in fact every is thinking what a douche they are.

The iPad is not a tablet PC, nor an advancement on the iPhone, so what the hell is it?

As for flash:
http://theflashblog.com/images/ipud.jpg

DragonSVD
04-02-2010, 16:28
First Saundie was being sarcastic about the ipad. Second, while it does have a certain appeal in appearance, that is something that shouldnt be so surprising. People buy things that are ascetically pleasing all the time. It also should not be judge too harshly until you get a chance to hold it. I love the iphone because of the combination of the interface, the quality of the screen, the form factor, and the quality of the audio output. It does what I want it to do. The ipad may do that as well, depending ont he apps that come out for it. It isnt trying to be a copy of another product like the tablet (which btw has not been successful to date) but a hybrid of what they learned fromt he ipad, and something in a larger form factor. This is a consumer product not a business tool. While it may also work as a business tool, it will not meet all of the needs, thats what laptops are for. Netbooks have been taking advantage of the desire of the consumer to have something smaller and portable with good battery life. Most people do nothing but surf the internet and check email with their netbooks. or as my friend did, he bought one just for holidays to take with and watch movies on instead of a portable DVD player. This new device from apple does ALL of what a netbook is used for, but adds a much friendlier interface for the user. The form factor is a decision on individuals. It is serving a certain market segment and it will be successful. My biggest issue with it, is that I really wanted something a little more on the business side, meaning office support. Now saying that, i hear they will be making a version of apples iworks that will work on this, so it gets it closer. BUT dammit, i need a VGA/DVI/mini-DVI output to plug into a projector...but maybe the rca plug will be enough....have to wait to see on that though.

BTW, I am a gadget man, but fashion is not my thing so I am not a pozer who sits in a coffee shop and waits to see who looks at me and my iproduct.

dinozo74
05-02-2010, 16:38
As for flash:
http://theflashblog.com/images/ipud.jpg

"Screenshot removed, my apologies if it has offended anyone." ... pr0n ? :D

And for the games, I'm sure you would look very stupid when you play with that thing :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epbwBIo70QM&feature=player_embedded

Panzer
05-02-2010, 19:40
"Screenshot removed, my apologies if it has offended anyone." ... pr0n ? :D

That was my guess too. Though with a bigger screen its a bit obvious what youre doing in the corner of Starbucks...

DragonSVD
24-08-2010, 21:04
Ok, sarcasm is what I expected from you. I on the other hand , have one of your previously mentioned hp tablets, btw they were marketed originally as a hp compaq, and I also have an iPhone. I was very much waiting for this as the first mac i would buy. I am a microsoft guy through and through, but i also love my iPhone. I want a blend of functionality and high entertainment value. This was supposed to be the next best thing for me. BUT apple didn't deliver on the functionality for me by making a bigger iPhone. I need the ipad to run office apps, if it did this, it would be perfect for me. I also love gadgets, but I am having a hard time convincing myself that the ipad is worth the expense. I will wait for more apps and accessories come out before deciding on buying, but I probably will. ....and I did :)

Varnos
29-08-2010, 22:43
...And I got swayed, being the gadget freak that I am. The comics did it, really :x

DragonSVD
31-08-2010, 20:58
But not feeling too bad for being swayed are you? After having owned mine for two weeks now, I have to say I am only happier by the minute. You have to give airvideo a purchase, and I am liking the wyse remote desktop tool.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

dinozo74
31-08-2010, 21:13
Uh huh huh ! It's fun to see how my opinion changed about that thing after trying one in an Apple Store. :D

Baloo_the_big_bear
31-08-2010, 21:39
We are actually using them in our products at work. Drillers on the oil rigs can now use them to control HPU functions, Bop Control systems and loads of other equipment. Very good fun!

zool
01-09-2010, 06:11
We are actually using them in our products at work. Drillers on the oil rigs can now use them to control HPU functions, Bop Control systems and loads of other equipment. Very good fun!

I wonder if BP was using these to run there rig aswell lol and if they screwed up would apple be liable?

but on a serious note once i get past its an apple product, who use a flaky excuse so they can manipulate what you put on your i-product and not fall foul to monopolising the system.

That its a iphone for the partially sighted without the phone.

That its dearer than a notebook/laptop which has more functionality and is more practical for family use as a whole.

@ 700g - 1Kg how long can a child actually play games on it holding it up to tilt the screen? 30 mins as tested using my mates 7yr old son.

taking the above into consideration and that we already have the iphone, I have to agree with my mum after i spent 20 mins showing her how to use it and the price when she said "how much? are they for real why would anyone other than someone who needs an extension for his penis buy that for that much" . though they are not the exact words it is close enough and was funny watching the shop assistants face as she blurted it out.