iPad: Tablet PC
Technology.am (Jan, 28, 2010) — San FranciscO: Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the company’s much-anticipated iPad tablet computer Wednesday, calling it a new third category of mobile device that is neither smart phone nor laptop, but something in between.
The iPad will start at $499. But Apple must still persuade recession-weary consumers who already have other devices to open their wallets yet again. Apple plans to begin selling the iPad in two months.
Jobs said the device would be useful for reading books, playing games or watching video, describing it as “so much more intimate than a laptop and so much more capable than a smart phone.”
The half-inch-thick iPad is larger than the company’s popular iPhone but similar in design. It weighs 1.5 pounds and has a touch screen that is 9.7 inches diagonally. It comes with 16, 32 or 64 gigabytes of flash memory storage, and has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity built in.
Jobs said the device has a battery that lasts 10 hours and can sit for a month on standby without needing a charge.
Raven Zachary, a contributing analyst with a mobile research agency called The 451 Group, considered the iPad a laptop replacement, especially because Apple is also selling a dock with a built-in keyboard.
But Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey said he does not believe the iPad offered enough additional features for consumers to justify buying yet another gadget, or to call it a new category of device.
In an e-mail, he criticized its lack of social features, such as ways to share photos and home video and recommend books.
Sitting on stage in a cozy leather chair, Jobs demonstrated how the iPad is used for surfing the Web with Apple’s Safari browser. The CEO typed an e-mail using an on-screen keyboard and flipped through photo albums by flicking his finger across the screen, Associated Press reported.
He also showed off a new electronic book store and a book-reading interface that emulates the look of a paper book. That puts the iPad in competition with Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle and e-book store.
Tim Bajarin of Creative Strategies Inc. called the iPad a great multipurpose mobile device – and the first tablet with a chance of success with consumers.
But Bajarin said Jobs’ presentation only touched the tip of what the iPad could do for newspapers, magazines and book publishers, three industries struggling in the transition to the digital age.
A new newspaper reader program from The New York Times and a game from Electronic Arts Inc. were demonstrated during the event. The iBookstore launched with titles from Penguin, Simon & Schuster, HarperCollins, Hachette Book Group and Macmillan, and will open up to other publishing houses.
Carolyn Reidy, chief executive of Simon & Schuster, called the iPad a “terrific device” that gives readers the ability to adjust the typeface and turn pages by touching a finger to the screen, as opposed to pushing a button, as the Kindle requires.
Applause rang out as Jobs stepped onto the stage to introduce the iPad to hundreds of analysts, bloggers and other guests at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco.
Accompanied at times by executives from Apple and other companies, Jobs played showman throughout the hour-and-a-half presentation, slowly revealing details about the iPad. When he announced the price – lower than what had been speculated – it was accompanied by the sound of glass shattering.
Like iPods and the iPhone, the iPad can sync with Apple’s Macintosh and Microsoft’s Windows computers. Jobs said the iPad will also be better for playing games and watching video than either a laptop or the small screen of a smart phone.
Unlike a laptop, the iPad has an accelerometer, so gamers can tilt the device to control what’s happening on the screen. And the iPad is lighter and easier to hold for long periods of time while watching a movie or TV show.
Its large screen makes it much easier to touch type than on a smart phone, and it is extremely responsive to finger swipes and taps for easy scrolling through Facebook, photo albums and news articles.
The iPad comes with software that includes a calendar, maps, and video and music players. All seem to have been slightly redesigned to take advantage of the iPad’s bigger screen.
Still, tablet computers have existed for a decade with little success. Jobs acknowledged Apple will have to work to convince consumers who already have smart phones and laptops that they need the iPad.
Further Reading
- April 3 debut for the iPad: Are you game for it?
- Apple said to prepare tablet PC introduction
- Apple tablet rumor re-surfaces, on sale in October 2009 for $800
- Will 17-inch iMac in $899 be Next Apple Weapon?
- Palm’s New Smart Phone Synchronizes with iTunes
- Samsung Introduces Corby, Touchscreen Mobile Phone for Youth
- Samsung Announces AMOLED 12M Camera Phone
- Smart Phones Can Capture, Send Ultrasound Images
- Apple iPhone to Get Direct TV Downloads?
- Amazon Launching ‘Big Screen’ ebook Reader
- Samsung Launches New WiMax ‘Mobile Internet Device’
- Apple Rejects iPhone e-book Reader App Over Access to Kama Sutra
- Google to Sell New e-books Online
- ASUS to launch World’s Cheapest Dual Screen e-Book Reader
- Apple reports its most profitable quarter yet; net jumps to 47%
Stay updated! Follow us on twitter and become our fan on Facebook.












13.04.59 at 1:04 pm
Time to Organize Your Wardrobe and Cut Down on Waste…
Very nice information. Thanks for this….
15.47.45 at 3:47 pm
This ipad will excel, but not as a reader but maybe with some app being coded right now.
17.30.57 at 5:30 pm
Hi there ! If you need someone to make your product or service be developed in France, don’t hesitate to contact me. I’m based in Paris core next to the “Champs Elys
22.40.32 at 10:40 pm
Glad to see that this site works well on my Blackberry Bold, everything I want to do is functional. Thanks for keeping it up to date with the latest.
02.11.43 at 2:11 am
OfSTk1 aztpimlxmvcx, [url=http://ogmwgytvyfep.com/]ogmwgytvyfep[/url], [link=http://boixqaantcxv.com/]boixqaantcxv[/link], http://vtgzqofyroyt.com/