Apple Tablet
Apple Tablet
The moment the tech world has been waiting on for possibly decades, maybe years and definitely months has finally culminated into today… The official launch of Apple’s highly anticipated tablet device: the iPad. Tablet computers have had a rowdy history. Developed as pen computers in the early nineties to Tablet PC is the noughties and culminating into the iPad
Slated to arrive at the end of March, the iPad will start at $499 for a Wi-Fi-equipped 16GB model. Apple will also sell 32GB and 64GB versions of the iPad for $599 and $699, respectively.
You’ll be able to add 3G connectivity to each of them for $130 more, with the 3G models arriving roughly a month after the iPad arrives in stores.
The iPad runs on a 1GHz Apple A4 chip. That’s an Apple-built processor resulting from the company’s April 2008 , which specialized in low-power processors.
For connectivity, in addition to the optional 3G, it has 802.11n, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 2.1; it syncs to a Mac via USB. To feed those 3G connections, Jobs also announced two new cellular data plans from AT&T: $14.99 a month for 250MB of data, $29.99 a month for unlimited data; both are prepaid, meaning neither requires a contract like the two-year commitment that iPhone users must make.
The interface
Apple touts the iPad as a third category of device, positioned between a smartphone and a laptop. During Wednesday’s presentation, Jobs drew a pointed contrast between the iPad and netbooks—lower-cost PCs that have sold well in the mobile market. But Jobs characterized netbooks as slow, burdened with low-quality displays and running PC programs. “They’re not better than a laptop at anything,” Jobs said. “They’re just cheaper.”
Apple thinks the iPad fills the gap between phones and laptops by making it easier to browse through e-mail, photos, music, and videos. Apple also used demos Wednesday to showcase the iPad’s ability to display e-books and play games. Jobs spent parts of Wednesday’s demo seated in an armchair to show off the ease of using the tablet’s on screen controls.
The interface seems a blend of what you’d see on a Mac and an iPhone, though it clearly draws its primary inspiration from Apple's iPhone OS, featuring the same home screen application launcher and dock, and many of the same built-in applications. There are some more Mac-like touches in some of the applications, such as the iPod program and the Photos application.
The iPad features touch-screen controls and an on-screen keyboard (though an optional Keyboard Dock provides a full-size keyboard for when you’re charging the tablet). Unlike the iPhone, the iPad features panes, floating windows, and tabs—taking advantage of its larger screen space. But Jobs made a point of saying during his presentation that the more than 75 million people who have already bought an iPhone or iPod touch will be perfectly at home using the iPad's interface.
As with the iPhone and iPod touch, videos on the iPad display in landscape mode and be switched between widescreen or fullscreen aspect ratios.
The software
The iPad includes a dozen apps that Apple says have been designed specifically for the tablet. Specifically, Apple senior vice president Phil Schiller showed off a new version of IWork that has been customized for the tablet. None of the three iWork apps will be on the iPad by default, however; you’ll have to pay $10 each for to download iPad-specific versions of Numbers, Pages, and Keynote from the App Store.
Also included on the iPad is iBook a free application which will manage e-books on the tablet. While crediting Amazon for its pioneering efforts with the Kindle, Jobs announced that Apple was opening its own iBookstore where iPad users will be able to download electronic books from the likes of Penguin, Harper-Collins, Hachette, Simon & Schuster, and other publishers were already signed up to supply titles. Those titles will use the ePub format—an open e-book standard.
Other apps featured on the iPad include a calendar, notepad, Web browser, photo viewer, separate music and video playing apps, and YouTube.
Gameloft demos Nova, a game designed specifically for the iPad.
Apple iPad specifications
Finally, let’s look at the numbers and data. Here’s the Apple iPad specs.
- Display:
- 9.7″ widescreen LED-backlit glossy multi-touch capacitive display (with IPS technology)
- 1024-by-768-pixel resolution @ 132 pixels-per-inch (ppi)
- Fingerprint-resistant oleophobic coating
- Processor: Apple A4 1 GHz (by PA Semiconductor)
- Memory: DDR2 RAM
- Video: Apple A4 1 Ghz (see above)
- Storage: 16 GB to 64 GB flash drive
- Wireless data:
- Integrated Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n
- Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
- 3G version: UMTS/HSDPA (through AT&T, no contract required)
- 3G version: GSM/EDGE (through AT&T, no contract required)
- Extra devices:
- Digital compass
- A-GPS (assisted GPS)
- Microphone
- Speaker
- Sensors:
- Accelerometer
- Proximity sensor
- Ambient light sensor
- Inputs:
- Dock connector (typical Apple port)
- 3.5 mm stereo headphone jack
- SIM card
- No USB port (!!!)
- Battery: Built-in 25 Whr rechargeable lithium-polymer battery (by DynaPak)
- Usage time:
- Internet: up to 5 hours on 3G
- Internet: up to 10 hours on Wi-Fi
- Video playback: up to 10 hours
- Colors:
- black with silver or
- Software:
- iPhone OS (for iPad)
- All iPhone applications are supported on the iPad
- In addition, iPad has its own App Store
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