Give Us Your Personal Download On the iPad

ipad3

Apple’s feverishly awaited tablet, the iPad is here. The device has a slim iPhone-like design but is larger thanks to its 9.7-inch screen. Still, the lightweight gadget (it weighs a mere 1.5 pounds) brings a decidedly netbook like-vibe with a 1-GHz processor and up to 64 GB of flash storage. There’s also Wi-Fi connectivity and optional 3G access.

But it’s not all smiles and gorgeously rendered rainbows. Key features such as a camera, multi-tasking, and possibly flash support are conspicuously MIA from the iPad.

We’d love to get your download on the iPad. What are your thoughts? Will you be shelling out $500 (or more) for this guy? If you do, what version will you get? Don’t just stand there, get to the polls and let us know!

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


A Closer Look at Apple’s New Tablet, the iPad

ipad1

After months of speculation, Apple has unveiled its tablet, called the iPad. The slim, large screen device evokes much of the same user interface as the iPhone, but it’s bigger and has some surprise features including Apple’s own custom chip.

Here’s the rundown on specs and some highlights of the device.

  • The tablet is 0.5 inches thick and weighs 1.5 pounds.
  • It has a 9.7-inch display with 1024 x 768-pixel resolution. It also has capacitive multitouch that’s similar to the iPhone.
  • The device runs Apple’s own processor, a 1-GHz Apple A4 chip — possibly the fruits of of Apple’s $278 million acquisition of PA semiconductor in 2008.
  • The iPad will have 16-GB to 64-GB flash storage.
  • It includes speaker, microphone and accelerometer so you can use the device in both landscape and portrait mode. There’s also a compass.
  • It has up to 10 hours of battery life and one month of standby time.
  • It offers Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity
  • It will include optional 3G access from AT&T. For $30 a month, users can get unlimited data. For iPhone users already crying out in pain about their bondage to the AT&T network, here’s something to sweeten the deal: No contracts are required for the data plan. iPad users can cancel their data connectivity at any time.
  • Unlimited data will cost $30 or users can pay $15 for up to 250 MB of data.
  • The iPad will cost $500 for 16 GB, $600 for 32 GB and $700 for a 64-GB model. But if you want 3G connectivity, add another $130 to the price tag.

It’s worth noting that these specs are nothing like what entrepreneur Jason Calacanis claimed when he tweeted Tuesday night that he had been testing a tablet.

The iPad will start shipping in two months. The 3G models will be available in 90 days. Complete specs of the iPad from Apple.

Despite its gorgeous hardware, the iPad is missing some key features.

  • There’s no camera on the iPad.
  • Though Apple is yet to confirm it, on-stage demos of the device during the launch indicate it might not support Flash. That could mean broken pages and some websites that might be off-limits.
  • No multitasking. Apple hasn’t commented on this, but it looks like the iPad works like the iPhone when it comes to apps. It can run just one app at a time and there’s no background processing.
  • There’s more to the iPad than just this. It will run apps designed for the iPhone, new custom apps and double as an e-book reader.
  • And no GPS for the Wi-Fi model. Though the iPad has Google Maps, the lack of GPS means you can’t use it for turn-by-turn navigation or in areas where’s there’s no wireless connectivity.

For more on this, read our live coverage of the tablet event.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Apple iPad Price

Full pricing: The 16GB, Wi-Fi-only version costs $500, while the 32GB is $600 and 64GB is $700. Pricing increases by $130 to add 3G. The Wi-Fi-only models ship in 60 days, while 3G models will ship in 90. [Apple iPad]

The Apple iPad: starting at $499

After nearly a decade of rumors and speculation, Apple’s finally unveiled the iPad. It’s a half-inch thick and weighs just 1.5 pounds, with a 9.7-inch capacitive touchscreen IPS LCD display, and it’s running a custom 1GHz Apple “A4” chip developed by the P.A. Semi team, with a 10-hour battery life and a month of standby. It’ll come in 16, 32, and 64GB sizes, and it’s got the expected connectivity: very little. There’s a 30-pin Dock connector, a speaker, a microphone, Bluetooth, 802.11n WiFi and optional 3G, as well as an accelerometer and a compass. There’s also a keyboard dock, which connects underneath in the portrait orientation, support for up to 1024×768 VGA out and 480p composite out through new dock adapter cables, and a camera attachment kit that lets you import photos from your camera over USB or directly through an SD reader. The device is managed by iTunes, just like the iPhone — you sync everything over to your Mac. As expected, it can run iPhone apps — either pixel-for-pixel in a window, or pixel-doubled fullscreen — but developers can also target the new screen size using the updated iPhone OS SDK, which is available today. The 3G version runs on AT&T and comes with new data plans: 250MB for $14.99 and an unlimited plan for $29.99 a month contract-free. Activations are handled on the iPad, so you can activate and cancel whenever you want. Every iPad is unlocked and comes with a GSM “micro-SIM,” so you can use it abroad, but there aren’t any international deals in place right now — Steve says they’ll be back “this summer” with news on that front.

It starts at $499 for 16GB, 32GB for $599, and $699 64GB. Adding 3G costs a $130 per model, so the most expensive model (64GB / 3G) is $829. The WiFi-only model will ship in 60 days, and the 3G models will come in 90.

Hey, check out our first hands-on right here, and here’s all our additional coverage:

Live from the Apple ‘latest creation’ event
iPad powered by custom 1GHz Apple A4 chip
iPad can run all iPhone apps unmodified, new iPhone SDK out today lets developers tweak apps for iPad use
Apple’s iPad keeping Adobe Flash away from your couch
Apple reveals iBookstore and app for the iPad
Apple announces iWork for iPad
Apple iPad 3G service plans on AT&T, $30 for unlimited data
iPad has optional keyboard dock, camera connection kit and Apple-designed case
iPad vs. iPhone… fight!
Apple iPad first hands-on!
iPad vs. iPhone: what does 3G cost you?

Continue reading The Apple iPad: starting at $499

The Apple iPad: starting at $499 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jan 2010 14:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple reveals iBookstore and app for the iPad

Put this down as something else rumored that’s come to fruition today. Apple’s just announced iBooks, an e-reader app and bookstore (called iBookstore) for the iPad, using the ePub format. We’re seeing prices around $12.99 to $14.99 so far… looks pretty slick! We’re sure Jeff Bezos and Co. are none too pleased to see this one, but we’ll have to see for ourselves what reading’s like on a non-E Ink screen. There’s a gallery after the break.

Be sure to hit up our hands-on right here!

Continue reading Apple reveals iBookstore and app for the iPad

Apple reveals iBookstore and app for the iPad originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Jan 2010 13:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Live Coverage: Apple’s Special Tablet Event

Apple CEO Steve Jobs holds the iPad tablet, at its unveiling in San Francisco January 27, 2010

Scroll down or click here for the latest live updates.

Apple’s Wednesday press conference, where we’ll likely see an Apple tablet, is shaping up to be the Cupertino, California, company’s most-anticipated event ever.

The Jan. 27 event, titled “Come see our latest creation,” will likely be marked down in history as the sequel to Steve Jobs’ legendary keynote at Macworld Expo 2007, where the CEO introduced the iPhone. The iPhone, then touted by the CEO as “three revolutionary products,” has grown to encompass more than 100,000 apps, giving birth to a new digital frontier and, in many ways, reshaping the cellphone industry.

Now Apple must meet, and perhaps exceed, the wow factor of the mobile marvel with its bigger sibling — a touchscreen tablet that the company has been developing for several years.

Rumor has it that Jobs has even said the tablet “will be the most important thing I’ve ever done.”

He has his work cut out for him. For decades, sci-fi movies have dreamed of a slate-like computing device replacing traditional PCs. Many companies have tried, and failed, to live up to these visions. Thanks to clunky user interfaces, durability issues and limited utility, the tablet has been filed away as a niche device again and again. But Apple, the leader in industry and interface design and master of innovating content distribution, could be the company to finally nail the design.

Could it save the publishing industry, reboot education and maybe even change the way we treat medicine? After years of speculation, we’ll finally get some answers.

Yours truly will live-blog Wednesday’s event right here, so bookmark this page. Wired magazine editor Mark McClusky and GameLife editor Chris Kohler will contribute commentary on the event, with photography by Jon Snyder.

The keynote, which takes place at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center, kicks off 10 a.m. Pacific. Stay tuned and look for updates to this post, or follow @bxchen and @gadgetlab for real-time news nuggets via Twitter.

Need to catch up on tablet news? Visit our full page including our major tablet stories from 2009.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

line of people at Yerba Buena center waiting for Apple press conference to start

9:20am Reporter Brian X. Chen is in line at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center. There’s a long line of people awaiting admission, while TV crews jostle for space alongside the elderly Chinese ladies who practice taijiquan here every morning.

9:37am We’re heading inside. Eeeeeeee!

9:55am They’re playing Bob Dylan. “How does it feeeeeeeel….”

Reporters will not be allowed to take photos from their seats. They’re being really militant about it, McClusky reports.

Al Gore is here. He’s standing in front talking to people.

crowd photo at yerba buena center, apple event, by jonathan snyder/wired.com
10:00am Fortunately, we have a photographer, Jonathan Snyder, on site.

The lights are dimming. The event is getting started!

Steve Jobs comes on stage. The crowd is standing and clapping.

“Good morning and thank you all for coming today,” Jobs says. “We want to kick off 2010 with a magical truly revolutionary product today. But first I have some updates.”

10:07 He says 250 million iPods have been sold, and there have been “50 million visitors to our store.”
App Store is an “incredible phenomenon,” delivering applications to iPhone and iPod touch users around the world.
“We have over 140,000 apps on the App Store.
“We started Apple in 1976. 34 years later we just ended our holiday quarter, our first fiscal quarter of 2010 with $15.6B of revenue.”

10:08 Apple is bigger than Sony, Samsung and Nokia’s mobile businesses. Apple is the #1 mobile device company in the world.
Those are the updates today.

There is a slide of Moses holding a tablet on the screen.

10:11 “Before we get to that, I want to go back to 1991. When Apple announced and shipped its first PowerBooks, this was the first modern laptop computer. Apple actually invented the first laptop computer with its Powebooks. First had keyboard and palm rests, trackball. 20 years later we have incredible laptops now. Just a few years ago in 2007, Apple reinvented the phone with the iPhone, and a few years later we got the great iPhone 3GS. So all of us use laptops and smartphones now.
“Everybody uses a laptop and or a smartphone. The question has arised lately. Is there room for a third category of device in the middle?
“They have to be far better at some key things. Better than the laptop, better than the smartphone. What kind of tasks? Things like browsing the web. That’s a tall order.
“Doing e-mail. Enjoying and sharing photographs. Video, watching videos. Enjoy your music collection. Playing games. Reading e-books.
“It has to be better than these kinds of tasks otherwise ithere’s no reason for being.
“Some people have said it’s a netbook. the problem is netbooks aren’t better at anything.
“They’re slow, they have low quality displays, they run old PC software.”

10:12 “We’ve got something better, and we’d like to show it to you today. It’s called the iPad.”
He’s holding an iPad. It looks like all the rumor reports said. 10-inch iPhone with a silver back.
Very thin.

10:14 “What this device does is extraordinary. You can browse the web with it. It is the best browsing eperience you’ve ever had. It’s phenomenal to see a whole web page right in front of you that you can manipulate with your fingers. Way better than a laptop, way better than a smartphone…. It’s a dream to type on.
“Got some great slideshows built in.
“Built in: a calendar, month’s activities. Built in: a great address book for your contacts. Has a great Maps application.
“Satellite view, (you can) zoom in on things.
“And of course we have the iTunes Store. Built right into the iPad, so you can discover it, purchase movies, podcasts, iTunes university, everything built right into the iPad.
“It’s awesome to watch TV shows and movies.
“That gives you a little overview of what the iPad can do.”

Apple iPad, in the hands of Apple CEO Steve Jobs

10:20 “It’s so much more intimate than a laptop and so much more capable than a smartphone with this gorgeous, large display.”
He’s scrolling down the New York Times website.
It looks just like Safari mobile but modified for a bigger screen.
Browsing through Time website. Now the Fandango website.
“The whole website in the palm of your hands.”
When it flips into landscape mode it flips a lot faster and smoother than the iPhone.
“So that is browsing the web. Let’s go to e-mail.”
Turn it sideways, have the inbox displayed in the left. The message displays in the right in a bigger window.
Taps a map of Napa Valley. Gets a big graphical map, smooth zooming in and out.
He just opened a big virtual keyboard.
Steve is typing “Wow, we’re announcing the iPad!” in a note to Phil Schiller and Scott Forstall.

10:21 Mark McClusky notes: In the web demo, you could see a broken plugin icon on NYTimes site. Does that mean there’s no Adobe Flash support on iPad?

10:24 Next let’s go to photos.

“If I’m on a Mac i can also get events, places and faces from iPhoto.
“Can scrub through them left to right.”
You can launch a map, you can see places pinpointed with thumbnails showing pics you took there
He’s showing a slideshow. Some cheesy music is playing.

The desktop is shown with a background. A dock on the bottom with iPhone icons. A desktop metaphor composed of iPhone-like icons.

He launches iTunes. New graphical interface for iTunes. Everything is tappable and pops up smoothly in a box, cover-flow style.
The iTunes Store. Built right in. Sample music, discover songs.

10:25 “And of course in addition to music I’ve got movies, tv shows, everything all right here, built in to the iPad.”

It’s got a calendar. Very fancy looking interface.

Game|Life’s Chris Kohler adds:
I like that he’s just rushing through all of the totally obvious stuff: Yes, of course it lets you browse your photos while you play your iTunes library. Jobs crashing in a comfy chair blazing through all of the features is a clever trick; it’s like you’re hanging out in somebody’s living room and they’re showing you their new toy.

10:27 Address book.
Maps app is full screen, you can switch into satellite view. Looks like Google satellite of course. Showing the Eiffel tower.

CK: Demonstrating the map/search capability, Jobs types in “Sushi” and lands on Sushi Boat on Geary. DON’T GO, STEVE.

He’s searching for food to eat. Searched for Sushi, and you can easily just find a sushi restaurant in a nearby location. Sushi Boat. Then you can view street view of the restaurant.
YouTube has a big video viewer with a menu on the side for you to scroll down search results.

Now in movies. He launches Star Trek. It opens really fast. You can scrub through easily. Standard iTunes control interface.
He’s playing the movie Up.

That’s an overview as to what the iPad can do. Audience is clapping.

“Watching it is nothing like getting one in your hands.”
“The iPad is really thin. It’s half an inch thin. it weighs just 1 1/2 pounds. That’s thinner and lighter than any netbook.”
Full capacitive multitouch display.
1 ghz Apple A4 chip. Their own custom silicon. 16GB – 64 GB Flash storage
16, 32 or 64 GB of flash solid state storage
Wi-Fi: 802.11n
accelerometer, compass, speaker, microphone, 30 pin connector
Battery life is 10 hours, with over a month of standby life

There is no camera, apparently.

Jobs: “iPad is arsenic free, BFR free, mercury free, PVC free, highly recyclable.”
Its got an aluminum and glass enclosure.

10:35 Let’s talk about the App Store.
Scott Forstall, SVP iPhone software is coming on stage.

“The App Store has been a huge success. We launched it just about a year and a half ago and already our cusotmers have downloaded over 3 billion apps, choosing from among 140,000 apps. We build the iPad to run every one of these apps unmodifiied out of the box.

Two ways: pixel-for-pixel accuracy.
“We can also automatically pixel-double and run those apps full screen.”
He’s showing us how it works.

10:37 Mark McClusky takes over the liveblogging here.

Game demo of ESPN Snowcross. iPhone game, running on iPad.
It’s an OpenGL Game.
Can resize game on the fly to full screen, even with graphically intense game. Right out of the app store, unmodified.
But developers can modify application to take full advantage of touchscreen.
There will be an enhanced iPhone SDK to support iPad development. Releasing today.
The SDK includes an iPad simulator now.

CK: The idea of pixel doubling to run all of the existing games on the iPhone seems to be a good one — The demo of the ESPN X-Games Snocross game, running at full screen, looked really good.

Gameloft is coming on stage
They have 60 games on the app store that have been downloaded more than 50 million times.

10:40 Brian X. Chen back at the keyboard.

Mark Hickey with Gameloft is on stage.
Showing the game Nova. What’s different about Nova on the iPad?
The size gives you a lot more flexibility [than iPhone] when controlling the game.
Slide finger across the screen to throw grenades. The iPhone gives us the ability to interact with the game in ways we couldn’t possibly before.
You can turn your hand to open a door.

10:42 CK: So far, the thing that’s excited me the most, as weird as this may sound, is the idea of dragging a mini-map across the screen in a first-person shooter. Touch interfaces on a big screen is something we’ve never seen before, and the idea of adding features that just couldn’t exist before is embodied in this concept.

Next up is the New York Times. (We knew they’d be here.)
Martin Nisenholtz is coming on stage.
Jennifer Brook is the interaction designer of this application.
They’ve developed a new application for the iPad.
Their iPhone app has been downloaded over 3 million times and so they’re doing the same thing with the iPad.
Jennifer: “We think we’ve captured the essence of reading the newspaper.”

10:44 It just looks like the website with some fancy buttons to bookmark articles…you can save to reading list, and sync to iPhone

“We’re very excited to pioneer the next generation of digital journalism. Thank you very much,” Martin Nisenholtz concludes.

10:47 Next up is Brushes, the iPhone paint app.
Steve Sprang from Brushes takes the stage.
Painting application designed for the iPad.
By pinching you can zoom in. By tapping and holding you can paint or erase. If you mess up you can undo. When done painting just tap the gallery button.

10:48 Next up is Electronic Arts.
EA has been a major supporter of the iPhone platform since launch of the iPhone with over 40 titles.
Travis Boatman of EA is coming on stage.
Gorgeous 3D version of Need for Speed game.
“We’re going to be able to bring all the great EA games from the App Store to this device in no time.”
Game is fully touched enabled. Rotating the device uses accelerometer to emulate turning a steering wheel.
The graphics look just all right. Nothing compared to serious consoles.

10:50 Next up is MLB.com.
It’s been downloaded nearly 2 million times in the App Store.
It’s streamed over 60 million videos.
Chad Evans of MLB.com is on stage
We realized we couldn’t just take our existing iPhone app and make it bigger. We had to update it to take advantage of the large, go

CK: Gamers will surely be scoffing right about now at the iPad’s graphics capability, which is more equivalent to an amazing smartphone than a serious games console — it makes Wii look like a PS3. But that barely matters to the people that will play games on this.

Evans is demoing a baseball game. Within the same app you can switch to MLB on TV.

Forstall: We’re proving the SDK today to allow developers to get started for the iPad…. That’s the App story for the iPad.

10:55 Steve is back on stage.
“These guys only had 2, 2 1/2 weeks to work on these things. Imagine what they’re going to do in the next few months. People are going to go crazy.”

Now a slide of the Amazon Kindle is on screen
“Amazon’s done a great job with pioneering e-books…” Steve says.

10:56

iBooks is the app for reading books.
(It looks a lot like Classics for the iPhone.)
Within the app you can download e-books from the iTunes e-book store.

Five of the largest publishers are on board: Harper Collins, Simon and Schuster, Macmillan, Penguin, Hachette
“We’re very excited about this.”

10:59 Now he’s demoing the iBook app.
It’s a bookshelf. It flips around to reveal the iTunes Store (kind of like a room behind a secret wall.)
Tapping a book on the shelf launches a nice, pretty-looking page. Swiping left or right turns pages.
You can change the font size if you’d like. Bigger or smaller. Change the font.
“We use the EPUB format. It is the most popular open book format in the world.”

“Now something very exciting. iWork.”
Exciting? iWork usually = iSnore…

11:06 Phil Schiller is showing us an iWork slide presentation.
You can tap several slides and create a bundle.
Media navigator — he’s adding images, buttons. You can tap to go to the next slide, or swipe left and right.

11:10 He demonstrated Pages and Numbers. Optimized tablet interfaces, with tabs along the top. One document can hold many spreadsheets.
In Numbers you can grab an entire column with your finger and drag it to move it.
There are over 250 formulas and functions built into Numbers.
A pie chart, you can tap it and change it to a different style graph.

Charging $10 for each iWork application (not the entire suite).

OK he’s done with iWork — thank God.

11:14 Steve is back on stage. Time to wake back up.

A few other things: iTunes.
The iPad syncs over USB with iTunes right on your Mac or your PC. Exactly like an iPhone or iPod Touch. When you sync, you sync everything. Your photos, your music, your TV shows, your contacts, your calendars, book marks, applications.
Backups are synced back.

11:15 “Every iPad has Wi-Fi.
“But we’re also going to have 3G.”
What does it cost for the data plans?
Telecom companies typically charge $60 a month for a data plan for a laptop.
“We’ve got a real breakthrough here. We’ve got two awesome plans for iPad owners. The first one gives you up to 250MB data per month. Unlimited is $29.99.
“We’ve got a breakthrough deal with AT&T.
“AT&T is throwing in free use of AT&T Wi-Fi hotspots.”

“No contract and you can cancel it anytime.
“You can buy it right on iPad and cancel it whenever you want.”
International plans will be in place by June.
“We hope to have those in place by June, so we’re going to start on that tomorrow.”

All the models are unlocked and use new GSM micro SIMs.

11:20 “E-mail is fantastic on this device. The best device I’ve ever seen for enjoying and sharing photography. Great for enjoying your music collection. And video is phenomenal. It runs almost all of the 140,000 apps on the App Store as well as a whole new generation of apps that will be designed specifically for the iPad. And the new iBooks application, with the iBooks store, you can carry literally thousands of books around on your iPad. And the iWork suite with the best interface we’ve ever seen.”

“What should we price it at? We’re going to price it under $1,000 which is code for $999.
“We had a very aggressive price goal because we want to put this in the hands of a lot of people. … I am thrilled to announce to you that the iPad pricing is not $999 but $499.”

Crowd is whistling and clapping.

11:22 Here are the options:

Wi-Fi only:
16GB $500
32GB $600
64GB $700

Wi-Fi + 3G:
16GB $630
32GB $740
64GB $830

It’ll be shipping in 60 days; 90 days for 3G models.

CK: Hmm, two models: one with just Wi-Fi, one with Wi-Fi and 3G. Seems like they’re trying to keep the base cost low.

There’s a mechanical keyboard accessory. It has a connector on the back for charging. You can charge the iPad with the keyboard.

Another accessory: A cover that protects your iPad.

UPDATES (bookmark this link to go straight to the latest live updates)

11:25 They’re showing a video of Apple employees talking about the iPad
“It’s going to change the way we do things every day,” Phil Schiller says in the video.
“It just feels right to hold the internet in your hands as you’re surfing it.” (Can’t we do that already?…)
The virtual keyboard is the same size as a physical keyboard, the video says.

11:30 “Developers will be developing apps specifically for the iPad so there’s going to be a whole new gold rush for app developers,” Forstall says in the video.
“This multitouch is the largest we’ve ever built in a product,” another Apple employee says.
You can share the device with someone else because they can view it off-angle.
Phil is talking about the price. “We wanted to take advanced technology hardware and software and do anything we could to get it in as many hands as possible.”

Steve: “Do we have what it takes to establish a third category of product? An awesome product between the iPhone and the MacBook? The bar’s pretty high, and it has to be better at doing some key things, like these. We think we’ve got the goods. We think we’ve done it. We’re so excited about this product.
“We’ve shipped 75 million iphones, Over 75 million people who already know how to use the iPad because they’ve used the iPhone.
“Over 12 billion downloads for iTunes.
“We are ready for the iPad.
“The iPad is our most advanced technology in a magical revolutionary device at an unbelievable price.”
“We think this is going to be a really great combination.”

More from Steve: “We’ve always tried to be at the intersection of technology and liberal arts. To be able to get the best of both, to make extremely advanced products from a technology point of view that also have them be intuitive, easy to use, fun to use.
“It’s the combination of these two things that I think has let us make the kind of creative products like the iPad.
“We’ve got a hands-on area next door, we’d like you to go get your hands on the iPad.”

He thanks us for coming; we’re done

And that’s a wrap. Thanks for joining us for this liveblog!


Steve Jobs Reveals the iPad – Video

Live at the keynote in San Francisco, Steve Jobs reveals the iPad.

Apple iPad: Everything You Need to Know

From the realm of sci-fi to Steve Jobs’ stage: The iPad is official. What is it? What can it do? How does it work? Here’s everything you need to know about Apple’s newest creation, all in one place.

It’s almost impossible to overstate the buzz leading up to this device. Immediately after the death of the Newton, rumors began trickling out about a followup from Apple; in the last five years, speculation and scraps of evidence about an Apple tablet have been a fixture in the tech media; in the last year, the rumors were unavoidable. Today, Apple’s tablet has finally arrived, and we’ve got the full rundown—from specs, features, content and price to what it’s like to actually use one.

The Hardware


Size and shape: The screen’s aspect ratio makes it seem a bit squat, but this is intended to be a bi-directional tabl—err, Pad. The bezel is a little fat, but otherwise, this thing is basically a clean slab of pure display. It’s just .5 inches thick, which is a hair thicker than the iPhone 3GS, and measures 9.56 x 7.47 inches. Final weigh-in is 1.5 pounds without 3G, and 1.6 with. Says Mark, who’s actually held one:

Imagine, if you will, a super light unibody MacBook Pro that’s smaller, thinner and way, way, way lighter. Or, from a slightly different perspective, think about a bigger iPhone that’s been built with unibody construction.

The screen: The tablet’s multitouch screen measures in at 9.7 inches, meaning that it’s got a significantly smaller footprint than the smallest MacBook, but a much larger screen than the iPhone. (That’s 9.7 inches diagonal, from screen corner to screen corner.) The screen’s resolution is a dense 1024 x 768.

Here‘s what it looks like in photos, and on video:

The guts: It’s a half-inch thick—just a hair thicker than the iPhone, for reference—and weighs 1.5 pounds. It’s powered by a 1GHz Apple ARM A4 chip, and has 16GB, 32GB or 64GB of flash storage. From the looks of it, Apple finally got some use out of that PA Semi purchase, and built their own mobile processor, but that’s no totally clear yet. It’s also loaded with 802.11 n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR, a 30-pin iPod connector, a speaker, a microphone, an accelerometer and a compass. Video output runs through and iPhone-type composite adapter at up to 576p and through a dock-to-VGA adapter at up to 1024 x 768. No HDMI, no DVI—not even a Mini DisplayPort.

3G is optional, and costs more, not less. Along with 3G, the upgraded models include A-GPS. (More on this below)

Oh, and there isn’t a rear-facing camera, nor is there a front-facing camera. This tablet is totally camera-less, which seems a bit odd.

The battery: Apple’s making some bold claims about battery life: ten hours for constant use, with a one-month standby rating. Ten hours of constant use includes video viewing, so you could conceivable watch about six feature films before this thing dies.

How you hold it: You can hold it two different ways, and the software will adapt to both. Portrait mode seems like the primay mode, a la the iPhone while landscape mode—better for movies and perhaps magazine content—is a secondary mode. The Apple decal is oriented for portrait mode, so basically, just get ready for a whole bunch of HEY IT’S A GIANT IPHONE!! jokes.

Connectivity

Some models have Wi-Fi exclusively, while some have 3G as well. It’s with AT&T, and costs either $15 a month for 250MB of data, or $30 for unlimited data. With the plan, you get access to AT&T’s Wi-Fi hotspots as well. Best of all, it’s a prepaid service—no contract. You can activate it from the iPad any time, and cancel whenever you want. This sounds like a fantastic deal, until you consider how it’s probably going to brutalize AT&T’s already terrible 3G coverage.

The iPad itself is unlocked, so you can conceivably use it with any Micro SIM card . But what the hell is a Micro SIM card? For one, it’s not the same kind of SIM that’s in your iPhone, so don’t expect to just pop that in and surf for free. It’s a totally different standard, and the iPad’s the only device that uses it right now. Even if, say, T-Mobile released a Micro SIM card, the iPad can’t connect to its 1700MHz 3G network.

The Software

The OS: The operating system on the tablet is based on iPhone OS, which is in turn loosely based on OS X. In other words, it’s got the same guts as the iPhone, as well as a somewhat similar interface. What this means in practical terms is that the UI is modal; you can only display one app at a time, and there aren’t windows, per se. There’s a new set of standard UI tools as well, including a pull-down menu, situated at the top left of most apps.

The homescreen: It’s like a mixture between the iPhone and OS X: it uses the iPhone launcher/apps metaphor, but has an OS X-style shiny dock. It feels very spread out compared to the iPhone’s homescreen, though I suspect this is necessary to keep things from getting too overwhelming. For our full walkthrough of the new OS, check here.


The keyboard: Input comes by way of an onscreen keyboard, almost exactly like the iPhone’s. Typing on it is apparently a “dream,” because it’s “almost lifesize”. Steve wasn’t typing with his thumbs, but with his fingers, as if it were an actual laptop keyboard. Navigation throughout the rest of the OS is optimized for one hand, though.

The browser: The browser is essential an upscaled version of Safari Mobile, with a familiar, finger-friendly title bar and not much else. It rotates by command of the accelerometer. From the looks of it, it doesn’t have Flash support, but we’ll have to confirm. UPDATE: Yup, none at all. You can get away with that kind of thing on the iPhone, sort of, but on a 10-inch tablet it’s a glaring omission.

Email: Mail again takes its visual cues from the iPhone, but with a lot more decoration: you can preview your mailbox from any message with a pull-down menu, and preview any message from within the mailbox, with a pop-up window.

Music: The music player is even more hybridized, styled like a mix between the iPhone’s iPod interface and full-fledged desktop iTunes. Interestingly, Cover Flow seems to have more or less died off.

Maps: This one may be the most direct conversion from the iPhone, with a very similar interface through and through. It includes Street View, too.

Photos: The photo library app looks a lot like iPhoto, only adapted for multitouch finger input.

Video: YouTube is available by way of an app, iPhone-style, which can play videos in 720p HD. iTunes video content plays back in a dedicated app, just like on the iPhone, and can also play back in HD. Movie codec support is otherwise the same as the iPhone, which is to say pretty limited.

Calendar and contacts: The calendar app is desktop-like, until you open contacts and calendars, which look a lot like actual contact books and organizers. They’re beautiful, and dare I say a bit Courier-like.

Apps


iPhone apps: This thing runs them! The iPad runs iPhone apps right out of the App Store, with no modification, but they’re either relegated to the center of the screen or in “pixel double” mode, which just blows them up crudely. Any apps you’ve purchased for your iPhone can be synced, for free, to your iPad.

New apps: The iPhone app SDK has already been expanded for tablet development, including a whole new set of UI elements and expanded resolution support. The raw iPhone app compatibility is just a temporary measure, it seems—any developer who wants their app to run on the tablet will develop for the tablet. Some of the early examples of adapted apps, like Brushes, are spectacular. More on the SDK here.
Apple’s pushing gaming on this thing right out of the box, demoing everything from FPS N.O.V.A to Need for Speed. It’s presumably running these games at HD, so the rendering power in this thing is no joke.

Ebooks: Apple’s also opened an ebook store to accompany the iPad, in the mold of iTunes. It’s called iBooks.
It offers books in ePub format, and makes reading on a Kindle seem about as stodgy as, you know, paper. To be clear, though, this is just Apple’s solution—unless they’re explicitly banned from the iPad, you should be able to download your Kindle app as well.

This store doesn’t sell magazines or newspapers, which’ll be relegated to regular app status. At this point, whether or not the tablet helps them out is in their hands.

iWork: Apple’ also designed a whole new iWork suite just for the tablet, which implies that this thing is as much for media creation as it is for consumption. There’s a new version of Keynote designed just for the iPad, as well as new version of Pages, (word processor), and Numbers, which is the spreadsheet app. Here’s what Keynote looks like:
The interfaces are obviously designed strictly for touch input, but from the looks of it can handle every function that the old, mouse-centric version could, plus a few more. And man, they’re so much prettier. Each app costs $10, and you can get them all for $30.

• File storage: Unlike the iPhone, the iPad does seem to have some shared storage aside from the photo roll. The newly released SDK reveals that when you connect an iPad to a PC or Mac, part of it—a partition, maybe?—mounts as a shared documents folder.

Accessories


Right away, Apple’s offering three main official accessories: a book-style case, a regular dock and a keyboard dock. (Ha!)

The book cover doubles as a stand, so you can prop the iPad up in a few different ways. The keyboard dock hooks up with the iPad when it’s in portrait mode, so you can type longer documents, charge, or both. The iPad will also support Apple’s Bluetooth keyboards.

The iPad’s only really got one accessory port, and it takes an iPod dock connector. Apple’s solution for this? Adapters! So many adapters. There’s a Dock Connector to VGA adapter, a USB camera adapter (which gives you one plain USB connection, though it apparently only works for importing photos), a USB to SD adapter, and an included USB power adapter, which lets you charge by AC or USB. It’s essentially just an iPhone charger with a bigger brick.

UPDATE: We have prices:

the Keyboard dock costs $70, the case costs $40, the SD/USB connection kit costs $30 and the VGA display adapter costs $30 (1024×768 only)

What It’s Like to Use

It’s hefty. Substantial. Easy to grip. Fast. Beautiful. Rigid. Starkly designed. The glass is a little rubbery but it could be my sweaty hands. And it’s fasssstttt.

Our detailed impressions in our hands on, right here.

Price and Release Date


The iPad ships worldwide in 60 days, but only in Wi-Fi versions. The 3G version will be another 30 days after that. Here are the prices:

Without 3G:

• $499: 16GB
• $599: 32GB
• $699: 64GB

With 3G:

• $629: 16GB
• $729: 32GB
• $829: 64GB

Apple will ship all the iPads in 60 days—the end of March—to America, and just the Wi-Fi models internationally. It’ll be another 30 days beyond that for 3G models to be available outside our shores; Apple says they’re still working on carrier deals.

3G comes by way of AT&T, who’s offering the service without contract, for $15 a month (250MB of data) or $30 a month (unlimited). That’s why, unlike the iPhone, the iPad is actually cheaper off-contract.

All the Rest

The First Hands On

The Media Strategy: Book, Magazines and Music

Eight Things That Suck About the iPad (Already!)

How the iPad Is a Ploy to Assassinate Laptops

The First Round of iPad Apps, From NYT to N.O.V.A.

iPad Accessories

Apple’s Official Specs Page

What’s actually new in the iPad’s user interface

• Our liveblog, in case you want to pretend the keynote is happening RIGHT NOW.

&bull A theory! The iPad Is The Gadget We Never Knew We Needed

• Another theory! The iPad is for olds

How the iPad Measures Up to the JooJoo, the HP Slate, Android Tablets and More

• Mo’ Apps, Mo’ Problems: How the iPad Will Change the Landscape of the App Store

• Adobe lashes out at Apple over the iPad’s lack of Flash

• iPad Snivelers: Put Up Or Shut Up (But Mostly Shut Up)

• The #appleipad tag, which collects all of our coverage (oh, there’s lots more) in one place.

And here’s Apple’s full press release:

Apple Launches iPad

A Magical & Revolutionary Device at an Unbelievable Price

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 27 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Apple® today introduced iPad, a revolutionary device for browsing the web, reading and sending email, enjoying photos, watching videos, listening to music, playing games, reading e-books and much more. iPad’s responsive high-resolution Multi-Touch™ display lets users physically interact with applications and content. iPad is just 0.5 inches thick and weighs just 1.5 pounds- thinner and lighter than any laptop or netbook. iPad includes 12 new innovative apps designed especially for the iPad, and will run almost all of the over 140,000 apps in the App Store. iPad will be available in late March starting at the breakthrough price of just $499.

(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20100127/SF44883)

“iPad is our most advanced technology in a magical and revolutionary device at an unbelievable price,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “iPad creates and defines an entirely new category of devices that will connect users with their apps and content in a much more intimate, intuitive and fun way than ever before.”

iPad features 12 next-generation Multi-Touch applications. Every app works in both portrait and landscape, automatically animating between views as the user rotates iPad in any direction. The precise Multi-Touch interface makes surfing the web on iPad an entirely new experience, dramatically more interactive and intimate than on a computer. Reading and sending email is fun and easy on iPad’s large screen and almost full-size “soft” keyboard. Import photos from a Mac®, PC or digital camera, see them organized as albums, and enjoy and share them using iPad’s elegant slideshows. Watch movies, TV shows and YouTube, all in HD or flip through pages of an e-book you downloaded from Apple’s new iBookstore while listening to your music collection.

iPad runs almost all of the over 140,000 apps on the App Store, including apps already purchased for your iPhone® or iPod touch®. The iTunes® Store gives you access to the world’s most popular online music, TV and movie store with a catalog of over 11 million songs, over 50,000 TV episodes and over 8,000 films including over 2,000 in stunning high definition video. Apple also announced the new iBooks app for iPad, which includes Apple’s new iBookstore, the best way to browse, buy and read books on a mobile device. The iBookstore will feature books from major and independent publishers.

Apple also introduced a new version of iWork® for iPad, the first desktop-class productivity suite designed specifically for Multi-Touch. With Pages®, Keynote® and Numbers® you can create beautifully formatted documents, stunning presentations with animations and transitions, and spreadsheets with charts, functions and formulas. The three apps will be available separately through the App Store for $9.99 each.

iPad syncs with iTunes just like the iPhone and iPod touch, using the standard Apple 30-pin to USB cable, so you can sync all of your contacts, photos, music, movies, TV shows, applications and more from your Mac or PC. All the apps and content you download on iPad from the App Store, iTunes Store and iBookstore will be automatically synced to your iTunes library the next time you connect with your computer.

iPad’s brilliant 9.7-inch, LED-backlit display features IPS technology to deliver crisp, clear images and consistent color with an ultra-wide 178 degree viewing angle. The highly precise, capacitive Multi-Touch display is amazingly accurate and responsive whether scrolling web pages or playing games. The intelligent soft keyboard pioneered on iPhone takes advantage of iPad’s larger display to offer an almost full-size soft keyboard. iPad also connects to the new iPad Keyboard Dock with a full-size traditional keyboard.

iPad is powered by A4, Apple’s next-generation system-on-a-chip. Designed by Apple, the new A4 chip provides exceptional processor and graphics performance along with long battery life of up to 10 hours.* Apple’s advanced chemistry and Adaptive Charging technology deliver up to 1,000 charge cycles without a significant decrease in battery capacity over a typical five year lifespan.**

iPad comes in two versions-one with Wi-Fi and the other with both Wi-Fi and 3G. iPad includes the latest 802.11n Wi-Fi, and the 3G versions support speeds up to 7.2 Mbps on HSDPA networks. Apple and AT&T announced breakthrough 3G pre-paid data plans for iPad with easy, on-device activation and management.

Continuing Apple’s dedication to designing and creating environmentally responsible products, each iPad enclosure is made of highly recyclable aluminum and comes standard with energy-efficient LED-backlit displays that are mercury-free and made with arsenic-free glass. iPad contains no brominated flame retardants and is completely PVC-free.

Apple today released a new Software Development Kit (SDK) for iPad, so developers can create amazing new applications designed to take advantage of iPad’s capabilities. The SDK includes a simulator that lets developers test and debug their iPad apps on a Mac, and also lets developers create Universal Applications that run on iPad, iPhone and iPod touch.

Pricing & Availability

iPad will be available in late March worldwide for a suggested retail price of $499 (US) for the 16GB model, $599 (US) for the 32GB model, $699 (US) for the 64GB model. The Wi-Fi + 3G models of iPad will be available in April in the US and selected countries for a suggested retail price of $629 (US) for the 16GB model, $729 (US) for the 32GB model and $829 (US) for the 64GB model. iPad will be sold in the US through the Apple Store® (www.apple.com), Apple’s retail stores and select Apple Authorized Resellers. International pricing and worldwide availability will be announced at a later date. iBookstore will be available in the US at launch.

*Apple tested wireless battery life by browsing web pages and receiving email over an AirPort® network, never letting the system go to sleep during the test, and keeping the display at half brightness. This is a typical scenario of use on the go, resulting in a battery performance number that is very relevant to mobile users.

**A properly maintained iPad battery is designed to retain 80 percent or more of its original capacity during a lifespan of up to 1,000 recharge cycles. Battery life and charge cycles vary by use and settings.

Tech Pundit Leaks Apple Tablet Specs?

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Apple is set to launch its new tablet today but entrepreneur and web personality Jason Calacanis seems to have stolen the company’s thunder by revealing a few key details ahead of the official event.

On his twitter feed Tuesday night, Calacanis claimed Apple gave him a tablet to test 10 days ago under a non-disclosure agreement (NDA). That NDA ended midnight Tuesday, he says. “It is the most amazing device ever,” Calacanis tweeted.

For those hungry to know more, Calacanis claimed to offer a peek into the Apple tablet’s features:

  • The tablet runs an “iPhone flavor operating system” and can handle multiple apps at the same time.
  • The display is OLED but the device also offers an e-reading mode with longer battery life.
  • It has two cameras–one in front, one at the back of the device so it works well for video conferencing.
  • There’s a built-in HDTV tuner and PVR.
  • There are thumbpads on each side for mouse gestures and fingerprint security for up to five profiles.
  • The tablet will cost $600, $700 or $800, depending on size and memory
  • There’s also a wireless keyboard and monitor connection for TV available, he says.
  • The tablet connects to other tablets over Wi-Fi for gaming and will include games such as Farmville, the Facebook game that has become a rage among users.
  • Overall the tablet offers a battery life of two to three hours while playing games. But there’s a solar pad for recharging.

Sound too good to be true? We will know soon enough. Read Gadget Lab coverage of Apple’s tablet event live.

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Apple Tablet Event Liveblog – We’re Here

Wednesday, January 27, 2010, 10am Pacific. The moment when Steve Jobs (or Phil Schiller) will step onstage and (probably) announce the Apple Tablet is almost here. Tune in NOW at live.gizmodo.com, so you don’t miss a bit of our liveblog.

So far, we’ve got our usual pre-game countdown, with observations of the line, celebrity look-a-like sightings, angry rants about how cold it’s going to be in SF, and photos of what people are wearing. Us? A tasteful Target and Walmart ensemble, naturally.

And if you’re a developer, work in the industry or are a member of the press that will be at the event tomorrow, email Brian Lam (his email’s in the masthead on the left <—) for info on a meetup tomorrow night. [Liveblog]