iPad original prototype re-appears with 12-inch display

This week several black and white photographs taken back around the year 2002 appeared containing what may very well have been the original iPad prototype – today some much more impressive images have been dropped. The images you’ll see here show not just the supposed original “035 prototype”, but a brand new iPad 2 as well. It seems that someone who owns one of these original beasts found themselves suddenly free to tell the truth about it and took immediate action to make it so.

What you’ll see is the iPad 2 sitting next to what’s being called the original iPad prototype. This device was shown in a story earlier this week which had none other than Apple’s Jonathan Ive confirming the existence of said prototype and that the images matched up to what he remembered from the early 2000s as the prototype in question. This original iPad – made well before such a name existed – had a 12 in display and was nearly an inch thick.

This device has not yet been shown running any software at all, but due to the distinctive lack of any kind of buttons or switches at all, we must assume that it was meant to be a touch-screen unit. The back of the device has an Apple logo in portrait configuration, and the whole back of the device is white plastic. This design places the device right in line with the original white MacBook lineup, rounded corners and everything.

One rather large difference is the area around the front glass panel – it appears to have a space for airflow, this unit perhaps even containing a cooling fan inside!

Have a glance at how different the original is from the most modern of iPad units, and thank your lucky iStars that Apple found a way to make things much, much smaller in the decade between the two. Head to our iPad timeline below as well for additional recent bits on the future of the iPad.

[via Buzzfeed]


iPad original prototype re-appears with 12-inch display is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Here’s the Real Original iPad Prototype in All Its Fat Glory [Ipad]

Unbelievably, the real, actual iPad prototype looks even bigger and fatter than what we saw in the mockup of it. BuzzFeed FWD has real pictures of the iPad prototype compared with the iPad 2 and it completely dwarfs the skinny tablet we know. More »

Sonos for iPad gets Retina upgrade

Sonos has updated its free controller app for the new iPad, bringing Retina Display graphics support to the multi-room remote software. Sonos Controller for iPad v3.8.1, fresh to the App Store today, also introduces a new – and much requested – feature for controlling volume, repurposing the iPad’s physical volume buttons to control audio levels from Sonos rather than the tablet’s own media playback.

You’ll need to be running iOS 4.3 or higher in order to use the volume keys in that way, and the Sonos app itself needs to be active. If you’re using the iPad for something else, then the buttons will control sound effect or local media volume as usual.

Nonetheless, it’s a useful addition, and the updated app looks great with its Retina Display graphics. Unfortunately not all album art lives up to the UI; Spotify graphics, for instance, are notably crunchy.

You can download the Sonos Controller for iPad app in the App Store here [iTunes link], though you’ll obviously need at least one Sonos device in order to actually use it. Check out our review of how the PLAY:3 holds up in a smaller installation here.

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Sonos for iPad gets Retina upgrade is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


iPad mini: Cheaper, more focused and, oh yes, smaller

The talk is weighing up: Apple’s iPad mini, the smaller “tweener” slate to slot in-between iPhone and new iPad, looks increasingly like a case of “when” and not “if”. Another high-profile and trusted source has jumped on the iPad mini bandwagon, taking the count of “insider confirmation” to three, alongside numerous other leaks and even some sneaky engineering sample photos.

The New York Times is the latest to speak up on the long-standing speculation, with its own clutch of sources saying that the tinier tablet is, indeed, in the pipeline. The paper joins the WSJ, which recently pointed to a September release date, echoing comments earlier again from Bloomberg that suggested a screen size “between 7- and 8-inches” and a pre-October launch.

Specifics are, in all cases, in short supply. The consensus so far has been on a 7.85-inch display, though none of the big three have settled on an absolute number. Chatter among the blogs and those blessed with insider-access has indicated a 1024 x 768 resolution might be enough to satisfy the “Retina” requirement, and there are mutterings of a new 19-pin dock connector too.

The big deal is price. Again, specifics are too much to hope for; the NYT instead says it will be “significantly less” than the existing $499 new iPad. That’s unsurprising, given it’s a smaller model altogether, and the real deciding factor will be exactly how much less it is. Google’s Nexus 7 is convincing reviewers – ourselves included – in no small part by virtue of its $199 price tag, and though Apple isn’t expected to dip quite that low, a $249 or $299 tag and the Cupertino cachet could be sufficient to encourage buyers to spend a little more than on Android alternatives.

As for focus, while Apple has been pushing the content creation talents of the new iPad in recent months, it’s Amazon’s success with the Kindle Fire in promoting content consumption that is believed to be Apple’s primary lure for joining the 7-inch segment. Amazon’s cheap 7-inch Fire hasn’t exactly helped Google, with its heavily-customized Android OS, but its helping the retailer push ebooks, movies, music and apps at a rate of alacrity.

With a couple of months to go before Apple is tipped to be making the iPad mini official, expect plenty more rumors and “anonymous sources” fleshing out the tablet. Is the prospect of a sub-$300 iOS slate enough to get you to open your wallet? Let us know in the comments.

[Image credit: Ciccaresedesign]


iPad mini: Cheaper, more focused and, oh yes, smaller is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


New iPad hits China on July 20 with cautious rationing

Apple has confirmed that the new iPad will go on sale in China on July 20, with the coast now legally clear for the tablet after the company secured rights to use the iPad name. Pricing for the new iPad has not been confirmed for the Chinese market, though the iPad 2 is on sale at 2,988 Chinese yuan ($469).

Sales of the tablet will be through Apple’s online store, as well as through select Apple Authorized Resellers and,  by reservation, from Apple retail stores. Those stores will only be accepting reservation requests each day between 9 am and 12 pm local time, from Thursday, July 19, with collection available the following day.

The decision to more strictly measure out new iPad stock in China is likely a response to previous “scalping” incidents, where grey market devices flooded the market after groups of unofficial resellers organized gangs to buy as many Apple products as possible. The launch of the iPhone 4S in China turned violent after Apple decided to block sales at the last moment.

Apple CEO Tim Cook has previously cited China as one of the key markets for the company’s future growth, with a vast and generally untapped demand for its hardware. More on the new iPad in our full review.


New iPad hits China on July 20 with cautious rationing is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


iPad mini rumors reignite over Nexus 7

Google’s own-brand entrance into the 7-inch tablet market with the Nexus 7 has refueled speculation about a so-called iPad mini, with Apple expected to face increasing pressure to compete at the tweener size. Rumors of a smaller iPad – which would slot into the mid-point between the existing, 9.7-inch model, and the 3.5-inch iPhone and iPod touch – have circulated for as long as the iPad has been on sale; however, the arrival of the new Nexus 7 running Jelly Bean is arguably the biggest motivator yet for Apple to make good on the heresay.

The Nexus 7′s more direct competitor in the slate market is Amazon’s Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble’s NOOK Tablet range. Both of the rivals – which each run Android, albeit with heavy customization – fall into the same near-$200 price window, versus the iPad which starts at $499 for the latest model.

Apple was tipped to deliver a smaller model of tablet alongside its Retina Display third-gen iPad, though instead the company kept on the iPad 2 and lowered the sticker price by $100. Nonetheless, industry observers have continued to predict a new, smaller model, with talk that orders have already been placed and that the new iOS slate could ship in Q3 2012.

Whether Apple would choose to compete with Google (and the others) with direct price parity is questionable. The company has not been afraid to sticker up its products with a relatively premium tag, reflecting a preference to deliver a cohesive all-round device rather than make cuts for the sake of a price target. Nonetheless, the $200 segment could prove more tempting now that Google has waded into it itself.


iPad mini rumors reignite over Nexus 7 is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.