Tablet Photos Look Like Real Deal

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These photos purportedly show the Apple Tablet, locked down in a security frame. They were sent by an undisclosed source to Engadget and, to my eye at least, appear to be the real thing.

Wired will be liveblogging the Apple press event, which starts at 10am Pacific on Wednesday. Get the latest news here:
Live Coverage: Apple’s Special Tablet Event

The screen looks to be around 9 or 10 inches and looks pretty much like what we expected: a big iPhone. The Home button at the bottom says to us that this is all about books and magazines, and less about movies (although when you’re watching a movie in landscape format, you don’t do much button pressing). Another cutout at the top of the security frame suggests either another Home button (unlikely) or a camera.

We can see from the screen that there is Wi-Fi on board, and the “No Service” message points to a data connection, although it doesn’t reveal the carrier. Another source tells Engadget that the back of the device will be aluminum, like the MacBook Pro, and that “pricing will run $800 on contract with Verizon and $1,000 without when it arrives in March.” This tallies with what we have already heard.

I’m going to call this as legit. I just wish the spy had gotten a snap of the on-screen keyboard in action.

Last Minute Leaked Photos of Apple Tablet? [Engadget]

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iThing: The Best Tablet Spoof Yet

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A last minute tip from a Gadget Lab reader might be the first actual photo of The Tablet, the savior of the print industry and curer of leprosy and typhoid (but – ironically – not consumption).

Not only are the pictures crisp and clear, they also show the name at last. Behold, the iThing.

These leaked photos, from either Kyle ‘The Yellow Dart’ Smith or Travis Fantina, depending on which end of the email you believe, come with the following testimonial as to their legitimacy:

I may, or may not work for Apple or I may or may not know somebody who does, however I have gotten my hands on 3 Tablet photos which I’m sure you will be able to verify are not fake after careful image analysis. Apparently the tablet will be called the iThing.

So there we have it. Conclusive proof of the iThing, a screen and frame that is just one pixel thick. More pictures below.

Follow our live coverage of the real Apple even here on Gadget Lab.

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Video: Apple Tablet Has iPhone-Like OS, Says McGraw-Hill


Publisher McGraw-Hill was the first company to not only publicly acknowledge the existence of an Apple tablet, but also offer some insight into its software experience.

In an interview with CNBC, McGraw-Hill’s CEO Terry McGraw probably said more than enough to get Steve Jobs slamming his fist on the table. When asked about the Apple tablet, rumored for an announcement Wednesday, McGraw said the following:

Yeah, Very exciting. Yes, they’ll make their announcement tomorrow on this one. We have worked with Apple for quite a while. And the Tablet is going to be based on the iPhone operating system and so it will be transferable. So what you are going to be able to do now is we have a consortium of e-books. And we have 95% of all our materials that are in e-book format. So now with the tablet you’re going to open up the higher education market, the professional market. The tablet is going to be just really terrific.

Fun. Check out the interview in the video above, starting around 2 minutes and 50 seconds. A hat tip to MacRumors for being the first to spot this.

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Designer Publishes ‘Leaked’ Apple Tablet Photos

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These wonderful fake tablet photos come from user interface designer Dustin Curtis. They supposedly show the Jesus Moses Tablet atop a 15-inch MacBook Pro. Unlike many blurry spy-cam shots, Dustin had faith in his Photoshop abilities and these pictures are sharp and clear.

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It’s a sweet-looking design, with dual dock ports for horizontal and vertical charging (and movie-watching). Even the bezel (although it looks thin on a large tablet) is wide enough for fingers to grip without obscuring the screen.

But the telltale signs are there. A bad, overly soft drop shadow (most obvious in the close-up), an off-looking reflection (the glowing Apple and the screen edge on the main shot) and the rather pale reflection of the MacBook keyboard in its own screen (again on the close-up). Still, it might be my favorite mockup so far, if only because the super-simple slab-like design fits with my idea of what the actual tablet will look like. For more debunking and analysis, head to Dustin’s blog, where these images were posted. Good try, Dustin!

Photos of the Apple Tablet [Dustin Curtis]

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Touchgrind Multi Touch Skateboard Game Shown on Mac

Touchgrind, the iPhone skateboarding game I briefly loved last February, could be coming to the Mac. Normally Mac games are cause for disappointment, but this one has a new angle: multi touch.

The oversized MacBook trackpad can recognize up to eleven fingers at once (we’ll leave the precise positioning of those fingers to your imagination). So far we have seem little more than fancy swipes and pinch-to-zoom, but gaming seems an obvious use for all that detection power, especially as we’re far more willing to learn new input methods for games than we are for word processors.

The Touchgrind demo, like the iPhone game, lets you ollie and kickflip your way around a course using some very intuitive finger movements. The big advantage of the MacBook is that it has a much larger screen: the lack of warning of upcoming obstacles is what made the iPhone game get frustrating very quickly. Here’s the video, with the exact same music as the iPhone demo video of the game.

To be clear, this is just a tech demo at the moment, but we’d love to see it as a cheap pick-up-and-play title for the Mac. And you know where else this game would be welcome? The Apple Tablet.

Multi-Touch Trackpad Gaming Demonstrated on MacBook [Mac Rumors]

Touchgrind for iPhone [Touchgrind/Illusion Labs]


Apple ‘Tablets’ Sniffed by Analytics Are More Likely iPhones

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A mobile analytics company has come forward with what it touts as evidence that Apple tablet prototypes are being tested — without offering any solid details suggesting the mystery devices are tablets at all.

Analytics firm Flurry has tracked down 50 devices that it believes are Apple’s expected tablet. The devices’ IPs and GPS data give away they have not left Apple’s Cupertino campus, according to Flurry, which raises the firm’s suspicion that these are prototypes in testing. Flurry goes on to say its app tracking matches the “characteristics of Apple’s rumored tablet device” even though the analytics don’t provide any data about the characteristics of the prototypes.

Flurry concludes the devices being tested are tablets because games, entertainment and book apps are being launched the most, according to analytics tracking, corroborating rumor reports that the tablet will have a strong focus on gaming and e-reading. But those are the types of apps you would expect to be tested the most on any iPhone-related prototype device to gauge performance and display quality. And there are more games in the App Store than any other kind of app. Moreover, Flurry’s data set — 200 apps — is extremely scarce relative to the App Store’s 100,000 offerings.

Flurry’s analytics state the devices are running a newer, unreleased version of the iPhone OS, version 3.2. Current iPhones run OS 3.1.2. That’s where Flurry’s argument falls apart, because a tablet would be unlikely to run the exact same OS as the iPhone. More realistic is a modified version of the iPhone OS that would probably be called something else, such as “iSlate OS.”

Flurry’s blog post then quickly gets lost in rumor territory, reporting claims on screen size and other unsubstantiated nuggets, even though its analytics do not retrieve any data about screen size or resolution.

Flurry tracks mobile applications and offers its customers usage stats and other handy numbers. It also knows what applications are being downloaded, to what device and where. It works like Google analytics: developers add Flurry to their applications and then their usage can be tracked, including geographic location, time spent online and even which mobile carrier they are on. This data is then aggregated so the developer sees just how their software is used.

“[We] identified approximately 50 devices that match the characteristics of Apple’s rumored tablet device,” Flurry said in a blog post. “Because Flurry could reliably ‘place’ these devices geographically on Apple’s Cupertino campus, we have a fair level of confidence that we are observing a group of pre-release tablets in testing.”

So Flurry’s analysis is such: Prototype devices aren’t leaving Apple’s campus, and they’re running iPhone OS 3.2. Out of a sample of 200 apps, they’re launching games, entertainment and e-reader apps the most. Therefore, they are tablets. To believe that conclusion, you’d have to take a few logical leaps of faith. First, you’d have to assume the tablet is running the same OS as the iPhone, and that’s unlikely. Or you could assume the tablet launches the iPhone OS in the background of its own OS, which is why it’d register as iPhone OS. (Good-bye, battery life.) Then you’d have to believe the 200 apps being tested are a strong representative sample of the App Store’s 100,000 wares.

If we were to make an assessment, these sound more like fourth-generation iPhones in testing. But there is no solid assessment to make, based on such a small sample of data that offers zero insight into the device’s hardware.

The figures just raise more questions. Do we assume that the tablet can run existing iPhone apps? Or are there, as we have heard, already larger, tweaked versions of current apps already in existence?

In just a couple of days, we’ll know for sure. One thing that can be predicted with almost 100 percent certainty: Whatever Apple shows us, we will all suddenly have to go buy one.

Updated 8:20 a.m. PDT: Wired’s Brian X. Chen contributed his skepticism about the report after contacting Flurry.

Insights from Tracking 200 Apps Across 50 Apple Tablets in Testing [Flurry]

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What to Expect From Apple’s Tablet Unveiling

Apple’s got a lot planned for its Wednesday press event.

While the invitation — “come see our latest creation” — is broad and vague, it’s fairly obvious that the biggest news will be the widely anticipated tablet.

It’s about time. Tech observers have been anticipating an Apple tablet for several years, churning out report after report of rumors and speculation. And Apple has been considering tablet designs since at least 1983. Now, perfectionist CEO Steve Jobs finally seems satisfied enough with the product to show it off in public.

But that’s not the only thing the company is likely to announce. Updates to the MacBook line and the iPhone OS are also likely to be on the ticket.

Here’s our guide to what you can realistically expect.

And if you don’t care to read our predictions, just stay tuned for the Jan. 27 event. We’ll be providing live blog and news coverage here on Gadget Lab and on Twitter: follow @bxchen and @GadgetLab for real-time news nuggets.

The Apple Tablet

Multiple independent reports have described the tablet’s appearance as a 10- to 11-inch iPhone or iPod Touch.  (AppleInsider’s sources describe the tablet as “a first-generation iPhone that’s met its match with a rolling pin.”) The tablet, many have reported, will serve as a slate-like substitute for magazines, newspapers and books, while also offering the general-purpose functions seen in the iPhone, such as gaming, viewing photos, web surfing and using apps.

A recent report from The Wall Street Journal adds that Apple will market the tablet as a product that can be shared among multiple people at home or in classrooms, thanks to its bigger screen.

A few reports have claimed the tablet will sport a 10-inch OLED touchscreen, which would be great for reading books. But there aren’t many of these displays on the market, and they would also cost Apple about $400 apiece. A 10-inch LCD touchscreen, on the other hand, would cost Apple $60 — much more in line with the expected $1,000 price tag.

The true mystery about the tablet lies in its software and user interface. Simply expanding the iPhone OS to fit a larger screen can’t be the whole story.

We expect a tablet interface that strives to appeal to everyone, like the iPhone OS does with its 3.5-inch screen, SpringBoard user interface and fingertip-sized icons.

The ergonomics of text entry will especially be challenging on a device that size. People briefed on the product say it will incorporate a virtual keyboard. But if the tablet is going to serve as an alternative to a notebook or netbook, an ordinary virtual QWERTY isn’t going to cut it.

We’re predicting Apple will incorporate new multitouch gestures, and maybe even the accelerometer, to trigger functions of the traditional QWERTY keyboard. Imagine if pressing two fingers down anywhere triggered the Shift key, for example.

And to add a wild guess, we think Apple will expand on the voice-recognition feature seen in the iPhone 3GS, to augment text entry.

Still, no one outside Apple’s tablet team has a solid idea of what the tablet’s interface will be like. The only minuscule clue is a quote from a recently departed Apple employee who told New York Times’ Nick Bilton, “You will be very surprised how you interact with the new tablet.”

If it’s taken Apple this long to figure it out, I’m sure we will be.

But we do expect the tablet’s operating system to share some of the same DNA as the iPhone OS. Indeed, the iPhone reportedly contains some elements of an older, shelved Apple tablet project.

What could it be called? Internet sleuthers at MacRumors.com have found evidence suggesting Apple is interested in the names iSlate, MagicSlate, iGuide and iPad. Apple has apparently filed for trademarks for each of those names.

Apple not only filed for the iSlate trademark; the company also procured ownership of the domain iSlate.com, making this the most likely candidate.

As for when the tablet will ship, WSJ published the most credible report to date claiming Apple has plans to ship the device in March.

Price tag? All we’ve heard are guesses from analysts, some who claim the tablet will cost as much as $1,000 including carrier subsidy. We estimate the tablet should cost between $700 and $1,000, placing it somewhere in between an iPhone and a MacBook.

There are a few scant rumors claiming the tablet will be carried by Verizon, but none seems substantive enough to bet money on. There’s too little information out there about the carrier to make any reasonable predictions.

In summary:

  • A 10- to 11-inch tablet,
  • somewhat resembling the iPhone hardware,
  • running a substantially expanded version of the iPhone OS,
  • probably called iSlate,
  • with a new, non-QWERTY interface,
  • possibly available in two versions, LCD and OLED,
  • with Wi-Fi and 3G data connections.

iPhone OS 4.0, iLife 2010

Fox News’ Clayton Morris had a scoop citing anonymous Apple employees who claim iPhone OS 4.0 and iLife 2010 will be announced at the event. I’m a believer.

The tablet will likely have a beefed-up version of the iPhone OS with all the newest features. So given the logic that the tablet OS is ready to be announced, iPhone OS 4.0 should be ready for a preview as well. But a preview would probably be it, just so Apple can begin seeding betas to developers to prepare their iPhone apps for 4.0.

As for iLife 2010, Apple has announced almost all of its iLife suites during January of years past. I believe we’ll see an iLife launch only because it would be consistent.

Jobs likes to pepper up press events with small announcements leading up to the major “One more thing,” so iLife and iPhone OS 4.0 will probably be the first to be announced.

MacBook Pro Upgrades — Maybe

An Intel contest promoted by e-mail appeared to leak upcoming MacBook Pros equipped with the newest Intel chips. Intel had sent e-mails to members of its Intel Retail Edge program, promoting a chance to win two MacBook Pros equipped with Intel’s new Core i5 processors during January, according to a report by MacRumors.

However, Intel soon after retracted the promotion, saying it was a mistake and that HP notebooks would be given away for the contest instead. I found this move suspicious, because the promotion had been sent in multiple languages to members in the United States, the United Kingdom and Spain. Seems odd that it would have gotten so far if the product weren’t even real.

Plus, MacBook Pros are due for a refresh. Apple last upgraded the MacBook Pro in June 2009, and typically the company refreshes notebooks every six or seven months. Therefore, my gut tells me Intel realized it accidentally leaked the MacBook Pros and then moved to undo the slip. I believe there’s a good chance MacBook Pros will be announced at next week’s event.

iTunes Upgrade

I haven’t seen any rumors of Apple introducing a new version of iTunes, but I assume it would have to, in order to launch the tablet. That’s because the tablet alone won’t be compelling unless it creates avenues for new content that can be used on the tablet, such as e-books, newspapers and magazines. Expect Apple to preview a new version of iTunes, perhaps 9.1, that would add new content sections to the iTunes Store. We’ll most realistically see a new e-book section demonstrated in iTunes, as Apple has reportedly been in talks with HarperCollins Publishers to make e-books for the tablet.

See Also:

Illustration of an Apple tablet
Photo Giddy/Flickr


New, Improved Instapaper for Kindle

insta-kindle-new-1 Instapaper, the incredibly useful “read later” service for the web, the iPhone and pretty much any e-reader, has just updated its Kindle support to make it even better.

Instapaper lets you click a bookmarklet to save whole articles, recipes or anything in your browser for reading later. Using an iPhone app or e-reader, you can then read long articles offline, and at your leisure.

Previously, as we have detailed, you could download a .mobi file from the Instapaper site for use with the Kindle, or opt to have it send direct over the air (Amazon will charge for the latter method). Instapaper supremo Marco Arment has tweaked the format so the bundles of goodness now show up as proper newspapers on the Kindle.

As you can see in the picture above, you can now browse a table of contents in the standard Kindle form. Selecting one takes you to the article, and hitting the Back button takes you back to this page. If you opt for wireless delivery, Instapaper will also archive old files in the “Periodicals: Back Issues” folder, just like it should, keeping the main screen clutter-free.

It’s a small touch, but I have been using it for the past few days and it makes a big difference to usability: no more scrolling through long lists of links, for example. Best of all, this remains completely free. You’ll have to buy a Kindle, of course, and we recommend upgrading to the paid, pro version of Instapaper for the iPhone.

Kindle feature dramatically improved [Instapaper Blog]

Photo: Charlie Sorrel/Wired.com

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Blu-ray Maker Re-Boxes $500 Player, Charges $3,500

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Above you see two Blu-ray players. On the bottom is the Oppo BDP-83, a $500 machine. On top is the Lexicon BD-30, which will set you back $3,500. Can you spot the difference, apart from the price?

It’s a trick question. There is no difference, at least not on the inside. In a daring matryoshka-like move, it appears that Lexicon simply bought a batch of Oppos and put them in new cases. Lest you think we are being picky here, or that Lexicon somehow took the guts of the Oppo and redesigned the surrounding circuitry, let us clarify. If you open up the $3,500 Lexicon, you will find an entire Oppo Blu-ray player inside, intact, with its original chassis.

These were the findings of Audioholics, the “Online A/V Magazine”. Suspicions were raised after spotting the Lexicon at the 2009 CEDIA Expo in Atlanta: “Looking at the player, its button layout and, most importantly, it’s [sic] rear panel, showed us that this product had the exact same layout as the Oppo BDP-83 Blu-ray player” writes Audioholics’ Clint DeBoer. Clint called one in for review, and here’s what he found:

When we received the player the first thing we did was open it up to get a look at the inside. Imagine my surprise when I found that not only did the Lexicon share the same boards and transport as the Oppo – it was in fact AN OPPO BDP-83 PLAYER, CHASSIS AND ALL, SHOVED INSIDE AN ALUMINUM LEXICON WRAPPER.

Oops. Audioholics didn’t bother to actually review the machine, as the Oppo had already been tested. The reviewers did, however, run some audio analyses to check out the one real difference between the two players: the more expensive Lexicon has THX certification.

The test shed more light on the THX certification process than on the players themselves. The units tested almost identically, no different than had they been two examples of the same model (which, really, they are). So that’s what an extra $3,000 buys you: a THX label and a new, aluminum faceplate. Audioholics has the whole scandal detailed, along with comparison pictures of the two Blu-ray players.

Update: THX’s Graham McKenna wrote to point out that there was actually some modification of the Oppo hardware:

THX worked directly with Oppo to improve video performance during the testing of the Lexicon player and the benefits made their way to the Oppo platform as well. It’s also important to note that THX is solely focused on quality and performance. Product pricing is never a driving factor for receiving THX certification.

Oppo on the Inside, Lexicon on the Outside [Audioholics]


Gallery: E-Readers Push Boundaries of Books

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Electronic-book readers are red-hot. After a blockbuster 2009, during which an estimated 5 million devices were sold, a new batch of e-readers are waiting to burst into the spotlight.

The latest generation of devices are easy on the eye, lightweight and packed with some nifty features such as the ability to take notes, make lists and — for some — even watch video. They also offer far better battery life than any netbook or notebook, often come with an unlimited wireless connection for downloading new books, and give you access to libraries of e-books that can top a million titles. At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas this year, there were so many e-readers that they had their own special section carved out on the show floor.

But will the category remain as hot as it is now?

E-readers, as we know them now, are at a crossroads. Next week, Apple is expected to announce a new tabletlike device that could also be used to read digital books. It’s expected to have a color screen, not the monochrome E Ink display found on most e-readers. Apple is reportedly talking to publishers to bring e-books and magazines to the device.

Meanwhile, other computer manufacturers are showing tabletlike devices, which are also based on color LED or OLED screens.

A device with a color screen could really change the landscape. Add the ability to watch video, play games or download apps — which most e-readers can’t do — and e-readers could start to look pretty primitive by comparison.

Still, e-reader manufacturers have made a lot of strides in recent months. Amazon has even added an app store to the Kindle.

But before you decide to buy a Kindle, Nook or Sony Reader, flip through this gallery to see what will be in stores this year.

And keep in mind that an array of touchscreen tablets just might render the entire category obsolete overnight.

Above: Plastic Logic

The Cadillac of e-book readers, Plastic Logic’s Que proReader is a gorgeous but expensive device that promises to give you a “paperless briefcase.” The Que, which is targeted at business users, has an 8.5 x 11-inch touchscreen display and the ability to handle a range of documents such as Microsoft Word files, PowerPoint presentations, Excel spreadsheets, digital books, PDFs, magazines and newspapers.

The Que can even sync with your Microsoft Outlook account to pull in e-mails and calendar for display on the device. Feature-wise, it’s difficult to beat the Que. But the price tag is enough to make most people gasp.

But if you want one, be prepared to open your wallet wide.

The 4-GB version of the Que with Wi-Fi and storage for about 35,000 documents will retail for $650, and an 8-GB version, which includes 3G connectivity from AT&T, will cost $800. The Que will start shipping mid-April.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com