Nokia next-gen “Rover” tablet unveiled?

After the spec rundown this morning of the long-rumored Maemo 5 tablet from Nokia, we’ve now got ourselves a potential name and image to pair with the wonderful promise of 3G and OMAP3. According to this shot obtained by Cellpassion, the next-generation Internet Tablet device is taking quite a bit of an N-series turn, with that 3.5-inch WVGA screen (instead of the 4-inch display on the N810), three-row QWERTY keyboard and other refinements making this look to be much more a smartphone than a tablet — which is presumably exactly what Nokia is going for. Naturally, we can’t vouch for the source, and there are enough oddities to the image — which seems to be gleaned from a presentation slide of some sort — to voice caution, but if this is truly the marriage of Maemo with handset we’ve always dreamed of, it’s going to be a little difficult to rein in our enthusiasm.

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Nokia next-gen “Rover” tablet unveiled? originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 May 2009 18:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wintek pegged as panel supplier for rumored Apple tablet

We’ve always heard that most things come in packs of three, so just as soon as some other dodgy source affirms that Hulk Hogan will actually be replacing Steve Jobs in August, we’ll be set. Shortly after seeing a 32GB iPhone placeholder over at T-Mobile Austria, we’re now staring at a comically brief report from Digitimes that pegs Wintek as the “panel module supplier for Apple’s upcoming e-book form factor netbook product.” If you’ll recall, Wintek was already independently confirmed as said panel supplier for said product back in March, but obviously Apple has remained tight-lipped on the whole netbook / tablet / e-reader thing. That said, we do find it interesting that this report clarifies that whatever’s purportedly cooking in some dark, highly guarded lab in Cupertino looks more like a tablet with a netbook-sized display rather than a conventional netbook. Whatever the case, we wouldn’t expect it at WWDC, but any Tuesday morning after that is fair game.

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Wintek pegged as panel supplier for rumored Apple tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 May 2009 06:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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More next-gen iPhone whispers: video recording, faster CPU, July release?

John Gruber over at Daring Fireball has a pretty good track record when it comes to Apple rumors — remember his spot-on predictions for the unibody MacBook Pro? — so when he’s got a thing or two to say about all the next-gen iPhone chatter, we listen. While not making any promises, he does say he’d wager quite a bit on a new model coming to WWDC, with about twice the CPU horsepower (and possibly twice the RAM, too) as the current model. He also adds some credence to all that talk of video recording, but makes no mention of potential background apps and plays down any surprise tablet or “iPhone mini” cameos. He goes on to add release date would be sometime in July in 16GB and 32GB varieties. We can’t say we’re willing to bet against him, but that doesn’t mean we’ll take his word as gospel. We can safely say, however, that we’re anxiously waiting to see what kind of shenanigans Schiller has in store for next month.

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More next-gen iPhone whispers: video recording, faster CPU, July release? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 May 2009 20:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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DLI 8400 ultra-rugged tablet is as far from pretty as it gets

Guard your retinas, fashionistas — this one’s bound to burn. Data Ltd has just loosed its latest ultra-rugged tablet PC, and it’s quite clear that the gains in rigidity come at a severe cost to style. The DLI 8400 is actually rather diminutive for a tablet, weighing just three pounds and packing a 7-inch sunlight-viewable LCD. Other specs include a backlit QWERTY keypad, GPS, WiFi, Bluetooth, built-in WWAN, 2GB of RAM, twin hot-swappable batteries (good for nine hours of use) and a shock-mounted HDD or SSD. Naturally, the IP54-rated enclosure is home to Intel’s 1.6GHz Atom CPU, and there’s a plethora of ports for field workers with gobs of peripherals. The Q2-bound rig gets going at $1,795, and while there’s no telling what kind of beating this thing can survive, it’s obviously done well to walk away from that awful plummet from atop the ugly tree. [Warning: PDF read link]

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DLI 8400 ultra-rugged tablet is as far from pretty as it gets originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 May 2009 14:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Analyst Predicts Apple Will Unleash Touchscreen Tablet Next Year

Evidence continues to mount that Apple will deliver a touchscreen tablet next year, with an analyst laying out solid reasoning for this rumored device to become a reality. It appears more likely to be an oversized iPod Touch, not a tabletized MacBook.

“Between indications from our component contacts in Asia, recent patents relating to multi-touch sensitivity for more complex computing devices, comments from [chief operating officer] Tim Cook on the April 22 conference call, and Apple’s acquisition of PA Semi along with other recent chip-related hires, it is increasingly clear that Apple is investing more in its mobile-computing franchise,” Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster said in a research statement issued to clients.

Apple’s next step in mobile computing will likely be the release of a touchscreen tablet featuring a 7-to-10-inch display sometime in the first half of 2010, Munster predicts.

Apple enthusiasts have been gossiping about a Mac tablet since July 2008, when the first rumor about the fabled device surfaced at MacDailyNews. Since then, a stream of clues, rumors and statements from Apple suggest this product will indeed join the Apple product family soon, as Gadget Lab has been reporting for several months.

Apple itself has steadfastly refused to confirm or deny any hint of an Apple tablet.

While in theory Apple could simply make a larger-screen iPod Touch, Munster believes creating a tablet will be more complex. He speculates the operating system will be a hybrid between the iPhone’s mobile operating system and Mac OS X. Or, Apple could optimize a version of Mac OS X for the multitouch interface.

Price range? Munster is guessing between $500 and $700, positioning this device as Apple’s response to netbooks.

At its recent quarterly earnings call, Apple chief operating officer Tim Cook said the company had no plans to release a netbook, calling the device category “junky.”

“For us, it’s about doing great products,” Cook said. “And when I look at what is being sold in the netbook space today, I see cramped keyboards, terrible software, junky hardware, very small screens and just not a consumer experience … that we would put the Mac brand on, quite frankly.”

Other indications that it’s an upsized-iPod-Touch–style tablet in the works (rather than a “junky” netbook) involve Apple’s recent hiring of several chip designers, as well as its acquisition of PA Semi to develop mobile processors.

Would a touchscreen tablet be worth putting the Mac brand on? We think so.

Apple Tablet in 2010 [Silicon Alley Insider]

See Also:

llustration of an imaginary iPhone tablet: Flickr/vernhart


Analyst: Apple Tablet Not Coming Until 2010

There’s been plenty of talk surrounding an upcoming Apple tablet or touchscreen netbook, and while many of the rumors have this multimedia device arriving around the same time as the new iPhone (i.e., later this summer), Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster says not so fast.

“We expect the development of such an OS to be underway currently, but its complexity, along with our conversations with a key company in the mobile space, leads us to believe it will not launch until CY10,” Munster said in a recent statement.

Such a device, according to Munster, would run a version of OS X optimized for touchscreens.

Archos event June 11th: 5-inch Android tablet with voice expected

This one’s a bit of a stretch but totally plausible. Archos just announced a press conference in Paris on June 11th — that’s a fact. However, the choice of Android-green in the invite above has caused widespread speculation that we’ll be getting a first peep at Archos’ heavily rumored Android-based device. Remember, TI was kind enough to give us the full specs on a 10-mm thin Archos Internet Media Tablet “with all the functionalities of a premium smartphone” back in February. At that time, TI listed specs like a 5-inch high-resolution screen, Adobe Flash support, TV recording, HD playback, 500GB of storage, 7 hours of video playback off battery, voice and HSUPA data radio all powered by a smokin’ OMAP3440 processor from TI. If true then we can expect to see the device hinted at in the invite launch in Q3.

[Via SlashGear, thanks Chris]

Read — Archos Press event
Read — Archos Internet Media Tablet [February 9th, 2009]

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Archos event June 11th: 5-inch Android tablet with voice expected originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 May 2009 04:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s Tablet: The Story So Far

With so many rumors about an Apple tablet buzzing around, it’s hard to believe Apple wouldn’t announce one this year. But what do we really know about this thing?

Apple fans are an expectant bunch, and one thing or another has gotten their hopes up nearly every year since the death of the Newton. But more recent—and especially post-iPhone—tablet rumors have become so intense, varied and inconsistent that it’s hard to come away with a coherent picture of what to expect. Here’s what we’ve got, and what it means.

Patents
Patent applications have kindled more bizarre Apple rumors than I can count, but there has been an undeniable cluster of activity around tablet-oriented tech as of late.

The earliest seeds of the current tablet frenzy can be traced back to 2004, when Apple filed for a European design trademark on a device that looked like “an iBook screen minus the body of the computer.” It was much larger than what people are expecting now, but in some ways the design prefigured the aesthetic of the next few generations of iMac, and even the iPhone.

Skip forward to 2006, when Apple filed for a patent for an onscreen keyboard, gesture recognition and a virtual scroll wheel. Again, some of these technologies would find their way into the iPhone before too long, but the application contained a telling mockup of a tablet-esque product, smaller than the 2004 version, but which fit most of its description.

A flurry of offhand “tablet” shout-outs in tangentially related patents followed, but none carried much weight. It wasn’t until August of ’08 that something truly momentous passed in front of the weary eyes of a Patent Office employee: A huge, generously illustrated filing describing how OS X could be adapted to touch input. In it were descriptions of iPhone-like interface element magnification, a full-sized multitouch onscreen keyboard, and finally, plenty of drawings of a tablet device being prodded by inexplicably troll-like horror-fingers (shown at left). A hardware patent—kind of like the 2004 tablet patent—surfaced a few months later, outlining a keyboardless device not unlike the one sketched previously.

In a nutshell, even though an Apple touchscreen tablet doesn’t yet exist, your lawyer would probably still advise you against trying to knock one off.

Rumors (and Facts)
Companies file patents for all kind of reasons, and when you’re as big as Apple plenty of them go unused. They only provide context for other juicier rumors—employee leaks, coded statements from company leadership, hardware orders processed through three layers of Taiwanese press—that can really grow legs. Apple tablet rumors have short lifespans—they either come true within a reasonable timeframe or they fizzle out. Point is, right now there’s a glut of them.

The current groundswell of wild speculation harks back to late 2007, when AppleInsider conjured a rumor that Apple was working on a slightly larger version of the iPhone. This was the first time in a while that anyone had talked about such a product, and it was exciting: Jesus mocked up a beautiful version himself, which led to a massively popular Photoshop contest.

In 2008, a loose-lipped German Intel executive let slip that Apple may be working on an Atom-based unit, which he referred to as a “version of the iPhone.” This odd outburst was quickly minimized, but was soon followed by a full-throated alert from MacDailyNews that an OS X-equipped MacBook Touch would drop by October.

Next came a NYT report in October that a “Macbook Nano or iPhone Slate” device had been discovered in the traffic logs of a major search engine. As was the tendency those days, people honed in on the possibility of a Mac netbook, to which Steve Jobs cryptically replied that Apple would “wait and see” how sales held up, and that in the event that they enter the ultraportable market, they’ve “got some pretty interesting ideas…” Oh good gracious, what could that mean?

This is when things really picked up. TechCrunch stuck their necks out too, saying that they’d talked to “three different sources” close to Apple, all of whom confirmed an iPod Touch-like device. This means—counter to MacDailyNews’ talk of a fully operational tablet computer—that it would run a stripped down mobile OS X like the one in the iPhone.

Just a few months ago, something resembling hard evidence emerged: The Commercial Times, Dow Jones news wire and Reuters all reported that Apple had ordered 9.7″ multitouch panels from Wintek. These would be the displays in a device set for a Q3 release. Shortly after, the WSJ reminded us that Steve Jobs was still pulling all the strings at Apple, and went out on a limb to say that he was working on something:

People privy to the company’s strategy say Apple is working on new iPhone models and a portable device that is smaller than its current laptop computers but bigger than the iPhone or iPod Touch.

BusinessWeek then put on their rumor-blog hat too, recently corroborated these rumors with sourced rumors of their own, fingering Verizon as a potential carrier for a 3G-enabled “Media Pad”. They were even so bold as to peg the summer of ’09 as a possible release date.

Deja Vu?
Something striking about these rumors is how conceptually similar they are to rumors from 7 or 8 years ago. This is from a 2002 eWeek “hunch” post, the last time that Mac tablets seemed “inevitable”, mostly on account of Apple’s rival Microsoft, and its over-hyped promotion of all things tablety:

This pre-release hardware combines a next-generation, low-power Motorola PowerPC chip and formidable screen real estate into a typically impressive Apple industrial design. The hardware is lightweight and slender, and the battery life skunks comparable Tablet PCs…the software is homegrown, pairing Mac OS X with the company’s impressive handwriting-recognition technology

The writer, Matthew Rothenberg, later specified:

[It’s a] device that superficially resembles a large iPod with an 8-inch diagonal screen, lacks a keyboard, packs USB and FireWire ports and runs Mac OS X along with a variety of multimedia goodies

A large screen that serves as the primary input device, a minimalist design, a proprietary Apple input system and better-than-average battery life? That describes the theoretical devices of 2009 nearly as well as it does those of 2002. Anyway.

The Most Compelling Evidence
Hidden somewhere amidst all the patent-filing and reputation-staking are some legitimately convincing pieces of information:

• Steady allegatons of Apple’s long, storied interest in tablets—buoyed by occasional patent filings—count for something, as does their consistent cynicism about netbooks (the only real alternative to tablets in the ultramobile computing space).
• The late 2008 patent app for a multitouch tablet interface is thorough, practical, timely and contains a plausible (if basic) mockup.
• The Wintek 9.7″ panel order is the closest thing to hard evidence that we’ve got. It’s a good bet that Apple has them, or will soon, and that they’re putting them to use—but not a sure one.
• That the device has no keyboard, is moderately sized, and that it’s media-centric are all ideas shared by those who’ve separately floated sourced tablet rumors (TechCrunch, BusinessWeek, MacNewDaily).

It looks like there’s a good chance a tablet is on its way. Separate rumors point to similar launch dates: Some say Q3, some say June, but they all could be talking about the same date, or at least the same swath of time.

What to expect as an OS is more difficult to divine from the above speculation, but common sense is instructive: iPhone OS wouldn’t work on a larger device. It’d be more trouble than it’s worth to reconfigure the core interface for a 10″ screen, and all the thousands of third-party apps written with the iPhone’s screen size and shape in mind would becoming all but useless. Barring some kind of app-in-a-window workaround—which doesn’t sound very Apple-like—or an entirely new version of OS X—which doesn’t seem necessary—desktop OS X with a modified shell, as shown in the 2008 interface patents, stands as the most likely candidate. It works pretty well on 9″ netbooks as is, so a 10″ screen with smart multitouch interface would make for a solid user experience.

Another common thread that runs through most of these rumors is the sense that this device would (or will) be a disruptive, industry-altering product, like the iPhone or iPod. But it’s difficult to see exactly how it would be: Far from setting new standards for smartphones or revolutionizing the portable music player industry, an Apple tablet would be treading where many others have before. It will be smaller than older tablet PCs and lack the keyboard, but that’s not worlds different, functionality-wise than MIDs and UMPCs like the OQO. It’d be thinner, wouldn’t have a keyboard and would pack OS X, sure, but it might not be distinguishable enough from existing hardware to really shake things up.

On the other hand, the disruption could come from the way it is introduced. Wireless carriers are eager to expand revenue streams and keep people under contract, and many rumors and abstract executive comments focus around the idea that tablets—not just Apple’s—will be inherently wireless devices, and they will be sold by carriers. That may seem far fetched now, since we’re generally used to buying laptops without a service plan, but it could easily be the next revolution in wireless hardware.

There is plenty we don’t know, and very little we can depend on. In the end, we have a screen size, a likely form-factor, an OS and a probable release window. Past that, the info is all chaff, and your guess as to how this thing will look—or if it will ever come out—is as good as ours. And guess you have—over the past few years everyone and their mom has mocked up an Apple Tablet. Here are our favorites from readers and industry insiders alike:

T-Mobile to release “multiple” Android devices this year

It’s no secret that T-Mobile has some grand Android-based plans after the million-selling success of the G1, and although we’ve heard sketchy reports of future devices to come, it sounds like things are starting to firm up: CTO Cole Brodman told GigaOm yesterday that the carrier is planning to launch “multiple” Android devices from “three partners” later this year. One of those is pretty obviously the HTC Magic / Sapphire / myTouch, but that’s just the tip of the potential iceberg here — we’ve got a feeling that the Samsung I7500 “Houdini” will be involved, the G1 v2 is certainly interesting, there’s that mysterious Huawei set we saw at MWC, and hell, we’ve even got reports of netbooks, tablets, and home phones in the mix. That’s a lot of directions Timmy-O can go, any predictions?

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T-Mobile to release “multiple” Android devices this year originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 09 May 2009 19:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS Eee PC T91 confirmed for late May or early June release in the UK

We’ve seen plenty of the ASUS Eee PC T91 ever since its first appearance back at CES in January, but now, according to Electric Pig, the swivel tableted, touchscreen-boasting Eee PC has been confirmed by ASUS for a “late May or early June” release in the UK. Sadly, there’s still no further word (beyond its April appearance at the FCC) for a Stateside release, but the UK model is expected to retail for £449 (about $685) when it launches there. We’ll just have to be patient, we suppose.

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ASUS Eee PC T91 confirmed for late May or early June release in the UK originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 May 2009 19:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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