Apple Likely to Introduce New iPad at March 2 Event

Apple is likely to introduce a new iPad at a San Francisco press conference scheduled for next Wednesday.

The company this morning sent e-mail invitations to members of the press with a not-so-subtle image of a calendar entry peeled back to reveal the corner of an iPad screen.

The event comes at the correct timing, as Apple’s original iPad was released April of 2010, and Apple’s mobile products typically get refreshed after one year. The event date puts to rest rumors that the iPad would be “delayed” until summer. (Never mind that it’s impossible to delay an unannounced product.)

Apple has not officially commented on details about the iPad 2, but some credible publications claim the tablet will have front- and rear-facing cameras, a thinner body and a more powerful graphics processor.

Wired.com will provide news coverage from the event, which kicks off 10 a.m. on March 2. Stay tuned.

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Five Things We Want From the New iPad, and Why

The current iPad. Photo: Charlie Sorrel

Apple will announce the iPad 2 next Wednesday, March 2nd, as made rather obvious by invites sent out to press this morning. Apart from the new iPad, that means one thing: speculation. I’m not immune, so here’s my list of things I think will make it into an already capable machine. I have stuck to features, rather than things like CPU speed, as the internal specifics matter less than what they actually enable you to do.

Cameras

Obvious, this one. We’re almost certain there will be a front-facing camera for FaceTime and other webchat applications, but I really don’t care. I’ll use that for Skype once in a while and that’s it. What I want is a decent rear-facing camera, like that in the iPhone (not the crippled piece of junk in the iPod Touch).

Why? Because it would be so useful, and not just for photography. Augmented reality, Instagram, scanning things, snapping photos and then drawing on top of them, the list goes on. One of the things I took away from all the tablets I tried at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week was just how good a camera is on a big device. It seems like it would be awkward, but the big screen is great for composing and the size turns out not to matter at all.

Speakers

The single iPad speaker isn’t bad, but for movies and music you really want something beefier, and preferably in stereo. The rumors point to at least one big speaker grille on the back of the iPad’s case. Currently I get around this with an assortment of Bluetooth speakers around my apartment, but I’d rather do without them.

SD Card Slot

This one would be purely for importing photos and video. Basically, it would be nothing more than a built-in camera connection kit. The Apple’s Camera Connection Kit is great, but it is one more thing to lose and carry. I use my iPad more and more for processing photos (courtesy of Photogene and FX PhotoStudioHD), and until I can send direct from my camera via Eye-Fi, a slot is a lot more convenient than yet another dongle in my bag.

A Better Connector

The 30-pin dock connector is one of the worst things Apple has made (the other is “all mice it has ever created”). It is symmetrical, so it’s hard to put in the right way in bad light. It’s delicate (the cord breaks easily where it enters the plug) and worst of all, it’s huge. In fact, the iPod Nano is barely big enough for the connector slot.

The likeliest candidate for a replacement is Light Peak, or Apple’s rumored implementation of it, Thunderbolt, which might show up in this week’s new MacBook Pros. This could be a small port that could carry power and data of any kind. That in itself would be good enough, but you know what I’d really like? A Thunderbolt data-cable with a MagSafe plug. That would be just about perfect.

Better Case

The size and weight of the current iPad are just fine. Anyone who complains that a 1.5 pound sliver of aluminum and glass is too heavy needs to shut up and go join a gym. But it is slippery. I keep mine in Apple’s own case 24/7. This is partly to protect the screen, but mostly to stop me dropping it, especially when I’m walking on crutches with it tucked under my arm.

A little more friction on the back would help a lot. Perhaps a plastic rear, or just a grippy coating.

Bonus: The Screen

This is a small request. I don’t want a retina display (or rather I do, but I don’t want the current penalties of price and battery life associated with it). All I want is a dimmer screen. The brightness at the top end is fine, but even at its dimmest setting, the screen is too bright for using indoors at night. It’s true, I keep my apartment fairly dim (I call it “moody and romantic,” but you may call it “cheap”), but unless you keep your place lit up like an office, the screen glows a little too much.

Those are my requests. What about yours? Do you want a built in printer? A near-field communications chip to turn your iPad into the world’s biggest wallet? Or even a flashlight? Let us know your suggestions, as ever, in the comments.


Rumor: iPad 2 Event Scheduled for March 2

A customer holds a first-generation iPad outside an Apple store. Photo: Bryan Derballa/Wired.com

Apple is preparing to introduce the second-generation iPad in a special event next week, according to a report.

Multiple sources close to the situation say Apple is set to unveil the upgrade for the popular tablet on March 2 in San Francisco, according to the well-sourced Kara Swisher of All Things Digital.

“The Wednesday date in a little more than a week is firm and will take place in San Francisco, the scene of many such Apple events,” Swisher writes.

Apple does not comment on rumors or speculation, but small clues hint at the possibility of the iPad 2 gaining front and rear-facing cameras (similar to the iPhone 4) and a more powerful graphics processor. The Wall Street Journal earlier reported a rumor that the resolution of the iPad 2 would not be significantly improved, which could come as a disappointment to customers.

If the March 2 launch date turns out to be true, the iPad 2’s debut will come just days after Motorola’s first tablet, the Xoom, is set to hit stores on Feb. 24.

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Motorola Xoom $600 With Verizon Contract, $800 Without

Motorola Xoom spec sheet, Mobile World Congress 2011. Photo Charlie Sorrel

We knew that Motorola’s Xoom tablet was going to cost $800 in its unencumbered, contract-free state, but now Verizon has revealed the price for those willing to sign up for data: $600.

To get that $200 savings, you’ll need to pledge two years to Verizon, at a minimum of $20 per month. For that you get the 3G Xoom and 1GB data. Totting that up over the life of the contract is $600 + (24 x 20) = $1,080. Being Verizon, you’ll probably have to toss in a one-off activation fee, too.

And what about 4G LTE? The Honeycomb-based tablet supports it, after all. The good news is that the upgrade will be free in the “second quarter of 2011″. Maybe it’ll come out at around the same time as Flash is hoped to be ready for the tablet.

The Xoom will be available from Verizon this Thursday, February 24th.

Motorola XOOM Tablet to Be Available on the Verizon Wireless Network on Feb. 24 [Press Release]

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Motorola Xoom Launches Without Flash

Motorola's Flash-free Xoom tablet at the Mobile World Congress. Photo: Charlie Sorrel

Motorola’s $800 white elephant, the Xoom tablet, will ship without Adobe’s Flash browser plug-in. The news, gleaned from small print on Verizon’s new Xoom pre-order page, has been confirmed by both Motorola and Adobe.

Update: The $800 launch price for the Xoom has been confirmed by the company’s press release. It will also be available for $600 with a two-year Verizon contract.

If you remember, Motorola has promised us the “full web”, in the form of Flash support. It seems that Adobe still hasn’t finished the 10.2 version of its proprietary plug-in, though. The Verizon ad says that “Adobe Flash [is] expected Spring 2011.” Motorola is even less specific in its official statement “Motorola XOOM will include full support for Adobe® Flash® Player® for accessing the rich video and animations of the web, to be available after launch [emphasis added].”

And what about Adobe? Here’s the official line:

Adobe will offer Flash Player 10.2 pre-installed on some tablets and as an OTA download on others within a few weeks of Android 3 (Honeycomb) devices becoming available, the first of which is expected to be the Motorola Xoom.

I had some hands-on time with the Xoom at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona last week. I (and some friendly German journos I ran into at the Motorola booth) wondered about Flash support. I surfed to a restaurant website (these are seemingly the only sites left on the web that require Flash) and got the familiar blue Lego “Flash not installed” symbol. We checked the settings, and Flash was indeed absent.

Flash is largely old news. Most things Flash is used for have already been re-optimized for tablets. But if you make it a headline feature for your new device, and can’t deliver until a vague future date, then it’s a little embarrassing. But not, I suspect, as embarrassing as the battery life of a tablet with Flash enabled.

Update for Flash Player 10.2 Support on Tablets [Adobe Flash Blog]

Xoom product page [Verizon via Engadget]

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Why Nobody Can Match the iPad’s Price

A customer carries a new iPad from one of Apple's 300-plus retail locations. Photo: Bryan Derballa/Wired.com

When Steve Jobs introduced the iPad last January, the biggest surprise wasn’t the actual product. (Many shrugged and called the iPad a “bigger iPhone.”) It was the price: Just $500.

Nobody expected that number, perhaps because Apple has traditionally aimed at the high end of the mobile computer market with MacBooks marked $1,000 and up. And perhaps we were also thrown off because Apple execs repeatedly told investors they couldn’t produce a $500 computer that wasn’t a piece of junk.

But Apple did meet that price, and the iPad isn’t junk. The iPad is still the first, and best-selling, product of its kind. Competitors, meanwhile, are having trouble hitting that $500 sweet spot.

Motorola’s Xoom tablet is debuting in the United States with an $800 price tag. (To be fair, the most comparable iPad is $730 — but there’s no $500 Xoom planned, and the lack of a low-end entry point will hurt Motorola.) Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, with a relatively puny 7-inch screen, costs $600 without a contract.

Why is it so hard to get to a lower starting price? And how was Apple able to get there?

Jason Hiner of Tech Republic suggests it largely has to do with Apple’s retail strategy. Apple now has 300 retail stores worldwide selling iPads directly to customers. That’s advantageous, because if the iPad were primarily sold at third-party retail stores, a big chunk of profit would go to those retailers, Hiner reasons.

Apple has partnered with a few retail chains such as Best Buy and Walmart, but those stores always seem to get a small number of units in stock. Hiner rationalizes that the true purpose of these partnerships is probably to help spread the marketing message, not so much to sell iPads.

The company can swallow the bitter pill of hardly making any money from iPad sales through its retail partners because it can feast off the fat profits it makes when customers buy directly through its retail outlets and the web store,” Hiner says. “However, companies like Motorola, HP, and Samsung have to make all of their profit by selling their tablets wholesale to retailer partners.”

The retail advantage is a reasonable theory, but Hiner neglects to mention the high overhead costs that Apple must pay handsomely for each of its 300 stores. To Hiner’s credit, Apple running its own stores does present clear benefits: the customer outreach is enormous, and of course, in Apple stores, Apple products don’t have to compete with gadgets sold by rivals on other shelves.

But when we try to decipher why the iPad costs $500, we have to consider the sum of all parts, not just the retail strategy.

Apple is the most vertically integrated company in the world. In addition to operating its own retail chains, all Apple hardware and software are designed in-house, and Apple also runs its own digital content store, iTunes.

Designing in-house means Apple doesn’t have to pay licensing fees to third parties to use their intellectual property. For instance, the A4 chip inside the iPad is based on technology developed and owned by Apple (not Intel, AMD or Nvidia). The operating system is Apple’s own, not something licensed from Microsoft or Google.

Why do you think Hewlett-Packard bought Palm to make the TouchPad? HP wanted ownership of a mobile operating system in-house to take control of its own mobile destiny and stop being so reliant on Microsoft (which, to this day, doesn’t have a credible tablet strategy).

On the iTunes media platform, Apple takes a cut of each sale made through each of its digital storefronts: the App Store, iBooks and iTunes music and video. iBooks still has a long way to go before it’s anywhere near as big as Amazon, but the App Store and iTunes are the most successful digital media stores of their kind.

At the end of the day, the iPad might be worth well above $500 for all we know. (Part estimates made by component analysts such as iSuppli aren’t very useful because they fail to measure costs of R&D and other factors.) It’s most likely that Apple can afford to absorb the costs of producing and selling the iPad because of the tenacious ecosystem backing it, and also because it has such tight oversight over every aspect of the company to control price.

That’s what it all boils down to: ecosystems and control. Competitors are struggling to match the $500 price point because they aren’t as fully integrated as Apple, in terms of retail strategy, a digital content market, hardware and software engineering — everything.

As Steve Jobs famously put it one day, “Apple is the last company in our industry that creates the whole widget.” Competitors are having trouble beating the iPad widget.

A hat tip to my colleagues @reckless and @lessien for helping me think through this post.


Gadget Lab Podcast: Android Tablets Galore, PlayStation Phone

          

This week’s episode of Gadget Lab covers highlights coming from Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, which was packed with tablets and smartphones.

The Motorola Xoom, one of the first tablets to run Android Honeycomb, finally got an official price tag: $800. It has a dual-core processor, a high-resolution screen and 4G compatibility, but would you pay that price? We doubt it, and so do many of our readers, apparently.

Another headliner at the show was Samsung’s awkwardly named Galaxy Tab 10.1. Wired.com’s Charlie Sorrel had some hands-on time with it and said the display was gorgeous, but the case felt like a cheap plastic toy.

One of the lamest tablets at the show was LG’s Optimus Pad. Most of the features are cool — a dual-core processor, front- and rear-facing cameras, and a high-resolution display — but the “3-D” spec made us roll our eyes. The 3-D mode makes images display as red and blue anaglyphs (which any computer screen could technically do), to create the cheap 3-D that’s been around for decades.

Moving on to phones, the most interesting smartphone coming from the show was the Xperia Play, which probably should’ve been called the PlayStation Phone. It plays PlayStation Portable games and includes a slide-out D-pad for controls. Pretty neat.

We take another look at the Verizon iPhone compared with the AT&T iPhone. Thousands of customers have been running bandwidth tests with the Speedtest.net iPhone app, and it looks like AT&T comes out ahead in terms of data transfer speeds — although from my previous tests, Verizon’s iPhone has been the more reliable phone.

Dylan wraps up the podcast with his favorite iPhone app of the week, Infinity Blade [iTunes], a fun slice-to-destroy 3-D game.

Like the show? You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or if you don’t want to be distracted by our unholy on-camera talent, check out the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds

Or listen to the audio here:

Gadget Lab audio podcast #104

http://downloads.wired.com/podcasts/assets/gadgetlabaudio/GadgetLabAudio0104.mp3


Motorola Thinks You’ll Pay $800 for the Xoom Tablet

Motorola’s Xoom tablet will cost more than the iPad, but the mobile company feels confident that it can compete with Apple.

The Xoom will go on sale for $800 in the United States, Motorola mobility chief Sanjay Jha told The Wall Street Journal, and it will include 32GB of storage and compatibility with the new 4G network.

Jha believes that 4G compatibility will make the Xoom worth the extra money for consumers. By way of comparison, the 32-GB iPad with 3G compatibilty costs $730.

“We felt that our ability to deliver 50Mb/s would justify the $799 price point,” Jha said. “It is 32GB with 3G and a free upgrade to 4G. Being competitive with iPad is important. We feel that from the hardware and capabilities we deliver we are at least competitive and in a number of ways better [than the iPad].”

While the inclusion of 4G compatibility does appear to add extra value to the Xoom, Motorola still can’t match the lower starting price of Apple’s iPad: $500 for the Wi-Fi model. Jha said Motorola would eventually offer a 32-GB Wi-Fi-only model as well that would cost around the same as Apple’s 32-GB iPad with Wi-Fi, which costs $600.

It’s unclear when the Xoom will ship, though a leaked Best Buy ad suggests Feb. 24.

I’m not convinced customers will be attracted to the Xoom’s $800 price tag because of the 4G spec. U.S. carriers only recently launched their 4G networks, and until they mature, I don’t think people are going to care about 4G versus 3G. The average customer is going to be attracted to the starting price, and $500 seems to be the sweet spot that Apple has nailed.

What are your thoughts on Xoom pricing? Chime in with your comments below.

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Photo of Motorola’s Xoom tablet demonstrated at CES 2011: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Gallery: Tablets Dominate Mobile World Congress

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Mobile World Congress 2011


It’s shaping up to be the Year of Too Many Tablets.

Like this year’s CES, the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona was all about the tablets. Android tablets ruled the show, for the most part, but the BlackBerry PlayBook and HP’s hot webOS-based TouchPad also made appearances.

But mixed into the tablet hype was the usual blend of weird products, mindless marketing, blue sky and gushing fountains and — of course — booth babes. Go grab yourself a café cortado or a cool glass of horchata and enjoy our picks of MWC 2011.

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Photos: Charlie Sorrel


How Apple Is Winning the Post-PC War

A bit of semantic juggling makes Apple the biggest player in both the personal computer and mobile platform markets.

A research report published today by DisplaySearch found that sales of the iPad propelled Apple past HP for the No. 1 spot in the “mobile PC” market.

To make that work, you have to count the iPad as a PC. DisplaySearch combined sales of Mac notebooks with the iPad and found that Apple sold 10.2 million, or 17.2 percent, of mobile computers shipped during the fourth quarter of 2010. HP shipped 9.3 million.

But you could also count the iPad as a mobile device, as some have done. If you lump together the iPod Touch, iPhone and iPad, Apple’s iOS is the mobile operating system most often used to browse the web, according to NetMarketShare.

“While we anticipate increased competition in the tablet PC market later this year with the introduction of Android Honeycomb-based tablets, Apple’s iPad business is complementing a notebook line whose shipments widely exceed the industry average growth rate,” said Richard Shim, Senior Analyst at DisplaySearch. “Apple is currently benefiting from significant and comprehensive growth from both sectors of the mobile PC spectrum, notebooks and tablet PCs. Cannibalization seems limited at this point.”

The reports seem slanted in Apple’s favor: traditionally the iPad wouldn’t be considered a PC, and most research firms have concluded Android is beating the iPhone in the smartphone market, which doesn’t count the iPod Touch or iPad.

But it’s rational to count the iPad as a personal computer because, well, it’s a computer, even if it has more limited capabilities than a PC. And it seems fair to combine iPod Touch, iPad and iPhone sales when determining which mobile platform has the most dominance: They’re all running Apple’s iOS.

When you look at the big picture, the labels don’t matter to the manufacturers: They just want customers buying their products, and they don’t care if you call it a PC, smartphone or tablet.

The two reports also demonstrate that the lines between “PC” and “mobile” are blurring. Technically all these products — the iPhone, MacBook, iPad, iPod Touch, HP notebooks, Android smartphones and so on — are mobile computers.

So if you look at the iPad as a personal computer, and the iPod Touch, iPad and iPhone as one mobile platform (which it is), one thing is clear: Apple may have lost the PC war, but it’s winning in the post-PC era.

Photo: Bryan Derballa/Wired.com