Videos: iPad Unboxed, Reviewed


If you’re sick of reading about the iPad, take a gander at some videos posted by reviewers. Stephen Fry of Time has posted an unboxing video of the iPad (above) which shows off some of its accessories. And PCMag has published a neat video review of the iPad (below) giving a walkthrough of the device.

The iPad is set to release Saturday. Read Wired.com’s buyer’s guide if you’re mulling over which of the six models to purchase.

PCMag: Apple iPad video review from PCMag.com Reviews on Vimeo.

Via MacRumors


Punked: iFixit Tears Down ‘Apple Tablet’

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I got pranked this morning, by the folks over at Apple tear-down-and-repair site iFixit. In an email from head honcho Kyle Wiens was the following juicy paragraph:

We had to resort to some subversive techniques involving a cop from Ottawa, a donkey, and three uncouth janitors to obtain this pre-release Apple Tablet (don’t ask, because we won’t tell).

We felt we compromised our morals at first, but we quickly got over it and began tearing this sucker apart. Apple has completely changed directions since their original press announcement, but the new hardware we got is actually much improved in a number of ways.

April 1st, or April Fools’ Day, is the day beloved of fools the world over (actually, the anglo-world over). Before the internet, the day was funny. You might knock on a neighbor’s door at 7AM, hand covered in ketchup and bandages, begging a lift to the hospital (my mother did this) or just read the day’s papers and spot the spoof ads therein.

These days, “viral” marketing companies seed their filthy campaigns days before (and often after) April 1st, so it becomes increasingly hard to tell what is real or not, especially for a site like Gadget Lab, which specializes in digging up amazing and unbelievable new toys. Unlike these PR morons, though, whose few days of “fun” sour a whole year of communication, Kyle’s prank is at once obviously a fake, and also hilarious. The “Apple Tablet Teardown” is in fact an un-boxing and subsequent dismantling of an Apple MessagePad 2000 aka the Newton.

The article is a gem. The iFixit folks have played it dead straight, and the captions and characteristically great pictures are produced as if this really were a brand new product:

It features a monochrome, backlit LCD measuring 4.9 x 3.9 inches, capable of providing resolutions of 480 x 320 pixels.

and

The tablet has a user-replaceable battery! You can use Apple’s proprietary battery pack, or you can just buy four AA alkaline batteries if you’re on the go.

That’s how you pull off an April Fool: the old fashioned way, the way that actually makes somebody smile. What you don’t do is put some dumb video up on YouTube, mail bloggers incessantly for a week before April 1st and then, on the day itself, patronizingly “reveal” the “joke” and then beg “I’d appreciate if I could get a post in [sic] your website.”

Apple Tablet Teardown [iFixit. Thanks, Kyle!]


Roundup: The First Reviews of Apple’s iPad

The early reviews for the iPad are in, and they’re certainly going to make Steve Jobs happy.

Apple handed out iPads to a few select publications a couple of days early, and the critical consensus is overwhelmingly positive.

The usual reviewers from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, as well as a few surprising newcomers to the Apple early reviews circuit, all praised the iPad for its epically long battery life (more than 12 hours), impressive speed and beautiful touchscreen.

Priced between $500 and $830, the iPad is hitting stores Saturday.

Excerpts from the eight early reviews are as follows:

Walt Mossberg, The Wall Street Journal:

I believe this beautiful new touch-screen device from Apple has the potential to change portable computing profoundly, and to challenge the primacy of the laptop. It could even help, eventually, to propel the finger-driven, multitouch user interface ahead of the mouse-driven interface that has prevailed for decades.
….
All in all, however, the iPad is an advance in making more-sophisticated computing possible via a simple touch interface on a slender, light device. Only time will tell if it’s a real challenger to the laptop and netbook.

David Pogue, The New York Times:

And the techies are right about another thing: the iPad is not a laptop. It’s not nearly as good for creating stuff. On the other hand, it’s infinitely more convenient for consuming it — books, music, video, photos, Web, e-mail and so on. For most people, manipulating these digital materials directly by touching them is a completely new experience — and a deeply satisfying one.

Andy Inhatko, Chicago Sun Times:

In fact, after a week with the iPad, I’m suddenly wondering if any other company is as committed to invention as Apple. Has any other company ever demonstrated a restlessness to stray from the safe and proven, and actually invent things?

Ed Baig, USA Today:

The first iPad is a winner. It stacks up as a formidable electronic-reader rival for Amazon’s Kindle. It gives portable game machines from Nintendo and Sony a run for their money. At the very least, the iPad will likely drum up mass-market interest in tablet computing in ways that longtime tablet visionary and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates could only dream of.

Tim Gideon, PCMag.com:

Aside from Apple enthusiasts, many of us wondered who would drop hundreds of dollars for this not-quite-computer. But having used the iPad for some time, I can tell you that the device just makes sense. When you combine basic-but-essential work tools with iWork, an improved browser, e-mail, iPod, and photo applications, a well-executed e-Book platform with iBooks, and throw in thousands of downloadable apps and games, and package it all in a gorgeous, slim slate with a beautiful 9.7-inch touch screen, you have yourself a winner.

Bob LeVitus, Houston Chronicle:

It turns out the iPad isn’t as much a laptop replacement as I thought (though it could easily be used as one). Instead, it’s an entirely new category of mobile device. For example, now when I want to surf the Web from the couch or back deck, the iPad is the device I choose. Starbucks? Same thing. Think of the iPad as a new arrow in your technology quiver, an arrow that will often be the best tool for a given task.

Xeni Jardin, Boing Boing:

Just as the iPhone, Palm Pré and Android phones scratched an itch we didn’t know we had—somewhere between cellphone and notebook—the iPad hits a completely new pleasure spot. The display is large enough to make the experience of apps and games on smaller screens stale. Typography is crisp, images gem-like, and the speed brisk thanks to Apple’s A4 chip and solid state storage. As I browse early release iPad apps, web pages, and flip through the iBook store and books, the thought hits that this is a greater leap into a new user experience than the sum of its parts suggests.

Omar Wasow, TheRoot.com:

The techie obsession with specs and obscure features completely misses how most consumers will actually use the iPad. A small percentage of power users will be disappointed that the iPad doesn’t, say, have an HDMI video-out port or that it currently lacks the ability to run multiple applications simultaneously or that it fails to address some other esoteric concern. The rest of us (even most techies) will be thrilled that doing what we want to do on the iPad is generally effortless.

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


iPad Alternatives: The Main Contenders [Ipad]

Just because most of us bought iPads doesn’t mean that any of you should. There are plenty of devices, out now or coming soon, that can do some things as well—or better. Here’s a roundup of the best: More »

Just 90 People Preorder Doomed JooJoo Tablet, 15 Return It

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gizmodo_logoThese Paypal documents from the JooJoo/Techcrunch lawsuit show that only 90 preorders for the $500 device, roughly $44k worth, were made. This is what happens when you launch a tablet the same month as Apple, at the same price.

And 15 of those turned into cancellations (which were hard to do, we hear.) That doesn’t seem like it’s enough money to cover legal fees or kick production into high gear. I’m going to reiterate our stance: It seems like a great device, but you should wait for things to shake out before putting down more money. And remember, this costs as much as an iPad.

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See Also:


JooJoo Tablets Start Shipping

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After a few false starts and some controversy over refunds, JooJoo–the tablet formerly known as CrunchPad–has finally started shipping.

Fusion Garage, the Singapore-based company behind JooJoo, says its tablets are now on their way to U.S. customers who pre-ordered them. JooJoo fans who pre-ordered the device should get it by Monday, March 29.

That’s interesting timing for JooJoo. Apple’s iPad will be available to consumers starting April 3. The $500 JooJoo is similar to the iPad in terms of looks. But it has a 12.1-inch touchscreen display, compared to the iPad’s 9.7 inch touchscreen. The JooJoo is Wi-Fi capable but offers no 3G connectivity option. It does, however, support full Flash. The tablets can be bought only from JooJoo’s website.

Earlier this month, JooJoo revamped its user interface and changed its home screen to display a polished grid of icons. It now includes features such as different sized virtual keyboards, one of which is designed for one-handed operation.

Still, it is unlikely that the JooJoo can beat Apple’s marketing machine for the iPad or ink the kind of deals that Apple has with book publishers and content providers to make the iPad more than just a web browsing device.

See Also:

Photo: JooJoo (Jim Merithew/Wired.com)


HP Slate: About $500, Atom Processor, June Launch

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Spanish gadget blog Clipset has the details of the upcoming HP Slate, with some quick hands-on time too. Previously, then Slate has only been seen in a teaser video promo.

First, the price. The Slate will apparently be €400, which translates literally to $543, but is likely to be less in the US. Clipset says this puts it in a range between netbook and iPad, although really we still don’t have an official iPad price for Europe. As to the hardware, the blog reports that there will be USB ports, a memory card reader (presumably SD), an Intel Atom processor and, weirdly, a camera on the back. It is also noted that the machine is “fatter” than the iPad, and feels more like a netbook conversion than a purpose-built, enlarged iPhone.

The Slate certainly looks nice, but if HP thinks it can slap Windows 7 into a pretty little glass and metal slab and have a chance, its dead wrong. It won’t work, as we saw with the Stantum tablet last week: Win 7 is a desktop OS, designed for a keyboard and mouse, not a fat finger. If the OS has somehow been tweaked or skinned, then HP may have a slim chance.

The Slate will be launched in June.

Probamos el tablet de HP que competirá con el iPad, el Slate [Clipset]


Windows Phone 7 Series Tablet Concept

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Umang Dokey’s Windows 7 Phone Series tablet concept is rather enticing, and it even manages to feel genuinely like a Microsoft product, with its mixture of impossible sci-fi concepts (3D video conferencing) and gray office mundanity (a keyboard).

The (non-embeddable) video shows the slim device in action, though it’s all computer generated graphics, as the device doesn’t actually exist. The keyboard is also a fold-out stand, depending on how far you rotate it from its hole in the back (and if you do decide to go all QWERTY, the rest of the unit will surely just topple backwards). The two webcams sit far apart on either side of the 8-inch touch-screen, and when used to make 3D would probably give you the viewpoint of Admiral Ackbar. The Bezel is really too small to let you hold the device without covering the screen with a thumb, and around the back are a couple of recessed joysticks for gaming. It looks lovely, and would probably be awful to use.

But the biggest takeaway from the demo video is that Windows Mobile 7 (sorry, but the official name is too much of a mouthful: just look at that headline up there) is perfect for a touch-screen tablet, with all its floaty, scrolling UI elements. This is what Microsoft should be working on, not some awful Windows 7 tablet.

Tablet Concept [Umang Dokey via da Giz]

See Also:


Cynergy’s magazine kiosk concept serves up digital content a la carte (video)

Not that we’ve never seen Surface-like touch tables interacting with mobile devices before, but now that the whole thing is being repackaged as “the magazine stand of the future” and those trendy tablets are involved, we might as well have a look. Cynergy is demonstrating a seamless method for purchasing digital content from one of these kiosks using your e-reader or tablet pc. It’s just a matter of plopping your device — which already knows your identity and available credit — atop the display table and then flicking the particular magazine or newspaper you want onto your storage. It looks effortless and all, but it also requires that you have the “custom designed and built” software from Cynergy, which you’ll have to pump funds into in order to get the seamlessness going. We don’t know how we feel about yet another proprietary ecosystem floating about, but you can make your own mind up after watching the video after the break.

Continue reading Cynergy’s magazine kiosk concept serves up digital content a la carte (video)

Cynergy’s magazine kiosk concept serves up digital content a la carte (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Mar 2010 08:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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E-Readers Will Survive the Onslaught of Tablets

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If you think the coming wave of tablets is about to make e-book readers obsolete, guess again.

Although dozens of tablets are scheduled to hit the market this year — from companies like Apple, HP and Dell, as well as upstarts like JooJoo — executives in the e-reader industry aren’t particularly worried.

Instead, they say, tablets and E Ink-based reading devices are likely to co-exist, targeting different groups of consumers based on their purchasing power, the extent of interactivity they need and their reading patterns.

“In the short term, every company is likely to have two lines of products,” says Robert Brunner, founder of Ammunition, a design firm that worked with Barnes & Noble to design the Nook e-reader. “If you think of a paperback-like reader, E Ink does a fantastic job. But color will definitely happen and it is likely to be LCD or OLED. It seems logical.”

Think of this strategy as something similar to the one employed by the print publishing industry. There are more expensive, better-designed hardcovers for consumers who value presentation — while the same books are often available in cheaper, but still functional, paperback editions.

In the digital world, that’s likely to translate into two sets of products: Full-featured tablets with color displays and lots of features that cost $400 or more, and inexpensive black-and-white E Ink-powered e-readers that will be available for $150 or less.

The launch of Amazon’s Kindle in 2007 kickstarted the market for electronic book readers. Last year, an estimated 5 million e-readers were sold and sales are expected to double this year. Meanwhile, companies like Apple and HP are promoting their tablets as devices that can be used to read digital books — although, as mini computers, these tablets can also do a lot more. Apple has already planned an iTunes-like iPad book store, called iBooks, that will compete with Amazon in selling electronic books.

The resurgence of tablets has given rise to chatter that tablets could mean the end of the road for e-readers. After all, who would want to buy a black-and-white Kindle that is basically good only for reading, when for only slightly more money, they could get a slick iPad that also does e-mail, shows movies, displays your photos and lets you edit documents?

That line of reasoning is moot, say executives in the e-reader industry.

“If reading is your primary entertainment activity, you are more likely to buy an e-reader,” says Glen Burchers, director of marketing for Freescale. “So this is a person who will pick up a book when they have the spare time instead of turning on the TV or opening up the computer.” Freescale’s processors power nearly 90 percent of the e-readers available currently.

Recent research commissioned by Freescale showed an e-reader buyer, on average, is 43 years old, earns $72,000 and buys two e-books a month.

Those who say they’re interested in buying a tablet tend to be much younger, Freescale’s research showed. Tablets will be more attractive to people who want to use them for reading but also for keeping up with their Facebook pages and Twitter feeds.

An e-book designed for tablets could have interactive elements, color photos and video embeds, making it perfect for textbooks or cookbooks. Narrative non-fiction or fiction books need that kind of multimedia enhancement less, so they are more likely to be targeted at black-and-white e-readers, says Brunner.

E Ink screens aren’t particularly good at anything other than books, leaving newspapers and magazines out in the cold. That’s where tablets could step in, says James McQuivey, an analyst with Forrester Research. Indeed, many magazines — including Wired — have already announced plans to develop electronic magazines that will work on tablets. But it will be a battle that could take a toll on e-paper based displays, he says.

“For people who read more of those media than they do books, tablets will be an ideal device and can easily take some wind out of E Ink sales, once we get beyond the fourth of the population that really enjoys reading books,” says McQuivey.

Still, tablets won’t immediately supplant lower-priced electronic paper-based e-readers, he notes.

“The first thing you need to consider is whether tablets will actually be as good for book reading as the E Ink readers are,” says McQuivey. “Having a two-week battery life and a device that’s comfortable to stare at for hours at a stretch without strain (as with e-paper based e-readers) is hard to beat.”

Another major factor is price. Currently, most e-readers cost about $260, and the cheapest e-reader currently available is a $200 Sony Reader. Driving the price down could help keep the category alive, especially if tablets cost $500 or more, as the iPad will.

Earlier this month, Freescale announced a new processor designed exclusively for e-readers that could bring down their cost to $150 and lower.

According to Freescale’s estimates, a $50 reduction in price potentially doubles the pool of consumers who say they will buy an e-reader.

“At this stage of the market, price is a very important factor for growth,” Freescale’s Burcher says.

So what’s a company like Amazon likely to do next? Create a color Kindle or a color tablet for e-reading?

Brunner says a tablet that puts e-reading at the center is a more likely response to the iPad. “They don’t have a choice if they want to offer a richer, more in-depth experience,” he says.

At least in the next two years, electronic paper displays are unlikely to offer color and video on par with LCD screens. E Ink’s color screens are not expected to be widely available until next year and alternative low power technologies, such as Qualcomm’s Mirasol, aren’t optimal for the large screens (greater than 6 inches) that are the hallmark of tablets. And even when these color, low-power display technologies become widespread, they will still lack the speed and contrast people are used to with LCDs.

Instead, say some industry executives, it is likely that Amazon could design a tablet with an LCD screen that puts digital books at the center of its user interface.

“Tablets currently focus on the web-surfing experience,” says Sri Peruvemba, vice-president of sales and marketing for E Ink. “But there’s room for a tablet that’s primarily targeted at students.”

Even if the e-readers market splits into two, it shouldn’t make a difference to publishers or readers, says Trip Adler, CEO of Scribd, a document-sharing social network. Companies like Scribd and Lulu support multiple devices including PC, smartphones and e-readers and a wide variety of formats such as ePub and PDF.

“People can upload a file in any format and we can convert it to all other formats,” says Scribd’s Adler. “We make the process simple.”

See Also:

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com