Apple’s iPad Thinks It Has a Camera

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Apple’s new tablet doesn’t include a camera, but the screenshot above reveals a “Take Photo” button in the iPad’s Contacts app.

Is it a hint that Apple is planning to release a camera-equipped iPad later? Or just a messy accidental result of sharing code between the iPhone Contacts app and the iPad’s? As much as we believe the former will happen eventually, the latter is more likely to be the case.

We can’t draw any conclusions from that since there are too many theories, but the screenshot is interesting nonetheless. The latest iPod Touch doesn’t include a camera, and Steve Jobs said that was because the gadget’s focus is gaming. However, iFixit’s teardown of the new iPod Touch found a small compartment that would be perfect for a camera. A rumor report also suggested the iPod Touch was supposed to have a camera but left it out due to technical problems.

Kudos to CrunchGear for spotting this.

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AT&T activated 3.1 million iPhones last quarter, 1 million non-phones

While Verizon suffers a bit on paper, primarily thanks to a spendy Alltel merger, AT&T has some pretty good news to report on the “money” front. AT&T’s $3 billion in earnings are up 26% over the year ago quarter, and particularly hot on the wireless front with 3.1 million iPhone activations, 2.7 million new wireless customers, and 1 million non-phone devices like e-book readers. While the 2.7 million bests the 2.2 million newbies at Verizon Wireless, AT&T gained less customers on contract thanks to its any-device-goes ways, so it’s hard to say who’s really in the best position here. Still, with devices like the Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader and now iPad in its fold, AT&T is clearly the go-to for getting your not-a-phone onto the internet. Now if only it could do it, um, well.

AT&T activated 3.1 million iPhones last quarter, 1 million non-phones originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Jan 2010 11:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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With iPad, Apple Still Has a Fatal Attraction for ATT

When Steve Jobs said Apple’s new iPad tablet would have 3G data service from AT&T during Wednesday’s press conference, sighs of disgust could be heard from the audience, presumably from disgruntled iPhone customers.

Prior to the unveiling of the 9.7-inch device Wednesday, a few vague rumors suggested Verizon would carry the tablet. Instead, Jobs announced two versions of the iPad: a Wi-Fi only model and an unlocked, Wi-Fi + 3G model for use on GSM networks. The Verizon network operates on the CDMA standard, meaning Verizon won’t be able to support the iPad.

Why not Verizon? Apple must be keenly aware of the incessant AT&T bashing from iPhone owners. And yet AT&T will be the primary U.S. carrier for the tablet, just as it is for the iPhone.

However, the tablet’s situation is different from the iPhone’s, analysts told Wired.com. First of all, this isn’t a phone. The iPad is a data-driven, media-rich device that you’ll primarily be using in your living room. Second, the tablet does not require committing to a contract for 3G. You can prepay a month ($15 for 250 MB or $30 for unlimited) for when you’re traveling, for example, and then cancel the 3G and just use the Wi-Fi.

But why not Verizon? Surely, Apple must have at least thought twice about sticking with AT&T as its official U.S. partner for the iPad. Dissatisfaction with AT&T did, after all, incite a consumer protest attempting to bring down its network with digital sabotage.

“What is this fatal attraction between Apple and AT&T?” wondered MKM Partners analyst Tero Kuittinen. “Pretty much everybody I talked to really expected Verizon.”

Kuittinen said Apple may have stuck with AT&T to retain a cordial relationship, because telecom analysts expect the iPhone’s exclusivity contract with AT&T to end in the next year, which could invite a Verizon iPhone.

“If they’re planning an iPhone Verizon launch maybe they’ll want to throw a bone at AT&T,” he said.

Ross Rubin, an NPD analyst, said it’s unlikely Apple purposely left Verizon out. The tablet is compatible with new GSM micro SIMs, which supports international carriers, so Apple likely made this decision to simplify its offerings.

AT&T said it plans to continue improving its network to help support Apple’s new device. AT&T iPad customers will have free access to 20,000 hot spots nationwide, an AT&T spokesman said.

“We have a great relationship with Apple,” an AT&T spokesman said. “Today we offer the nation’s fastest network and will continue to increase network speeds throughout 2010 and 11 in advance of 4G networks and devices being widely available which further sets us apart from the competition of the mobile broadband leader.”

Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Apple’s Tablet E-Book App Rips off Indie Dev’s Creation

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We love the iPhone book-reading app Classics, and apparently Apple does, too. The iPad tablet includes an app called iBooks, and its similarities to Classics are beyond the realm of coincidence.

The UI is the same idea: a shelf of books that you can tap to choose a title. The pages emulate the look of a printed book page. The 3D page-flipping effect looks almost exactly the same. The only major difference is iBooks has a tool to change font point and type. That and, of course, access to e-books in the iBooks store, which will feature titles from Penguin, Harper Collins, Simon & Schuster, Macmillan and Hachette book group. (Classics’ book content is an aggregation of public-domain materials from Project Gutenberg.)

But for the most part, it’s still the classic story of big-corporation-rips-off-independent-business. (And Apple wasn’t the first to borrow Classics’ idea, either.) And this has happened a few times in the mobile app space. A few months ago, Wired.com reported on two developers who were stomped when they inadvertently competed with Apple, as well as one developer whose project was squashed when Google came out with the same idea and offered it for free.

Ryu also acknowledges that Classics’ bookshelf view was heavily inspired by Delicious Library, but he asked Delicious Library creator Wil Shipley for approval before Classics’ release.

Of course, that doesn’t put Classics out of business. It’s unclear whether iBooks will be ported over to the iPhone, or whether it will be an exclusive app on the tablet.

Phillip Ryu, who helped create Classics, said he felt a little hurt, but as a loyal fan of Apple, he isn’t planning on picking a fight.

“It stung a bit as a huge fan of Apple, but in the end it’s a page flip,” Ryu told Wired.com. “We’ll come up with something cooler and let them take this digital reading experience to the next level with iBooks.”

Ryu has made Classics free for a limited time, adding “We figured it’s a good idea to get Classics into as many hands as possible, before people start calling it an iBooks ripoff.”

Classics Download Link [iTunes]

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Hands-On With the Apple iPad

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It’s finally here. Apple’s most anticipated device since the iPhone, a touchscreen tablet dubbed the iPad, has landed. We had some time to test drive it. First impressions? It’s great for what it does, and we’re hoping it’ll expand to become so much more.

Thanks to clunky user interfaces, durability issues and limited utility, the tablet has been filed away as a niche device again and again. Has Apple, the leader in industry and interface design, finally nailed the tablet?

Take a dive into our gallery while we give the device an early critique.


Tablet Sutra: How Are We Supposed to Hold This Thing?

Speculation and guesswork aside, if Apple’s got a tablet, we need to know how to handle it, physically. So, with two pieces of cardboard, scotch tape and Photoshop, we crudely mocked one up. It was… unusual.

Tablet PCs have been around for years, but they’ve got keyboard, ball-jointed necks and all manner of extraneous fixture and features. Smartphones are sort of like this new slate-like variety of tablet, only they’re too tiny. Buttonless, slick, slab-like tablets do currently exist, but they’re rare, and no one has found the right software pairing to make them particularly versatile. A 10-to-11-inch tablet wouldn’t be totally new, but since none of us are really clear on how you’re supposed to handle it in real-world situations, we built our own.

Here now, in the darkest, dingiest corner of the tech world’s favorite rabbit hole, we’ve performed a hands-on with our cardboard version of Steve Jobs’ mythical product. So, before it exists anywhere outside of our collective imagination, step into Tablet Sutra, the at-times-awkward position-by-position walkthrough of tablet handling:

The hurdles for a tablet like this aren’t just technological. This is a device that’s going to have to convert its usership to a whole new kind of physical experience. We’re used to laptops and smartphones, and we take the things they’re good and bad at for granted. The tablet’s software may be a wonderful mystery box with massive potential, but the tablet form factor, like any other, won’t be for everyone.

If you think we left out any key tablet positions, mention it in comments—feel free to upload photos—or send a note to our tips line with “Tablet Sutra” in the subject line. We’ll be on the lookout.

ASUS’ Jonney Shih talks tablets, Chrome OS and the (eventual) demise of netbooks

We’ve gotta say: after witnessing the ASUS press event at CES this year, we have a whole new love for the company and its outspoken Chairman, Jonney “megatrend” Shih. The man, myth, legend recently sat down with Silicon.com and talked a bit about his own brand of the future. Apparently ASUS has slate PC prototypes in its labs, along with netbooks running Android and Chrome OS, but there’s nothing he’s convinced is ready for market yet. For slates specifically, “Content is still not attractive enough today to the customer,” according to Shih. He expects there to be content stores from Apple, Google and Microsoft to obtain content tailored to touchscreen tablets, and plans on waiting until there is such a compelling use case before bringing something to market (though those color e-books sure look raring to go). Another potential category that ASUS is hedging its bets on is the smartbook. He likes the price advantage, but isn’t sure users are ready to abandon Windows yet. “When people talk about cloud computing, unfortunately it’s still not there yet,” he says, but: “as time goes on you will see more advantage of being always connected.” The solution to all of this madness? WaveFace, naturally. A post-netbook era, perhaps five years from now, will diverge from the “regular, dull PC roadmap” and put more emphasis on portability, wearability and intuitive use. A couple of concept renders doesn’t have us convinced ASUS is positioned to deliver this, but we’re happy to watch and find out.

ASUS’ Jonney Shih talks tablets, Chrome OS and the (eventual) demise of netbooks originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jan 2010 10:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Will the Apple Tablet Be Called iPad?


Bloggers can’t stop banging the rumor drum with an Apple press event scheduled for next week, presumably devoted to its anticipated tablet device. MacRumors’ Arnold Kim found evidence suggesting Apple filed for the trademark iPad, which could be another potential name for the rumored Apple tablet, in addition to iSlate and iGuide.

Based solely on the 2006 Mad TV sketch below the jump (warning: mildly NSFW), I wholeheartedly hope Apple does not brand its tablet “iPad.”

Personally I’m into the name “iSlate.” It sounds like what you would call the iPhone’s bigger sibling. Plus, there’s firm evidence that Apple filed for the iSlate trademark and owns the iSlate.com domain. (Apple does not own the iGuide.com or iPad.com domains.)

Some other Apple heads are predicting the resurrection of iBook, the name of Apple’s older notebooks prior to the MacBook rebranding, for the tablet. I’d bet against that, since Apple will likely push its tablet as a general-purpose device and stray away from it being construed a pricey e-book reader or “Kindle killer.” Plus, I have doubt Apple would wish to recycle an old product name for what we’re all hoping will be a revolutionary new product. It just wouldn’t seem right.

Whatever the name is, I’m willing to bet the “i” prefix is here to stay. Assuming the tablet is running some form of the iPhone OS, it would be inconsistent to slap the “Mac” prefix into the name.

Of course, anyone’s guess is as good as mine, and we’ll all find out Jan. 27. What do you think an Apple tablet should be called? Vote in the poll below, or add your own suggestions in the comments section.

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Photo illustration of an Apple “iTab”: Gluepet


Rumor: Apple Event to Highlight iPhone OS 4.0 in Addition to Tablet

In addition to a tablet device, Apple is expected to introduce the next major upgrade for its iPhone operating system in a press event next week, according to reports.

Fox News cites an unnamed Apple employee who claims iPhone OS 4.0 will be a major topic of the Jan. 27 press event along with the fabled Apple tablet. The source did not disclose any details about the software upgrade, but in a separate report The Boy Genius Report cites one of its “trusty Apple connects” who stated the following:

  • There will be multitouch gestures OS-wide. (Would make sense for that as the rumored OS for the iTablet is close if not the same as the iPhone)
  • “A few new ways” to run applications in the background — multitasking.
  • Many graphical and UI changes to make navigating through the OS easier and more efficient.
  • The update will supposedly be available for only the iPhone 3G and 3GS, but will “put them ahead in the smartphone market because it will make them more like full-fledged computers” more than any other phone to date. Everyone is “really excited.”
  • The last piece of information is the most vague, but apparently there will be some brand new syncing ability for the contacts and calendar applications.

“We’re not commenting on rumors,” an Apple spokesman told Wired.com.

Wired.com polled a few iPhone app developers who said it was realistic to expect iPhone OS 4.0 to be demonstrated next week. Last year, Apple held a press event previewing iPhone OS 3.0 in March and released the upgrade during May’s Worldwide Developers Conference. Apple could feasibly demonstrate iPhone OS 4.0 next week (assuming it’s ready) to give developers time to prepare their apps for the update prior to releasing it at WWDC.

Phillip Ryu, a partner at iPhone development house Tap Tap Tap, said his impression was iPhone OS 4.0 should be ready for announcement because Apple will presumably announce the tablet’s software development kit, which would most likely contain some elements of iPhone OS 4.0.

Fox News’ source added that Apple will launch iLife 2010 during next week’s event. That could indeed be true, because Apple has released most of its previous iLife software suites during January Macworld Expo conferences in years past.

We’ll find out soon enough. Stay tuned here on Gadget Lab, where we’ll provide live blogging and news coverage of Apple’s press event next week.

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Photo of an iPhone 3GS: Jon Snyder/Wired.com


Apple Invitation Confirms Special Product Event Jan. 27

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Apple has sent out press invitations for a product event to be held at San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Theater.

The invitation reads, “Come see our latest creation.” The event is scheduled to begin 10 a.m., Jan. 27.

In the past month, multiple independent reports have claimed Apple in late January will launch its highly anticipated tablet, which the company has reportedly been developing for several years. Many rumor reports have described Apple’s tablet as a 10-inch version of the iPhone with a strong focus on reading capability. Corroborating these rumors, The Wall Street Journal on Monday published a report that claimed Apple is negotiating with HarperCollins Publishers to produce e-book content for the introduction of the tablet.

Yours truly, along with Wired photographer Jon Snyder and senior editor Dylan Tweney, will provide live blog and news coverage from the event next week. Stay tuned.

While you wait, catch up on our previous reports regarding Apple’s rumored tablet. Our collection of stories is below.

The graphic accompanying the invitation (above) is unique compared with those we’ve received in the past. Perhaps the paint splats are related to a painting application that Apple plans to demonstrate with a tablet. What are your theories?

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