HP TouchPad now $200 off at Staples — it’s like Christmas in August

If there’s still not enough change in your couch to snatch up a $399.99 16GB HP Touchpad, today could be your lucky day — that is, if you’re in the market for a webOS slate in the first place. It looks like Staples is offering a $100 coupon for the slab, which should be applicable to the already discounted price, giving you webOS love for $299 for the 16GB model and $399.99 for 32GB. If that price gets any lower, the $35 tablet might just have to step up its game.

HP TouchPad now $200 off at Staples — it’s like Christmas in August originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Aug 2011 12:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP offers $100 discount on TouchPad for one weekend only

Back when we reviewed HP’s webOS slate, we said it might be worth your time if it cost $100 less. Well guess what? It does, or will, this weekend. This is a fleeting discount, however, with the slab sale starting tomorrow and ending Sunday. But at $400 and $500 for the 16GB and 32GB versions, respectively, it might just be worth the asking price. Now, we wouldn’t go skipping any meals, but if you’ve got the cash and an undying allegiance to a dying brand, we say go for it. A list of terms and conditions can be found at the source link below.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

HP offers $100 discount on TouchPad for one weekend only originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Aug 2011 15:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP TouchPad gets its first OTA update: webOS 3.0.2 brings performance enhancements, untold joy

It’s hitting the airwaves a few hours later than promised, but HP’s TouchPad finally has the long-awaited webOS update that early adopters have been clamoring for. Wondering what webOS 3.0.2 brings to the multi-touch table? Aside from performance and reliability enhancements, it also adds “improved functionality to several core webOS apps,” most of which are direct responses to user feedback. Indeed, “hundreds” of improvements are promised, including bolstered scrolling within the email app, the ability to set your wallpaper from photos in the Photos app, Just Type searching within Calendar and improved autocorrection of contractions. Yeah, seriously. A more detailed changelog awaits you after the break, and you can let us know if your bell has been rung down in comments below.

Continue reading HP TouchPad gets its first OTA update: webOS 3.0.2 brings performance enhancements, untold joy

HP TouchPad gets its first OTA update: webOS 3.0.2 brings performance enhancements, untold joy originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 02 Aug 2011 01:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP Movie Store arrives on the TouchPad, cup-holder accessory to follow?

HP had us slightly worried at the crude-looking beta release of the Play music platform, but its new Movie Store app for TouchPad owners looks reassuringly polished and gleaming. The Roxio-powered service offers movie purchases from $9.95 and rentals from $2.99, as well as a fair selection of TV shows for $1.99 per episode. Meanwhile, Amazon’s beta Kindle app for the TouchPad also launched earlier this week, so things are certainly ticking along. We just hope HP hasn’t forgotten about that promised document-editing function — some people want to create as well as consume.

HP Movie Store arrives on the TouchPad, cup-holder accessory to follow? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 20 Jul 2011 10:35:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Switched On: The bedeviled bezel

Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about consumer technology.

One of the few homages that the Palm Pre paid to the Palm Pilot was the gesture area, a separate part of the display face below the screen used for swipes just as the Pilot had a separate area devoted to entering Graffiti strokes. Unfortunately (like Graffiti before it), the gesture area was one of the least intuitive aspects of the Pre’s operation, and HP has been moving away from it as a required navigation element. On the TouchPad, the gesture area has been scrapped in favor of an iPad-like bottom button.

But HP hasn’t outright ignored the bezel on the TouchPad. Users can still swipe inbound from the bezel as an alternative way of bringing up its card view. Indeed, in 2011, it seems like nearly everyone has been taking a swipe at the bezel around touchscreen displays. First, RIM introduced inbound bezel swipes as a key navigation element on the PlayBook for activating menus, bringing up applications to launch, and its own webOS-like app switching interface. Microsoft showed how inbound bezel swipes will be part of the navigation for touchscreen devices in Windows 8. And MeeGo also uses the inbound bezel swipe as its keystone user interface element on smartphones…

Continue reading Switched On: The bedeviled bezel

Switched On: The bedeviled bezel originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 17 Jul 2011 17:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP TouchPad goes on sale in the UK, starts at £399 for 16GB WiFi model

Here’s an interesting titbit: HP’s TouchPad has already begun to ship to speciality shops in the US, but for the pernickety among us, you may know that the company’s first webOS slate hasn’t actually hit the streets of Londontown. Until now, ole chap. The 16GB WiFi model is going for £399, while a doubling of capacity will tack on a few extra quid. It’s available now directly from HP’s webstore, but if mum always criticised your rampant online shopping sprees, we hear aeroplanes and coupés are colourful alternatives for acquisition.

Continue reading HP TouchPad goes on sale in the UK, starts at £399 for 16GB WiFi model

HP TouchPad goes on sale in the UK, starts at £399 for 16GB WiFi model originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 16 Jul 2011 11:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Engadget Interview: HP’s Stephen DeWitt

HP caught the industry by surprise yesterday, announcing some serious executive reshuffling, with Stephen DeWitt, the company’s former head of Personal Systems Group Americas stepping up to fill in the lead role at HP’s webOS global business unit, while Jon Rubinstein will be in charge of PSG globally. This game of executive musical chairs raised a lot of questions with regards to the state of the company’s beloved but arguably underperforming mobile operating system, particularly in the wake of the TouchPad’s lukewarm reception amongst reviewers, ourselves included.

We managed to grab some time with DeWitt, in spite of what’s sure to be a fairly packed schedule at the moment, discussing the impact of the TouchPad’s reviews, the present and future of webOS, and what smartphone he carries around in his pocket.

Continue reading The Engadget Interview: HP’s Stephen DeWitt

The Engadget Interview: HP’s Stephen DeWitt originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 20:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP TouchPad 4G for AT&T hands-on (video)


Earlier today, AT&T announced that the HP TouchPad is coming to its 4G network, complete with a processor bump to 1.5GHz (up from 1.2GHz) and an HSPA+ radio. The carrier wasted no time getting its latest slate out in the public, showing it off at an event in NYC this afternoon. There aren’t any cosmetic changes to speak of, but that faster connectivity and notable processor boost are certainly nothing to shrug at. We had a chance to see the tablet in action, and it performed fairly well, especially considering the poor connectivity environment AT&T selected to host its event. Jump past the break to see it in action in our hands-on video, or check out our full review of HP’s slower, WiFi-only TouchPad.

Continue reading HP TouchPad 4G for AT&T hands-on (video)

HP TouchPad 4G for AT&T hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 17:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP TouchPad 4G coming to AT&T this summer with 1.5GHz CPU, won’t support LTE

Funny what a number can do, eh? Just last month, we heard that a 3G model of HP’s TouchPad would be coming to AT&T this summer, and now we’re being told that it’ll actually be called the TouchPad 4G. 4G as in HSPA+. Not 4G as in LTE. Got that? Good. Aside from the basics — 32GB of internal storage, integrated GPS and HSPA+ / WiFi radios — a newfangled 1.5GHz processor (up from 1.2GHz) will make its debut, hopefully improving those performance issues we saw during our review. Sadly, no one’s spilling details on pricing or release, with the carrier simply affirming that it’ll be on sale prior to the “back to school” season. We’re guessing the Summer of 2011 is going to be quite the confusing time to be an in-store AT&T employee — how exactly do you sell an actual 4G hotspot when you’ve got HSPA+ devices calling themselves the same? Oh, nomenclature.

Continue reading HP TouchPad 4G coming to AT&T this summer with 1.5GHz CPU, won’t support LTE

HP TouchPad 4G coming to AT&T this summer with 1.5GHz CPU, won’t support LTE originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 12 Jul 2011 12:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Is WebOS Hosed?

Former Palm CEO Jon Rubinstein, the guy who resurrected Palm, is leaving HP’s Palm unit (no longer called Palm, to boot). Taking over is Stephen DeWitt, HP’s U.S. computer overlord. This isn’t good for webOS. In fact, It’s terrible. More »