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Apple's New iPad

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Whether Apple's announcement of the tablet dubbed iPad made you long for one, scoff at how unnecessary they are, or crack jokes about the choice of name, you have to admit it was a huge announcement.

In Internet terms alone, the number of tweets as the announcement event progressed was in the hundreds per second. Servers couldn't keep up, sites that promised live blogging were over capacity. Engadget's live blog managed to keep up and send many good photos, but it was struggling.

The Facts

Let's examine the facts about the iPad, then discuss whether it's revolutionary or unnecessary. The first fact, and possibly the most important fact in terms of marketing, is that the device is stunningly beautiful.

Apple's Steve Jobs Announces Launch Of New Tablet Computer

The high resolution device is 9.7" big and 0.5 inches thin. It weighs 1.5 pounds with a 1GHz Apple A4 chip. It runs on the iPhone operating system with the multi-touch screen controls familiar to iPhone users. It uses wireless technology, but not every model comes with 3G wireless.

There's a full sized keyboard.

Apple Announces Launch Of New Tablet Computer

I'll get into what it can do in a minute. What it does not do is fit in your pocket, have a phone, or have a camera. It isn't meant to be a phone, and it isn't meant to be a full computer. It's meant to fit a niche in the middle of those two, according to Apple.

Apple Announces Launch Of New Tablet Computer

How about price? The base model is $499, the fully loaded 3G model is $829.

Apple Announces Launch Of New Tablet Computer

The wi-fi model iPads start shipping in late March, the 3G models will be available in April. All of the iPad 3G models are unlocked, which means you don't have to be stuck with AT&T. Even so, Apple secured a special pricing deal from AT&T for an unlimited data plan for $29.99 a month with no contract. International data plan deals are promised by June.

For more tech specs see The Apple Store.

What can it do?

Two word answer: a lot. Here's a brief rundown.

  • An ebook reader using ePub technology that links to a new iBook store from Apple. The ePub technology plus the usability of the ebook reader may make it superior to Kindle and may prove to be the killer app for the iPad. In landscape mode, you can see two pages side by side, or let one page fill the full screen in portrait mode. @susanorlean thinks this feature is just what she needs. Early content partners include Penguin, HarperCollins, Simon&Schuster, Macmillan, and Hachette.
  • All 140,000+ iPhone apps run on it. A feature called pixel double lets your iPhone games run at double the normal size.
  • Mail. The redone and improved mail program is rich and capable.
  • Web browsing. Safari is the browser.
  • Syncs with iTunes, iPhoto, your contacts, and other Mac apps for music, photos, video, movies and games. All your iPod tunes, your photos, and other goodies work.
  • All new calendar features that are, like Mail, reworked and rife with rich features.
  • Mac iWorks apps including word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation software are available from the App Store for $9.99 each. This feature alone means the iPad can serve as a mobile work computer for many users. You can import iWork ’09 and Microsoft Office documents and send documents in iWork ’09 and PDF formats.
  • An optional keyboard dock can turn the iPad into a laptop-like desk machine. After noticing Steve Jobs make typos on the touchpad keyboard, @triciad tweeted that the keyboard dock means that maybe even Apple doesn't consider the touch pad so easy to use.

A feature it lacks, and one that keeps it out of the full-computer niche is multitasking. There's no way to have Twitter, Mail, Safari and Words with Friends all running at the same time. I'd like to see multitasking come in a later version, along with 3G wireless at every price point.

Cindy Li listed the users she immediately realized can benefit from the functionality of an iPad. She lists the vision impaired, snow birds who live in two places throughout the year, and travelers of all stripes.

I agree with her initial reaction, but I think that a lot of demand

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Virginia DeBolt 5 pts

This was written before anyone had one, so I appreciate you comments as an actual user.

Virginia DeBolt
BlogHer CE ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/virginia-debolt ) | Web Teacher ( http://www.webteacher.ws/ ) | First 50 Words ( http://first50.wordpress.com )

buzenteam 5 pts

Nice summary. Kindle has been my option but with the launch of the ipad, it was on instinct that I had to buy it since I also loved playing games. Now I play lots of puzzle games on my iPad. If you have tried Bejeweled or Tetris, you would really be interested to try out StarFaces. Certainly one of the best iPad app. I had
played this game on my iphone for a while and now I have it for ipad
and its great! Love the photos option

Virginia DeBolt 5 pts

Try going directly to http://ronnibennett.typepad.com/ instead of trying to get to timegoesby.net. Comes right up for me. I've been seeing posts in my RSS reader every day from TGB, too, so I think it's working just fine.

Virginia DeBolt
BlogHer Technology CE ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/virginia-debolt ) | Web Teacher ( http://www.webteacher.ws/ ) | First 50 Words ( http://first50.wordpress.com )

TheFoodShrink 5 pts

Virginia, thank you for explaining what the iPad does and doesn't do.  I appreciate you here and on Time Goes By.

And, on that subject, I have not been able to link to Time Goes By for about 3 days, either on my computer or my husband's, in either Mozilla or Google Chrome.  Stumped for how to contact them (cached copy still won't let me get to the site, although I can read the articles AND the daily updates sent to me in my email don't have functional links that work right now, either).  I remembered your name from their contributing editors list and thought I'd try this venue.  Sorry to hijack your topic...I'm still grateful for this post.  You can leave a response here or at maturelandscaping@gmail.com.  Thanks!

sassymonkey 6 pts moderator

Is what kind of DRM the e-books that Apple sells will have. The fact that it's e-pub is promising and I've got my fingers crossed that you don't have to read the ebooks on a iPad or iPhone. I already have an e-reader (not a Kindle) and really don't intend to upgrade any time soon. 

Contributing Editor Sassymonkey also blogs at Sassymonkey ( http://sassymonkey.ca ) and Sassymonkey Reads ( http://sassymonkeyreads.ca ).

Virginia DeBolt 5 pts

I love me some beautiful gadgets, too.

Virginia DeBolt
BlogHer Technology CE ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/virginia-debolt ) | Web Teacher ( http://www.webteacher.ws/ ) | First 50 Words ( http://first50.wordpress.com )

Elisa Camahort 5 pts

Look, I love my Kindle. Love it. For the functionality.

But the interface? Sux hard. And it's not particularly attractive. And everything about using it *except the availability of the WhisperNet and its incredibly fast, always-accessible access to buying books from Amazon* is clunky and a tiny bit frustrating.

It's like Amazon was begging Apple to eat its lunch on an e-reader.

So, I realize the baseline price is double the Kindle 2 price, and I do think that will slow the iPad's domination of the e-reader market. But then again, it does so much more than the Kindle...

I want one just because I want one. :) And I can't wait to compare the e-reading experience.

Elisa Camahort Page BlogHer elisa@blogher.com My BlogHer profile ( http://www.blogher.com/haystackprofile/viewprofile... ) truly shows you everything I do online...Check it out!!