Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Shops overwhelmed by iPad2 sales

 

Saturday, Apr 30, 2011


Gulf News

Dubai Apple’s official unveiling of the iPad2 tablet in the UAE yesterday was heartily embraced by consumers who cleaned out shelves at retailers across the country, leaving some store employees overwhelmed by the rush.


The new tablet that is 33 per cent thinner and 15 lighter than its predecessor was in high demand as evident from throngs of shoppers who descended upon iPad2 kiosks at electronics stores in Dubai.


After several hours of brisk sales, CarrefourCarrefour in the Mall of the Emirates only had a handful of more basic iPad2 tablets still available.


“We thought we had enough stock for weeks but everything is gone. What you see here is what you get,” a CarrefourCarrefour electronics department manager told a jostling group.


Better prices


Impatient shoppers demanded to know the store’s prices on different variations of the new iPad2 while clutching newspaper advertisements to compare prices. “Are you offering the same prices shown here?” one man asked a CarrefourCarrefour employee. “Can you give us better prices than this?” The employee said he couldn’t change the prices. It appears the prices of the six models of the iPad2 were the same in several popular stores checked by Gulf News yesterday morning.


CarrefourCarrefour, Jumbo ElectronicsJumbo Electronics and Plug-Ins offered the same prices such as Dh2,149 for the 16GB iPad2 with Wi-Fi only. The price for the 16GB model with Wi-Fi and 3G (that allows a SIM card to be inserted for permanent portable online access) was Dh2,649 at all three stores.


A 32GB model with Wi-Fi only set back consumers Dh2,549 while the price for the 32GB model with Wi-Fi and 3G was Dh3,099.

Shoppers paid Dh2,999 for the 64GB model with Wi-Fi and Dh3,599 for the 64 GB model with Wi-Fi and 3G.

A salesperson at Jumbo ElectronicsJumbo Electronics told a small crowd of iPad2 buyers that the Apple tablets were moving very fast. “I’ve sold 20 this morning already,” he said to people mobbing the iPad2 display inside the store. He said that many people waited until yesterday to buy the iPad2 rather than buy grey market models earlier.


By Derek Baldwin?Buiness Features Reporter

c Gulf News 2011. All rights reserved.

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Monday, May 30, 2011

Today's KUTV 2News Facebook Prize

NEW YORK, April 7 (UPI) -- Technology trackers said Thursday that U.S. retail giant Toys "R" Us would soon be selling Apple's hot-selling iPad2.


Web site ModMyi reported that a Toys "R" Us employee had sent it training material for iPad2 sales.


The material reviews iPad2 features and lists "accessories available at 'R' Us."


Intomobile reported the device is available at 10,000 retail outlets, including Walmart, Target, Best Buy and Radio Shack. Toys "R" Us also carries Apple's iPod.


A recent survey showed a move to a Toys "R" Us customer base might be a wise move for Apple. A Piper Jaffray survey said 20 percent of teenagers recently indicated they intended to buy a computer tablet within the next six months.


View the original article here

Ipad2 now here

Apple’s iPad2 is due to hit local stores starting on Friday, according to Power Mac Center.

Power Mac Center (PMC), a chain of retail shops and service providers of Apple products and accessories in the country, said it is also making the Apple iPad 2 and its original accessories officially available in the country with an exclusive offer. An iPad 2 purchase in any of the designated stores entitles customers to free 30-day coverage for accidental damage under the Save Mac program. This conveniently allows for a replacement of the iPad 2 in cases of sudden and unforeseen physical damage during the period of insurance.

Prices will be similar to those of the original iPad when it first came out late last year, according to a text message from Power Mac Center spokesman.

The newest and improved iPad 2 will now be available at Power Mac Center Apple Premium Reseller stores in Greenbelt 3, SM Mall of Asia, SM Megamall, The Annex at SM City North Edsa and TriNoma.

Moreover, PMC celebrates this launch with a three-day 10-percent sale on all iPad 2? accessories, including iPad 2 Smart Cover, an ingenious Apple technology especially designed for the iPad 2.

The iPad 2 is available in black or white, Wi-Fi only and 3G+Wi-Fi models, with 16 GB, 32 GB, and 64 GB capacities.

The latest iPad is “thinner, lighter and faster” from its predecessor and comes with two cameras.

?

View the original article here

Sunday, May 29, 2011

MEA Mobile Launches iSupr8 for Apple’s iPad2

April 27, 2011 07:07 AM?Eastern Daylight Time?Vintage Video Love with Apple's iPad2 and the 5th Annual Cambridge Super 8 Film Festival

NEW HAVEN, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--MEA Mobile today announced the iPad2 release of its market leading motion video filter app, iSupr8?. “The flexibility of the iPad 2 further extends the practical capabilities of indie filmmaking creativity,” says Bruce Seymour, Managing Director of MEA Mobile.

“I have seen, literally, millions of feet of 8mm film in my life time”

The release coincides with the upcoming Cambridge International Super 8 Film Festival which will take place?April 28th - May 1st. “We are honored for iSupr8 to be among the sponsors of the festival alongside the inventors of Super 8 film,” says Chris Mizsak of the Cambridge Super 8 Group.

iSupr8 filters your Apple iPhone and now Apple iPad2 videos with a professional Super 8mm film treatment. “I have seen, literally, millions of feet of 8mm film in my life time,” says Phil Lilley of Aarchive Film Productions “iSupr8 have made digital emulation look so authentic, from the scratches, to the light?effects...it's the closest thing I have seen that looks like film from a digital format.”

Map based geo tagging provided by Snapr brings mobile social functions to iSupr8. iSupr8 is the world’s first vintage video app to provide integrated geo-tagged video upload and sharing for iPad 2. View a live feed from within iSupr8 and see featured work at: share.isupr8.com

During the first 24 hours of the iSupr8? for iPad2 release, the app is on sale for 99 cents.

iSupr8? features:

iSupr8? Community: Click on iSupr8 Logo in Development Room Tru8?Processing: Advanced Super 8 Filters Export Video: Edit with Final Cut Pro X, or iMovie Share on Facebook or send via Email AirPlay Enabled: Stream to Apple TV

Tweet This: #iSupr8 | Instant Video Vintage for #iPad2 http://goo.gl/CjKvC

iSupr8? is available for Apple’s revolutionary products including: iPad 2, iPhone 4, iPhone 3GS, and 4th Gen iPod Touch. More info at: www.iSupr8.com

MEA Mobile?innovates on the Apple iOS and Google Android mobile platforms. The company’s breakthrough products include iGloLEDset, WiFi?controllable lights available for Apple iOS and Google Android. MEA Mobile is actively expanding?with offices in New Haven, Connecticut and Auckland, New Zealand.


View the original article here

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Apple Gets Set for iPad2 Boost

So it seems Apple really wanted to make the announcement themselves. The official press release of the launch of the iPad 2 in the Philippines after the jump.




CUPERTINO, California—April 27, 2011—AppleR today announced that iPadR 2, the second-generation of its breakthrough post-PC device, will arrive in Japan on Thursday, April 28 and Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and eight additional countries on Friday, April 29. iPad 2 will be available at Apple retail stores at 9 a.m. local time, select Apple Authorized Resellers, and online through the Apple StoreR (www.apple.com) beginning at 1 a.m. Additionally, iPad 2 with Wi-Fi will be available in China beginning Friday, May 6.


iPad 2 features an entirely new design that is 33 percent thinner and up to 15 percent lighter than the original iPad, while maintaining the same stunning 9.7-inch LED-backlit LCD screen. iPad 2 features Apple’s new dual-core A5 processor for blazing fast performance and stunning graphics and now includes two cameras, a front-facing VGA camera for FaceTimeR and Photo BoothR, and a rear-facing camera that captures 720p HD video, bringing the innovative FaceTime feature to iPad users for the first time. Though it is thinner, lighter, faster and packed with new features, iPad 2 still delivers up to 10 hours of battery life* that users have come to expect.

Last Chance to Win An iPad2

April 27, 2011 - Southern League (SL) Pensacola Northwest Florida Professional Baseball LLC has partnered with ToucanSave.com to give one lucky fan a brand new 16 gig iPad2. The fan appreciation contest, to honor you, the best fans in baseball. The winner of the iPad2 giveaway will be selected on Saturday, April 30th.

If you wish to enter, visit ToucanSave.com and select Pro-Baseball when signing up for the website's mailing list. This is a free e-mail subscription that features savings of 50-90% for local attractions. Once you have confirmed your e-mail address, you will automatically be entered in the contest.

The Northwest Florida Professional Baseball contest is open to all fans 18 and older who register with ToucanSave.com by noon on April 30, 2011. If you enter before noon on April 1, 2011 and select Pro-Baseball, you will be eligible for the Northwest Florida Professional Baseball April drawing as well as ToucanSave.com's March,and May iPad2 giveaways!

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The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.


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Friday, May 27, 2011

Are the BlackBerry PlayBook and LG G-Slate ready to take on iPad2?

By ANDY IHNATKO ai@andyi.com Apr 22, 2011 10:22PM

The launch of Blackberry's Playbook tablet in Toronto Tuesday, April 19, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

I’m not entirely sure that the tech industry will produce a tablet computer that can effectively compete against the iPad anytime soon. But it’s inevitable that somebody will produce a tablet that can succeed in the marketplace alongside the iPad, and it appears that the only way to design such a device is via the Braille Method: companies are just going to have to feel their away around until a clear answer reveals itself right under their fingers.

It’s the strong and slow boring of hard boards, as ideas are methodically tested and put out before the public. Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, when you get right to the truth, is the Giant Smartphone that myopic prognosticators predicted the iPad would be. Motorola’s Xoom is a nice piece of hardware, but it can mostly be summarized as “It’s like the iPad, only without all of the advantages.” It’s a double-bacon-cheeseburger made out of laminated soy instead of cow and pig. Not inedible, but why on earth would you order one when the genuine article is actually less expensive?

Two new tablets came out this week: RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook and LG’s G-Slate (offered in the US through T-Mobile). Each represents a departure from the iPad mold. Well, enough of a departure that they’ll avoid Motorola’s mistake, anyway. And while each has their individual pluses and minuses, they share three elements that indicate future directions for the Not-Really-An-iPad market to go.

They’re Both Pocketable

. . . In the sense that it’s at least conceivable that you can carry the PlayBook or the G-Slate around without a case or a bag.

That’s kind of a big deal. The iPad’s 10-inch screen contributes to the device’s unmatched latitude of functions but it also means you’ll always be carrying it in a bag, or jerking your head back towards the table you just left, panicked that you might have left your iPad folio case behind. And then remembering that oh, yes, it’s right here in my hand.

The G-Slate is just as wide as the iPad, so you get a nice full page width to work with when you’re working on a document or reading webpages. But the display has a widescreen aspect ratio, which makes it two or three inches shorter. It’s still too big to be considered “pocket-sized,” but nonetheless I can fit it in plenty of back pockets.

The PlayBook is just about the right size for a small tablet. It’s closer to the size of a Kindle than an iPad and it slides easily in most of my back pockets (note: my fashion statement is “I’d rather have useful pockets than dignity”) and it fits in many coat pockets as well.

The difference between the PlayBook and the iPad (and even the PlayBook and the G-Slate, to a lesser degree) is that it moves the tablet closer to being a ubiquitous device. What good is the greatest tablet in the world to you if you leave it at home?

I’ve been pondering this over the past couple of weeks. There’s something more intimate and personal about these smaller tablets. I like the size. I can’t see myself doing as much with a smaller tablet as I can with a larger one, but the smaller size could be a major draw for someone who’s looking for a tablet that functions less as a computer and more as a content device with web and email.

They Both Work As Standalone Devices

Out of the box, an iPad is a $500 mirror until you connect it to a PC or a Mac and establish an ongoing relationship between it and an iTunes library. It can download media and apps on its own, and it can sync content from other sources and other iTunes libraries, but the tether between this iPad and that computer is like piano wire. It’s the only way you can back up the device and install updates.

Setting up the PlayBook was a quick and (mostly) painless walk through a series of setup screens. There was one progress-halting glitch, but only provoked me to sigh and chalk it up to The Version 1.0 Disease, instead of provoking me to chuck the device into the drywall like a ninja star.

Speaking of Version 1.0 Disease: the first thing the PlayBook did once I configured it for my WiFi network was locate and download an OS update. Nice: OS updates are important enough that the responsibility for finding and installing them should be taken off of the shoulders of the user, who, after all, just wants to hurry up and start playing Farmville.

The G-Slate is an Android 3.0 device. I signed in with my Google ID and minutes later, it was fully configured with my email accounts and all of the Android apps I downloaded and installed when testing other Android phones and tablets. The G-Slate effectively became a clone of the Xoom tablet I’ve been keeping an eye on for the past couple of months.

In fact, my only Whiskey Tango Foxtrot moment came when the G-Slate suddenly connected to my secure WiFi network. Not cool, Google: I would never have consented to storing a secure network password in the cloud if I’d have been asked. And there went an hour of my day, as I reset the password and updated the 1.8 million devices in my house that use that router.

So is an untethered experience superior? It’s really just a style choice. The benefit is simplicity and a streamlined “out of the box” experience. Setting up an iPad is slightly irky, but it’s smooth. And many folks (myself included) see an advantage in the fact that the secrets on your iPad are kept between your iPad and your desktop without any need to tell the largest data-collection company in the world who all of your friends and business contacts are.

They Both Play Flash Content

And here, Envy reared its ugly head.

Apple won’t put a Flash player on the iPad. Steve Jobs even issued a papal bull on the subject, to address the charge that Apple is just trying to steer its users away from free content on the Web and towards paid content available through the iTunes Store.

Naw, I believe Steve. Philosophically, Apple thinks they should promote the more open HTML5 standard for video and interactivity. On a more practical note, they cite their opinion that Flash on a mobile device is crashy, it uses so much CPU that the battery burns up too fast, and that it doesn’t even deliver a good video or gaming experience to the user. I also think that philosophically at least, Apple chafes at the idea of tying part of their fortune to the whims and quality-control systems of an outside software company.

So be it. Apple has every right to decide the destiny of their own device. So far, they do seem to know what they’re going, yes?

But I think Apple’s completely wrong about Flash. I’ve been watching Conan and Colbert all week long on the PlayBook and the G-Slate; Flash video works perfectly fine. The framerate could be described as “slideshow-esque” until the local buffer fills up, but after no more than thirty seconds, I’m watching an hour of smooth, sound-synced video.

What does Flash video playback do to the battery? It drains down about as much as you’d expect when you play streamed, compressed video for an hour. On both devices, I can watch a couple of hours of video and still have most of the charge left.

Is the Flash plugin stable? Why, my friends, it’s just as stable as the desktop Flash player.

(Yes, thank you; I thought we’d all enjoy a good laugh together. Sorry if you were drinking something when you read that.)

The plugin does crash the mobile browser sometimes. But it rarely happens in the middle of playback and it doesn’t happen frequently enough for any regular desktop Flash user to raise an eyebrow. Hell, I’ve had to restart my desktop browser just while writing this very column.

Yup, Mobile Flash is imperfect. Gaming in particular is a real problem: Adobe hasn’t figured out how to translate the ubiquitous “a mouse pointer is hovering over something but isn’t clicking it” user-interface to a touchscreen device.

But Flash video plays a damned-sight better on the PlayBook and the G-Slate than it does on the iPad. It’s as simple as this: I can watch last night’s “Conan” and “The Colbert Report” and last week’s “The Amazing Race” on these tablets without any problems. On the iPad, I can’t. I like those shows. I therefore see this as a drawback of my iPad.

Hence, the Envy. Pulling out a little tablet and watching a recent TV show while you’re out enjoying a morning bagel is wonderful. Doubleplus-so if you’re doing it for free instead of for $1.99 per download.

The last twist of the knife: Apple claims that “no Flash” brings a few advantages to the iPad. Okay, well, if any of these advantages appeal to a G-Slate or PlayBook user, he or she can open a Preferences box and simply turn Flash off. Or, they can remove the plug-in entirely.

Spotlight Dance: The BlackBerry PlayBook

I hesitate to formally review the PlayBook because it doesn’t appear to be truly finished yet. The current model (available with 16, 32, or 64 gigs of storage) is WiFi-only; RIM promises that a 3G/4G model will be out later this year. The current model has — holy cats — no email client, calendar, or contacts database: RIM promises that those apps are coming.

The pickings in the PlayBook’s app store are painfully thin. When I couldn’t find a version of the Kindle app, I just assumed there was something wrong with the Search feature. I mean, honestly, about thirty minutes after I put my Wall-E animatronic toy on my WiFi network by installing an Arduino board, the doorbell rang and it was someone from Amazon offering to create a Kindle app for this thing I’d just built.

The PlayBook comes with a built-in reader and store app for Kobo, so it’s not as though you can’t use the it for e-books. No, I’m more concerned about how (the bloody hell) a major device like the PlayBook hits the market without lining up such an obvious and willing ally. It seems incredible that this — and certain other no-brainer apps — weren’t available for download on launch day.

I shall be kind and reckon that the app store, too, will begin to straighten itself out in the coming months. I spent most of my time with the PlayBook in the web browser and it’s media player apps and for whatever it’s worth . . . I liked ‘em.

I’ve already mentioned that this is a computer that can’t even get email, except via a webapp, and that there are practically no third-party apps for it. I think you know where this is going but I hope you’ll keep reading anyway because what’s actually here is actually rather nice.

The PlayBook is a handsome device: solid without feeling heavy, durable without feeling clunky. It’s been finished and machined like a business device, echoing RIM’s personality as a company that makes business communication devices.

But why, oh why did they make the Power button a tiny nailhead that’s mounted flush with the bezel? It takes effort to engage it. This design choice seems to state “You’re never meant to manually switch this thing into and out of Sleep mode.”

Charging is done from a standard Micro-USB port (hooray) or via a set of metal contacts that settle into a cradle. There’s also a micro-HDMI port for driving displays up to 1080p in dual-display or mirrored mode. Front and rear-facing cameras shoot decent 3 and 5-megapixel photos, and 1080p HD video.

Sound and Vision: its screen is the first one I’ve seen that can rival the iPad’s for color and clarity, and they didn’t skimp on the internal speakers, either. The PlayBook delivers surprisingly loud and rich sound. Clearly, the media experience was a priority and the device certainly delivers.

You can load up your PlayBook with content via USB. Alas, it doesn’t simply show up on your desktop as a simple USB mass storage device. You’ll need to install a set of drivers first. Once that’s done, you can just drag stuff straight in without any middleware. Built-in players support most video, audio, and picture formats, and the full Documents-To-Go suite lets you read and edit most Office files.

The PlayBook’s user interface is extremely encouraging. It’s simple, effective, and actually quite pretty, though I reckon that this last element is mostly enforced by the determination of the developer. The OS and its built-in aps have flow and logic. I didn’t get lost even once throughout my time with the device.

The screen’s touch sensor actually extends all the way to the edge of the glass instead of ending at the bezel. This allows for a simple and easy-to-learn set of gestures for controlling apps. Swiping from the top of the device into the screen displays an app’s function menu. Swiping across switches between open apps. Swiping up reveals the app launcher and manager.

Corner gestures do things like reveal and hide the keyboard (when an app doesn’t pull it up automatically) and the system ribbon. They’re not as obvious, but it’s a natural and easy extension of the concept.

As easy as it is to remember these gestures, the PlayBook also gives you visual cues when appropriate. Overall, I really think the PlayBook is on to something, here. I wish there were more apps available so that this interface could really crack its knuckles and put on a show. Even as-is, RIM seems to have come up with a lovely solution to the problem of managing a great many functions on a pocketable screen.

A marquee-level feature of the PlayBook is how well it plays with your BlackBerry phone. Once you’ve linked the two, the PlayBook becomes an extension of your handset, delivering big-screen apps for the mail, contacts, and appointments on the device. It’ll also automatically inherit any secure connections that your phone has, and the PlayBook can share the phone’s internet connection.

I’ve often said — without much snark intended — that a BlackBerry phone is more of a fleet vehicle than a sports car. It’s the one that you’re issued when you take your job. It was designed to appeal to the poor schmoes who have to support and maintain the dozens or hundreds of phones their IT department distributes, and not the people who have to use them every day. Whatever else the PlayBook is, it seems consistent with RIM’s existing corporate philosophy: at its core, it’s not “a whole second tablet computer that needs support” . . . it’s an extension of an existing phone.

I can’t really recommend the PlayBook to anybody today. Its present features work very well, and it’s a highly appealing pocket tablet. If RIM’s CEO had offered the world a 90-minute keynote demo of everything this tablet can do today, suffice to say that the world would be extremely excited to get their hands on it in three months time when it’s finished.

Alas, it’s shipping this week. I join the chorus of people who will scan the spec sheet and say “Seriously? No email client?” Today’s PlayBook would have to be pretty damned inexpensive before anybody could overlook its omissions, uncertainties, and imponderables.

I’ll talk about pricing at the end but: no, the PlayBook is most assuredly not Pretty Damned Inexpensive.

Spotlight Dance: LG G-Slate

There’s much less left for me to say about the G-Slate. It’s an Android 3.0 slate, and therefore most of what I wrote about the usability of the Motorola Xoom a couple of months ago applies here. It’s a functional tablet OS with very little that seems exciting or even particularly clever.

Mostly, the Android OS is like the plumbing in your house. It shakes and rattles and if it were put together right it wouldn’t do that, but it works and you really take no notice of it. You’re neither a fan nor an enemy. The G-Slate, like other Android tablets, expresses itself through the apps you download. The Kindle app works fine. Cool, now I’m streaming music via Pandora. Etc.

The Maps and Navigation features kick the iPad’s built-in butt up and down the schoolyard, though. The G-Slate ships with the full 3D version of Google Maps. In practically any city with more than three Starbucks you can explore and navigate through a 3D model of the street map. Multitouch gestures are quick and agile thanks to the G-Slate’s dual-core processor.

Turn-by-turn voice navigation is free and easy. As usual, touch a button and say “Navigate to The Outer Limits in Waltham” and within a few seconds, you’re on your way to the comic book store.

The G-Slate specifically is highly appealing. I’ve already spoken of the appeal of a smaller tablet. The G-Slate, with its credible Android app library, can articulate that advantage much better than the PlayBook or the Galaxy Tab. The device comes across as A Wicked Awesome Reader (whether you’re reading books, websites, documents, or email) as opposed to a cut-down tablet.

That’s not meant to downplay the G-Slate’s capabilities. When hooked up to my Bluetooth keyboard, it became a perfectly serviceable word processor, though I point out that “perfectly serviceable” is several syllables off from “perfect” and several cuts down from the total solution that the iPad represents.

The G-Slate is a slim-and-trim tablet that takes most of its design cues from the iPad. It’s heavier than the iPad 2, though, and its smaller footprint makes it feel even heavier. Ports include the customary mini-HDMI and micro-USB ports and, annoyingly, a separate needle-thin hole for a special charger. File this under “another thing you have to remember to pack for your trip.” The battery lasts an iPad-standard “8 to 10 hours” in practice.

The screen is gorgeous: it’s a full 720p HD display (1280x768). HD videos — even streamed from YouTube — look great but the display really performs in detail-ey apps like Google Maps. Put it side-by-side against the iPad and the PlayBook, however, and you can tell that it isn’t rendering the same wide gamut of colors as the other displays.

The G-Slate is also the first major 4G tablet to hit the market. The Xoom promises 4G LTE speeds later this year, and that’s lovely, but for now, this is the only one that’s delivering. Bonus: T-Mobile doesn’t charge for WiFi hotspot tethering, so you can share your 4G connection to nearby devices for free.

(Here it comes…)

The G-Slate has front and rear-facing 2 and 5-megapixel cameras. As usual for tablets, they shoot decent HD video.

(Here it is…)

. . . And the rear-facing camera shoots in 3D.

I was lying about the Amazon rep coming to my house to write me a Kindle client but I swear I’m telling the truth about this: the G-Slate has two cameras and you can shoot video in HD, using either 1950‘s style red/green anaglyph (which you can view on any screen or on any print, if you’re wearing plastic 3D glasses) or side-by-side 3D (which only works on 3D TVs).

OK, well, yes: it’s a gimmick. But it’s a fun one. You will spend a silly amount of time shooting in 3D. You’ll also likely take 3D video of pretty much anyone you show this tablet to. You will shoot your own version of Dr. Tongue’s 3-D House Of Pancakes.

It won’t transform your life. The 3D video isn’t even terribly good. But look: it’s a fun feature and it’s not as though the G-Slate would have cost $100 less without that second camera. I sincerely say that I welcome the presence of a somewhat daft-but-cool feature in a major hardware release, so long as it doesn’t get in your way when you get sick of playing with it.

Back To The Similarities

So we have the PlayBook, which shows lots of promise but clearly isn’t ready for retail yet, and the G-Slate, which is actually quite an attractive little tablet, and at least offers an answer to the question “Why would I buy this instead of an iPad?”

Specifically: because it’s slightly more likely to fit into a pocket and it plays Flash. Neither of these are convincing answers but at least they’re credible ones.

Alas, both of these tablets are kneecapped by the toughest problem facing any iPad competitor: they’re way too expensive. The WiFi-only PlayBook costs $499, $599 and $699 for its 16, 32, and 64 gig models. It’s exactly the same pricing as the iPad 2. An utter nonstarter, particularly given the severe limitations of the device.

The 32-gigabyte G-Slate is available for $529 after applying an instant coupon and a mail-in rebate ... and after you sign a two-year contract. 5 gigs of data per month will run you $49 a month, which is the next step up after the damned-near-useless 200 megabytes a month plan.

The off-contract price is $749. By comparison, the 32 gig iPad 3G is $729, with 2 gigabytes of monthly data for $25 and no contract or additional charges . . . and remember, the cheapest “free and clear” iPad is $499.

The range of pricing options available for the G-Slate complicates things a bit but the conclusion is still pretty clear: it’s a tough sell. Even if, for the sake of argument, we say that the iPad’s OS and apps aren’t superior (a subjective opinion, but I’ll argue it until you want to gnaw your own ears off), and even if we say that the size of the iPad’s app library shouldn’t be a factor in the decision (but do keep in mind that you could buy every tablet-optimized Android 3.0 app in the Marketplace and still have enough change from a hundred dollar bill to go out for a nice dinner) . . .

. . .

. . . Where was I?

Well, whatever. The G-Slate takes the crown as My Favorite Android Tablet but that’s an aside. We must come right back to the point that anybody with $600 to spend on a tablet and who’s willing to spend another grand in wireless fees isn’t buying an Android device. They’re headed straight for an Apple Store. Where they still can’t buy an iPad for another couple of weeks yet, because several million Americans have already come to the exact same conclusion and they got to the store first.

Nonetheless, these devices show some of the gaps in the iPad’s armor. Some day, someone’s going to make a 7-inch or 9-inch Android tablet that can play Flash videos and they’ll sell it free-and-clear for $200 less than the cheapest iPad. Or, they’ll add a mix of features that Apple isn’t interested in but which this company has incorporated flawlessly.

When that day comes, people like me will stop talking about the finer points of the app store ecosystem and a well-thought-out interface and a high-quality user experience and will start saying things like “. . . but damn, for $250 it’s one hell of a great deal.”


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iPad2 finally in India

 

Bangalore: Apple has officially announced that it will launch its iPad 2 in India this week. iPad 2 will land in Japan April 28th and will be launched in India, Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore and seven additional countries on April 29.


According to the company statement, the maximum retail price for 16GB model iPad 2 with Wi-Fi is available at 29,500 and the device will be sold at 34,500 for the 32GB model and at 39,500 for the 64GB model.


The third-generation version of the iPad 2 with Wi-Fi will be sold at a maximum retail price of 36,900 for the 16GB model, 41,900 for the 32GB model and Rs 46,900 for the 64GB model.


Featuring a new design, iPad 2 is 33 percent thinner and up to 15 percent lighter than the original iPad. The device also features Apple's new dual-core A5 processor and includes two cameras, a front-facing VGA camera and a rear-facing camera.

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

ZSL's CLM Mechanix, Closed Loop Marketing Solution Now Available on the iPad2

Edison, NJ (Vocus/PRWEB) April 06, 2011

CLM Mechanix, a closed loop marketing tool used to automate the production and distribution of unique one to one messaging to key target audiences, today announces the integration with Apple iPad2. The CLM Mechanix iPad Application lets customers leverage the recent deployment and utility of the iPad2 providing complete access to mobile enabled user functionality provided by the big 9.7'' touch-screen and excellent battery life of Apple’s device.

ZSL is proud to announce that CLM Mechanix is now available on the Apple iPad2. Through these mobile devices, users gain near Real-Time connectivity to analytics and when this data is adequately translated to information in market materials, it can truly help “marketing go local”. Users of CLM Mechanix quickly learn the power of the EZ-button. With a few simple quick selections, users have set-up and execute the EX-button and thereby build instant cross-media variable-data market campaigns to your key targets or customers.

Commenting on CLM Mechanix's availability on the Apple iPad2, Timothy Paeschke, CLM Mechanix’s Senior Director for Enterprise Solutions stated:

“We created CLM Mechanix to make data actionable. We’ve taken existing market research data, and combined it with a powerful “digital delivery” storefront and by choosing certain magic metrics to target the most appropriate individuals with the most appropriate messages. CLM Mechanix manages the processes involved in creating a fully cross-media campaign experience, enabling your marketing materials with unique personalization and custom messaging that is personally relevant and up-to-date. CLM Mechanix can provide the information that key targets ask for and require.”

CLM Mechanix is truly a mobile marketing solution also available on iPhone, Blackberry and Android platforms. CLM Mechanix is a next-generation of automated Closed Loop Marketing tool available to all businesses, and used particularly well in Pharmaceuticals, Healthcare and Life Sciences.

CLM Mechanix provides cross media communication through delivery of messages across all channels including Email, Personal URL web-landing pages, Direct Mail, all incorporated in your field representatives call cycles for personal delivery. PURL's (Personal URL) will empower the sales representatives to have one custom portal for each doctor. Sales Collateral, presentations and Demo Videos can be stored for easy access.

"This is a truly a remarkable moment for ZSL Inc. Today with the help of our team, ZSL Pharma is well poised to leverage the opportunities being created within the Pharmaceutical Industry, especially as it involves our expertise in automation of business processes, providing our clients efficiencies with their current tools and new stand-alone solutions based on their needs and configurations. We are truly excited at the launch of our new Closed Loop Marketing Mechanix web-based tool and for our dedicated http://www.CLM-Mechanix.com web-site. CLM Mechanix provides additional growth and expansion within the American markets and facilitates our further penetration in new markets within Canada, South America, Europe and Asia", as stated Sudarshan Venkatram, Chairman and CEO of ZSL Inc.

For more information, please contact Tim Paeschke at (732) 379-3954 or visit our new website at http://www.clm-mechanix.com.

About CLM Mechanix

Closed Loop Marketing Mechanix delivers data-driven personalized communications to your targets, based on prescribing history, plan association, physician specialty, or any other recorded/tracked interaction. Campaigns can be executed with or without sales team support and done with messaging at the local level in any combination of communication formats including Direct Mail and Print, email, personal web-landing pages or PURLs and now through Mobile Devices. Website: http://www.clm-mechanix.com

About ZSL
Closed Loop Marketing Mechanix is brought to you by ZSL, Inc, a global provider of software and technology services. The company is headquartered in Edison, NJ, and currently employs more than 3500 IT and Business professionals worldwide. Additional offices include: U.K., Canada, France, Singapore, Malaysia, Dubai, and India.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Apple faces Japan earthquake supply concerns

The Californian company has not spoken about the impact of the earthquake and tsunami in a country which is a hub for key components such as touch-screen glass, batteries and memory sticks. Apple's latest device, the iPad2, came out on the same day the quake struck and analysts believe it is likely to hit sales and margins next quarter.

"The biggest concern at the moment is quite short term in nature and that revolves around the supply chain that is a global issue following the catastrophe in Japan," said Daniel Ernst, an analyst at Hudson Square Research.

Supply constraints are not new to Apple, which as well as the iPad2 introduced a new version of the iPhone 4 for some of its customers in the US last quarter. Apple has historically said little about its supply chain and sourcing of the components that go into its devices.

However, the prices of certain key parts have risen since the earthquake. The cost of a 64-gigabit flash chip has climbed 13pc since Japan's worst earthquake struck on March 11. "They [Apple] are in the best position to manage it but there's virtually no way they won't have some impact," said Mr Ernst.

In the final quarter of 2010, Apple had a gross profit margin of 38.5pc, and analysts say that could decline by up to 3 percentage points in the next three months.

Analysts who track Apple are expecting sales in the company's latest quarter to have climbed 73pc to $23.4bn (£14.3bn), while profits are forecast to come in at $5.39 per share compared with $3.33 in the same period last year.

"Apple is the company that is best capturing revenues and profits from the mobile revolution, in our opinion," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners.

The company's results have so far seen little disruption from the decision by Steve Jobs, its co-founder and chief executive, to take medical leave in January. Apple have remained tight-lipped on Mr Jobs's decision but he was off for the first six months of 2009 to have a liver transplant.

Though he recommends investors buy Apple shares, Mr Gillis does not expect them to repeat the 50pc gains they enjoyed last year. A combination of higher components prices, uncertainty over the future of Mr Jobs and increasing competition to the iPad will hold back the share price performance, he said.


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iNsane? Auburn, Maine, Is Giving an iPad2 to Every Kindergarten Student

Maine (who would have guessed?) continues to lead the way in education technology. Not only is the state an international leader in tech literacy due to their one-to-one laptop program for middle and high school students, now one small town plans to give an iPad 2 to every kindergarten student.

The school board in Auburn, population 24,000, voted unanimously to provide the tablets to 285 kindergarteners and their teachers. At $475 a pop, the investment will cost around $200,000, but the board hopes the tablets will help boost literacy from 62 percent to 90 percent by 2013. Superintendent Tom Morrill says the investment's worth it, calling the devices "essential" and saying they're "even more important than a book." Morrill hopes to make the investment an annual one, giving iPads to every following class. His plan is to pay for the devices with private donations, but if that falls through, the bill will fall to the city's taxpayers.

Not all taxpayers are thrilled about that possibility. Nicole Fortin told the Bangor Daily News she thinks the idea's "crazy." Taxpayers are already strapped and worries about about kids breaking the devices—the students will get to take the iPads home—are rampant. "This is a lot to put in the hands of a 5-year-old," says Fortin. With student addiction to media now the norm, parents are also concerned about giving so much screen time to such young kids.

But, in the video above, you can see how excited the students are to learn their letters using downloadable apps, and the state's laptop program has boosted student achievement. What do you think? Should kindergarteners stick to "old school" books or is Auburn on the right track?

photo via The Apple Bites


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Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Win an iPad2 from Simply Self Storage

Simply Self Storage is giving away the new iPad2 to one lucky winner on Facebook.

Salt Lake City, UT (Vocus/PRWEB) April 12, 2011

Simply Self Storage is offering visitors to their website a chance to win an all-new iPad2. People interested in getting their hands on their very own iPad2 now have a chance to get it for free. Contestants can enter the contest by “Liking” Simply Self Storage on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/simplyselfstorage). It’s that simple! Rent a unit with Simply Self Storage and they can double their chances with two entries!

Simply Self Storage provides safe, secure storage for all kinds of items, from simple household belongings to boat and car storage. They have many self storage locations all over the United States and offer both short-term and long-term storage on a month to month basis. Simply Self Storage is your one-stop-shop for locks, boxes and packing supplies and they even provide truck rentals through Penske.

The winner of the contest will receive the sleek new iPad2 from Apple. It is thinner, lighter and faster than its predecessor. The Dual Core A5 Chip makes surfing the web a much smoother experience. Whether watching a movie or playing games, the iPad2 gives you flawless video. It offers two cameras, one of them shoots HD video, and the other is for FaceTime Video Calling.

The storage experts at each Simply Self Storage location give people helpful tips and advice on how to pack and move efficiently and they can assess the amount of storage their customers will need based on what they plan on storing. Most locations offer climate controlled units to protect valuable items that could be damaged by inclement weather.

About Simply Self Storage. Simply Self Storage is the solution to all your self storage needs. With thousands of self storage units nationwide Simply Self Storage is taking the hassle out of self storage and making it simple. With the click of a mouse, people can choose their unit size, reserve a unit, make a payment and more! As one of the nation's largest independent self storage companies you'll always find a self storage facility that is convenient and clean. Many of their storage locations have heated and cooled units, video surveillance monitoring, secure gated access, RV and boat parking and moving truck rentals. Simply Self Storage is also your one stop shop for boxes, tape, padding material, locks and more. Each location is clean, professionally managed and offers state-of-the-art security so that your belongings will always be safe and secure.

# # #

Christina Furnia
Simply Self Storage
407-248-7878
Email Information


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Monday, May 23, 2011

The first dedicated iPad2 camera app - Camera Boost

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Are the BlackBerry PlayBook and LG G-Slate ready to take on iPad2?

By ANDY IHNATKO ai@andyi.com Apr 22, 2011 10:22PM

The launch of Blackberry's Playbook tablet in Toronto Tuesday, April 19, 2011. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

I’m not entirely sure that the tech industry will produce a tablet computer that can effectively compete against the iPad anytime soon. But it’s inevitable that somebody will produce a tablet that can succeed in the marketplace alongside the iPad, and it appears that the only way to design such a device is via the Braille Method: companies are just going to have to feel their away around until a clear answer reveals itself right under their fingers.

It’s the strong and slow boring of hard boards, as ideas are methodically tested and put out before the public. Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, when you get right to the truth, is the Giant Smartphone that myopic prognosticators predicted the iPad would be. Motorola’s Xoom is a nice piece of hardware, but it can mostly be summarized as “It’s like the iPad, only without all of the advantages.” It’s a double-bacon-cheeseburger made out of laminated soy instead of cow and pig. Not inedible, but why on earth would you order one when the genuine article is actually less expensive?

Two new tablets came out this week: RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook and LG’s G-Slate (offered in the US through T-Mobile). Each represents a departure from the iPad mold. Well, enough of a departure that they’ll avoid Motorola’s mistake, anyway. And while each has their individual pluses and minuses, they share three elements that indicate future directions for the Not-Really-An-iPad market to go.

They’re Both Pocketable

. . . In the sense that it’s at least conceivable that you can carry the PlayBook or the G-Slate around without a case or a bag.

That’s kind of a big deal. The iPad’s 10-inch screen contributes to the device’s unmatched latitude of functions but it also means you’ll always be carrying it in a bag, or jerking your head back towards the table you just left, panicked that you might have left your iPad folio case behind. And then remembering that oh, yes, it’s right here in my hand.

The G-Slate is just as wide as the iPad, so you get a nice full page width to work with when you’re working on a document or reading webpages. But the display has a widescreen aspect ratio, which makes it two or three inches shorter. It’s still too big to be considered “pocket-sized,” but nonetheless I can fit it in plenty of back pockets.

The PlayBook is just about the right size for a small tablet. It’s closer to the size of a Kindle than an iPad and it slides easily in most of my back pockets (note: my fashion statement is “I’d rather have useful pockets than dignity”) and it fits in many coat pockets as well.

The difference between the PlayBook and the iPad (and even the PlayBook and the G-Slate, to a lesser degree) is that it moves the tablet closer to being a ubiquitous device. What good is the greatest tablet in the world to you if you leave it at home?

I’ve been pondering this over the past couple of weeks. There’s something more intimate and personal about these smaller tablets. I like the size. I can’t see myself doing as much with a smaller tablet as I can with a larger one, but the smaller size could be a major draw for someone who’s looking for a tablet that functions less as a computer and more as a content device with web and email.

They Both Work As Standalone Devices

Out of the box, an iPad is a $500 mirror until you connect it to a PC or a Mac and establish an ongoing relationship between it and an iTunes library. It can download media and apps on its own, and it can sync content from other sources and other iTunes libraries, but the tether between this iPad and that computer is like piano wire. It’s the only way you can back up the device and install updates.

Setting up the PlayBook was a quick and (mostly) painless walk through a series of setup screens. There was one progress-halting glitch, but only provoked me to sigh and chalk it up to The Version 1.0 Disease, instead of provoking me to chuck the device into the drywall like a ninja star.

Speaking of Version 1.0 Disease: the first thing the PlayBook did once I configured it for my WiFi network was locate and download an OS update. Nice: OS updates are important enough that the responsibility for finding and installing them should be taken off of the shoulders of the user, who, after all, just wants to hurry up and start playing Farmville.

The G-Slate is an Android 3.0 device. I signed in with my Google ID and minutes later, it was fully configured with my email accounts and all of the Android apps I downloaded and installed when testing other Android phones and tablets. The G-Slate effectively became a clone of the Xoom tablet I’ve been keeping an eye on for the past couple of months.

In fact, my only Whiskey Tango Foxtrot moment came when the G-Slate suddenly connected to my secure WiFi network. Not cool, Google: I would never have consented to storing a secure network password in the cloud if I’d have been asked. And there went an hour of my day, as I reset the password and updated the 1.8 million devices in my house that use that router.

So is an untethered experience superior? It’s really just a style choice. The benefit is simplicity and a streamlined “out of the box” experience. Setting up an iPad is slightly irky, but it’s smooth. And many folks (myself included) see an advantage in the fact that the secrets on your iPad are kept between your iPad and your desktop without any need to tell the largest data-collection company in the world who all of your friends and business contacts are.

They Both Play Flash Content

And here, Envy reared its ugly head.

Apple won’t put a Flash player on the iPad. Steve Jobs even issued a papal bull on the subject, to address the charge that Apple is just trying to steer its users away from free content on the Web and towards paid content available through the iTunes Store.

Naw, I believe Steve. Philosophically, Apple thinks they should promote the more open HTML5 standard for video and interactivity. On a more practical note, they cite their opinion that Flash on a mobile device is crashy, it uses so much CPU that the battery burns up too fast, and that it doesn’t even deliver a good video or gaming experience to the user. I also think that philosophically at least, Apple chafes at the idea of tying part of their fortune to the whims and quality-control systems of an outside software company.

So be it. Apple has every right to decide the destiny of their own device. So far, they do seem to know what they’re going, yes?

But I think Apple’s completely wrong about Flash. I’ve been watching Conan and Colbert all week long on the PlayBook and the G-Slate; Flash video works perfectly fine. The framerate could be described as “slideshow-esque” until the local buffer fills up, but after no more than thirty seconds, I’m watching an hour of smooth, sound-synced video.

What does Flash video playback do to the battery? It drains down about as much as you’d expect when you play streamed, compressed video for an hour. On both devices, I can watch a couple of hours of video and still have most of the charge left.

Is the Flash plugin stable? Why, my friends, it’s just as stable as the desktop Flash player.

(Yes, thank you; I thought we’d all enjoy a good laugh together. Sorry if you were drinking something when you read that.)

The plugin does crash the mobile browser sometimes. But it rarely happens in the middle of playback and it doesn’t happen frequently enough for any regular desktop Flash user to raise an eyebrow. Hell, I’ve had to restart my desktop browser just while writing this very column.

Yup, Mobile Flash is imperfect. Gaming in particular is a real problem: Adobe hasn’t figured out how to translate the ubiquitous “a mouse pointer is hovering over something but isn’t clicking it” user-interface to a touchscreen device.

But Flash video plays a damned-sight better on the PlayBook and the G-Slate than it does on the iPad. It’s as simple as this: I can watch last night’s “Conan” and “The Colbert Report” and last week’s “The Amazing Race” on these tablets without any problems. On the iPad, I can’t. I like those shows. I therefore see this as a drawback of my iPad.

Hence, the Envy. Pulling out a little tablet and watching a recent TV show while you’re out enjoying a morning bagel is wonderful. Doubleplus-so if you’re doing it for free instead of for $1.99 per download.

The last twist of the knife: Apple claims that “no Flash” brings a few advantages to the iPad. Okay, well, if any of these advantages appeal to a G-Slate or PlayBook user, he or she can open a Preferences box and simply turn Flash off. Or, they can remove the plug-in entirely.

Spotlight Dance: The BlackBerry PlayBook

I hesitate to formally review the PlayBook because it doesn’t appear to be truly finished yet. The current model (available with 16, 32, or 64 gigs of storage) is WiFi-only; RIM promises that a 3G/4G model will be out later this year. The current model has — holy cats — no email client, calendar, or contacts database: RIM promises that those apps are coming.

The pickings in the PlayBook’s app store are painfully thin. When I couldn’t find a version of the Kindle app, I just assumed there was something wrong with the Search feature. I mean, honestly, about thirty minutes after I put my Wall-E animatronic toy on my WiFi network by installing an Arduino board, the doorbell rang and it was someone from Amazon offering to create a Kindle app for this thing I’d just built.

The PlayBook comes with a built-in reader and store app for Kobo, so it’s not as though you can’t use the it for e-books. No, I’m more concerned about how (the bloody hell) a major device like the PlayBook hits the market without lining up such an obvious and willing ally. It seems incredible that this — and certain other no-brainer apps — weren’t available for download on launch day.

I shall be kind and reckon that the app store, too, will begin to straighten itself out in the coming months. I spent most of my time with the PlayBook in the web browser and it’s media player apps and for whatever it’s worth . . . I liked ‘em.

I’ve already mentioned that this is a computer that can’t even get email, except via a webapp, and that there are practically no third-party apps for it. I think you know where this is going but I hope you’ll keep reading anyway because what’s actually here is actually rather nice.

The PlayBook is a handsome device: solid without feeling heavy, durable without feeling clunky. It’s been finished and machined like a business device, echoing RIM’s personality as a company that makes business communication devices.

But why, oh why did they make the Power button a tiny nailhead that’s mounted flush with the bezel? It takes effort to engage it. This design choice seems to state “You’re never meant to manually switch this thing into and out of Sleep mode.”

Charging is done from a standard Micro-USB port (hooray) or via a set of metal contacts that settle into a cradle. There’s also a micro-HDMI port for driving displays up to 1080p in dual-display or mirrored mode. Front and rear-facing cameras shoot decent 3 and 5-megapixel photos, and 1080p HD video.

Sound and Vision: its screen is the first one I’ve seen that can rival the iPad’s for color and clarity, and they didn’t skimp on the internal speakers, either. The PlayBook delivers surprisingly loud and rich sound. Clearly, the media experience was a priority and the device certainly delivers.

You can load up your PlayBook with content via USB. Alas, it doesn’t simply show up on your desktop as a simple USB mass storage device. You’ll need to install a set of drivers first. Once that’s done, you can just drag stuff straight in without any middleware. Built-in players support most video, audio, and picture formats, and the full Documents-To-Go suite lets you read and edit most Office files.

The PlayBook’s user interface is extremely encouraging. It’s simple, effective, and actually quite pretty, though I reckon that this last element is mostly enforced by the determination of the developer. The OS and its built-in aps have flow and logic. I didn’t get lost even once throughout my time with the device.

The screen’s touch sensor actually extends all the way to the edge of the glass instead of ending at the bezel. This allows for a simple and easy-to-learn set of gestures for controlling apps. Swiping from the top of the device into the screen displays an app’s function menu. Swiping across switches between open apps. Swiping up reveals the app launcher and manager.

Corner gestures do things like reveal and hide the keyboard (when an app doesn’t pull it up automatically) and the system ribbon. They’re not as obvious, but it’s a natural and easy extension of the concept.

As easy as it is to remember these gestures, the PlayBook also gives you visual cues when appropriate. Overall, I really think the PlayBook is on to something, here. I wish there were more apps available so that this interface could really crack its knuckles and put on a show. Even as-is, RIM seems to have come up with a lovely solution to the problem of managing a great many functions on a pocketable screen.

A marquee-level feature of the PlayBook is how well it plays with your BlackBerry phone. Once you’ve linked the two, the PlayBook becomes an extension of your handset, delivering big-screen apps for the mail, contacts, and appointments on the device. It’ll also automatically inherit any secure connections that your phone has, and the PlayBook can share the phone’s internet connection.

I’ve often said — without much snark intended — that a BlackBerry phone is more of a fleet vehicle than a sports car. It’s the one that you’re issued when you take your job. It was designed to appeal to the poor schmoes who have to support and maintain the dozens or hundreds of phones their IT department distributes, and not the people who have to use them every day. Whatever else the PlayBook is, it seems consistent with RIM’s existing corporate philosophy: at its core, it’s not “a whole second tablet computer that needs support” . . . it’s an extension of an existing phone.

I can’t really recommend the PlayBook to anybody today. Its present features work very well, and it’s a highly appealing pocket tablet. If RIM’s CEO had offered the world a 90-minute keynote demo of everything this tablet can do today, suffice to say that the world would be extremely excited to get their hands on it in three months time when it’s finished.

Alas, it’s shipping this week. I join the chorus of people who will scan the spec sheet and say “Seriously? No email client?” Today’s PlayBook would have to be pretty damned inexpensive before anybody could overlook its omissions, uncertainties, and imponderables.

I’ll talk about pricing at the end but: no, the PlayBook is most assuredly not Pretty Damned Inexpensive.

Spotlight Dance: LG G-Slate

There’s much less left for me to say about the G-Slate. It’s an Android 3.0 slate, and therefore most of what I wrote about the usability of the Motorola Xoom a couple of months ago applies here. It’s a functional tablet OS with very little that seems exciting or even particularly clever.

Mostly, the Android OS is like the plumbing in your house. It shakes and rattles and if it were put together right it wouldn’t do that, but it works and you really take no notice of it. You’re neither a fan nor an enemy. The G-Slate, like other Android tablets, expresses itself through the apps you download. The Kindle app works fine. Cool, now I’m streaming music via Pandora. Etc.

The Maps and Navigation features kick the iPad’s built-in butt up and down the schoolyard, though. The G-Slate ships with the full 3D version of Google Maps. In practically any city with more than three Starbucks you can explore and navigate through a 3D model of the street map. Multitouch gestures are quick and agile thanks to the G-Slate’s dual-core processor.

Turn-by-turn voice navigation is free and easy. As usual, touch a button and say “Navigate to The Outer Limits in Waltham” and within a few seconds, you’re on your way to the comic book store.

The G-Slate specifically is highly appealing. I’ve already spoken of the appeal of a smaller tablet. The G-Slate, with its credible Android app library, can articulate that advantage much better than the PlayBook or the Galaxy Tab. The device comes across as A Wicked Awesome Reader (whether you’re reading books, websites, documents, or email) as opposed to a cut-down tablet.

That’s not meant to downplay the G-Slate’s capabilities. When hooked up to my Bluetooth keyboard, it became a perfectly serviceable word processor, though I point out that “perfectly serviceable” is several syllables off from “perfect” and several cuts down from the total solution that the iPad represents.

The G-Slate is a slim-and-trim tablet that takes most of its design cues from the iPad. It’s heavier than the iPad 2, though, and its smaller footprint makes it feel even heavier. Ports include the customary mini-HDMI and micro-USB ports and, annoyingly, a separate needle-thin hole for a special charger. File this under “another thing you have to remember to pack for your trip.” The battery lasts an iPad-standard “8 to 10 hours” in practice.

The screen is gorgeous: it’s a full 720p HD display (1280x768). HD videos — even streamed from YouTube — look great but the display really performs in detail-ey apps like Google Maps. Put it side-by-side against the iPad and the PlayBook, however, and you can tell that it isn’t rendering the same wide gamut of colors as the other displays.

The G-Slate is also the first major 4G tablet to hit the market. The Xoom promises 4G LTE speeds later this year, and that’s lovely, but for now, this is the only one that’s delivering. Bonus: T-Mobile doesn’t charge for WiFi hotspot tethering, so you can share your 4G connection to nearby devices for free.

(Here it comes…)

The G-Slate has front and rear-facing 2 and 5-megapixel cameras. As usual for tablets, they shoot decent HD video.

(Here it is…)

. . . And the rear-facing camera shoots in 3D.

I was lying about the Amazon rep coming to my house to write me a Kindle client but I swear I’m telling the truth about this: the G-Slate has two cameras and you can shoot video in HD, using either 1950‘s style red/green anaglyph (which you can view on any screen or on any print, if you’re wearing plastic 3D glasses) or side-by-side 3D (which only works on 3D TVs).

OK, well, yes: it’s a gimmick. But it’s a fun one. You will spend a silly amount of time shooting in 3D. You’ll also likely take 3D video of pretty much anyone you show this tablet to. You will shoot your own version of Dr. Tongue’s 3-D House Of Pancakes.

It won’t transform your life. The 3D video isn’t even terribly good. But look: it’s a fun feature and it’s not as though the G-Slate would have cost $100 less without that second camera. I sincerely say that I welcome the presence of a somewhat daft-but-cool feature in a major hardware release, so long as it doesn’t get in your way when you get sick of playing with it.

Back To The Similarities

So we have the PlayBook, which shows lots of promise but clearly isn’t ready for retail yet, and the G-Slate, which is actually quite an attractive little tablet, and at least offers an answer to the question “Why would I buy this instead of an iPad?”

Specifically: because it’s slightly more likely to fit into a pocket and it plays Flash. Neither of these are convincing answers but at least they’re credible ones.

Alas, both of these tablets are kneecapped by the toughest problem facing any iPad competitor: they’re way too expensive. The WiFi-only PlayBook costs $499, $599 and $699 for its 16, 32, and 64 gig models. It’s exactly the same pricing as the iPad 2. An utter nonstarter, particularly given the severe limitations of the device.

The 32-gigabyte G-Slate is available for $529 after applying an instant coupon and a mail-in rebate ... and after you sign a two-year contract. 5 gigs of data per month will run you $49 a month, which is the next step up after the damned-near-useless 200 megabytes a month plan.

The off-contract price is $749. By comparison, the 32 gig iPad 3G is $729, with 2 gigabytes of monthly data for $25 and no contract or additional charges . . . and remember, the cheapest “free and clear” iPad is $499.

The range of pricing options available for the G-Slate complicates things a bit but the conclusion is still pretty clear: it’s a tough sell. Even if, for the sake of argument, we say that the iPad’s OS and apps aren’t superior (a subjective opinion, but I’ll argue it until you want to gnaw your own ears off), and even if we say that the size of the iPad’s app library shouldn’t be a factor in the decision (but do keep in mind that you could buy every tablet-optimized Android 3.0 app in the Marketplace and still have enough change from a hundred dollar bill to go out for a nice dinner) . . .

. . .

. . . Where was I?

Well, whatever. The G-Slate takes the crown as My Favorite Android Tablet but that’s an aside. We must come right back to the point that anybody with $600 to spend on a tablet and who’s willing to spend another grand in wireless fees isn’t buying an Android device. They’re headed straight for an Apple Store. Where they still can’t buy an iPad for another couple of weeks yet, because several million Americans have already come to the exact same conclusion and they got to the store first.

Nonetheless, these devices show some of the gaps in the iPad’s armor. Some day, someone’s going to make a 7-inch or 9-inch Android tablet that can play Flash videos and they’ll sell it free-and-clear for $200 less than the cheapest iPad. Or, they’ll add a mix of features that Apple isn’t interested in but which this company has incorporated flawlessly.

When that day comes, people like me will stop talking about the finer points of the app store ecosystem and a well-thought-out interface and a high-quality user experience and will start saying things like “. . . but damn, for $250 it’s one hell of a great deal.”


View the original article here

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Sporcle’s 500 Million Game Play Sweepstakes – Win an Apple iPad2

Posted on: Saturday, 16 April 2011, 00:00 CDT

The countdown has begun. Sporcle is nearing the 500 millionth game to be played mark and as part of the countdown celebration, Sporcle is giving away an Apple iPad2 to the user who plays that 500 millionth game.

Seattle, Wash., and San Francisco, Calif. (Vocus/PRWEB) April 15, 2011

The countdown has begun. Sporcle, the fun and addictive trivia game and quiz website and mobile application, is nearing the 500 millionth game to be played mark since its inception in 2007. As part of the countdown celebration to this games played milestone, Sporcle is giving away an Apple iPad2 to the user who plays that 500 millionth game.

“Sporcle’s users have given us a lot with their dedicated game play, innovative online quizzes and help in improving the user experience for all online game players, so we wanted to give back,” said Ali Aydar, CEO, Sporcle. “Reaching the 500 million games played milestone is a great achievement, and as a thank you we wanted to give back to one lucky user, by giving away an iPad 2.”

To enter the sweepstakes, register and verify a free account on Sporcle and play the 500 millionth game. More information and contest rules are available on the Sporcle 500 Million Sweepstakes page. Whether it’s a user that signed up for a free account years ago, or a user that is signing up today, they are both eligible. Once a registered account has been created and verified, the next step is start playing one of the thousands of online games that Sporcle has to offer. As the games played tracker nears the milestone, one lucky Sporcle online trivia quiz player will help role the tracker number from 499,999,999 over to 500,000,000.

Join us at Sporcle and start playing one of thousands of our fun and addictive quizzes, from a variety of categories. From sports trivia games, to geography quizzes, you’ll find great brain-busting games. And who knows, you may just win an Apple iPad 2.

About Sporcle
Sporcle offers online trivia games and quizzes through the Sporcle.com website and mobile applications for the iPhone, iPad, and Android platforms. Founded in 2007, Sporcle came to life with the response to its first quiz, naming the U.S. Presidents. As avid crossword, Jeopardy! and trivia fans, the original quiz was not only to test knowledge, but also as a way to learn a piece of information that seemed to come up again and again.

Sporcle continues to create quizzes for entertainment, memory and diversion. You can play one of the thousands of quizzes and trivia games or create your own games!

# # #

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prwebsporcle/ipad2-giveaway/prweb8309964.htm

Source: prweb

More News in this Category


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"Guess the Verdict" to Support Your Favorite Charity & Win an iPad2

Win an iPad2 by Guessing Personal Injury and Medical Malpractice Payouts

(PRWEB) April 5, 2011

Rosenberg, Minc, Falkoff, & Wolff, LLP Launching "Guess the Verdict" Contest. Support Your Favorite Charity and Win an iPad2 by Guessing Personal Injury and Medical Malpractice Payouts

The contest takes the form of a description of an actual personal injury or medical malpractice case and asks the contestant to guess the amount of the settlement or verdict. The closest guess to the settlement amount wins the contest after sixty days. A purchase or payment does not increase chances of winning. The contest is open to all US citizens above the age of majority in their state.

Rosenberg, Minc, Falkoff & Wolff, LLP (RMFW) is the premier New York personal injury and medical malpractice law firm with offices located throughout NYC. Founded in 1922 they are responsible for hundreds of millions of dollars of settlements for their clients and have had success with a variety of different accidental injury cases while proudly serving the New York community. Drawing on years of experience and an elite team of doctors, lawyers, and engineers RMFW provides free professional case evaluations and free confidential consultations to potential clients who have been injured through the negligence of another. Settlements in excess of $30 million have been reached for clients in the greater New York area, and at RMFW there is no fee unless they win your case.

Personal injury law relates to civil lawsuits pertaining to bodily or mental injury to a person, and has been practiced by RMFW in New York since the 1920s. They fight for the maximum settlement and are free to the client if they do not produce a recovery settlement.

Medical malpractice refers to professional negligence by a health care provider and is a particularly complicated area of the law that requires a lawyer specializing in that type of case. RMFW has medical experts at their disposal to help in evaluating and reaching a settlement in New York medical malpractice cases, and has a proven track record of delivering justice to the victims of this negligence.

The New York personal injury attorneys of Rosenberg, Minc, Falkoff, & Wolff, LLP are all experienced trial lawyers who have graduated from some of the most prestigious universities in the United States. They have years of experience with personal injury and medical malpractice and are known for compassion and aggressive advocacy for clients.

###

David Martin
Rosenberg, Minc, Falkoff, & Wolff, LLP
(347) 766-6787
Email Information


View the original article here

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Ć¢iWin' an iPad2 from Contract Magazine



06 April, 2011



Are your designs digitally inspired? Contract, along with a variety of progressive sponsors, are looking to keep designers on the forefront of innovation by giving away an Apple iPad2 to over a dozen* lucky winners, at NeoConR 2011.
Enter to win by subscribing to Contract’s digital edition magazine at www.omeda.com/ncon between April 2 and June 2. Or, you can register onsite at NeoConR by dropping off your business card at one of the participating showrooms. One iPad2 will be given away at NeoConR 2011 every hour*. Current subscribers may still enter by resubscribing to the digital edition between April 2 and June 2 to be eligible for the drawing.

Watch ContractDesign.com and the April, May, and June issues of Contract for updated sponsor information. Current sponsors, as of March 2011, include Andreu World America, Bolyu, Davis Furniture, IO Healthcare, KI, Keilhauer, Momentum Textiles, Petter Pepper Products, Sit On ItR Seating, Three H, 20-20 Technologies, and Vitra.


* Based on showroom participation. No purchase is necessary for entry, but winners must be present in sponsor showroom to claim their prize.


>> Check out the current Contract digital edition at www.contractdesign.com/digital


06 April, 2011


 Are your designs digitally inspired? Contract, along with a variety of progressive sponsors, are looking to keep designers on the forefront of innovation by giving away an Apple iPad2 to over a dozen* lucky winners, at NeoConR 2011.
Enter to win by subscribing to Contract’s digital edition magazine at www.omeda.com/ncon between April 2 and June 2. Or, you can register onsite at NeoConR by dropping off your business card at one of the participating showrooms. One iPad2 will be given away at NeoConR 2011 every hour*. Current subscribers may still enter by resubscribing to the digital edition between April 2 and June 2 to be eligible for the drawing.

Watch ContractDesign.com and the April, May, and June issues of Contract for updated sponsor information. Current sponsors, as of March 2011, include Andreu World America, Bolyu, Davis Furniture, IO Healthcare, KI, Keilhauer, Momentum Textiles, Petter Pepper Products, Sit On ItR Seating, Three H, 20-20 Technologies, and Vitra.


* Based on showroom participation. No purchase is necessary for entry, but winners must be present in sponsor showroom to claim their prize.


>> Check out the current Contract digital edition at www.contractdesign.com/digital

 

View the original article here

Friday, May 20, 2011

Upgrade to iPad2 well worth the cost | DERK COLUMN

I've had a few weeks of hands-on time with the new iPad2 now and I can finally offer an opinion on whether the upgrade is worth it.

The answer is a solid yes.

I base this on a couple of factors, not the least of which is the solid resale value of the first version. My original iPad was a top-of-the-line 64GB version. About a week after its successor's March 11 release, its resale value on Gazelle was $530. That amount, subtracted from the $829 price for an iPad2, gave me a net cost of $299.

For that I got the latest version, including 3G service on Verizon, dual-core processors and twice as much system RAM, from 256MB to 512MB.

So what is the real difference?

For one, the dual-core processor and the extra RAM give the iPad2 noticeably more horsepower in everyday tasks such as Web browsing or using apps like Friendly for Facebook. With apps that take a little more "oomph" — such as The Daily Scrabble or even, yes, Angry Birds — the tablet is much more fluid and responsive. Movies launch quicker, photos pop onto the screen and the whole thing just seems faster. (Professional benchmarks prove this.)

The iPad2 has improved portability. It's 33 percent thinner than the original and, at 1.3 pounds, about 15 percent lighter. You would not think this would make much difference, but the new version just feels better.

The Smart Cover, the iPad2's revolutionary cover, really adds to the experience. I didn't fully understand the fuss around the cover until I got one. I opted for the $69 leather version instead of the $39 polyurethane version.

The cover's secret is hidden magnets that form hinges on one side and, on the other, firmly close. A video on the Apple website explain it all but basically some hidden magnets on one side form the hinges and the other close the other side firmly. It folds up to form a stand. If that was not cool enough, when the magnet closes, the iPad2 shuts off. When you open the flap, the device turns back on.

The cover has a few faults. One is that it leaves the back uncovered and susceptible to scratches. (A number of third parties have already come out with back covers or options instead of the Smart Cover.) But the lack of a rear cover keeps the device thin and light.

Also, if you carry the iPad2 in a backpack or other bag and jostle it a lot, your tablet can turn on and off quite a bit, draining the battery. The iPad2 will turn itself off after a few minutes but a number of these events will leave you without a full charge after a while.

I just plan to take care how I handle the iPad2. All in all, it's a great upgrade. I recommend getting it — if you can find one.

James Derk is a tech columnist for the Scripps Howard News Service and owner of CyberDads, a computer repair firm. Email him at jim@cyberdads.com.


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iPhone, iPad2 sales boost Apple earnings



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Boeing/aerospaceCrime & courts Politics Everett Roads & trafficNeed to Know Good News Small business Food: The Dish To Your Health Gardening Eco Geek TV Local arts High school sports Silvertips Mariners Seahawks Fantasy football Stealth Hunting & fishing Fly-fishing Herald editor Photo vault Web Monkey Midday  21, 2011
iPhone, iPad2 sales boost Apple earningsadvertisement?|?your ad hereApple Inc. is already the envy of the technology world. On Wednesday, it rubbed it in with quarterly results that had only one blemish: It couldn't make the new iPads fast enough. "We sold every iPad 2 we could make," Chief Financial Officer Peter Oppenheimer said. Apple sold 4.7 million iPads of both kinds in its latest quarter, below analyst expectations and the holiday quarter's sales. It launched the second version of the tablet computer two weeks before the end of the period. Apple said net income for its fiscal second quarter, which ended March 26, was $5.99 billion, or $6.40 per share. That's up 95 percent from $3.07 billion, or $3.33 per share, a year ago. Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting earnings of $5.37 per share. The results were lifted by the record sale of 18.65 million iPhones, millions more than analysts had expected. Verizon Wireless started selling the phone in the quarter, ending AT&T Inc.'s three-and-half-year period of being the only U.S. iPhone carrier.

Kindle to add books from U.S. libraries

Owners of the Kindle from Amazon.com will be able to download e-books from 11,000 U.S. libraries later this year, the company said Wednesday. Most U.S. libraries already provide e-books, which work with nearly all e-readers except the Kindle. They're also accessible on many smartphones and tablets such as the iPad. Amazon.com Inc. says it's working with OverDrive Inc., which runs e-book systems for public libraries, to make the system compatible with the Kindle. According to OverDrive, Kindle e-books will have the same lending terms as existing library e-books. Most libraries lend their books out for three weeks at a time. The e-books on Kindle will no longer open after that period of time.

Investors buy homes at risk of foreclosure

Investors drove up U.S. home sales last month, plunking down cash to grab cheap homes at risk of foreclosure. But purchases made by first-time homebuyers, who are crucial to a housing recovery, fell. Sales of previously occupied homes rose in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.1 million, the National Association of Realtors said Wednesday. That's up 3.7 percent from 4.92 million in February. The pace is far below the 6 million homes a year that most economists say represents a healthy home sales market.

Washington Post offers custom news

The Washington Post Co., parent company of The Herald, is launching a news aggregation website called Trove that allows users to create their own news sites based on Facebook interests and customized subjects. Vijay Ravindran, chief digital officer of the Post Co., says the free website aims to be a first stop for news and a step toward understanding what the future of news looks like online. The site pulls users' interests from Facebook. Users also can create special channels on subjects they want to follow.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

iPad2: Not That Big Of A Deal?

Eyewitnesses claim to have seen a prototype. Some say it has several new features, others say they weren't blown away... Tags: iPad, Apple, mobility, wireless, iPhone, February 03, 2011

Just like photos of the iPhone4 were "mysteriously" released on the web a few months before the Apple gadget hit the market, pictures of the iPad2 have just surfaced online.

Mac repair shop iFixYouri posted the photos, which it says are of an iPad 2 sent from China. So what's new? Cue drum roll...


...Well not that much, apparently. The site says the second-generation Apple tablet will have a slightly thinner LCD screen - a difference of about one millimeter. It will also have a lighter display and a slightly different cable connector -- but the same resolution as its predecessor.

"Honestly, we were hoping to be blown away, but we're not ... " iFixYouri said in the post.

But wait a second, maybe there is more to it than meets the eye.

 

A Reuters employee claims to have seen a prototype of the device at Rupert Murdoch's launch of "The Daily," NewsCorp's digital newspaper, in New York City yesterday.

The iPad2, the staffer says, has a front-facing camera at the top edge of the glass screen. Meanwhile, manufacturing sources have said it will have two cameras - one in the front and one in the back - enabling users to make video calls. Apple is offering no comments.


The next version of Apple's popular tablet computer is expected to be announced in the next few months.


The original iPad was released in April and sold nearly 15 million units by the end of the year.


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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Brand New & Unlocked Apple IPAD2 64GB Wi-Fi-3G...............$500us Dollars

 

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Price: RM 500.00

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Will iPad 2 be in India by first week of May?

Bangalore: India will not have to wait for months to get iPad 2. The announcement of the launch of iPad 2 in India will come as soon as March End or April. Apple COO, Tim Cook announced that the iPad2 is being rolled out in 13 new countries in a week's time and it might as well land in India.

If the iPad 2 hits India in a week's time, it would be a cheer for Apple fans, who haven't even got the iPhone 4. The pricing of Apples iPad2 will range from 27900 which will be similar to iPad1.

Apple, while declaring its financial results, revealed it had sold 4.69 million iPads in its second fiscal. Analysts said the company had sold even more units if supply constraints had not hit the operations.

The tablet has been up for orders at HomeShop 18 and if noticed, the prices are really sky high. The basic Wi-Fi only 16 GB version is priced at 34, 900. What's more is that the iPad 2 will be on sale through popular electronics retailers like Vijay Sales, Croma and Reliance iStores.

Apple was criticized badly for delaying the launch of the iPad 1 in India (it launched in Jan 2011), but it seems that they are making up with the iPad 2. Firstly, the iPad 2 is being shown on the Apple India homepage for sometime now, prompting many to say that the company was trying to dump unsold unit in India ahead of iPad 2 launch.

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