Posts Tagged ‘iPad’

Apple’s new iPad goes on sale in Australia

March 16th, 2012

Apple Inc’s new iPad went on sale in Australia early on Friday, greeted by throngs of fans hungry to get hold of the US consumer giant’s latest, 4G-ready tablet computer.

While numbers were down on launches of earlier iPads, the still-solid turnout reflects demand for Apple products, even though analysts say the new version is a collection of incremental improvements rather than a major technological innovation.

The initial rush for the first iPad 3s sold globally was not at one of Apple’s gleaming glass and polished wooden stores in Sydney but across the road at Australian phone company Telstra. Telstra opened two stores just after midnight local time to begin selling the iPad, stealing an eight hour march on Apple.

David Tarasenko, a 34-year-old construction manager, who was the first to pick up the iPad, said he couldn’t wait ever since Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook revealed the third iteration of the tablet.

“When Tim Cook announced it, it sounded like such a magical tool. I just got hyped into it, I guess,” he said.

The third-generation iPad from Apple — which sports a high-definition “retina” display and comes with a better camera — starts at $499. It is capable of operating on high-speed 4G “LTE,” or Long-Term Evolution network, although it is not compatible with Telstra’s 4G network in Australia.

“The (lack of 4G access) is not a game-breaker. They’ve upgraded the 3G technology, which I’ve tried and it’s pretty snappy,” said Cameron Ing, a data storage administrator.

The iPad 3 is going on sale on Friday in 10 countries, including the United States, Canada, Singapore, France and United Kingdom.

Among those in the queue outside Sydney’s flagship Apple Store was Stephen Parkes, who was paid A$950 ($990) to wait in line for four days by the founder of an odd jobs website.

“I get a high waiting in the line and picking up one of the first products being retailed,” said Ryan Han, a student at the University of New South Wales, who had also queued for hours.

“I did that for iPad 1, 2 and will do it for 4 as well,” said Han, who was hoping to buy two iPads, for himself and a friend.

Such is the demand for new Apple products that middlemen often pay “mules” to buy the latest versions and transport them to markets scheduled for later releases.

A middle-aged Asian man outside the Apple store, flanked by two blue suitcases, said he was hoping to buy several new iPads, ideally more than 10. He declined to reveal his name, nationality or who he was buying the tablets for.

Apple’s market capitalization now exceeds $500 billion and Wall Street thinks it can expand further should fan-demand persist.

Early signs hint at a strong 2012 for the device, which competes with Samsung Electronic’s Galaxy, among others. Despite soggy weather, small crowds had already gathered outside the downtown San Francisco Apple store ahead of the launch in the United States.

Apple began accepting orders for the device on March 7, but wait times for shipping the device are now two to three weeks in the United States.

Wall Street expects a strong start for the iPad 3, and some analysts even expect sales of the current model to overtake the iPad 2. Apple will continue to sell the iPad 2 but dropped its price by $100 to start at $399.

Apple may sell 65.6 million iPads, estimated Canaccord Genuity analysts who also raised their target price on Apple stock to $710 from $665.

So far, the company has sold 55 million iPads since it launched the device in 2010.

Tablet sales are expected to increase to 326 million buy 2015 with Apple largely dominating the market, according to research firm Gartner.

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/hardware/Apples-new-iPad-goes-on-sale-in-Australia/articleshow/12279245.cms

25 countries to get iPad a week after US launch

March 15th, 2012

After the new iPad goes on sale Friday in the US and nine other countries, Apple will make the tablet computer available in 25 additional countries a week later, mostly in Europe.

The new iPad is Apple’s third version and sports a faster processing chip and a sharper screen. It works with a faster cellular network called 4G.

The countries getting the device on March 23 are Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Macau, Mexico, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain and Sweden.

Besides the US, Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, countries getting it Friday are Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Sales begin at 8 a.m. local time.

Apple has already stopped taking advance orders for Friday and said customers should expect a two- to three-week wait for purchases made Wednesday through its online store. That means those who haven’t ordered yet have to visit a retail store in person if they want it on Friday. Lines are likely to form hours ahead of opening.

Apple said the iPad will be sold in the US at Best Buy, Radio Shack, Sam’s Club, Target and Walmart, in addition to Apple’s own stores. The basic iPad will retail for $499 to $699, depending on the amount of storage. Models capable of accessing the 4G cellular network will cost $629 to $829. Customers who want 4G models will have to choose either AT&T or Verizon Wireless in the US ahead of time.

The company will still sell the previous model, the iPad 2, for $100 off the old price. The basic model now costs $399 and the cellular version, working with 3G networks, costs $529.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/25-countries-to-get-ipad-a-week-after-us-launch/articleshow/12270348.cms

Nivio Brings Microsoft Office To iPad

March 14th, 2012

Nivio’s nDesktop is a flexible cloud-based service that places a fully functional Windows 7 desktop inside any HTML5-compliant Web browser. That includes mobile devices such as tablets–which means you can run Microsoft Office on an iPad.

I got a chance to try the software on the iPad at Macworld. Nivio demoed two other apps that work with nDesktop: nApps and nDrive. nApps is a service that lets nDesktop users rent apps–such as MS Office–on a monthly subscription basis. nDrive offers online and offline cloud document storage with or without nDesktop. Together Nivio’s three most recent services offer a cross-platform, mobile, single desktop–as long as you have fast Internet access.

The bottleneck is latency. nDesktop uses canvassing translated to Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) to communicate between the remote and host computer, a Rackspace server that does most of the heavy lifting. For maximum performance your ping time should be under 100ms–about the same latency that cutting-edge online games require.

nDesktop performed like a desktop and that was despite the high-latency Wi-Fi at the tradeshow. Everything from app interactivity, including complex commands and MS Office heavy lifting, ran smoothly. Unfortunately, Nivio didn’t have creative apps such as Adobe Photoshop available to demo.

One of nDesktop’s weak points is video playback. It’s just not good at delivering smooth streaming in HD. So don’t look for Adobe Premier Pro 5.5 on iPad any time soon. Nivio CEO Sachin Dev Duggal claims streaming video would intolerably increase users’ minimum bandwidth requirements. Considering most devices are capable of streaming video content locally, Duggal doesn’t see it as an enormous problem. The problem is a standard one for terminal interfaces such as those based on Citrix technology.

The company plans to develop a solution in the near future that will take advantage of local hardware, he said. What Duggal is probably alluding to is transferring the entire video request to the iPad, which then performs the streaming request to the server directly.

nDesktop was thoughtfully built for iPad. Although it doesn’t yet support GPS, it does include most touch inputs such as the pinch zoom and typical poke and drag gestures. nDesktop and the apps come standard with a virtual mouse when more accuracy is required for fine navigation, which I found to be reasonably useful for MS Office type work. If nDesktop users want to use the iPad as a thin client, the software can use the VGA port to output video and Bluetooth to connect external devices.

Small to mid-size businesses have a number of nDesktop features to look forward to. Nivio plans to add centralized user management and billing, as well as a virtual file server with permission control. Also, the nBusiness control panel will add instant user provisioning, as well as application and storage management.

Because nDesktop operates remotely–as do the apps–Nivio takes care of upgrading, maintaining, and ensuring uptime. Nivio also maintains archives and backups. Hardware upgrades with nDesktop become less frequent. Because the OS and apps run remotely, older computers can run up-to-date programs at normal speeds. nDesktop will save cash by giving businesses the ability to rent software on a project-by-project basis.

Duggal said SMB business pricing will start around $25 a month plus an additional $15 a month for MS Office. For prosumers, nDesktop is $5 a month for 10 hours of use and $15 a month for unlimited access. nApps offers MS Office to consumers at the SMB price ($15), and Corel Draw X5 for $25 a month. There are educator and student options as well.

Currently, there are 120 nApps. Duggal said the company plans to add 700 more in the next six months, including Adobe products, and in 18 months there will be 5,000 nApps.

nDrive offers 10GB of free storage, and paid options for more. nDrive is also accessible offline.

Source:http://www.informationweek.com/byte/reviews/personal-tech/desktop-apps/232602470

Naming the device iPad 3 “would be so predictable”, says Apple’s Phil Schiller

March 9th, 2012

A tablet by any other name not as sweet as iPad. That’s the message Apple conveyed on Wednesday when it unveiled the third version of its tablet computer, calling it only…iPad.

After naming the previous version iPad 2, Apple abandoned a number-based nomenclature, surprising pundits who speculated that the company might name its new tablet “iPad 3″ or “iPad HD,” referring to its high-definition screen.

Failing to set apart the new tablet by name could lead to brand confusion for consumers who own the original device, also called iPad, or for buyers of later versions, said Matt Gordon, director of naming and writing for Landor Associates, a brand consulting firm based in San Francisco.

“It does complicate things after the purchase,” he said. “It’s also confusing with the original iPad, down the road, as people have multiple generations of this device.” Sticking with the original name of a device is hardly new for Cupertino, California-based Apple.

The company updated the iPod multiple times without attaching numbers to the digital music player. Ditto for MacBook laptops and iMac desktops. Naming the device iPad 3 “would be so predictable,” Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of worldwide marketing, said in remarks to reporters.

“We’ve had many products where we’ve never used numbers. Sometimes we do, sometimes we don’t.” The move stands to reinforce Apple’s dominance of the tablet category, said Stephen Baker, vice president for industry analysis at NPD Group.

According to market research firm Gartner Inc., Apple will account for two-thirds of the 103.5 million tablet devices sold in 2012. “It’s more of a thumb in the eye of everyone else, like, ‘We don’t have to put numbers behind our products, because everyone knows what ours is,’” Baker said. Apple gets about 20% of its sales from the iPad, attracting consumers as well as business users.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/naming-the-device-ipad-3-would-be-so-predictable-says-apples-phil-schiller/articleshow/12190631.cms

Will new iPad keep Apple from dropping?

March 9th, 2012

Apple Inc. on Wednesday unveiled the much-anticipated third-generation iPad. In a so-called “post-PC world” when the tablet computer market is divided as iPad and non-iPad, many are wondering whether the new device can defend Apple’s dominance and keep one of the world’s most valuable companies from slowing down.

When unveiling the new iPad, Apple’s Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook noted the industry is in a post-PC revolution and Apple has “feet firmly planted in the post-PC future.”

Cook said that Apple is fortunate to have three post-PC products, namely iPod, iPhone and the iPad, which make up 76 percent of Apple’s revenues last year. Called the “poster child of the post-PC world”, a total of 15.4 million units of iPad were sold during the fourth quarter of 2011, which overtops personal computer units from any major manufacturers such as HP, Lenovo, Dell and Acer.

Sarah Rotman Epps, an analyst of market research firm Forrester Research, told Xinhua in a phone interview that she thinks the new iPad is a “truly impressive feat of engineering”, noting the new tablet will raise the bars for Apple’s counterparts to compete both in the hardware and software side.

Running on a faster A5X chip and 4G network, the new iPad also got app updates, such as iPhoto, to deliver the performance of sharper Retina Display, which has 1 million more pixels than a large-screen HDTV.

Along with HD video recording, dictation input and other new features, the new iPad will “enhance the consumer experience in a significant way,” Epps said.

To fight rivals like Amazon which use lower-prices tablets to encroach on iPad’s share, Apple chooses to keep the iPad2 in its product line with a 100-U.S.-dollar price reduction. The 16GB and WiFi-only iPad 2 is now 399 dollars.

Statistics and forecasts are quite bright for Apple and the new iPad. Forrester Research said 65 percent of all touchscreen tablets in use at work in the United States are iPads. According to IMS Research, another research firm, Apple dominated the global tablet market with a 62 percent market share last year and the number is forecast to increase to 70 percent in 2012.

“There is a large customer base loyal to Apple products that have been waiting for the latest tablet. Many owners of the iPad 1 are also expected to upgrade to the latest release. In addition to this consumer demand, growth is also forecast as a result of sales into enterprise and education,” said IMS Research.

Meanwhile, some competitors have come to a sobering evaluation of their performances in the market, admitting that their attempt to grab the tablet share has largely been a flop.

“Honestly, we’re not doing very well in the tablet market,” Hankil Yoon, a product strategy executive for Samsung, said last Monday during a media roundtable at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

However, not all industry watchers are quite impressed by the new generation iPad. Rob Enderle, a veteran analyst in Silicon Valley, said Apple vowed to achieve things Steve Jobs hadn’t finished, but it didn’t. The new iPad “is over-promising,” he told Xinhua in a phone interview.

He said the problem for the new iPad is it cannot embrace all new product benchmarks by increasing the depth of the line and significantly improving the hardware. He noted that some of the new device’s improved performance depends on the 4G network which is not quite popular and mature for the moment in the United States.

Last month, James B. Stewart of The New York Times said in an article that it’s just a matter of time before Apple’s growth confronts the law of large numbers which suggests that high earnings growth and a rapid rise in share price will slow down as the companies grow larger.

Some companies have been felled by the law. Cisco Systems hit a market capitalization of 557 billion dollars at the peak of technology bubble in March 2000, but its capitalization is currently around 100 billion dollars, down by 80 percent since then.

As many analysts and reporters said Apple’s innovation has been incremental, Epps, the analyst, pointed out that the new iPad is “a gut renovation masquerades as incremental innovation,” and the formula for Apple’s success is the company designs its products for its customers.

She said customers will wait in line at an Apple Store to buy the new iPad that is designed for customers, not the press.

“We expect that the new iPad will sell even more units than the previous version has,” she told Xinhua.

Source:http://english.cri.cn/6826/2012/03/08/191s685660.htm

Having Owned The Last Two iPads, I’m not Interested in The iPad 3

March 7th, 2012

Nearly two years ago, Apple took the stage and introduced the world to the iPad – the first major step in modern, high-end tablets and the very first step towards the end of the PC era. At that point, the vast majority scoffed at the idea of spending upwards of $500 for an in between device that barely had more functionality than their pocket-sized smartphone. Since then, however, a slew of other manufacturers have jumped on the tablet bandwagon with their own little twist. Tablets have finally started to gain traction and have begun encroaching on the PC market.

In just two days, Tim Cook will be taking the stage to announce Apple’s third-generation iPad, presumed to be called the iPad 3 (or maybe the iPad HD). What we actually know about the next iPad is very little. But if rumors hold true, it should feature a Retina Display (2048 by 1536 pixels), either a dual- or quad-core processor, the same memory options as the iPad 2, Siri, a slightly modified design, 4G LTE connectivity and a larger rear camera sensor. There is also some floating (and far less likely) speculation that it will come bearing iOS 6, thanks to some web logs that have picked up on some iPad traffic with iOS 6 installed.

All of this considered and despite the it (seemingly) shaping up to be one sweet piece of hardware, I’m not all that interested in the iPad 3.

For starters, I willingly admit that I said I might be offloading my Kindle Fire for a little extra cash to put towards the next iPad. I still may. However, that would simply be to test the waters, maybe for a review. I don’t know yet. But it doesn’t mean I’m all over myself and dying of anticipation for Apple’s announcement. I’m not. At all.

One of the main reasons, though, is because this time around, Apple is behind the curve. Okay, maybe not behind the curve. But they’re no longer leading the tablet efforts in terms of specifications. ASUS was the first to out a tablet with a quad-core with the original Transformer Prime and the first to announce one with a display resolution beyond WXGA (1280 by 800 pixels) with the Prime TF700T, which will sport a WUXGA (1920 by 1200 pixels) display.

Sure, if the iPad does actually come with a Retina Display, it will pack quite a few more pixels in a slightly smaller display – over 100 more horizontal pixels and over 300 more vertical pixels in landscape. But for the majority of users, this bit is trivial. I, for example, am perfectly fine with the WXGA display on the Prime, though I may consider the TF700T when it arrives later this year, simply for the improved display and Wi-Fi connectivity.

Truth be told, specs don’t really carry as much weight when it comes to the iPad. Performance, battery life and the display were already sufficient enough for most people. More cores in the processor would only provide even better gaming. And a better display is just icing on the cake.

But the iPad 3 only being an evolutionary upgrade to its predecessor is hardly the reason I’m not interested. I have owned both the original iPad (twice, actually) and the iPad 2. I had both of them for an extended period of time and their luster wore away quickly. After a couple weeks – with all three models – I was no longer using it. I would use my phone or computer to browse the Internet instead. And after buying the iPad 2, I decided to go back to an Android tablet.

What’s more is something I’ve covered a couple different times now. Between Android phones and Android tablets, there is a mental context switch. Menu buttons, notifications and several other interface elements differ greatly between the two. This is something I like, though, seeing as I use and hold my phones and tablets differently. The iPad’s interface, on the other hand, is almost identical to the iPhone interface. It’s not necessarily a bad thing. But I prefer the interfaces to accommodate for different screen sizes more appropriately.

All things considered, I’m not saying Android tablets are better than iPads. I don’t want to start that war. Android tablets, however, are better for my needs than any iPad is. There are probably millions of Americans who would disagree with me on that matter, but I am a heavy user of several Google Apps accounts, and Android tablets simply suit my needs without the need for paid, third-party apps. And with the recent introduction of Chrome for Android, there’s no going back now.

Like I said, I will probably buy an iPad 3 … eventually. I will also probably sell it in due time, like I have with the other three that I have owned. They’re cool. And they’re fun for a while. But no iPad I’ve ever used has served my needs without a hitch. I need a better balance between work and play with my tablet, and a keyboard dock like the Transformer Prime.

Maybe an iOS overhaul – one that makes it more OS X-like – with another ZAGGmate would do the trick. But I’m not holding my breath.

All of that said, I know I’m the minority here. There are a ton of you out there who can’t wait for Tim Cook to take the stage Wednesday or to begin lining up to place your pre-orders. Tell me, readers, how you feel about the most recent iPad 3 announcements and whether you’re excited in the comment section below!

Source:http://www.phonedog.com/2012/03/05/having-owned-the-last-two-ipads-i-m-not-interested-in-the-ipad-3/

New, faster Apple iPad expected next week

February 29th, 2012

Apple Inc is hosting a media event next Wednesday, where it is expected to unveil a faster, better-equipped version of its popular iPad tablet to thwart increasing competition from deep-pocketed rivals such as Amazon.com Inc.

The invitation-only event will be held at 1 pm EST (1800 GMT) on March 7 at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, where it also introduced the last two generations of iPads.

Apple, which sent the invitation to reporters by email on Tuesday, did not divulge details of the event beyond saying: “We have something you really have to see. And touch.”

The invitation featured a partial picture of the touchscreen of a device resembling an iPad.

Apple launches are some of the hottest events on the tech calendar, scrutinized by fans, investors, the media and industry insiders alike.

The iPad has dominated the nascent tablet computer market, but Amazon’s Kindle Fire, which sells at half the cost, has chipped away at the lower end of the market.

The third iteration of a device that has helped put pressure on demand for traditional laptops and computers is expected to boast a faster, quad-core processor, and a higher-definition screen.

Some analysts and industry experts expect 4G wireless capability, ensuring that the iPad remains current as cutting-edge broadband technology from Verizon Wireless and other carriers gains momentum. Verizon Wireless is a venture of Verizon Communications Inc and Vodafone Group Plc .

“The picture is zoomed in on an icon and I don’t see any pixels in that icon,” Avi Greengart, analyst at Current Analysis, said, underscoring how industry experts pick apart even Apple’s communiques for hints of what to expect.

“You don’t need exceptional foresight to guess that Apple is likely looking at a higher resolution display.”

TAKING ON PCS

The company’s market value has climbed steadily in past weeks, buoyed by anticipation over its latest gadget as well as by hopes that Apple will finally accede to shareholders’ demands that it return some of its $98 billion war chest of cash and securities.

On Tuesday, Apple shares racked up a record high of $534.62 in heavy trading on the Nasdaq market before easing slightly to $532.70, up 1.3 per cent on the day.

Apple iPad tablet sales doubled in the December quarter to 15.43 million units. The company has sold about 55 million iPads since it introduced the device in 2010.

It may be looking to “make further inroads into the general computing market” with the newest iPad, Greengart said.

Chief Executive Tim Cook has often said that he expects tablets to outsell personal computers eventually. Cook, who took the company’s helm after visionary Steve Jobs died in October, will likely lead the event, with ample help from marketing chief Phil Schiller and other executives.

With the iPad 2 starting at $499, investors will also be watching to see if Apple plans to discount it, creeping farther down the price chain and closer to the Fire, to broaden the iPad’s appeal.

Source:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/tech/hardware/new-faster-apple-ipad-expected-next-week/articleshow/12075632.cms

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