The iPad Tablet is a small flat computer that is in tablet form. It has a touch screen operating system and is used much in the same way as the iPhone. It is a much bigger system, about the span of an open book. This is convenient because one of its main uses is as an eBook device, which allows users to download text onto the screen and read it like a book. It is much like the Kindle product made by Amazon.
It is to officially go on sale at the end of March, 2010 and orders have already broken records. It has gotten huge amounts of press and made its first major appearance on stage at the Grammy Awards. It was used as a plug for Apple, since the iPad was read from to announce the winner.
From the back you might think it was a really small laptop and from the front you may think it was a really huge iPhone. It is just a very flat computer system that does not stand up. It must be held. It also does not have a mouse or keyboard that come with it, though they can be added. It is more used as a music player, book downloader, and sound recorder with the ability to make phone calls and connect to the web.
It is fairly light, weighing one and a half pounds. Considering what it can do, this is extraordinarily light. It looks the simplest of all Apple products (meaning that the technology is very sophisticated, it just does not have a lot of frills). It has but one USB port and a single headphone jack. The rest of the iPad is completely smooth.
This is the brainchild of seventeen years of work. It started in 1993 and was finally announced as ready in 2010. It has had more hype and publicity than any other Apple product, which will account for its sales more than for its technology.
This is even including the price which many view as high. The iPad starts at five hundred dollars without any keyboard or mouse. Those need to be bought on their own. Sales have not slowed, but some are surprised by the product’s limitations. It cannot operate more than one program at a time nor are there video recording options. Many believe these problems will be soon corrected and upgraded.
Some have speculated that a lawsuit over the name will follow. Lawyers from both sides have been contacted and have both discussed publicly the fact that they are unsure if a lawsuit will even happen. The right to the name is caught up in much technical and legal confusion and the original owner may not wish to press charges, especially considering that no verdict could be sorted out before the iPad goes live to stores.
The iPad Tablet is a small flat computer that is in tablet form. It has a touch screen operating system and is used much in the same way as the iPhone. It is a much bigger system, about the span of an open book. This is convenient because one of its main uses is as an eBook device, which allows users to download text onto the screen and read it like a book. It is much like the Kindle product made by Amazon.
It is to officially go on sale at the end of March, 2010 and orders have already broken records. It has gotten huge amounts of press and made its first major appearance on stage at the Grammy Awards. It was used as a plug for Apple, since the iPad was read from to announce the winner.
From the back you might think it was a really small laptop and from the front you may think it was a really huge iPhone. It is just a very flat computer system that does not stand up. It must be held. It also does not have a mouse or keyboard that come with it, though they can be added. It is more used as a music player, book downloader, and sound recorder with the ability to make phone calls and connect to the web.
It is fairly light, weighing one and a half pounds. Considering what it can do, this is extraordinarily light. It looks the simplest of all Apple products (meaning that the technology is very sophisticated, it just does not have a lot of frills). It has but one USB port and a single headphone jack. The rest of the iPad is completely smooth.
This is the brainchild of seventeen years of work. It started in 1993 and was finally announced as ready in 2010. It has had more hype and publicity than any other Apple product, which will account for its sales more than for its technology.
This is even including the price which many view as high. The iPad starts at five hundred dollars without any keyboard or mouse. Those need to be bought on their own. Sales have not slowed, but some are surprised by the product’s limitations. It cannot operate more than one program at a time nor are there video recording options. Many believe these problems will be soon corrected and upgraded.
Some have speculated that a lawsuit over the name will follow. Lawyers from both sides have been contacted and have both discussed publicly the fact that they are unsure if a lawsuit will even happen. The right to the name is caught up in much technical and legal confusion and the original owner may not wish to press charges, especially considering that no verdict could be sorted out before the iPad goes live to stores.
source : http://www.epressrelease.info/?p=1409