Saturday, January 30, 2010

Apple iPad arrives

Well, it's certainly not called the iTablet or iSlate now, contrary to the rumours. And the iPad will be no use to Australians wanting to read Australian titles, because the iBook store will only be accessible to Americans. Why? Because iBook, like Amazon, must respect the copyright areas allowed in the author/publisher contracts.
If the author's contract says something like, "only in USA and dependencies", then Amazon and iBook must preclude our purchases.

This is NOT the case for books. Australians can buy any BOOK they want from Amazon, so long it is just one copy. Significantly, Australians have the right to buy any book from almost any part of the world.

But try to buy software from Amazon, and the copyright enforcement is 'bleedingly obvious' - cannot ship software or electronics to Australia. So this is an example Digital Rights Management enforced by the retailer because of Amazon's supply contract with each publisher or distributor.

What was new this week?

iPad's Big Target: E-Readers

Matt Hamblen, Computerworld Jan 31, 2010 4:31 am

Apple ipad
Apple ipad
"The new Apple iPad's color multitouch display will clobber -- but not kill -- the blossoming e-reader market, which includes Amazon.com's Kindle, the Sony Reader and other devices that use gray-scale displays and slower interfaces, some analysts said.
"Apple 's full-color, full motion [iPad] device makes not only netbooks, but any product with an E Ink display look tired and dated," wrote Yankee Group analyst Carl Howe in a blog after spending a few minutes using the tablet device.


"If you're a publisher who lives and dies by what your content looks like, you want to be talking to Apple now; any other digital distribution is going to look very last decade,"

iPad: What it means for Australia

GORDON FARRER January 29, 2010
"WHAT we know about plans for the iPad in Australia is far outweighed by what we don't know. We know that the basic wifi - wireless broadband - version of the iPad will be available worldwide in late March. The wifi+3G version will be available in the US and ''selected countries'' in April. We also know that iBooks, which gives users access to e-books and digital textbooks and one of the iPad's biggest selling points, will only be available via US models.

"We don't know how much the devices will cost in Australia; which telcos will carry the device; or whether Australia is a ''selected country''. And we don't know which Australian media outlets will provide content tailored to take advantage of a technological breakthrough some optimistic souls see as a potential saviour of the newspaper industry."


Australian Designer Creates The ‘iPad Wall’

Posted by Brenton Currie on Jan 31st, 2010

A Melbourne architectural firm, ClarkeHopkinsClarke, has created a mockup design of an ‘iPad wall’, a wall fitted out with hundreds of iPads.
iPad Wall (Credit: CHC)
iPad Wall (Credit: CHC)

The wall could be used in situations such as libraries, where users could browse books on the devices, or be used in place of televisions which are used currently to display interactive scenes or promotional information.
“With the built-in features of the iPad and customisable applications, there is literally an endless number of things we can do on the wall,” the company said in a post introducing the design.
“Interchangeable wallpaper pattern & video is just the beginning, but imaging a giant jigsaw that you can play using multitouch, an interactive aquarium scene, digital graffiti, interactive speaker wall, even a life sized digital bookcase for your iBooks!”
Because of the relatively cheap price of the iPad ($499 USD), many of the devices could be purchased for a smaller cost than say fitting out the wall with large LCD televisions, and unlike normal feature wall mosaic tiles, the iPad contains groundbreaking technology and features, which are usually only seen in $600 or above priced products.

Kobo E-Reader is First such App on iPad

Kobo app


Third party e-book readers

"The iPad might have iBooks, but if Apple’s built-in iPhone apps are anything to go by, then it will likely be gorgeous but limited (the Mail app, anyone?). We think that it’ll be the third party e-book readers that turn the Moses Tablet into the Kindle Killer people so obviously want it to be.








Stephen Fry: why the Apple iPad is here to stay

The self-confessed Apple fanatic on why the launch of the company's new tablet will change everything

"Well bless my soul and whiskers. This is the first time I've joined the congregation at the Church of Apple for a new product launch. I've watched all the past ones, downloaded the Quicktime movies and marvelled as Apple's leader has stood before an ovating faithful and announced the switch to Intel, the birth of iPod, the miniMac, the iTunes Store, OS X, iPhoto, the swan's-neck iMac, the Shuffle, Apple retail stores, the iPhone, the titanium Powerbook, Garageband, the App Store and so much more. But this time I finally made it. I went to San Francisco for the launch of the iPad. Oh, happy man."

"The speed, the responsiveness, the smooth glide of it, the richness and detail of the display, the heft in your hand, the rightness of the actions and gestures that you employ, untutored and instinctively, it's not just a scaled up iPhone or a scaled-down multitouch enhanced laptop – it is a whole new kind of device. And it will change so much. Newspapers, magazines, literature, academic textbooks, brochures, fliers and pamphlets are going to be transformed (poor Kindle). Specific dedicated apps and enhancements will amaze us. You will see characters in movies use the iPad. Jack Bauer will want to return for another season of 24 just so he can download schematics and track vehicles on it. James Bond will have one. Jason Bourne will have one. Some character, in a Tron-like way, might even be trapped in one."

Amazon CEO: “Millions” of Kindles Sold

Posted by: Douglas MacMillan on January 28
"Amazon.com keeps secret the number of Kindles it sells, saying the devices generate too small a portion of overall revenues to warrant disclosure. But on Thursday, the company gave its first big hint at the e-book reader’s financial success.
In a press release detailing the e-commerce giant’s solid all-around performance in the fourth quarter of 2009, CEO Jeff Bezos says, “Millions of people now own Kindles.” So, assuming that at least two million people have bought the device, and that each paid at least $259 – the cost of the least-expensive Kindle – Amazon now has a business worth more than $500 million in sales. Not bad for a product that’s a little more than two years old."

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Apple iSlate Rumours (Apple Tablet)


Recent Videos for apple tablet


Apple Tablet commercial
Apple Tablet commercial

Apple iSlate Designs - Apple Mac Tablet Mockups
Apple iSlate Designs - Apple Mac Tablet Mockups

The iSlate: What Apple doesn't want u to know.
The iSlate: What Apple doesn't want u to know.

1:06**Apple Tablet** commercial**Apple Tablet** commercial
3 days ago 255 views appleinsider76
1:17**Apple** iSlate Designs - **Apple** Mac **Tablet** Mockups**Apple** iSlate Designs - **Apple** Mac **Tablet** Mockups
5 days ago
13,142 views Frezkee
4:41The iSlate: What Apple doesn't want u to know.239,826 views SoldierKnowsBestFeatured Video



Apple's iSlate: The Kindle Killer

J.S. McDougall

Co-Founder of Catalyst Webworks
Posted: December 30, 2009 04:07 PM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index

"By releasing an e-reader so hopelessly tied to the paper, Amazon gave Apple an opening to provide something better. If the latest swirl of rumors is true and Apple plans to release a tablet computer, or iSlate, early next year, you can bet your life it will put the Kindle to shame when it comes to digital content delivery. Any e-ink device simply will not be able to compete. I'm not going to reveal any names, but I have it on very good authority, for example, that--unlike the Kindle--the new Apple tablet will, indeed, have a color screen. Might it also ... play video?! (Please pardon the sarcasm.)

Digital Book content

"Book publishers are feverishly searching for the best ways to pour their content into the new digital stream. And rightly so. I've argued here in the past that book publishers, as producers of a continuous stream of high-quality and edited content, are perfectly suited to capitalize on the new opportunities presented by the digital content revolution. Selling e-books has long been the most accepted method--and though I have my reservations--I wouldn't necessarily disagree. I would argue, however, that the best e-books are certainly not Kindle e-books.
"Book content should no longer be imprisoned by the limitations of paper. Digital books should include author interviews, instructional videos, pop-up definitions of esoteric terms, instant foreign translations, optional soundtracks, links to helpful web sites, and anything else publishers and authors can dream up to increase the value and effectiveness of their content."

10 Million Apple Tablets? A Glance Back for Perspective

The benchmark for a successful launch keeps changing, and

Apple's own record is mixed as we await the "iSlate" entry.

Harry McCracken, Technologizer Jan 2, 2010 12:40 pm

Apple rumor of the moment: Former Google, Microsoft, and Apple executive Kai-Fu Lee has blogged that he's heard Apple thinks it can
steve jobs apple tablet
steve jobs apple tablet
. (I persist in putting quotes around "iSlate" since we don't know if that's the product's name, assuming there is a product at all.)
That ten-million tablet figure is merely a rumor, albeit one spread by a smart guy who may have excellent sources. It certainly sounds ambitious. But how ambitious is it? For the sake of comparison, I dug up some sales figures for other Apple products -- starting with the Apple I, and including both numbers reported by Apple and some third-party estimates. Here they are, after the jump.
Total sales of Apple I, 1976-1977: about 200
Apple II units sold, 1977-1982: 750,000
Apple II units sold, 1982: 300,000
Total Apple III units sold, 1980-1984: 65,000
Original 1984 Macs sold in first 74 days: 50,000
Original 1984 Macs sold in first year: 250,000
Macs sold, October-December 1993: one million
Macs sold, 1995: 4.7 million
iMacs sold in first 139 days: 800,000
iPod during first full year: 378,000
iPod at 5 1/2 years: 100 million
iPod at 8 years: 225 million
Total original iPhones sold: 6.1 million
iPhone at 46 weeks: six million
iPhone/iPod Touch at 20 months: 30 million
iPhone, July-September 2009: 7.4 million
Macs sold by Apple in fiscal year 2009: ten million

"The benchmark for successful sales keeps changing, of course: Back in 1982, selling 300,000 Apple II computers was an extraordinary achievement, considering that it was a pricey product in a category which most households and businesses hadn't yet adopted. And the fact that Apple only managed to sell 378,000 iPods in that gizmo's first year is explained by the fact that the first iPod only worked with Macs, not Windows PCs-more than 95 percent of computer owners couldn't have used an iPod no matter how much they craved one."

10 Technologies that Will Rock 2010

5 comments
by: Erick Schonfeld January 02, 2010 |
external image saupload_2010.png
Now that the aughts are behind us, we can start the new decade with a bang. So many new technologies are ready to make a big impact this year. Some of them will be brand new, but many have been gestating and are now ready to hatch. If there is any theme here it is the mobile Web. As I think through the top ten technologies that will rock 2010, more than half of them are mobile. But those technologies are tied to advances in the overall Web as well.
Below is my list of the ten technologies that will leave the biggest marks on 2010:
  1. The Tablet: It’s the most anticipated product of the year. The mythical tablet computer (which everyone seems to be working on). There are beautiful Android tablets, concept tablets, and, of course, the one tablet which could define the category, the Apple (AAPL) Tablet. Or iSlate or whatever it’s called. If Steve Jobs is not working on a tablet, he’d better come up with one because anything else will be a huge disappointment. Why do we need yet another computer in between a laptop and an iPhone? We won’t really know until we have it. But the answer lies in the fact that increasingly the Web is all you need. As all of our apps and data and social lives move to the Web, the Tablet is the incarnation of the Web in device form, stripped down to its essentials. It will also be a superior e-reader for digital books, newspapers, and magazines, and a portable Web TV.

Deconstructing the iTablet Rumor Mill

seekingalpha.com/
January 01, 2010 by
Apple Investor picture
Apple Investor picture

Apple Investor
Blow You Away, Maybe
"Well, besides the size of the tablet, what cool thing can we expect from the all-things-iMaker? There’s the general speculation that the Apple tablet will run the iPhone OS, so it will immediately have access to 100s of thousands of apps. Well, that is if they’re compatible with the huge iPhone-like device. Some have said it might run iPhone apps in a window the same size as current apps, like widgets.
external image saupload_patent_091224_2.pngImage Credited to AppleInsider

"And what of text entry, can we expect the same experience as current iPhones, a super-sized chicklet keyboard? It’s possible that Apple has been working on a much more futuristic approach. According to AppleInsider, they uncovered a patent application filed by Apple in 2007. They derived the following from that patent:

"Using an “articulating frame,” the surface of such a device would create physical bumps or dots for the user to feel when it is in keyboard mode. Those surface features would retract and disappear when the device is not being used to type. It is detailed in an application entitled “Keystroke Tactility Arrangement on a Smooth Touch Surface.”

What Will it Do, Think Different?
"I don’t think we’re going to see a killer app that defines the Apple tablet. What I do think is that Apple will build a multi-media device that is so compelling, that it will make the Kindle look like a transistor radio. In my opinion, the new Apple iSlate, iTablet, iWhateva, will be the ultimate hand-held reader, in full color, with full multi-media capabilities, both input and output. It will display and take pictures from a high resolution 5 megapixel camera, capable of HD 1080p resolution video. Ars Technica recently reported that such a camera has been selected by Apple for the next generation iPhone. It would be perfect for the tablet.

The new tablet will likely be a portal to the iTunes Movie store. It has been reported by many sources that Apple is in negotiations with big movie studios trying to lure them away from Cable operators with attractive subscription services and lucrative licensing deals. There are reports from the Wall Street Journal that CBS and Disney are reportedly considering signing a deal."


Jobs to Unveil Apple Tablet Next Month , Ex-Google Exec Says

Owen Fletcher, IDG News Service Dec 31, 2009 12:40 am

"Steve Jobs plans to unveil Apple's much-hyped but still unconfirmed tablet device next month, and it will come with 3D graphics and a price tag below US$1000, according to former Google China president Kai-Fu Lee.
"Most surprising: Apple predicts production of nearly 10 million [units] in the first year!" Lee said in a post on a Chinese microblog service that cited information from a source he described as a knowledgeable friend. The tablet will look like a large iPhone and come with a 10.1-inch multitouch touchscreen, a virtual keyboard and support for videoconferencing and e-books, the post said."