This text is replaced by the Flash movie.
 

Posts Tagged ‘ iPad ’

By Matt Hamblen
January 17, 2011

FRAMINGHAM – When it comes to the bevy of new tablet computers coming to market, a tablet maker’s brand will take on more significance than ever.

Brand, which is far broader than “brand name,” has become an all-encompassing, almost-indefinable essence of a company. It explains, for example, why many analysts believe Apple will introduce an exciting, successful second-generation iPad later this year. Because it is has the Apple brand, it will shine, they reason.

Indeed, the word “brand” has begun to stretch its meaning beyond a company’s trademark or its reputation. It now includes elements such as a manufacturer’s popularity, marketing savvy and ability to design and build quality products. Brand has come to encompass the maker’s ability to distribute its products widely and to support them and its customers.

By contrast to Apple’s iPad, some analysts are already expressing concerns over the way Research in Motion’s brand, more specifically, RIM’s strong reputation with business users, will affect sales to consumers of its coming PlayBook tablet .

In the same vein, analysts wonder how well Hewlett-Packard, a powerhouse in servers and printers with a strong brand in those areas, will do when it introduces WebOS products, including an expected tablet, at an announcement Feb. 9 in San Francisco.

Ramon Llamas, an analyst at IDC, noted that even though HP has a respected brand, the WebOS that HP acquired with its purchase of Palm last year hasn’t proved to be a strong brand in the market. WebOS has powered smartphones such as the Palm Pre and Pixi.

“Even though it’s HP, popularity with a tablet or other product is determined by your predecessors, and WebOS didn’t really catch on,” Llamas said in an interview. “By comparison, iPad is a derivative of iPhone , and now we have PlayBook coming from BlackBerry. But WebOS? Not so much. WebOS traces back to the Pre and Pixi, and the fact was that not a lot of people picked up those phones.”

HP’s strong reputation with servers and printers will not matter with WebOS, Llamas said. “If you take a look at what HP wants to do with WebOS, HP is big on [saying it will have] a lot of money for marketing,” Llamas said. “Well, congrats, but where’s the distribution [operation] and where’s your customers?”

Llamas said he examined many tablets introduced at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last week but didn’t find any clear winners. “A lot of companies said they had tablets, but it was usually just another company waving a banner,” he said. “Until a strong brand comes out with a tablet that’s well differentiated, there’s not a lot of real standouts.”

Having a strong brand behind a new tablet will matter because the field of tablets is so large and the category is relatively new, meaning the winners will be those that first get the attention of buyers, Llamas said.

“A strong brand has helped Apple over the years, even through antennagate with iPhone 4, but brand only works so far,” Llamas said. “Brand is a big piece [of ultimate success], but not the only piece. In an early market like tablets, having a strong brand helps.”

With the crowded tablet market, Llamas and other analysts said RIM and HP will need to strategize ways to use their brands to attract customers who will test and then buy unproven tablets. RIM has strong partnerships with hundreds of wireless carriers globally, which will help the PlayBook, Llamas said.

“People are drawn to a brand, but ultimately influenced by factors such as cost and how well a certain device can execute,” Llamas said. “They want to know about the UI and other factors, and what’s the bang for the buck, obviously.”

Todd Bradley, executive vice president of HP’s personal systems group, defended the WebOS in a recent CNBC interview from CES.

Bradley called WebOS, now in version 2.0, the first “truly Web-based OS … that is very feature rich.” He also called it the “only true multitasking OS,” because it allows a user to open 20 different apps at once. He said the WebOS will find its way into smartphones, tablets, PCs and other large screen devices, with an introduction at the Feb. 9 event.

“We see an enormous opportunity for customers to get the best Web experience,” Bradley added.

HP’s Feb. 9 event in San Francisco will follow a Sprint Nextel announcement in New York on Feb. 7, and some analysts said the two could be related. Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates, noted that Sprint sold the first Treo handheld from Palm with solid success, giving HP and Sprint something in common.

But because of the two-day difference in the events, Gold speculated Sprint could announce something else, perhaps about the future of WiMax and LTE, or it could offer more details about the RIM PlayBook that Sprint has already announced it will run over WiMax.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

By Bob Brown
January 11, 2011

FRAMINGHAM – Digg founder Kevin Rose blogged this week that Apple will announce the iPad 2 in the next 3 or 4 weeks — maybe even Feb. 1.

Social news aggregation pioneer Rose, who has his information “on good authority,” says the second edition of Apple’s tablet will boast back and front cameras, plus an even better display (initially he wrote of a retina display, but amended his post to add that another source said the display will have a higher dpi but won’t technically be a retina display.”

Rose warned: “If you’re thinking of buying an iPad, hold off for now.” (His blog post is actually based on his new paid monthly newsletter called Foundation.)

2011 TECH PRIORITIES: Finding a place for iPads in the enterprise

While many have expected the iPad 2 to feature two cameras in order to exploit Apple’s Facetime video chat technology, Apple watcher

Joe White of the AppAdvice website says it will be challenging for Apple to boost the iPad’s already stellar resolution without increasing the 9.7-inch screen size.

Network World blogger Yoni Heisler has also been tracking iPad 2 feature rumors, noting the latest speculation about everything from a smaller bezel to wide-range speakers.  Some say the iPad 2 will be powered by a dual-core processor.

Buzz around an impending iPad 2 launch was fueled this past week at the CES 2011 conference in Las Vegas by the appearance of what was reported to be an iPad 2 shell and an iPad 2 case with a hole in the back, presumably for a camera to peek through.

PRODUCT ROUNDUP: 2010′s most popular iPad apps

Rose’s estimate for the iPad 2’s launch on Feb. 1, if accurate, would come the week following the Macworld Expo in San Francisco, which Apple is not attending. The first version of the Apple tablet debuted in April, and the company sold more than a million of them in the first month.

Industry watchers see no end to Apple’s tablet domination anytime soon, even in the enterprise.  Forrester analyst Ted Schadler says Apple has infiltrated the enterprise by way of enthusiastic consumers taking their devices to work and spreading the word.  Some estimates have Apple selling as many as 28 million iPads by the end of this year.

The iPad rumors should really pick up, if as expected, Verizon next week reveals its iPhone plans, since so much Apple gossiping energy has been spent on that in recent months. Verizon this week issued an invitation to a mysterious event in New York City on Feb. 3.

Of course, speculation about the next iPhone itself, maybe the iPhone 5, will also keep Apple in the headlines. Industry watchers have been figuring on a spring or summer unveiling for the latest and greatest smartphone.

For rumors and speculation about Bob Brown, follow him on Twitter, Facebook and StumbleUpon

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
By Joel Mathis
December 15, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – A desktop program that lets users create personal wikis has made its debut as an application for the iPhone and iPad.

VoodooPad for iOS, an offering from developer Flying Meat, made its debut last Friday in Apple’s App Store. It’s a slimmed-down version of its desktop counterpart, giving users the power to create documents that interlink and cross-reference information–including URLs and images–and to sync back-and-forth with the desktop version of VoodooPad via WebDAV and MobileMe.
While the app offers more flexibility than VP Reader, Flying Meat’s free iOS app that let VoodooPad users view their documents on their iPhones in read-only mode, the documentation for the new app reveals some limitations. There is no support for rich-text editing within the app; documents synced from an iPhone or iPad back to a user’s desktop lose their formatting as a result.  There is no support for encryption, nor for syncing VoodooPad documents through Dropbox.
VoodooPad for iOS costs $10 and is compatible with all devices running iOS 4.2 or later.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
By Nick Spence
December 3, 2010

LONDON – Yahoo! has released their list of top searched terms for 2010, with Apple typically scoring well.
Yahoo! analysed search queries from over 631 million people, adding up the results to create the annual Top 10 Searches and Top 10 Obsessions of 2010 list.

Apple was the only gadget maker in the Top 10, thanks to continued interest in the iPhone and best-selling iPad.

“Dizzying tech advances belied a bad economy. The iPhone’s fourth coming captivated naysaying geeks and covetous consumers alike, and beat out the iPad in searches. An accidental sneak peek unfolded like a joke (“So this engineer walks into a bar…”), but ended in record lines at stores,” Vera H-C Chan noted in a Yahoo! blog.

“High-tech drama stimulated an already frenzied Mac cult (which was also tracking the Apple iPad), and pushed the iPhone into the No. 6 slot.”

The full Yahoo! Top Ten Searches included the BP Oil Spill in top spot, followed by the World Cup, Miley Cyrus, Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga, iPhone, Megan Fox, Justin Bieber, American Idol and Britney Spears.

Apple proved a hit in the Yahoo! Top 10 Obsessions of 2010, with the iPhone taking top spot, and the iPad at number three.

The Yahoo! Top 10 Obsessions of 2010 included the iPhone at number one, followed by
Lindsay Lohan, iPad, Glee, Jersey Shore, Facebook, Bedbugs, Tea Party, Silly Bandz
And Stieg Larsson’s ‘The Girl.’

“Obsessions in 2010 inspired constant Web surveillance (just when is the new iPhone coming out?) and vigilance for getting the scoop when a key moment came (order in the court, here comes Lindsay),” added Vera H-C Chan.

Full Yahoo! Year in Review coverage can be found here.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

iOS 4.2 for the iPad: Hands-On

By on November 24, 2010

By Jared Newman

November 24, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – Down: Actually Updating the iPad

I can’t speak for Mac users, but updating iOS devices through iTunes on a PC is a chore on par with defragmenting your hard drive. Chances are, you’ll first have to update iTunes–download, install, and restart. Then, once your computer’s rebooted, you have to download and install the iOS update itself, and the whole process can take more than a half hour. Put over-the-air updates on the top of your iOS 5 wishlist.
Up: Folders

I use more apps on the iPad than I do on the iPhone–and folders are basically a necessity. The iPad’s folders work the same as before–drag one app on top of another to rename it–but now you can stuff 20 apps into a folder instead of 12. Folders within folders are still too much for Apple to handle, but not entirely necessary, either.

Down: Software Orientation Lock

There are two camps on iPad rotation lock. One group says the hardware switch above the volume rocker should be used as a mute button, because it’s the same function as the hardware switch on the iPhone, and because muting is useful. I’m in the other group, which thinks the iPad needs a hardware orientation lock for all the shifting around you might do while reading on a couch or in bed. The software switch is too inconvenient to reach for such a handy feature. iOS 4.2 makes the hardware switch into a mute button, instead of a software orientation lock. Of course, the easy solution would be to give users the choice, but that’s just not how Apple does things.
Up: Multitasking

Though I don’t like Apple’s implementation of multitasking–the tendency to build up a tray full of rarely-used apps drives me insane, and background processing is limited to a few specific tasks–on the iPad it’s an essential feature. I highly recommend switching from Safari to Atomic Web Browser, which now preserves all of your open tabs without the need to reload each page. It’s like you never left the app, which is probably the point.
Down: Printing, or Lack Thereof

As expected, Apple killed the breezy shared printer support that it once promised as part of this update, so you can’t connect an offline printer to your Mac or PC and tell the iPad to print from the computer. Instead, only specific networked printers will work, including Hewlett-Packard’s ePrint-enabled printers. Fortunately, you can still get third-party apps to do the job.
Up: Better E-mail

Conversation threading and a unified inbox for multiple accounts are nice, provided you aren’t using an alternate e-mail program such as Gmail’s Web app. Even if you don’t regularly touch the iPad’s Mail app, iOS 4.2 adds one killer feature in the ability to open attachments in third-party apps. I was delighted to see that office documents can already be opened in Office2 HD for editing or saving to Google Docs.
Down: Game Center

I haven’t spent much time yet with Game Center, Apple’s gaming hub, but at first glance I can already see that it’s still a disappointment. The app fails to automatically check for Game Center games you already own. You can’t send messages or compare achievements. The ability to invite friends to a game is cool, but there’s no easy to way to see which of your friends have the same game. Without these features, Game Center just feels like a thinly-veiled attempt to sell you more apps.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

By David Chartier
November 22, 2010


SAN FRANCISCO – Businesses and the enterprise are putting the iPad to work, and now those users can manage their social presence on Apple’s tablet, thanks to a major upgrade to HootSuite.

HootSuite is a social media dashboard designed primarily for businesses. You can manage multiple accounts across services like Twitter, Facebook, WordPress, LinkedIn, and even Foursquare. You can schedule posts for a later date, invite team members without sharing sensitive account passwords, view short URL analytics, and even get useful insight into the social reach of your followers.

The company has provided many of its best features in an iPhone app for some time, and now it’s added a native iPad interface. HootSuite 2.0 is a big universal upgrade that brings many of the service’s best features and clever interface tools to the more expansive display of Apple’s tablet.

Like HootSuite’s Website, the iPad app displays multiple columns at once and let you scroll horizontally between them, allowing you to get a bird’s-eye view of just about anything you want–Twitter replies, Facebook comments, and/or keywords searches to stay on top of the latest topics in your field.

HootSuite 2.0 is available now for free in the App Store, requiring an iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad running iOS 3.1 or later. HootSuite offers a variety of accounts; they start with a free ad-supported model that limits you to five social accounts, no team members, only 30 days of stats history, and just two RSS feeds that you can automatically syndicate to your accounts. Pro and Enterprise plans start at $5 per month, which bumps you up to unlimited social networks, RSS feeds, and stats history, as well as one free team member, Google Analytics integration, Facebook Insights, no ads, and more.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

By Jared Newman
November 19, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – Google Docs editing for Android, iPhone and iPad isn’t all that it could be, but it’s a start.

The long-awaited editing features are rolling out over the next few days for Android 2.2 and above, and for iOS 3 and above.
Once enabled, you’ll see an Edit button in the top right corner of any document. Tapping it takes you out of read-only mode so you can start writing.

I haven’t received the rollout yet, but judging from Google’s blog post and demonstration video, editing appears to be primitive compared to proper office apps, with only the ability to write text in the document’s current font, edit spread sheets and add bullet points. I do like how edits appear in real time, so you can collaborate from the road.

The list of missing features is still pretty long. You can’t create new documents, change fonts or styles, add hyperlinks, format text, add images, or do any other advanced editing that Google Docs already allows on the desktop. Spreadsheet editing is also completely absent.

For Android users, mobile Docs editing does add one neat feature — the capability to input text by voice — but considering everything you can’t do with Google Docs on mobile phones, it’s hard to recommend it over a proper document app if you plan to do a lot of work.

For iPad, I still like Office2 HD, which syncs to Google Docs and has most of the editing and document creation features that Google Docs Mobile omits. I haven’t had much of a reason to edit documents on the phone, so I’ll default to PC World’s App Guide, which gave high marks to QuickOffice Mobile Suite. That app, available for iPhone and Android, syncs to Google Docs and other services.

Still, you can’t argue with the free service Google is offering, and I have a feeling this isn’t the last we’ll hear of mobile document editing from Google.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

The iPad Stands Alone

By on November 9, 2010

By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols
November 9, 2010

FRAMINGHAM – Where is the iPad’s competition?

By this time, I’d expected to see some real comers gunning for Apple’s iPad tablet. Hasn’t happened.

You want to talk about HP’s just-released Slate 500 ? It has a starting list price of $799. An iPad can cost that much, but the price starts at $499, and people have demonstrated that they’re willing to pay that much and more. Are people going to feel the same way about the Slate 500? Highly doubtful.

The Slate has an 8.9-in. screen, compared to iPad’s 9.7 in., and it runs Windows 7. Now, tell me, how many Windows 7 apps are there for a pure touch-screen tablet? The iPad boasts over 5,000. And get this: For your 800 bucks, you get a Wi-Fi-only device. Makes you wonder whether HP’s goal is to see whether it can ship a product that can die even faster than Microsoft’s Kin did .

Some people would tell you that since Windows is under the hood, the Slate is going to get snapped up by business users who wouldn’t touch an Apple product. Really? Thousands of people are already buying iPads for business use .

It’s not just HP, though. HP just stands out for having the dumbest iPad-rival launch to date. Anyone paying attention knows that iPads are selling faster than hotcakes on a cold Vermont morning. So, where are the iPad’s rivals?

The first problem was that everyone underestimated just how popular the iPad would be. There was a sense it was going to be big, but who knew that almost 7.5 million iPads would be sold in the device’s first two quarters of existence? Suddenly, tablets went from being a niche market for companies like Fujitsu to being big, big business.

The result? Almost no one had their manufacturing ducks in a row. Even now you can see OEMs struggling with basic design issues. Will tablets with 7-in. displays sell? Maybe. Maybe not.

When it first became apparent that the iPad was going to turn the tablet PC from a niche product into a best-seller, I predicted that Linux-based tablets would quickly give the iPad a run for its money. I was wrong. I still think it will happen, just not as soon as I thought.

Linux-powered tablets like the Dell Streak, which is due to get upgraded to Android 2.2 , are finally making their way into the marketplace, but there won’t be a flood of them out by the holidays.

It turns out that while Android 2.0 and 2.2 make killer smartphone operating systems, they’re not quite ready for tablets. The problem that many would-be Android tablet builders, such as Archos, Toshiba and ViewSonic, have encountered is that the current generations of Android don’t do such a great job with a tablet’s larger interface.

The other Linux contenders, such as MeeGo — the embedded Linux with the best chance to rival Android — won’t be rolling out until 2011. The Google Chrome operating system , due out real soon now, is well, still due out real soon now.

I predicted that Linux-based tablets would quickly give the iPad a run for its money. I was wrong.

Windows 7 ? Oh, I guess it could be a competitor, but historically Microsoft has always flopped with mobile phones and other embedded devices. The folks in Redmond have also done a lousy job of competing head-to-head with Apple in this arena. I can make my point with one word: Zune.

So, for the time being, or at least through the 2010 holiday season, the iPad rules. Sometime in 2011, we’ll start seeing real competition, but not this year. I still think that the Android Linux models will be the first to give the iPad a real race. Unlike the other possible contenders, the Android Linux community already has a large group of application programmers ready and able to develop tablet apps, just as Apple does. But for now, it’s still an iPad world.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Free Broadcast TV on Your iPad

By on November 8, 2010

By John P. Mello Jr.
November 8, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – Interested in watching broadcast television–for free–on your iPad? Just point Safari to FilmOn.com.

FilmOn is streaming broadcasts of several network affiliates in the Los Angeles area, including those of NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox, in an effort to entice users to purchase subscriptions to their service. The basic package costs $9.95 per month, while a premium package that includes movie channels and pay-per-view movies costs $24.95 per month.

A number of other feeds are also currently available for viewing, including audio-only feeds from Sky News, BBC News, CNN International, and Dubai Sport. The XXX station is (naturally) blocked from free access.

We took a look at the free offering and found that the quality of the stream is very good–although, occasionally, the video turns into a solid block of color. It’s not available in full-screen mode, however, and, of course, you can’t skip any commercials in the programming. If you don’t have an iPad, you’ll also be able to access FilmOn–but stream selections are limited to the four major broadcast networks. If you’d prefer not to view the stream in your browser, FilmOn also offers a special player download for viewing content.

FilmOn is the brain spawn of U.K. financier Alki David.

“Our platform is designed to be easily customized for broadcasters and advertisers that wish to get into the online broadcast business quickly and with minimal expense,” David said in a statement. “FilmOn is currently in negotiations with all major cable providers and plans to provide complete syndicated cable television services throughout the U.S. in 2011.”

If you’re wondering how the networks feel about all this, well, they’re not very happy with FilmOn–nor are they excited about ivi TV, which streams live broadcasts from network affiliates in Seattle and New York.
They’re so unhappy, in fact, that they’ve sued both outfits.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark

By Elizabeth Heichler
November 2, 2010

BOSTON – Apple filed two lawsuits against Motorola and Motorola Mobility late Friday in a US federal court, claiming violations of its patents in multiple Motorola cell phones, including the Droid line.

According to the Oct. 29 filings in the US District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin — first reported by the blog PatentlyApple — Apple is accusing Motorola of infringing on six patents, three of them focused on touchscreens. The products that it claims include the infringing technology are Motorola’s Droid, Droid 2, Droid X, Cliq, Cliq XT, BackFlip, Devour A555, Devour i1, and Charm.

Earlier this month, Motorola Mobility filed suit against Apple asking the US District Court in Delaware for a declaratory judgment that Apple had no rights to sue it for infringing 12 patents that it said Apple has asserted in targeting Android-phone maker HTC. None of those 12 patents are being invoked by Apple in its suit filed Friday. Motorola also filed two patent infringement lawsuits against Apple charging violations in the iPad, iTouch and iPhone products.

Apple is seeking a jury trial and compensatory damages.

  • Squidoo
  • Multiply
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Twitter
  • TechNet
  • Technorati Favorites
  • MySpace
  • Share/Save/Bookmark
Subscribe E-Newsletter

Don't get left behind. Sign up to receive the latest news.

Our Sponsors
Kerio
Ozaki
redwood
Super Micro
Kaspersky
KOSS
Xitrix
ArcusIT
Emerson
Copylandia
Piso Cloud
ePLDT
Bitdefender
Multi-Color
Chikka
Smart
Peplink
Sophos
Astaro
itproasia
MEC
APC
wsi
 
 
 
PC World Magazine Subscription
subscribe now
Web Design