Monday, 30 August 2010

Toshiba Folio 100 iPad rival named

Toshiba has named its upcoming tablet the Folio 100, according to a report by Notebook Italia, and some further spec details have emerged too.

The slate, which is the company’s great hope of carving a slice out of the market currently dominated by the fast-selling iPad, had previously been referred to by Notebook Italia as the SmartPad (when the site leaked images of the device last week). Which we think is actually a better name than the Folio 100, as the latter sounds a bit stuffy to us.

At any rate, we already knew that Nvidia Tegra 2 technology was rumoured to be powering the Android tablet, but according to Notebook Italia, it will also boast 16GB of memory, wi-fi and 3G, along with a USB port and an HDMI port.

A 10.1 inch display was also confirmed by the site, along with a 1 megapixel webcam, and seven hours worth of battery life is promised. The device should run Android 2.2.

All this should be officially confirmed, or not, by Toshiba at this week’s IFA show over in Berlin. Along with, hopefully, some indication of the tablet’s release date.

Samsung will also be announcing its Galaxy Tab at IFA, and these will be the first of many tablets to attempt to take a bite out of Apple’s market share.

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Chinese iPad keyboard arrives in UK, off to US

There is going to be so much more of this, putting your nice new Apple iPad into a case or slot or docking station which contains some form of keyboard. Apple Insider has spotted one coming over from China, already in the UK at £60, and on its way to the US.

Almost every blog that has written it up has jeered that people just cannot forget the form factor of yesterday and are trying to make the lovely new iPad look like a rubbishy old Netbook. Far from it. Apple itself came out with a docking station and keyboard at launch. The only step Apple hasn’t completed, despite hinting at it, is to make the keyboard part of the case you carry around with you and that’s what a swathe of new companies are sure to try.

We all know that typing speed on an iPad touch screen, or any touch screen for that matter, is roughly 50% that of a proper physical keyboard. So when you are at a workstation kind of job, sitting typing, it’s better to have a keyboard. Once the iPad comes down a little in price, corporations will buy them in large number especially if their they can make corporate Apps speak to /run on it. Of course keeping track of all those iPads which people will then take home with them is perhaps another matter.

We do see the issue with putting an alien wraparound on your lovely new iPad, because if you just need to send one email the touch keyboard is plenty good enough. But there will be some people who never sit still and yet have a ton of typing chores to get through, and a carry case version is perhaps for them.

The pictured device apparently comes from Shenzhen Paoluy Silicone Technology, and has the catchy name of the BL-BKB76. The two devices talk to each using Bluetooth, naturally (the Apple one is physically connected through the dock) and can be powered by a single iPad connector.

This particular device became discovered because Apple Insider and other blogs keep an eye on the FCC approval requests and because this uses wireless Bluetooth connection, it has to be screened by the US regulatory authority, which shows it is on the way to the US.

The overall effect of this particular design is to turn the iPad into something more like a clamshell styled Netbook, a little like the iPad carry case, but with a keyboard thrown in. The device has already been seen on shopping site Gearzap for sale in the UK, at £60.

The device manual claims a standby time of 100 days and working battery time of 90 hours, but people have already tested it at around 45 hours, about a week’s work. It would be irritating to have to remember to charge two things, instead of one, even if a charge lasted a full week on the keyboard. It charges through a USB iPod connector cable.

Having said all this, the iPad can be used almost any Bluetooth keyboard and Apple certainly has those, so then you only need the charging dock to stand the iPad up.

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

Samsung Galaxy Tab v. Apple iPad: How Do They Compare?

The launch of the first iPad contender is impending. The Samsung Galaxy Tab is scheduled to launch in Germany on September 2, and it is assumed that it will be available in the United States sometime this autumn as well. Since the obvious comparison is Galaxy Tab vs. iPad, let's take a look at how the two tablets stack up against each other.

Size

A teaser video provides a glimpse at what the Samsung Galaxy Tab has to offer.The Samsung Galaxy Tab is smaller than the current Apple iPad (although rumors suggest a smaller 7-inch iPad model is in the works). The iPad is almost the size of a standard sheet of paper at roughly ten by eight inches, and it weighs a pound and a half. We don't yet know the weight of the Galaxy Tab, but based on a video teaser the size appears to be similar to the Amazon Kindle.

Display

The iPad has a 9.7-inch touchscreen display capable of 1024x768 resolution. As the smaller size mentioned above implies, the Galaxy Tab display is smaller. The Samsung tablet uses a 7-inch display originally thought to be limited to 800x600 resolution, but newer speculation is that it is 1024x600.

Processor

Apple designed a custom A4 processor for the iPad. It is a high-performance, low-power system-on-a-chip running at 1GHz. Sources report that the Galaxy Tab will run on a similar 1GHz ARM processor.

Operating System

While the iPad runs a version of Apple's iOS, the Galaxy Tab will run on its primary mobile OS competitor--Android. The iPad is currently stuck on yesterday's iOS with version 3.2.2. It is slated to get an update to iOS 4 very soon, which will add functionality like nested folders and multitasking. The Galaxy Tab will reportedly come out of the gate with the cutting edge Android 2.2, a.k.a. "Froyo".

Apps

Both the Apple and Android app stores have more than enough variety to meet the needs of virtually any user. Granted, the Apple App Store has crossed the 250,000 apps mark, while the Android Market lags somewhere around 100,000, but at some point it becomes like the Cold War nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union: how many times do you need to be able to blow up the whole planet?

Features

Many of the features are similar, but this is one area where the Galaxy Tab doesn't just compare, but can set the bar for what to expect in the next-generation iPad. Based on the video, it appears that the Galaxy Tab has both front and rear-facing cameras, and is capable of video chat. The Galaxy Tab is also expected to support Adobe Flash, and possibly be able to play HD video.

Intangibles

When it comes to making an actual purchase, it rarely boils down to comparing spec sheets. There are intangible factors that come into play. How much does it cost? Which wireless providers support the device?

The Galaxy Tab will have the benefit of riding the wave of tablet demand created by the Apple iPad, but it is also at a disadvantage compared with the three million plus unit jumpstart the iPad has. Still, there are people who love Apple and iOS, and there are people who love Android. The Galaxy Tab looks to be a very capable device and will at least offer a worthy challenger in the tablet market.

Wednesday, 16 June 2010

Apple launch official Apple Store App for iPhone and iPad


Apple has launched the official Apple Store App, allowing iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad users to purchase Apple branded products direct from their current Cupertino devices.

Asides from being a mobile version of Apple’s official online store looking to prey on the loyalty of Apple’s existing customer base, the application will allow users to book appointments with their local Genius Bar staff, check stock availability in desired retail stores and even apply for one-to-one training with the latest Apple products.

Aptly named the Apple Store, the new application will be free to download making it possibly just the second thing with an Apple logo not to cost over the odds, the first being the store’s free carrier bags.

Purchases made through the Apple Store App will be paid for directly though user’s iTunes accounts, furthering the possibilities of –in-app payments.

This app has surprised many in taking until now to arrive. Apple’s reasoning for launching the Apple Store App now, just days ahead of the arrival of the iPhone 4 is to allow users to use the former to buy the latter.

Sunday, 13 June 2010

Native iPad Apps Reach 10,000 Mark


Apple iPad Keynote Games Launch
The iPad has already exceeded expectations in many ways. From one of the fastest selling personal computing devices in the history oftechnology to the rate of adoption among all facets of society, the iPad has rewritten the book on how a new device enters the market. Now comes news about developer adoption as well. The iPad App Storerecently crossed the 10,000 apps mark. That’s over 10,000 applications in a little over three months. That pace of development is astounding when viewed in the light of Apple’s famously slow approvals process.
According to MacStories, the number of paid apps has hovered around the 80% mark with 2107 of those being games. By comparison, only 75% of iPhone-specific apps are paid. While this shows a slightly bias towards paid apps on the iPad, the ratio of paid to free apps is somewhat similar. The fact that roughly only 20 – 25% of App Store applications are free to download is astounding in itself. It shows the power of the high volume, low price model of application development. Before Apple pioneered the idea of an App Store, the traditional development model was low volume, high price. Developers labored for months or years on feature-rich, expansive applications that tried to encompass a whole topic or genre. They depended on making back their money by charging a high price on relatively low volumes. Now, the emphasis is more on individual developers making smaller applications that focus on a very specific feature set. A developer can make a very specific application in a short timeframe, post it to the App Store, and make back their investment at a relatively low unit price. The rate of growth amongst iPad applications only underscores how successful that model has become.
It will be interesting to see if the pace of growth continues over the coming months. The iPad has started something (it’s a bit premature to call it a revolution) and I think it will at least sustain itself, if not grow. Will the iPad continue to outpace the growth records set by its cousin the iPhone? We need to wait and see. Let’s give it a year and we’ll see where we’re at in April 2011.
What do you think of the unprecedented growth in iPad apps? Is this just initial developer excitement or a long term growth trend? Leave us a comment and let us know.

Saturday, 12 June 2010

Apple Design Awards Winners

The Apple Design Awards 2010 recognize iPhone OS applications that demonstrate technical excellence, innovation, superior technology adoption, high performance, and outstanding design. Each year, winning products set new standards for the developer community to follow. Read about what made this year's winners stand out above the rest.

iPad Application Winners

Financial Times iPad Edition

The Financial Times Ltd.
View in iTunes Preview
Offering a really great newspaper reading experience on iPad, the Financial Times presents an elegant user interface with animation, shadows, transparency, off-white paper color, nice typography, and intuitive navigation. Integrated photos and video nicely augment printed content. The app's extensive features and interactions are powered by CoreText, MySQL, CoreData, Cocoa Touch, NSURL, UIwebview, and AV frameworks. The Financial Times also has an application available for iPhone. View website

Flight Control HD

Firemint
View in iTunes Preview
Flight Control HD is the landmark game that defined a new genre of games on iPhone. Now available for iPad, Flight Control HD offers more layouts, including a 3D layout, head-to-head and multi-device play options, enhanced Multi-Touch control, and improved game mechanics enabled by the large iPad screen. This game is a great example of innovative gameplay, outstanding use of Multi-Touch, and superb attention to detail. Flight Control is also available on iPhone and is equally addictive. View website

Pinball HD

OOO Gameprom
View in iTunes Preview
Pinball HD is a real Pinball simulator with high fidelity art and stunning 3D graphics delivered through advanced use of OpenGL ES 2.0. This high-quality pinball game offers unique sound effects, a soundtrack with atmospheric music, and voices played using Core Audio. Its high performance, multiple camera views and support for real-time orientation changes brings you inside the action. Portrait mode gives you a flying-table view with the camera panning and zooming over the action while Landscape mode shows a full table view. Pinball HD delivers a level of realism you won’t believe.View website

Star Walk - Interactive Astronomy Guide

Vito Technology Inc.
View in iTunes Preview
Star Walk is a personal planetarium for anyone who is interested in stargazing. It makes discovering more than 9,000 stars, planets, constellations, and messiers beautiful and easy using OpenGL ES 2.0 to create stunning 3D graphics delivered at 30 fps. Star Walk uses the accelerometer, compass, and Core Location frameworks to accurately determine orientation, bearing, and location to enable viewing of the night sky as it appears from your location. Star Walk also reaches an international audience with versions in English, Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, and Russian. View website

TabToolkit

Agile Partners
View in iTunes Preview
TabToolkit is an incredibly powerful music notation viewer with multi-track audio playback. The app includes an audio synthesis engine that enables you to listen to and control the audio for all instrument tracks individually. TabToolkit makes learning how to play your favorite songs on guitar, bass, keyboard, drums and other instruments easier and more fun. It offers a beautiful design with high-fidelity artwork optimized for iPad. View website

Friday, 11 June 2010

Weekly top iPad apps: classic games for the digital generation

This selection of iPad applications takes you back to your childhood days of video game playing.
Prince of Persia Retro
This retro platform gamer has been faithfully reproduced for the iPad. Those of you who remember the original Prince of Persia game will be excited to once again spend hours in front of the screen trying to escape from the dark cavities of the dungeons, controlling the prince's acrobatic fighting moves, on a quest to save the beloved Sultan's daughter.
Price: $0.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/prince-of-persia-retro/id373984189?mt=8
Solitaire City Classic 
Solitaire City Classic is a collection of one-player card games for the iPad and iPod touch. The app contains six different versions of solitaire plus options for one or three card dealing, Vegas scoring, and timed game scoring. Users can customize the application by choosing one of several different card and background designs or create their own using images from the iPad photo library.
Price: Free
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/solitaire-city-classic/id340141710?mt=8
Pinball HD
The days of saving up quarters so you could run down to your nearest gaming arcade to get your weekly pinball fix might be over, but thanks to Pinball HD you can relive the happy moments in your own lounge room. Pinball HD is a glorious digital rendition of a classic pinball machine. The accurate ball physics, intuitive controls and beautiful graphics make this classic arcade remake a joy to play.
Price: $2.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pinball-hd/id363592836?mt=8
TETRIS for iPad
The original Tetris game has been updated for its iPad debut. Players of classic Tetris will immediately notice the brighter graphics, the remixing of the background theme music, and the added "Magic Mode." Fans of the original Tetris may find the iPad version's ‘tap-to-rotate' controls difficult to adapt to.
Price: $6.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tetris-for-ipad/id363296995?mt=8
PAC-MAN for iPad
PAC-MAN, one of the most famous arcade games has also been ported to the iOS platform. PAC-MAN for iPad remains true to the original in many ways. Players navigate through the one maze eating dots and staying out of the way of the nasty ghosts. PAC-MAN is controlled by an onscreen joystick (which can be a little frustrating to maneuver at times) or with the swipe of a finger. Players try to gobble up all the dots to move on to the next level.
Price: $4.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/pac-man-for-ipad/id363297482?mt=8
SCRABBLE for iPad
The traditional family letter game, Scrabble, has been revamped for its iPad release. Scrabble for iPad lets you compete against the computer, battle against other players across the world in an online game or invite your friends over and have a real digital game of Scrabble with up to four players. Players can download the free Scrabble Tile Rack Application to keep their tiles hidden from the other players when in Party Play mode.
Price: $9.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/scrabble-for-ipad/id363306776?mt=8
BlocksClassic
BlocksClassic is a remake of the classic brick breaking game Breakout that could be found on almost every computer during the 1980s. BlocksClassic infuses gameplay with 3D graphics, colorful bricks and added features.
Price: $0.99
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/blocksclassic/id286136632?mt=8

Source Guardian.co.uk

Wednesday, 9 June 2010

iPad stats and what is next for Apple


Apple chief Steve Jobs kicked off his speech at the Worldwide Developer Conference last night by dishing out some iPad statistics, and Mashableand duly infographed them:
Mashable's iPad statistics
National Public Radio in the US have had 300,000 iPad app downloads since launch; Beet.TV did some back-of-the-envelope maths and made that 15% of all iPads sold. The New York Times has has 350,000 iPad app downloads on one week, the Wall Street Journal said it had 10,000 active users each week and the Financial Times reports 130,000 since the launch on 28 May.
Under production at Apple: Search and TV
Jason Calcanis took a rare break from his Facebook sabotage campaignto deconstruct Steve Jobs' interview at D8 last week. Despite Jobs' denial that Apple is not working on search or a new TV product, Calacanis toldBeet.tv that Jobs is "an excellent liar" and that Apple would launch a new Apple TV by next Christmas and produce a search engine within two years.
The search theory was backed by by the guy who literally wrote the book on Google - John Batelle - who also said Apple will be working on a powerful search tool focused on its apps.

Source Gaurdian.co.uk 

Sunday, 6 June 2010

Apple iPad First Look and Full Specs

iPad imitators hope to bite into Apple's lead

HONG KONG — When Apple announced the arrival of the iPad, it said it would create and define a brand-new sector in the market for computer devices, somewhere between the smartphone and the notebook laptop.
Two months and over two million iPad sales later a string of Asian manufacturers have shown they agree -- by unveiling their own tablets which they hope will take a bite out of Apple's lead.
Over a dozen new iPad-style gadgets have now entered the fray, and more are sure to follow.
At the Computex computer trade fair in Taipei this week, beautiful models posed with shiny black slabs of clever glass -- most of which looked pretty much the same as Apple's iPad.
First out of the box was the catchily named ASUS Eee Pad 101TC. It's similar in size to the iPad, runs on Windows and will sell for 399 US dollars -- around 100 US dollars less than the US price of a basic iPad.
The MSI WindPad 100, which at 499 US dollars costs the same as the iPad, also runs on Windows and boasts a webcam -- which is conspicuously absent in the first iPad models. LG's new UX10 device also has a webcam.
Many newcomers will also use Adobe's Flash video technology, another perceived flaw in the iPad. Apple refused to allow Flash on its new gadget.
Taiwan-based chipmaker VIA believes the way forward in the tablet market is to go smaller and cheaper.
Its VIA Slate prototype has a seven-inch screen, runs on an old version of Google's Android operating system and will retail for between 100 and 200 US dollars. Several other tablet devices will also run on Android.
Right at the bottom of the market is the iPed -- which seems to be a direct copy of the iPad, even down to the packaging. It is on sale only over the Taiwan Strait in China, selling in a Shenzhen computer mall for 105 dollars.
Nancy Liu of Taiwan's Industrial Technology Research Institute told AFP that companies launching their tablets at Computex wanted to prove "they have the capability to catch the trend set by Apple."
"I don't think the followers are capable of dethroning Apple's leadership at least in the short term," Liu said.
But it's not the gadget, it's what you can do with it that counts. And this is where Apple is also streets ahead of the pack. As Jenny Lai, a Taipei-based technology analyst for brokerage firm CLSA, says: content is king.
"Content remains a critical part of the success story for iPad," she said. "Currently, there are seven major app stores including new entrants Lenovo and Asustek.
"What?s more important for Apple and existing vendors is building up a more user-friendly interface and more choices for online-store users."
Apple has more than 100,000 downloadable applications compared to the 500 it offered for the iPhone when it first opened online less than two years ago. Google has more than 30,000 apps available for Android.
Lenovo's application download store for Lephone and other products has around 250 applications. Asustek say it is cooperating with Intel and Microsoft to launch an app store in 2010 on a Windows platform.
And it's not just computer makers watching each other's reaction to this "new" market -- the struggling old school publishing industries are also looking on in hope.
The tablet computer plus its slightly less glamorous cousin, the e-reader, have been hailed as the saviour of the book and newspaper industries.
Sony, which has an e-reader but does not have a tablet computer on the market -- yet -- predicts big changes for the publishing industry on the back of the launch of all these devices.
Steve Haber, president of Sony?s digital reading business division, believes the printed book will soon be overtaken by its electronic sister, the same pattern seen with music and photography.
"Within five years there will be more digital content sold than physical content," he told the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
"I have multiple meetings with publishers and tell them paradigm shifts happen. You can say fortunately or unfortunately you haven't had a paradigm shift in, what, hundreds of years.
"We in the consumer electronics area have a paradigm shift every year or two."

Thursday, 3 June 2010

Steve Jobs: iPad Suicide Factory 'Pretty Nice'

Apple CEO Steve Jobs said the Taiwanese iPad factory that's been branded a sweatshop amid a rash of worker suicides is actually "pretty nice."


Jobs denied allegations that the plant, owned and operated by Apple sub-contractor Foxconn, subjects workers to long hours and inhumane conditions.


    
India looks to broadband connectivity and fiber optic cable projects as major engines for economic development as it prepares for a huge uptick in demand for online access from consumers and businesses


"They've got restaurants and swimming pools," said Jobs, who spoke earlier this week at the D tech conference in Southern California. "For a factory, it's a pretty nice factory," said Jobs.
Foxconn manufactures the iPad, iPod, and iPhone on behalf of Apple. It also produces tech components for other big vendors, including Dell, HP, and Sony.


Critics have suggested Foxconn is pushing workers beyond the limit in order to meet demand for the iPad, which is selling at a rate of about 33,000 units per day. 12 Foxconn employees have attempted suicide since January—10 succeeded.


Jobs conceded that reports of the deaths were "very troubling to us." He said Apple sent over "our own people and some outside folks as well to look into the issue."


Apple's CEO also used the stage at the Wall Street Journal's D conference, in Rancho Palos Verdes, to expound on a number of other hot tech-industry topics.


With his company having sold more than 2 million iPads since April 3rd, he said it's clear the tech industry is ready to move beyond the personal computer—a market long dominated by Apple rival Microsoft and its Windows software.


"The transformation of the PC to new form factors like the tablet is going to make some people uneasy because the PC has taken us a long ways," said Jobs.


Jobs' comments came a week after Apple surpassed Microsoft in market capitalization. Critics say Microsoft's reliance on its Windows cash cow has kept it from matching Apple's moves into hot new markets like tablet computing and mobile communications.


Jobs also took another swipe at Adobe and its Flash online video technology.


"We don't think Flash makes a great product, so we're leaving it out," said Jobs, referring to Apple's decision not to support Flash on the iPhone or iPad.


Source Newsweek

Wednesday, 2 June 2010

Apple's IPad Has A Copycat Rival ... The IPed

Apple is facing competition from a slew of new devices aiming to rival its iPad - among them the not so originally named iPed.

A shot of the iPed
The iPed, as pictured in a television report. Photo: Japan News Network (JNN)
Cheaper knock-off gadgets are starting to hit the Chinese markets, in a bid to take advantage of consumer excitement surrounding the groundbreaking tablet device.
Key to their appeal are their prices; while a basic iPad model can be bought for roughly $500 (£340), the iPed is retailing for $150 (£100).
The iPed is currently on sale in the Chinese city of Shenzhen, which is the location of the largest Foxconn plant, where the iPad is manufactured.
Created by a company called Orphan Electronics, the rival device was released over the weekend.
Apple iPad
The original ... Apple's iPad
Crucially, it uses a version of Google's Android operating system rather than Apple’s competing iPhone OS, according to the Japan News Network (JNN).
It is also reported to be a little heavier than the iPad and to boast a bigger display screen - but less resolution.

Airline confirms in-flight iPad trial

For consumers reluctant to splash out on the new iPad, how about trialing one when jetting off on holiday?
From later this June, Australian budget carrier Jetstar is to offer passengers iPads for inflight entertainment, the company said June 1.
Jetstar will rent the devices for AUD10 (€6.85) per flight on domestic services, aiming to roll the trial out to international services later in 2010.
Passengers will be able to watch preloaded music videos, movies or TV programs, read e-books, listen to music or play games on the devices.
However, internet connectivity will be disabled in line with Jetstar's in-flight regulations.
"Given the demand for the iPad so far, I anticipate it will have strong appeal amongst our passengers," said Jetstar chief Bruce Buchanan.
"Based on demand for the iPads as part of the trial, we'll be looking to roll out the devices across our entire domestic and international network later in the year."
Jetstar says it is the first airline to make the devices available for passengers, although several hotel chains now provide them for guests to play with.
InterContinental concierges got their hands on the devices first, on the US launch date, followed quickly by guests at one of London's swankiest venues The Berkeley.
Among many others, the Westin New York, Hilton San Diego and Hotel Indigo San Diego and Ritz-Carlton Chicago are now offering iPads for guests.

iPad Review

My first impressions of the device are largely positive. Apple has once again built a product that looks good and feels great in the hand, and the familiar user interface, borrowed from the iPhone and iPod touch, is perfectly suited to the bigger screen. The iPad whizzes along, opening applications, re-sizing web pages, and zooming in and out of maps almost instantaneously.
It's a great, fun gaming platform, and it's lovely to view full-size web pages while browsing the internet. Developers, no doubt, are already rubbing their hands with glee about the apps and services they could tailor specifically for this device.

Gadget frustration peaks at 11.48am on Christmas Day, says survey
The new touch-optimised iWork suite is beautifully realised, making it quick and easy -- and, dare I say, fun -- to piece together a spreadsheet or presentation. It also helps to elevate the iPad to more than just a plaything.


As Steve Jobs said during his keynote, if you're going to create a third category of device, between the smartphone and the laptop, then it needs to be better than either for certain tasks. In many areas, this is true for the iPad -- web browsing is much better on the iPad than the iPhone, just because of the bigger screen, and physically flicking through photos, music and movies is just more enjoyable on the iPad than a laptop.


But in several crucial areas, the iPad falls short of the functionality that would have made this more than just a large iPod touch. The lack of Flash support is a major issue; the iPad's big screen is designed to make the best of multimedia content and the full-screen browsing experience, but the sight of little blue squares dotted around web pages where embedded video should have been just makes you feel like you're being short-changed.


The iPad's inability to multi-task could also severely hamper its appeal. It's being pitched as a portable device that you could kick back and use on the sofa at home, but you can't listen to your Spotify playlists at the same time as writing an email, or browse the web while using an instant-messaging app to chat with friends. It's one or other, just as it is on the iPhone and iPod touch, but for the extra money you're paying for the iPad, you expect something more akin to a laptop computing experience.


I love Apple's new e-reader application, iBooks. The virtual bookshelf, on which your digital tomes sit, is an example of Apple design at its best; elegant, simple, well-executed. The reading experience itself was also delightful, with the pages of the virtual books having the sort of patina you would expect to find on a printed novel. Turning pages is achieved with a swiping gesture, or a single tap in the right-hand margins.


But I think the backlighting of Apple's pin-sharp display is going to cause a lot of tired eyes; e-Ink is deeply unglamorous, but it does the job superbly, and I don't think serious bookworms will be swayed to chose the iPad over the Kindle or a Sony Reader. For the casual reader though, the inclusion of the iBooks app, and the iBookstore, is a boon, and likely to inspire impulse purchases of novels in much the same way as the iTunes music store on the iPhone and iPod touch is a constant temptation.


Before yesterday's event, analysts were adamant that the iPad would be the saviour of newspapers and magazines, but there was little sign of that at the launch. The New York Times showed off a slick application, but it just felt like a larger-scale version of their iPhone app rather than a genuine step-change in the way printed content is delivered and consumed. I had hoped to hear more about how the iPad could be used to read magazines or shape the day's news agenda. However, it's still early days and Apple are only now able to talk more openly to prospective content partners about mutually beneficial deals.


The iPad is a lovely device that gadget fans will lust after, but I'm yet to be entirely convinced that it offers enough of an advantage over my smartphone or laptop. I do think it has the potential to be a game-changing device, but it will be the second- and third-generation versions that really drive the agenda, and introduce a new and innovative way of computing.


Ultimately, the iPad is a large iPod touch: a great device to draw your inspiration from, but perhaps not the seismic shift in technology that we were expecting. But watch this space...

By Claudine Beaumont, Technology Editor, The Telegraph in San Francisco