USB or no USB on IPad 2?
Lets see which next generation of the hottest merchandise on earth will bring. Apple is undoubtedly achieving which as they possess bought 6 million units to be produced prior to the release date.
IPad 2 could utilize both GSM and CDMA systems to make it simple to access to the web.
The case is heading to be thinner. Ipad 2 can possess each FaceTime entrance dealing with camera as within the apple iphone and rear going through camera and it should additionally have 3-axis gyroscope.
iPad 2 is roumored to have both an SD credit card slot along with a USB interface to allow for uploading media. Various rumors possess advised which Apple is transferring in the direction of totally wi-fi platform - communicating, generating, and streaming advertising and images. IPad 2 can possible have greater decision show equivalent to the Retina Display highlighted on the apple iphone 4. Greater resolution areas strains on power supply life a velocity of processor. Twin Core processor and greater electric battery may clear up that issue, but after that we'd possess some extra bodyweight to be troubled about. Even however this is unlikely, as Ipod device Touch and Apple iphone previously possess this market.
As for processor KitGuru statements 2 GHz processor and a elevated definition picture the camera for next generation of iPad. As for launch day and delivery names and emails we are nevertheless in the dark, even however some reviews advised that Apple could start off delivery the iPad 2 in February, that indicates that IPad 2 want be on the shelves by April 2011.
Price-wise, we're not expecting IPad 2 to be cheaper by any implies. In any other case, offered the loyal client foundation of Apple together with the top notch and reliability of Apple products, we are not speculating on any cost drops.
Verify out a teaser movie displaying the prototype uni-body situation for 2nd generation of Ipad.
Discover your next iPad on www.occasion-ipad.com - iPad occasion pas cher - iPad cheapest price
Does the Apple iPad Wifi or Apple iPad 3G fits you better?
Apple's latest iPad model, the iPad 3G, arrived on the market in the US friday .
Beside the plastic strip on the top sit – for 3G reception – and the entrance for the sim-card, the new iPad looks the same as the previous model we know. Or not?
While the newest model of the Apple iPad is only somewhat gained in weight you can surf on the internet via an available 3G connection anywhere and anytime .
If you want this feature at the beginning you have the add an extra 130 Euros when purchasing the 3G version. Prices for the 3G-versions (with respectively 16, 32 or 64 GB on board) begin probably at 550 Euros. Rumours even speak about 800 Euros for the top model . Some sources say Apple will make an announcement next monday in which they will communicate all market prices and dates of availability per country .
Early testers in the United States pointed out that you not only will pay extra the feature but also need to pay the subscriptions expense of the data bundle .
They compared the performance of the iPad 3G on an AT&T network and it was the same like the iPhone 3GS did . They said the signal quality level of the iPad was the same than the iPhone 3GS . You cannot compare the speed of an 3G connection with the speed of a normal WiFi connection. Nevertheless is the speed enough to check your e-mail and surf on the popular websites .
Because the iPad have been equipped with a faster processor, loading webpages is faster than on the iPhone . It's not only on paper faster, it feels in reallife faster . We experienced no problems when the iPad automatically switched between 3G operation and WiFi operating mode . On top of your display you can see a nice icon which indicated if you are using WiFi or 3G .
Apple-fans do not think much about the question to buy this new version or not . You have also other solutions available which let you use the regular WiFi iPad with almost the same feature set than the iPad 3G model . It's called a Mifi-router . Via this kind of software you can convert a device with GSM/3G/UMTS-signals into a WiFi-signal . (Mifi-software is available for Windows Mobile Smartphones or jailbroken iPhones or Symbian S60 phones).
If you use this MiFi connection your Apple iPad is connected via de WiFi connection and believes it's actually a WiFi connection . You have an extra advantage beside you can use your smartphone as router. You can also download and install Apps which demand WiFi .
American users and reviewers are complaining about the bad quality of videos when using 3G . While this was not an issue on the iPhone because it has a little screen, on iPads big screen you will see the videos look bad because the lack of decent resolution .
You understand that if you want to use GPS the only good option you have is the 3G . The quality of GPS with the new GPS-chip for the iPad 3G works better compared to the GPS-chip of the iPhone 3GS .
Is the price a problem for you, but you want really the same functionality and you are prepare to do some concessions? Installing the MiFi router solution will alow you to choose for the regular iPad.
9th Suicide at iPhone Factory in Taiwan

A ninth employee has jumped to his death at Taiwanese iPhone manufacturer Foxconn, China's state media reports.
Xinhua said 21-year-old Nan Gang leapt from a four-storey factory in the early hours, soon after finishing work.
Shortly after, it emerged that the death of a worker at a Foxconn plant in Hebei province earlier this year was also a suicide.
A total of 11 Foxconn employees have tried to kill themselves this year - two have survived.
The incidents have raised concerns about worker treatment at the site.
The Associated Press quoted spokesman Arthur Huang as saying the company carried out social responsibility programs to ensure workers' welfare.
Earlier this week, Foxconn said it was enlisting counselors and Buddhist monks to provide emotional support for its workers.
Suicides
Ten of the employees worked at Foxconn's campuses in Shenzhen, but on Friday it was revealed that a man who died at a factory in the northern Hebei province had also jumped from a building.
The worker, identified by Xinhua as 19-year old Rong Bo, died in the city of Langtang early this year.
A similar investigation into the death of 16-year old Wang Lingyan - who was found dead in a dormitory at the same site - concluded she died from cardiac arrest, government spokeswoman Wang Qiunu told Xinhua.
Foxconn is part of Hon Hai Precision, the world's largest maker of consumer electronics, and employs 800,000 workers worldwide, mostly in China.
The company has said it is taking the deaths seriously, even though a local government investigation did not blame working conditions.
The spate of deaths comes after a Foxconn employee in charge of shipping Apple's iPhone prototype units killed himself last year after one of the units went missing.
Apple said it had investigated accusations of bad employment practices by Foxconn stemming from a June 2006 complaint, and found the claims to be largely unfounded.
Monk support
However, it concluded that some employees were working more than Foxconn's mandated maximum during peak production times, and as many as a quarter of them were not taking at least one day off a week.
US-based China Labor Watch has criticized Foxconn's 'military-style administration and harsh working conditions' and called on the company to 'initiate a thoroughgoing analysis of life on its production lines.'
Foxconn says it has hired 100 counselors and invited monks to help workers at a new Employee Care Center, and trained its medical staff to provide emotional support.
It has also introduced a reward system for employees who spot colleagues with emotional problems, and a hot-line for workers.
A Post-iPad World?
In this guest opinion piece, Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps argues that the introduction of the iPad ushers in a whole new era in personal computing, one with less choice, but more relevance.

There is something very significant about the iPad beyond how many units it will sell: it's changing how we think about the PC. The iPad creates a use case for a device that doesn't do everything your laptop does, targeted at a consumer that uses devices more for consumption than production. The iPad ushers in a new era of personal computing that we call "Curated Computing"—a mode of computing where choice is constrained to deliver less complex, more relevant experiences. Let me repeat that, because it's the essence of the Curated Computing experience: less choice; more relevance.
Consider this: consumers can do a wide variety of things with a Windows PC or Mac, like run commands, install robust software, connect easily to external devices, and save files locally. But the iPad does things differently. Its operating system runs more like a jukebox than a desktop, asking consumers to choose (and often pay for) applications from a predetermined set list. Each of these applications is in itself also curated, since the publisher selects content and functionality that's appropriate to the form factor, just as a museum curator selects artwork from a larger collection to exhibit in a particular gallery space.
But why is this new era of Curated Computing so important? After more than two decades of failed experiments with tablet PCs (remember the Dynapad?), consumers finally have a tablet that works—and the iPad works precisely because it's a Curated Computing experience. Even while some pundits may scream about Apple controlling the ecosystem, at least some consumers (more than 1 million so far, says Apple) show willingness to trade off unlimited choice for relevance. But success beyond the iPad is not guaranteed. In order for tablets to grow as a viable market beyond the iPad, product strategists must reshape consumers' expectations of what a PC can be and how it fits into consumers' everyday life, alongside desktops, laptops and smart-phones.
The iPad is a device you want, but don't need. It departs radically from what consumers think they want from a PC. One month prior to the iPad's launch, a Forrester survey of more than 4,500 US online consumers revealed the top features consumers said they wanted in their next PC purchase. Two-thirds of US online consumers want a DVD drive, but this feature, along with other most-wanted features like CD burners and webcams, are absent from the iPad. The iPad's features, such as the touchscreen, are lower on consumers' wish list, with only 22 percent desiring a touchscreen for their next PC. This doesn't mean consumers won't buy the iPad, it just means that Apple has a steep education process ahead of it. Apple and its future tablet competitors need to teach consumers that they can live without these standard PC components in their tablet device—and in fact, the experience can be better for it.
This education process should not discourage future tablet success. In fact, it is finally the right time to introduce a fourth form factor (desktops, laptops, and net-books are the first three) to the consumer PC market, since it's now the norm for households to own multiple PCs. In 2003, 25 percent of all US households owned more than one PC; by the end of 2008, 45 percent did. Among US online consumers, at the end of 2009, 69 percent had multiple PCs. Even with these growing adoption rates, it's still very difficult to create a new product category. However, Apple comes to it with several strengths, such as preexisting iPhone OS software that works for this new form factor, a developer community that has created thousands of custom apps, and the Apple Store, which provides a laboratory where consumers can test out the iPad before they buy.
To compete with Apple in the tablet market, product strategists must bridge the gap between what consumers expect from a PC and what a tablet actually delivers. Most importantly, they should embrace a Curated Computing experience, which limits choice in a good way, turning the limitations of the form factor into strengths rather than weaknesses. The iPad's success can be attributed to its guided simplicity: the only way to use the device is via apps, which are expressly developed for the device.
Additionally, tablets should be positioned as complementary to the rest of a product line. Even though there have been many claims to the contrary, it is unlikely tablets will eliminate laptops, or even netbooks, at least in the short term. So consumers need to see how this device fits into their life in a new way. If it's the best way to read The Wall Street Journal in bed or listen to NPR in the shower, don't be afraid to state its purpose. No one takes their laptop to the bathroom.
The iPad paves the way for other tablets to follow—if other tablets can get the Curated Computing experience right, and it's not clear that tablets that run on Android or Windows 7 necessarily will. There's more at stake here than just tablets: Curated Computing will be the dominant design principle behind future form factors like wearable devices. Product strategists that don't want to cede the future of devices to Apple should start thinking like museum curators and editors: sometimes less is more.
High Tech Drama: Adobe Calls Out Apple
Adobe Systems Inc. have lately been criticizing Apple Inc. in newspaper advertisements and on its website, saying the exclusion of its video software from the computer maker's iPad and iPhone stifles competition.
Adobe is advertising its public missive in 24 newspapers and websites, including the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, in response to criticisms of Adobe's software by Apple Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs. The Adobe letter, signed by founders Chuck Geschke and John Warnock, says that Apple’s actions could “undermine” the future of the Internet.
“In the end, we believe the question is really this: Who controls the World Wide Web?” the founders say. “And we believe the answer is: nobody -- and everybody, but certainly not a single company.”
Today’s letter is part of a widening rift between Apple and Adobe. Beyond refusing to support Adobe’s Flash software for the iPhone and the iPad, Apple last month said app developers must use programming tools that rely on open standards, rather than software using proprietary technologies, such as Flash.
Jobs followed that two weeks ago with a 29-paragraph public letter outlining six reasons why Apple chose not to use Flash on its mobile devices. He wrote that Flash has “major technical drawbacks” and said his company has “few joint interests” with Adobe.
HTML5, the open-standard format Apple uses, lets developers create online videos and animation without relying on third- party plug-ins, such as Flash, said Jobs, 55.
“It’s a dangerous precedent to have a single company picking and choosing what parts of the Web they want to support,” David Wadhwani, general manager and vice president of Adobe’s Platform Business Unit, said in an interview.
Adobe’s advertisements and letter today are its most public response to the criticisms. The company’s letter said that open markets are necessary for developers to create the applications customers want as computing moves from traditional computers to mobile devices.
“No company -- no matter how big or how creative -- should dictate what you can create, how you create it, or what you can experience on the Web,” they wrote.
Apple believes in open Web standards, like HTML5, Trudy Muller, an Apple spokeswoman, said in an interview. “Flash is not an open Web standard like HTML. It is a proprietary Adobe product.”
Apple’s exclusion of Flash could hurt Adobe sales, the company said in a regulatory filing last month. Adobe, based in San Jose, California, offers its Flash Player as a free download, and makes money from authoring tools, including Photoshop and Illustrator, that advertisers and designers use to create Flash-based graphics, animation and video.
Adobe complained to U.S. antitrust enforcers, saying Apple is stifling competition by barring developers from using Flash to create apps for the iPhone and iPad, said two people familiar with the matter. The complaint triggered discussions between the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission over which agency should review the allegations, the people said.
IPhone sales more than doubled last quarter and the iPad tablet, released April 3, sold 1 million copies in less than a month.
Flash runs on more than 800 million mobile phones, manufactured by all the top 20 handset makers except Apple.
iPad Worldwide Release Delayed!

Facing very high demand in the U.S. market, Apple is about to disappoint Canadian fans with a reported one-month delay of the tablet device's international launch.
In a news release from the company's Cupertino, California headquarters Apple claims to have sold more than 500,000 iPads, and taken "a large number of pre-orders for iPad 3G models for delivery by the end of April." It expects sales will “likely continue to exceed our supply over the next several weeks.”
Calling it a "difficult" decision, Apple will only begin taking online international pre-orders on May 10 (announcing at the same time the international price), with delivery delayed until the end of May.
This is the second delay for customers living outside the U.S. In January, Apple said the iPad would be sold worldwide in late March. It started selling them in the U.S. on April 3, but delayed the international launch until later this month.
"We know that many international customers waiting to buy an iPad will be disappointed by this news, but we hope they will be pleased to learn the reason—the iPad is a runaway success in the US thus far."
The “Amazon Effect”
Smelling blood in the water after Amazon caved to Macmillan’s demand to stop selling e-books of their titles for only $10, News Corp Chief Rupert Murdoch says he, too, wants that deal.
Murdoch’s media empire includes HarperCollins books, which has had 20 titles on New York Times best-seller lists in the past three months, including Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue ($29) and the hot political tome Game Change ($28). Reuters reports Murdoch told analysts Tuesday that Amazon appears “ready to sit down with us again” and renegotiate the deal under which Amazon prices new e-book titles at $9.99. That’s even though the publisher still gets a wholesale payment based on a higher price and Amazon eats the loss itself.

“We don’t like the Amazon model of selling everything at $9.99,” Murdoch said. “They pay us the wholesale price of $14 or whatever we charge,” he said. “But I think it really devalues books, and it hurts all the retailers of the hardcover books.”
If HarperCollins forces Amazon’s hand, it would deal a major — and perhaps final — blow to the pricing scheme that discounts digital books relative to their print counterparts. Amazon wants to charge less for e-books in part to make the purchase of its Kindle e-book reader more palatable and create reader interest in a new format which should increase book sales overall.
But at least some book publishers think charging $10 for a new release is not enough, even though:
a) Charging as little as $3 more seems to be enough, which is still a hefty subsidy of the cover price.
b) The economy of scale only improves the more e-books you sell.
c) The cost of producing an e-book is as close to $0.00 as you can get.
After two days of bravado over the weekend, Amazon bowed to pressure from Macmillan. The publisher insisted on charging $12.99 to $14.99 for its books, even though it, too, was receiving the wholesale price commensurate with that higher price anyway.
Amazon had briefly banished Macmillan titles after the publisher complained about $10 books, but it blinked on Sunday and, in a brief Kindle forum post, said it had “capitulated” because “Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles.”
The gathering storm began with last week’s announcement of the Apple iPad Tablet. Five major publishers, including Macmillan, were part of the launch, and Apple said they would be free to charge more. The irony of ironies is that Apple’s policy, on a product which does not exist, has creating instant and irresistible pricing pressure on the world’s largest online retailer.
Article By: John C. Abell
Dell Mini 5 Looks Very Promising!
Check out what Dell has cooking!
Dell Mini 5 Hands-ON from Gizmodo on Vimeo
Looks like I might have to skip getting a Nokia N900.
This fine piece of machinery has a dazzling 5 inch screen, custom Android OS, wi-fi, bluetooth, multi-touch, and to top it off, a 5 MP camera!
Read more at Gizmodo.com.
Apple iPad Tablet (16GB, Wifi)
Apple iPad: Revolutionary Device with Advanced Technology
A truly revolutionary device, the Apple iPad is perfect for your mobile computing lifestyle, including browsing the Web, reading and sending e-mail, enjoying photos, (more...)


