Ipad - A recent Wall Street Journal article proclaimed that during his medical leave, CEO Steve Jobs has been working on that mid-sized mobile device, bigger than an iPhone but smaller than a MacBook.

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Apple Ipod - True´s and Lie´s.

Steve Jobs, Verizon, the iPhone and the iPad

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Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486062129/

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Someone at Verizon (VZ) has been busy winding up the rumor mill this week, leaking stories to at least three news outlets about a pair of prototype wireless devices that Apple (AAPL) is reported to be shopping around.

In the past two days, news items in the New York Times, USA Today and BusinessWeek have all cited unnamed persons briefed on a new round of negotiations between Apple and Verizon - two companies whose failure to reach an agreement in 2005 famously resulted in the original iPhone going to AT&T (T).

BusinessWeek provides the most detailed account of the two prototypes:

A smaller, less expensive "calling device" described by a BusinessWeek source who has seen it as an "iPhone lite";
A "media pad" that would let users listen to music, view photos, watch high-definition videos and place calls over a Wi-Fi connection.
This "media pad" sounds a lot like the tablet Apple has been rumored to be working on for at least 18 months - and for which Apple is reported to have snapped up large quantities of 9- to 10-inch touch-sensitive screens. BusinessWeek reports that it is smaller than Amazon's (AMZN) Kindle e-book reader, but with a larger touchscreen.

Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486058255/

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Ipad


According to the BusinessWeek source who has seen it:

Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486875912/

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Ipad


"We are talking about a device where people will say, 'Damn, why didn't we do this?' Apple is probably going to define the damn category."

Silicon Alley Insider's Henry Blodget suggests that Apple call it the iPad.

The nature of the "calling device" is a matter of some dispute. USA Today suggested that it would run on Verizon's CDMA network - a possibility dismissed Monday by Piper Jaffray's Gene Munster as "unlikely" given the hurdles involved in building and supporting a cellular technology that seems to be on its last legs. As Apple COO Tim Cook put it last week: "CDMA doesn't really have a life to it after a certain point in time."

Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486060261/

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Ipad


The timing of all this is also fuzzy. BusinessWeek's sources tell it that one of the devices could come out this summer - but they don't say which one. We'd put our money on the iPad, given that any Verizon iPhone - lite or not - would probably have to wait until after 2010, when the carrier's next-generation LTE (Long Term Evolution) cellular network comes on line and Apple's contract with AT&T expires.

Complicating matters are multiple reports that AT&T is trying to get Apple to extend its deal as the iPhone's exclusive U.S. carrier beyond 2010.

The whole thing sounds like a typical high-wire Cupertino negotiating session, in which Apple seduces potential partners with impossibly sexy gadgetry, pits one against the other, and ends up extracting the most favorable terms for itself.

Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486875810/

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Ipad


It's no accident that one of BusinessWeek's sources - Verizon Wireless CEO Lowell McAdam - says that before Steve Jobs went on medical leave, McAdam was talking directly with the master dealmaker himself.

UPDATE: The Wall Street Journal Tuesday reported that Verizon is in discussions with Microsoft (MSFT) to carry a touchscreen device code-named "Pink" that would compete with Apple's iPhone by early next year. In a note posted after the report, Morgan Keegan's Tavis McCourt pointed out that Verizon already sells 14 different touch screen phones, six of them running Windows Mobile. "There appears to be nothing new here from a product perspective," he writes. "If we assume Microsoft was the source of the leak, this speaks volumes as to how threatened it is by iPhone."

See also: Rumor: An iPhone for Verizon in 2009

Here are some sample pictures of the Apple's multi-touch Tablet computer concept. This gadget will retail at $699 for 32GB and $899 for 64GB. It will be available soon, maybe at MacWorld 2008. Check out more pics after the jump.

Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486058173/

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Ipad


More about the iPad:

http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple-Reserve-aqui-o-seu-iPad-Apple/c78_4022_4050/index.html?CDpath=1
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple/c78_4022/index.html?CDpath=1
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple-iPad-todos-os-modelos/c78_4022_4051/index.html?CDpath=1
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple-iPad-todos-os-modelos/c78_4022_4051/p24289/Apple-iPad-Tablet-16GB,-Wi-fi/product_info.html?CDpath=1
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple-iPad-todos-os-modelos/c78_4022_4051/p24290/Apple-iPad-Tablet-32GB,-Wi-fi/product_info.html?CDpath=1
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Ipad-Apple-iPad-todos-os-modelos/c78_4022_4051/p24291/Apple-iPad-Tablet-64GB,-Wi-fi/product_info.html?CDpath=1
http://ziontechgroup.wordpress.com/cnet-confirma-que-apple-esta-produzindo-o-ipad-touch/
http://ipad-apple.blogspot.com/
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos-Apple-iPad-tablet/c78_4022/index.html
http://www.ztg.com.br/ecommerce/zion/Eletronicos/c78/index.html
http://ipadapple.blogspot.com/2009/07/apple-pode-lancar-tablet-ate-o-natal.html
http://ziontechnologies.wordpress.com/
http://malucosporapple.blogspot.com/2009/04/apple-cria-o-ipad.html
http://malucosporapple.blogspot.com/2009/07/jornal-chines-afirma-producao-de-apple.html
http://www.squidoo.com/ipad
http://ipadforum.blogspot.com/2009/05/ipad-apple-o-rumor-que-so-cresce-na-web.html
http://ipadforum.blogspot.com/2009/04/apple-ipad.html
http://appleipad.wordpress.com/
www.squidoo.com/ipad
http://ziontechgroup.wordpress.com/2009/12/02/video-sobre-ti-verde/

More News from CNN.

A recent Wall Street Journal article proclaimed that during his medical leave, CEO Steve Jobs has been working on that mid-sized mobile device, bigger than an iPhone but smaller than a MacBook.

By Tom Krazit

(CNET) -- Is the world finally ready for the mobile minitablet? It's become quite clear over the last several months that Apple is ready to bridge the mobile computing gap, with plans to develop a device that fits somewhere in between the iPhone and the MacBook.

Apple has developed ideas for mobile computing over the past two years that have resonated with users.

A recent Wall Street Journal article proclaimed that during his medical leave, CEO Steve Jobs has been working on that mid-sized mobile device, bigger than an iPhone but smaller than a MacBook.

And just this week, BusinessWeek reported that Apple is developing a "media pad" that would let users watch videos on a larger screen than an iPod Touch or Amazon Kindle, but on a device that's more portable than notebooks and lacks a keyboard.

The personal computer industry has long tried to make such a device a reality, but apart from some early success for the Kindle, no one has managed to convince the public that the attempts released to date -- such as the Ultra Mobile PC -- are worth buying.

Instead, PC companies looking for increased mobility are finding ways to shrink the notebook PC as opposed to a finding a new way to use computers.

As far back as 2000, Microsoft founder Bill Gates was evangelizing Tablet PCs, but a combination of price and uninspired software doomed that category to niche status.

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Intel and Microsoft then turned the hype machine to the UMPC (later rebranded MID, or Mobile Internet Device), which several years later aren't exactly flying off store shelves.

More recently, PC companies have embraced Netbooks, small inexpensive mini-notebook computers that are designed for basic Web surfing and e-mail. Netbooks, however, are further depressing the PC industry's gross margins and attempt to cram a full-fledged notebook user interface into a small package, and it doesn't seem that Apple is all that crazy about this category.

But Apple has developed a few unique ideas for mobile computing over the past two years that have resonated with designers, developers and users; namely, the iPhone OS and the App Store. So, is the timing finally right for the tweener computer?

BusinessWeek reported that the iPad (name stolen from Silicon Alley Insider for its brevity) would be about the size of the Amazon Kindle, but with a screen that covers a greater portion of the surface. The Kindle is 7.5-inches long, but the screen is just 6 inches; by comparison, the iPhone sports a 3.5-inch display, while the smallest MacBook uses a 13.3-inch display.

Previous attempts at making keyboard-less devices with 7-inch or 8-inch screens--such as UMPCs and MIDs--haven't captured the public's imagination. Microsoft and Intel had high hopes for the concept in 2006, which was also known as Project Origami inside Microsoft.

Samsung made perhaps the best-received UMPC, but that wasn't saying much, and interest in the category quickly faded after the launch of the iPhone.

The main issue with UMPCs was a lack of compelling software. They were designed to run Windows XP, which itself wasn't designed to run on a device with such a small screen and limited methods of input.

And at launch, Windows Vista was actually a step backward in terms of its suitability for mobile devices.

Intel tried to shift MIDs to Linux to get around the resource problems of Windows Vista, but its partners have yet to gain any traction. And neither attempt was able to galvanize third-party developers into creating applications designed specifically for a mobile platform.

Apple's iPhone OS, however, was designed for a small-screen mobile environment. Installing the iPhone OS 3.0 on the iPad would allow Apple to preserve the user interface from the iPhone and iPod Touch and keep the device simple: a more complicated (and power-hungry) operating system isn't needed for a computer like this.

This would also allow Apple to take advantage of the App Store, giving the iPad thousands of applications at its disposal right from launch. One potential problem with that approach is that developers will have to rewrite their iPhone applications to adapt to the larger-size screen on this new device, said Craig Hockenberry of Iconfactory, creators of Twitterific.

Hockenberry, who is very confident that Apple has such a device in the works, doesn't think this will be a huge obstacle, but developers will have to gauge whether the extra development effort is worth their time.

One thing Apple could do is set aside a separate section of the App Store for iPad-optimized applications, while finding a way to run older iPhone applications in some sort of compatibility mode.

"It wouldn't be hard for Apple to have a "Classic" environment on a tablet that provided a 320x480 window for running one or more iPhone applications," Hockenberry said in an e-mail. "It would be a smart thing for them to do: there are instantly tens of thousands of apps and users are presented with a familiar interface (something that looks a lot like Dashboard in Mac OS X.)"

The iPad could also be the first Apple product to surface with a chip designed by P.A. Semi, which Apple didn't buy on a lark. A custom chip could solve two problems for Apple -- the need to keep software compatibility with the ARM-based chips used to run the iPhone while delivering more performance for HD video playback or more robust games that competitors might not be able to immediately match.

What might such a device cost? There are two schools of thought on price.

UMPCs, at around $700, were considered too expensive but because they didn't offer any value, not because of the sticker price itself. It would not be hard for Apple to argue that an iPad with an HD screen, thousands of applications, and a superior mobile browser is worth just slightly more than what people were willing to pay for the original iPhone.

A $699 iPad would slot nicely between the iPod Touch and MacBook in Apple's product lineup and preserve Apple's profit margins, while allowing the company to reduce the price over time if needed similar to the original iPhone.

But Apple could also hook up with a wireless carrier--we'll save the AT&T versus Verizon debate for another day--to subsidize the iPad. The company has reportedly been in talks about distributing MacBooks through wireless carrier friends like AT&T, which already sells 3G-equipped Netbooks with a data plan subscription.

A device such as this would be infinitely more attractive with wide-area wireless networking, as opposed to just Wi-Fi--especially if carrier subsidies bring the price down to around $499, just above the largest iPod Touch. It's hard to see something this big replacing a mobile phone--you're not going to hold one of these up to the side of your head--but there are certainly plenty of headsets available in the world.

This is the last frontier of the promised convergence between computers and communication devices: the mid-sized device. That shift has already happened to the smartphone, but it seems very reasonable that for many people, smartphone screens are too small for serious computing.

If Apple is indeed working on such a product, it will have to get the implementation right to avoid duplicating the failures of so many other mobile computing aspirants. But by having awakened the public to the promise of basic mobile computing, Apple could be best positioned to capitalize on the need for something more.Link:
Ipad: http://www.flickr.com/photos/37761725@N04/3486058255/

Content:

Ipad


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