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All about the Apple iPad

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From cnet.com

Apple finally gave us the date the first iPads will hit store shelves: April 3. We've been closely following the touch-screen tablet since Apple first announced it in late January, but here's a quick guide for your most essential questions about the device.

First things first: How big is it?

The iPad's screen offers a maximum resolution of 1,024x768 pixels and measures 9.7 inches diagonally, 5.75 inches wide, and 7.75 inches tall. An 0.86-inch bezel frames the screen (with a hair extra room on the bottom to account for the home button), making the front of the iPad a total of 7.47 inches wide and 9.56 inches tall. The total thickness of the iPad is half an inch at its thickest point, which tapers down to a quarter of an inch near the edges. Total weight is 1.5 pounds for the model with Wi-Fi only, or 1.6 pounds for the version with 3G.

What hardware features does the iPad offer? Many of the iPad's hardware capabilities are identical to the Apple iPod Touch, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1, a stereo audio output (headphone jack), built-in speaker, an integrated lithium ion rechargeable battery, and NAND flash memory. A built-in accelerometer and ambient light sensor are also included on the iPad.

Hardware features that distinguish the iPad from the iPod Touch include a 1GHz A4 processor, an oleophobic screen coating, integrated digital compass, built-in microphone, mute switch, and support for 802.11n Wi-Fi (in addition to 802.11b/g). The 3G version of the iPad includes a SIM card tray, as well as assisted GPS capabilities.

What's the deal with the wireless plan?
Apple and AT&T are offering a pretty good deal on 3G service for the iPad. There are two options: $15 a month for 250MB of data, or unlimited data for $29.99 a month. The bonus is that you don't have to sign any contracts that bind you to the device for two years. Each option can be prepaid for a month in advance. Again, you need the iPad 3G model, which bumps up the baseline price of the device to $629 (16GB), $729 (32GB), and $829 (64GB).

If I already have apps for my iPhone or iPod Touch, can I use them on the iPad?
In most cases, the answer should be yes. Older or existing apps can run on the iPad at their native iPod/iPhone resolution (taking up a small portion of the iPad screen) or used in a full-screen mode that artificially doubles the resolution. So long as the apps are in your iTunes library when you connect the iPad to your computer, most should transfer with no problem. There are exceptions, of course. Apps designed to take advantage of unique hardware characteristics of the iPhone (such as the photo camera or video recording) may not transfer, and would be useless on the iPad anyway.

That said, many popular apps for the iPhone and iPod Touch will likely be offered in a new iPad-specific version that makes better use of the device's larger screen. These apps, designed specifically for the iPad, will not be backward-compatible with the iPhone and iPod Touch.

I've heard the iPad is basically just an oversize iPod Touch. Is that true?
In some ways, it is a super-sized version of Apple's touch-screen iPod: same basic look and functionality with its multitouch screen and reliance on iTunes and the App Store to install applications and download media. But there are plenty of differences.

The operating system is a version of the iPhone OS, but with a slightly different look and feel. Many of the same apps are there--e-mail, photos, notes, an iPod, calendar, contacts, maps, YouTube, and Safari--but have been tweaked to take advantage of the iPad's larger screen size.

The 9.7-inch screen offers far more screen real estate and also makes the iPad much more realistic to use an e-reader. That brings us to iBooks, the e-bookstore Apple created specifically for the iPad. It's an app that features a virtual bookshelf with content from five major publishers: HarperCollins, Hachette, Penguin, Macmillan, and Simon & Shuster. The iBooks store will feature both popular books as well as textbooks. Readers can choose to read in portrait or landscape mode and change the size of the text.

But that's not the only iPad-only software Apple has cooked up. The company had its engineers completely rework iWorks for the device, including Pages (word processing), Numbers (spreadsheets), and Keynote (presentations). Each iWorks app will be sold separately for $9.99.

There are accessories that will cause some major iPhone/iPod envy as well, like the keyboard dock accessory. There's also a camera connection kit that lets users import images from their SD cards, and a charging/docking accessory, that when used in conjunction with the photo app's montage mode turns the iPad into an electronic picture frame.

What else might I need to use the iPad?
While the iPad can be used without a computer for the majority of its features, you will need to connect to a computer running Apple's iTunes 9.0 or later to initially set up the device. Computer specification requirements for iTunes 9.0 can be found on Apple's Web site.

If you plan on using the iPad at home for surfing the Web, and you do not have a 3G-capable model, you will need to make sure your home is set up for wireless Internet. A power adapter is included with all iPads, but users should consider investing in a charging dock if they wish to take advantage of the iPad as a photo frame. Users who anticipate using the iPad heavily as a word processor may want to consider buying Apple's keyboard dock or a compatible Bluetooth wireless keyboard.

What's missing from the iPad that I might find in a competing product?
The iPad is in many ways one of the first products of its kind--making it hard to draw easy comparisons. When weighed against high-end smartphones, users should know that the iPad is not designed for voice calls or text messages (though there are apps that can work around this limitation). More importantly, the iPad does not include a built-in camera for taking photos or videos.

When compared to low-end laptops and Netbooks, the iPad can't run common full-fledged applications (such as Microsoft Word), or use multiple apps simultaneously. Conventional input and output ports, such as USB, SD, VGA, and LAN are also missing, though some adapters exist to address this. Critics routinely point out that the iPad does not support Adobe's Flash media format, which is required to view content on many popular Web sites. Lack of an integrated hardware keyboard or high-resolution video output are also common complaints from the laptop perspective.

Finally, compared against dedicated e-readers (such as the Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble Nook), the iPad's reflective glass front and backlit color LCD screen arguably strain the eyes more than a passively illuminated non-glare e-ink display.

When and where can I buy it, and how much is this going to set me back?
There are two versions of the iPad. Apple announced Friday that the Wi-Fi version will launch in the U.S. on April 3, followed by the Wi-Fi and 3G-capable edition later in the month. Both versions will hit Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland, and the U.K. in late April.


Saturday Night Robbery

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We were robbed Saturday Night 2-20-10 please visit our Facebook page to view & share a couple of videos of the break-in.

Please share these videos on facebook, twitter and email to help us catch who did this.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Hyannis-MA/Cape-Mac-Computers/110627071880?v=wall


Super Bowl Apps

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Super Bowl XLIV Apps to Load Before Kickoff

Mobile

This Super Bowl weekend, whether you are rooting for the New Orleans Saints or that other team, there is a dog pile of apps to can enhance the game, although I will admit not as many as I would like for some handsets.

The Super Bowl app yardage leader is the iPhone. The iTunes app store offers the official NFL Superbowl Program, formatted for your phone, for $4.99. There is a $1.99 Saints-focused WhoDatApp, which has a roster and player data, twitter updates from Saints players (I wouldn’t count on a lot of tweets during a game), and an archive of Bobby and Deke sports talk radio shows, although you need a Wi-Fi connection for audio.

There is an Indianapolis-specific app for $1.99, with a schedule, roster and statistics. The free ESPN ScoreCenter app also offers game statistics as well as scoring alerts, just in case you are momentarily distracted by the barbecue. If you need to get out of the house, the free Fan Finder app will help pinpoint sports bars near you.

Close behind is single app, but it’s a doozy. Sprint has preloaded the NFL Mobile Live app on 100 models of its phones, and not just smart phones, but semi-smart phones like the LG Rumour and Samsung Reclaim. If the app isn’t on your phone, text 7777 for a download. It’s free, but it will use data minutes. The NFL Mobile Live shows a twitter feed from NFL players and personalities, and you will be able to see live programming from the NFL Network during the game.

The Android market is a little skimpy. There are some all-news apps, some fantasy football apps, but I found just one specific Super Bowl app. it is the $1.39 Cajun Super Bowl language quiz, which lets you look up words you might hear from fans cheering the Saints in a N’awlins patois.

The Blackberry market is equally thin, with no specific Super Bowl apps that I could see. The best I could do was to find team themes for your phone at $5.99 each. Oddly, the description of Saints theme pack cites the helmet’s “lucky blue horseshoe.”

Suspicious, but I’m from Baltimore. I am predisposed to think Indianapolis is up to something sneaky.


REBATES ON HP PRINTER

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Music Lovers

Posted by: steve in MyBlog

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December 29, 2009, 2:39 PM

App of the Week: Cult Bands, Live and Free

Mobile

Lots of apps provide free music, but only one I know of plays original music, recorded live in its own studios, from a variety of artists. It is called Daytrotter, and it just happens to have a free iPhone app.

Daytrotter operates out of Rock Island, Ill., where it says it entices artists to stop by its studio on their ways elsewhere. The musicians then lay down a few live tracks, often using borrowed instruments.

Almost 800 sessions have been recorded by more than 700 artists, and all can be heard free on the iPhone.

Daytrotter specializes in lesser-known bands, although many have developed strong followings since their early appearances there. Artists like Death Cab for Cutie, Raphael Sadiq, Fleet Foxes, Vampire Weekend and the Ting Tings have made appearances. Daytrotter said it adds artists each day.

Fidelity is quite good on most recordings, if sometimes charmingly crude. Just take a listen to Bell X-1’s sweetly mellow rendition of “I Fought the Law and the Law Won.”

What the app doesn’t offer is free downloads of songs, reviews and videos. For that, you still have to go to the site.

 


Otterbox Defender Series

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Availible in our Hyannis location, Otterbox Defender Series  for the iPhone 3g and 3gs!


"The real test would be to see if it's as tough as it looks. I went out into the parking lot and dropped it from waist height (I'm 6 feet tall). No problem. Next from shoulder height. It didn't even blink. It bounced, but didn't blink. Finally, I handed it over to my kids. While the added bulk was most noticeable in the hands of a toddler (anyone who's held a Newton 2100 has a point of reference), it isn't meant for a toddler, so that's OK. The kids dropped it, pounded on it (iChalky gets them especially wound up) and even spilled half of a juice box (don't ask me how many ounces) onto it. The case took all of it and the iPhone kept on ticking."

Check out this write up about the Defender Series  and some great comments


Solar MacBook Charger

Posted by: steve in MyBlog

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Pay your money and take your choice: a solar-powered battery charger for an Apple MacBook for $1,200; or a new Apple MacBook for $200 less.

 

A Kansas company called QuickerTek has just announced the Apple “Juicz,” for those who just can’t find an AC outlet nearby, but can find the sun (the company claims someone took a Mac and a Juicz on a visit to Mount Everest and it worked well—closer to the sun, I guess).

 

The $1,200 lightweight, flexible panel puts out 55 watts and supposedly fully recharges just about any current Apple laptop in six hours, plugging into the Magsafe port. A bargain model for $700 has 27 watts and takes about twice as long to recharge the MacBook.

 

It’s a serious device, but at this price, one would have to be either committed to going green full time, or just committed. After all, AC outlets are…well, ubiquitous. As one reviewer noted, $1,200 could buy one heck of an extension cord.


Points to ponder from NYT

Posted by: steve in MyBlog

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It’s hard to believe that hiring managers and employers are surfing the Web to screen job candidates – or that anything your boss might dig up online might matter as much as your undergraduate major or references, but increasingly, it seems like it does.

A recent study conducted by Harris Interactive for CareerBuilder.com determined that 45 percent of employers questioned were using social networks to screen job candidates — more than double from a year earlier, when a similar survey found that just 22 percent of supervisors were researching potential hires on social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and LinkedIn.

One easy thing you can do to gauge of how much digital dirt there is muddying up your online reputation is by Googling yourself, said Peter Spicer, a personal risk specialist . If, for example, you have your annual beer pong tournaments memorialized on Facebook and MySpace, you might want to consider deleting those pictures or at least untagging yourself in them or ensuring that your privacy settings are set so that people outside of your network can’t view them. Choosing a slightly more respectable profile photograph of yourself couldn’t hurt, either.

“First impressions are crucial to landing a job, particularly in the current job market,” said Mr. Spicer. “A job candidate with no embarrassing photos online has an immediate edge over you if there are pictures of you on Facebook wearing a lampshade and holding a martini.”

If you cringe at what surfaces after a cursory Google search — like photos from that hotdog-eating contest you won in 1995 — you could always try creating your own content online, like a LinkedIn account or Google profile, to help buffer it out, but “a better idea is to think twice before posting any public content you wouldn’t want found by potential employers,” said David Binkowski, senior vice president of marketing at MS&L, a communications firm.



My first Apple ( 1977 ) $2638.00

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An Example of what you can do with the NEW ipod Nano!

Posted by: andrew in MyBlog

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http://www.ableandrew.com/ableandrew/Movies.html

 

This was done with all the software that is included in your new Mac (iMac, MacBook, and MacBook Pro) . Or if you have iLife '09. 

 

Software Used: iMovie, iWeb, MobileMe

 

See ya in the store!

Andrew 


Cape Mac Computers Apple Specialists