International

Applause for Apple iPad

WASHINGTON, (AFP) - US media outlets are gushing like star-struck lovers over the Apple iPad in early reviews.

The few blessed by Apple to receive review copies of the iconic California firm's latest creation, which was launched yesterday, were clearly smitten with the notepad-sized gadget.

"This beautiful new touch-screen device from Apple has the potential to change portable computing profoundly, and to challenge the primacy of the laptop," said the Wall Street Journal, calling it a "game changer."

January 27, 2010 filed photo shows Apple Inc. CEO Steve Jobs announces the new iPad as he speaks during an Apple Special Event at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts San Francisco, California. AFP

Apple chief executive Steve Jobs billed the iPad as "revolutionary" when he unveiled the device in San Francisco in late January, saying it will carve out a home between smartphones and laptop computers.

The USA Today newspaper agreed, like most other media outlets: the "stunning" iPad is "rewriting the rulebook," it said.

"The iPad is not so much about what you can do -- browse, do email, play games, read e-books and more -- but how you can do it," said tech reporter Edward C. Baig.

"Apple's tablet is fun, simple, stunning to look at and blazingly fast," he added. Following weeks of rising expectations, the tablet finally hit Apple stores at 9:00 am yesterday, with some analysts predicting they will be sold out within a day, ensuring buzz stays high for the gadgets.

New York Times' business columnist David Carr effused so lovingly about iPad in comments fired off on Twitter that Silicon Valley gossip website Valley Wag playfully likened it to romance.

"Killer apps: maps, books (so sexy!), YouTube (freaky pretty), plain old surfing," Carr tweeted at the microblogging service before evidently slipping off for some private time with his iPad.

"Threshold of devices that you can take to the bathroom has been crossed," he said in a subsequent message. "Not a good bath read, but works well with other appliances."

Carr went on to contend that the iPad makes surfing "far less monogamous." The Valley Wag story about the tweets bore the headline "David Carr is Having Intimate Encounters with his iPad."

"Between the iPad drooling and April Fool's Day nonsense, I am boycotting the Internet for remainder of today," former Wall Street Journal reporter turned independent journalist Heidi Moore vowed in a tweet Thursday.

The 9.7-inch (24.6 centimetre) touch-screen devices allow users to watch video, listen to music, play games, surf the Web or read electronic books. The iPad also runs most of the 150,000 applications made for the iPod Touch and the iPhone.

Prices for iPads range from 499 dollars to 829 dollars depending on features. "Not only does it threaten to turn the digital publishing and electronic reader market on its head," said Scott Steinberg, head of technology consulting firm TechSavvy Global.

"The iPad aims to provide a more comfortable and casual means of consuming audio, video and photo content as well as playing games." Software makers behind applications that have been hits on iPhones and iPod Touch devices have been scrambling to adapt programmes to the larger screens and beefier processors in iPads.

"Once the specifics were finally known, our team began putting together our plans for the device the same day," said Michael Murphey, chief executive of iVerse Media which tailored a digital comic book for the iPad.

Family-oriented entertainment giant Walt Disney Company -- whose largest individual shareholder is Apple CEO Jobs -- has built an iPad version of its flagship website and promised applications for viewing online content from all its businesses.

"The iPad provides a very compelling consumer experience, and we are pleased to have new forms of original, interactive content on this great device," said Disney chief executive Bob Iger.

Among Disney's iPad-focused entries are applications for TV shows, video games, interactive books and even a finger-painting feature to allow children to draw on the screen, according to the Washington Post.
Popular complaints when the device was unveiled in January included the lack of a camera, multi-tasking capabilities, a USB port, and support for videos made with Adobe Flash software.

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