Apr 02
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David Pogue at NY Times has a non technical review of the Ipad – check it out here.

The post has a video component as well, I am embedding it here – scroll down and push the play button (you’ll have to endure a gruesome 20 sec Toyota ad though).

Here is an excerpt (emphasis added) – my focus is on the non-tech segment:

The Apple iPad is basically a gigantic iPod Touch.

The simple act of making the multitouch screen bigger changes the whole experience. Maps become real maps, like the paper ones. Scrabble shows the whole board, without your having to zoom in and out. You see your e-mail inbox and the open message simultaneously. Driving simulators fill more of your field of view, closer to a windshield than a keyhole.

The new iBooks e-reader app is filled with endearing grace notes. For example, when you turn a page, the animated page edge actually follows your finger’s position and speed as it curls, just like a paper page. Font, size and brightness controls appear when you tap. Tap a word to get a dictionary definition, bookmark your spot or look it up on Google or Wikipedia. There’s even a rotation-lock switch on the edge of the iPad so you can read in bed on your side without fear that the image will rotate.

If you have the cellular model, you can buy AT&T service so you can get online anywhere. (Cellular iPads aren’t available until next month; I tested a Wi-Fi-only model.)

But how’s this for a rare deal from a cell company: there’s no contract. By tapping a button in Settings, you can order up a month of unlimited cellular Internet service for $30. Or pay $15 for 250 megabytes of Internet data; when it runs out, you can either buy another 250 megs, or just upgrade to the unlimited plan for the month. Either way, you can cancel and rejoin as often as you want — just March, July and November, for example — without penalty. The other carriers are probably cursing AT&T’s name for setting this precedent.

Here is the video:

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Mar 31
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BusinessWeek has an article on possible alternatives to the pricey AT&T data plan offered with the iPad devices. One is not required to purchase a plan from AT&T – so competing options are popping up all over the place. Here is a quick summary of options presented in the article:

Boingo Wireless will let you surf for two bucks per hour (or $10/month):

Boingo Wireless, which sells Wi-Fi access in airports, convention centers, and other public places, on Mar. 29 announced it would begin selling $2-an-hour access to more than 125,000 Wi-Fi hotspots for iPad users. Consumers can purchase the access directly through Apple’s iTunes online store. Boingo Chief Executive Dave Hagan says he expects especially strong demand in New York and San Francisco, where AT&T’s cellular network has suffered from congestion. “If it’s not working very well, Wi-Fi is there,” he says. The iPad “is going to be a very big opportunity for companies like ours.”

Sprint will let you hook up and surf with 4 devices for $60:

Other wireless service providers see a market, too. Sprint Nextel (S), the third-largest U.S. cellular carrier, plans to market to iPad owners its Overdrive mobile Wi-Fi hotspot, which for a $60-a-month subscription lets users connect as many as five mobile computing devices to its next-generation 4G cellular network. “In our view the iPad will make a very compelling 4G device,” says Sprint spokesman Scott Sloat. Sprint says its 4G network offers download speeds that are as much as 10 times as fast as AT&T’s 3G network.

Yet, if you are on Verizon FiOS you are lucky – Boingo is free:

Customers of Verizon’s FiOS Internet access service already receive free, Verizon-branded access to Boingo’s hotspots and could use the service with their iPads as well, according to Boingo’s Hagan. Verizon Wireless declined to comment.

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