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Apple
introduces
new $499
iPad
tablet
computer
By
JESSICA
MINTZ
and
RACHEL
METZ
AP
Technology
Writers
Apple
CEO
Steve
Jobs
unveiled
the
company's
much-anticipated
iPad
tablet
computer
Wednesday,
calling
it a new
third
category
of
mobile
device
that is
neither
smart
phone
nor
laptop,
but
something
in
between.
The iPad
will
start at
$499, a
price
tag far
below
the
$1,000
that
some
analysts
were
expecting.
But
Apple
must
still
persuade
recession-weary
consumers
who
already
have
other
devices
to open
their
wallets
yet
again.
Apple
plans to
begin
selling
the iPad
in two
months.
Jobs
said the
device
would be
useful
for
reading
books,
playing
games or
watching
video,
describing
it as
"so much
more
intimate
than a
laptop
and so
much
more
capable
than a
smart
phone."
The
half-inch-thick
iPad is
larger
than the
company's
popular
iPhone
but
similar
in
design.
It
weighs
1.5
pounds
and has
a touch
screen
that is
9.7
inches
diagonally.
It comes
with 16,
32 or 64
gigabytes
of flash
memory
storage,
and has
Wi-Fi
and
Bluetooth
connectivity
built
in.
Jobs
said the
device
has a
battery
that
lasts 10
hours
and can
sit for
a month
on
standby
without
needing
a
charge.
Raven
Zachary,
a
contributing
analyst
with a
mobile
research
agency
called
The 451
Group,
considered
the iPad
a laptop
replacement,
especially
because
Apple is
also
selling
a dock
with a
built-in
keyboard.
But
Forrester
Research
analyst
James
McQuivey
said he
does not
believe
the iPad
offered
enough
additional
features
for
consumers
to
justify
buying
yet
another
gadget,
or to
call it
a new
category
of
device.
In an
e-mail,
he
criticized
its lack
of
social
features,
such as
ways to
share
photos
and home
video
and
recommend
books.
Sitting
on stage
in a
cozy
leather
chair,
Jobs
demonstrated
how the
iPad is
used for
surfing
the Web
with
Apple's
Safari
browser.
The CEO
typed an
e-mail
using an
on-screen
keyboard
and
flipped
through
photo
albums
by
flicking
his
finger
across
the
screen.
He also
showed
off a
new
electronic
book
store
and a
book-reading
interface
that
emulates
the look
of a
paper
book.
That
puts the
iPad in
competition
with
Amazon.com
Inc.'s
Kindle
and
e-book
store.
Tim
Bajarin
of
Creative
Strategies
Inc.
called
the iPad
a great
multipurpose
mobile
device —
and the
first
tablet
with a
chance
of
success
with
consumers.
But
Bajarin
said
Jobs'
presentation
only
touched
the tip
of what
the iPad
could do
for
newspapers,
magazines
and book
publishers,
three
industries
struggling
in the
transition
to the
digital
age.
A new
newspaper
reader
program
from The
New York
Times
and a
game
from
Electronic
Arts
Inc.
were
demonstrated
during
the
event.
The
iBookstore
launched
with
titles
from
Penguin,
Simon &
Schuster,
HarperCollins,
Hachette
Book
Group
and
Macmillan,
and will
open up
to other
publishing
houses.
Carolyn
Reidy,
chief
executive
of Simon
&
Schuster,
called
the iPad
a
"terrific
device"
that
gives
readers
the
ability
to
adjust
the
typeface
and turn
pages by
touching
a finger
to the
screen,
as
opposed
to
pushing
a
button,
as the
Kindle
requires.
Applause
rang out
as Jobs
stepped
onto the
stage to
introduce
the iPad
to
hundreds
of
analysts,
bloggers
and
other
guests
at the
Yerba
Buena
Center
for the
Arts in
San
Francisco.
Accompanied
at times
by
executives
from
Apple
and
other
companies,
Jobs
played
showman
throughout
the
hour-and-a-half
presentation,
slowly
revealing
details
about
the
iPad.
When he
announced
the
price —
lower
than
what had
been
speculated
— it was
accompanied
by the
sound of
glass
shattering.
Like
iPods
and the
iPhone,
the iPad
can sync
with
Apple's
Macintosh
and
Microsoft's
Windows
computers.
Jobs
said the
iPad
will
also be
better
for
playing
games
and
watching
video
than
either a
laptop
or the
small
screen
of a
smart
phone.
Unlike a
laptop,
the iPad
has an
accelerometer,
so
gamers
can tilt
the
device
to
control
what's
happening
on the
screen.
And the
iPad is
lighter
and
easier
to hold
for long
periods
of time
while
watching
a movie
or TV
show.

Its
large
screen
makes it
much
easier
to touch
type
than on
a smart
phone,
and it
is
extremely
responsive
to
finger
swipes
and taps
for easy
scrolling
through
Facebook,
photo
albums
and news
articles.
The iPad
comes
with
software
that
includes
a
calendar,
maps,
and
video
and
music
players.
All seem
to have
been
slightly
redesigned
to take
advantage
of the
iPad's
bigger
screen.
Still,
tablet
computers
have
existed
for a
decade
with
little
success.
Jobs
acknowledged
Apple
will
have to
work to
convince
consumers
who
already
have
smart
phones
and
laptops
that
they
need the
iPad.
"In
order to
really
create a
new
category
of
devices,
those
devices
are
going to
have to
be far
better
at doing
some key
tasks,"
Jobs
said.
"We
think
we've
got the
goods.
We think
we've
done
it."
Applications
designed
for the
iPhone
can run
on the
iPad.
Apple is
also
releasing
updated
tools
for
software
developers
to help
them
build
iPhone
and iPad
programs.
"We
think
it's
going to
be a
whole 'nother
gold
rush for
developers
as they
build
applications
for the
iPad,"
said
Scott
Forstall,
an
iPhone
software
executive.
The
basic
iPad
models
will
cost
$499,
$599 and
$699,
depending
on the
storage
size,
when it
comes
out
worldwide
in
March.
Apple
Inc.
will
also
sell a
version
with
data
plans
from
AT&T
Inc. in
the
U.S.:
$14.99
per
month
for 250
megabytes
of data,
or
$29.99
for
unlimited
usage.
Neither
will
require
a
long-term
service
contract.
The iPad
models
that can
connect
to
AT&T's
wireless
network
will
cost
more —
$629,
$729 and
$829,
depending
on the
amount
of
memory —
and will
be out
in
April.
International
cellular
data
details
have not
yet been
announced.
Shares
of Apple
rose
$2.04,
or 1
percent,
to close
Wednesday
at
$207.98.
The
Cupertino,
Calif.-based
company's
shares
have
more
than
doubled
over the
past
year,
partly
on
anticipation
of the
tablet
computer.
Shares
in
Amazon
rose
$3.27,
or 2.7
percent,
to
$122.75.
Jobs,
54, a
pancreatic
cancer
survivor
who got
a liver
transplant
last
year,
looked
thin as
he
introduced
the
highly
anticipated
gadget,
though
he
seemed
to have
more
energy
than at
Apple's
last
event in
September.
Apple
had kept
its
latest
creation
tightly
under
wraps
until
Wednesday's
unveiling,
though
many
analysts
had
correctly
speculated
that it
would be
a
one-piece
tablet
computer
with a
big
touch
screen.
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