Unveiling Apple's iPad: Live blog

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tablet, apple, jobs, launch

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After months of rumors and speculation about a slate-like device, Apple has had its say. See the train of events in this blog from of the high-profile press event which kicked off in San Francisco at 10am PST — 5am Sydney time.

The quick details:

  • The Apple tablet is real, and is called the iPad
  • Can have 16, 32, or 64GB of SSD storage
  • 16GB - US$499, 32GB - US$599, 64GB - US$699. Add US$130 for 3G models
  • Like a large iPod Touch
  • 9.7-inch IPS display
  • 12.7mm thin, 0.68kg
  • 1GHz custom Apple chip called A4. Processor, graphics, i/o memory controller on one chip.
  • 802.11n Wi-Fi (3G versions available), Bluetooth, accelerometer, compass, and a 10-hour battery life
  • "Virtually" all iPhone apps work, connects to and uses iTunes
  • "iBooks" application, with titles from Penguin, Harper Collins, Simon and Schuster, MacMillan and Hachette
  • Custom version of iWork, US$9.99 per app
  • Accessories, including a keyboard that also functions as a dock
  • There will be "even better deals" coming for international customers in the Australian winter, which may mean a delayed release here
  • Nothing on new MacBooks, or any of Apple's other product lines
Outside the Apple event

The press checks in for the big Apple event Wednesday morning outside the venue. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Outside the Yerbu Buena Center for the Arts

The scene outside San Francisco's Yerba Buena Center for the Arts before Wednesday morning's big Apple event. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Inside the building

Inside the building, awaiting Steve Jobs (assuming he'll be doing the announcing). (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

9:35am PST: OK, we're all settled inside Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, where the event should get going in just under 10 minutes. I'm with CNET reviewer Donald Bell, who will be providing some occasional commentary today. The place is packed already and Bob Dylan is on the speakers. The stage is a bit of a different setup than we've seen at these events before, with a comfortable-looking leather chair and table set up on the left.

A seat and small table on stage

A seat and small table on stage — that's not typical for these events. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:01am: Lights are lowering, music is getting turned down. Here we go.

10:01am: Steve Jobs takes the stage to a standing ovation.

10:02am: He says he wants to kick off 2010 by introducing a truly magical and revolutionary product today. But first a few updates to other products.

iPods up first. Steve says the 250 millionth iPod was sold last week.

10:03am: Now he's talking about retail stores.

10:03am: And another store, the App Store, an "incredible phenomenon" he says. With 140K apps on the App Store, there have been 3 billion downloads over the past 18 months.

10:04am: Finally, he shows an old photo of himself and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and says since they started the company in 1976, and now they have a company making US$15.6 billion in revenue. "Apple is an over $50 billion company," now he says.

Steve Jobs takes the stage

Steve Jobs takes the stage. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:05am: He is going to explain where the revenue comes from: iPods, iPhones, and Macs. "What's interesting" he says is iPods, iPhones and Macs are mobile devices. Apple is a mobile device company. "That's what we do."

10:06am: Apple is the largest mobile devices company in the world now, by revenue, according to Jobs. He says this includes Sony, Samsung, and Nokia's mobile devices units.

10:06am: End of updates. Now to the main event.

10:06am: He shows a photo of Moses holding a tablet. "I chuckled when I saw this."

10:07am: Quick history lesson: 1991 PowerBook on screen now. The first modern laptop, he tells us.

10:07am: Shows 2007 original iPhone too.

10:07am: All of us use laptops and smartphones now, he says. The question has arisen lately, is there room for a third category of device in the middle?

10:09am: In order to create a new category of devices, they have to be really good at doing some important things, he says. That includes web browsing, e-mail, photos, watching video, listening to music, playing games, and reading e-books.

10:09am: Some people have thought that's a netbook, he says. "The problem is netbooks aren't better at anything," he says to loud laughter and applause.

They're just cheap laptops. We think we have something better.

10:10am: iPad is the name.

10:10am: It's a giant iPod Touch-looking device, just like we thought. Same home button, same bezel.

10:11am: You can browse the web with it, using the touch screen to navigate.

10:11am: Can be oriented to landscape or portrait mode.

10:12am: He shows e-mail, Facebook, and The New York Times as examples of sites to visit. The virtual keyboard is landscape.

10:12am: There's a calendar and address book for contacts. Maps using Google Maps too.

10:13am: The iPad will have access to the iTunes Store.

Jobs announces the iPad

Jobs announces the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:14am: He takes a seat in that leather chair, reclining like he's in a living room.

You slide to unlock the screen just like an iPhone. He pulls up the New York Times again. Shows how you can scroll up and down, zoom with his fingers.

10:16am: He clicks the Safari bookmark bar to pick other sites like Time.com and Fandango. He stresses that you get the "whole web site" not just a mobile version of these sites.

10:17am: Now onto e-mail. There's a dropdown inbox menu on the left, while the text of emails show up on the right. You can zoom in on images in the body of the email, tap to open PDF attachments.

Jobs takes iPad for a spin

Jobs takes iPad for a spin. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Jobs demoing the iPad

Jobs demoing the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:20am: Photos can be viewed in stacks organized by events, and viewed in portrait or landscape. You sort through by flicking with your finger. A bottom bar looks like a film strip you can scroll through to see all photos in an album. Can organise by faces, places, or events, just like iPhoto.

10:20am: Meanwhile, CNET's Ina Fried notes that all the tablet chatter has Twitter on a delay. Posts are taking eight or nine minutes to show up on the site.

10:20am: Can also do built-in slide shows from a drop down menu, which he's demoing now.

10:21am: Now onto music. It has a "built in iPod," he says.

10:22am: Plays your music and displays album artwork. Can scroll through your music library from a menu on the left. When you select an album a pop-up window will show all the songs on that album.

10:23am: iTunes demo now. Can buy movies, TV shows, music, podcasts, iTunes U stuff.

10:23am: He runs through the calendar and contacts real quick. But now he's showing maps.

10:24am: Works just like Google Maps on an iPhone.

10:25am: YouTube HD videos are up now. You can watch videos in portrait or landscape.

Photos on the iPad

Photos on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Jobs lounging with the iPad

Jobs lounging with the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:26am: He shows how you can watch downloaded movies and TV shows too. With movies (he picked Star Trek) you can jump ahead to particular chapters you want to watch from a menu that appears on the left.

10:27am: He's showing his favorite sequence from "Up," now. A Pixar movie of course.

10:27am: "And that gives you an overview of what the iPad can do," he says.

10:28am: He's going to talk specs now. The iPad is 0.5 inches (12.7mm) thin and weighs 1.5 pounds (0.68kg). A 9.7-inch IPS display, the same type of display used in the latest-generation iMac.

10:29am: It has full capacitive multi-touch screen, 1GHz custom Apple chip. It's called A4, the most advanced chip they've done: processor, graphics, i/o memory controller on one chip. Can have 16, 32, or 64GB of SSD storage.

10:29am: 802.11n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, accelerometer, compass, and a 10-hour battery life.

10:30am: The battery life elicits some enthusiastic applause from the audience.

10:30am: There's also one month of standby battery life. You can leave it asleep and not use it for 30 days.

iTunes on the iPad

iTunes on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:31am: Back to software. Scott Forstall, senior vice president of iPhone software, is going to talk to us about the App Store now.

10:32am: The iPad can run virtually every app unmodified from the App Store. They do that by run them centered and small in the middle of the screen, or they can double the pixels to make them fill the screen of the iPad.

10:32am: With Facebook for example, you can play with the standard iPhone app version of it or click the 2x button on the bottom right and the app window blows up to fit the screen.

10:34am: Forstall demos a game for us. Just like with Facebook, he starts with the app window small and centered on the screen and later selects full screen.

Jobs offers up iPad stats

Jobs offers up iPad stats. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:35am: All the apps you already have will work on the iPad. But developers can also modify the apps themselves to fit the screen.

"That's what we did for our apps," Forstall says.

The iPhone SDK now supports development for the iPad as well. The new SDK will come out today.

10:36am: There's an iPad simulator included.

10:37am: Apple will feature apps built specifically for the iPad "front and centre," on the App Store, he says.

Some developers who've already had a peek at the iPad SDK are going to show us what they've come up with in a few weeks. First up, Gameloft, a game developer often featured at iPhone events.

Green check

Green check. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:40am: A Gameloft representative shows a first-person shooter game that was made for the iPad. Its default is the full screen mode. Like iPhone games, you can use the accelerometer to navigate, and touchscreen to drag items around the screen.

iPad display

iPad display. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:40am: Now The New York Times is getting its turn.

10:41am: Martin Nisenholtz from the NYT has been working with the iPad for three weeks.

10:43am: They've taken the iPhone app version of the NYT app and make it for the iPad. You can scroll from left to right, save articles to a reading list (which will sync to an iPhone for later reading). Tap to change number of columns, resize text by pinching, and navigate via a bar on the bottom of the screen. You can click update and it will automatically bring in the latest stories.

Facebook on the iPad

Facebook on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Scott Forstall talks apps

Apple's Scott Forstall takes the stage to talk apps and the developer kit. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:43am: Now a painting app for iPhone called Brushes is going to be demoed. The developer behind it, Steve Sprang, takes the stage.

Nice resolution

Nice resolution. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

The New York Times on the iPad

The New York Times on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:45am: You can scroll from left to right through paintings, and with pop up windows you can pick colors, brushes, and other tools. If you want to share, you can send to Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, etc.

10:46am: Electronic Arts is getting its turn now.

10:48am: "Need for Speed," is the game they're showing. They said it took "a very short amount of time" to rework it from the iPhone to the iPad version. That means they can redo all of their iPhone games pretty quickly.

Need for Speed

Travis Boatman, a VP for Electronic Arts, demos a car racing game on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:49am: MLB.com up now.

10:50am: "We couldn't just take our existing iPhone app and make it bigger," MLB's Chad Evans says.

10:51am: Can scroll through the scoreboard on the top, see the virtual Gameday version of a game, but with a bunch of screen space you can also watch highlight videos in the same window. On the bottom you can scroll through a team's lineup, click on players and their baseball card pops in a small window.

You can also watch full-screen live video of games.

MLB.com on the iPad

MLB's Chad Evans demos MLB.com app for the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:53am: Steve's back. He puts a picture of the Kindle on screen. "Amazon's done a great job of pioneering this functionality with the Kindle. We're going to stand on their shoulders and go a bit further."

The new app is called iBooks.

10:54am: You can choose books from what looks like an actual bookshelf. On the upper left is a button that leads to the iBook Store. Can download books right to the iPad. All five major publishers (Penguin, Harper Collins, Simon and Schuster, MacMillan and Hachette) are on the bookstore starting this afternoon.

Now a demo of the books app.

10:55am: The UI is exactly like iTunes or the App Store.

10:56am: To read a book you tap on it and it opens to be read via portrait or landscape. Tap anywhere on the right to flip forward in pages, tap on the left to go back. You can also pick up a page and lift it by dragging your finger right to left.

10:57am: A scroll bar on the bottom shows your progress through the book and what page you're on.

You can change font and size also if you want.

10:58am: It uses the ePub format. Not just popular books, but textbooks are coming as well.

But he moves on quickly without giving any detail about textbooks.

iBooks on the iPad

iBooks on the iPad. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

Bookshelf on iBooks

Bookshelf on iBooks. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

iBooks interface

iBooks interface. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

10:59am: Now Jobs is talking about iWork, and invites Phil Schiller, senior vice president of product marketing, to give more details.

11:00am: The iWork team has reworked the software for the iPad, including a brand new version of Keynote to make presentations with touch input only.

Also new versions of Pages and Numbers.

11:02am: Schiller is demoing those for us now.

Demo of Keynote presentation software

Demo of Keynote presentation software. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

11:09am: First he runs through all the multi-touch features of Keynote. Then he moves on to the way you can create page layouts with Pages by scrolling, do automatic text wrapping by putting images on pages with text already on them, and change column numbers with pop up menus. With Numbers, you can create spreadsheet also with just touch input. You can drag spreadsheet columns by dragging, and add rows of data. By clicking on a column a pop-up calculator appears to input numbers or calculations.

11:10am: Quick side note while they wrap up that demo: We still haven't heard anything about a cellular connection for this device. Jobs has only indicated that there's Wi-Fi so far.

11:11am: Back to iWork: Schiller says each iWork application will cost US$9.99.

11:12am: Jobs is back to talk about iTunes. iPad syncs via USB to a Mac or PC. That will sync your photos, music, contacts, everything, just like an iPod or iPhone.

11:13am: Now wireless networking. All iPads have Wi-Fi. We're also going to have models with 3G he says (I guess I spoke too soon).

11:14am: A "real breakthrough" he says. Two plans in the US: 250MB of data every month for US$15.

The second plan: unlimited plan for US$30 per month. AT&T is the US provider. Free use of AT&T Wi-Fi hotspots included too.

11:15am: Don't have to go to an AT&T store to activate it. Can do it on the iPad. No contract, both plans are pre-paid. This also elicits some excited applause.

International 3G plans won't be available until June. All iPads are unlocked. They use GSM micro SIMs.

11:16am: This summer (Australian winter) there will be "even better deals" for international customers, Jobs says.

11:18am: Price coming up now. If you listen to the pundits, we're going to price it under US$1000, he says.

We had a very aggressive price goal, he says.

11:19am: It's US$499.

iPad starts at US$499

iPad starts at US$499. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

11:19am: To start, anyway, at 16GB.

US$599 for 32GB, US$699 for 64GB. With 3G, add US$130 to each. So: US$629, US$729, and US$829.

11:20am: They'll start shipping Wi-Fi models everywhere in 60 days.

The 3G models will be shipping in 90 days.

11:21am: There are accessories for this thing too. A charging dock you can use to display the iPad in portrait. Also a keyboard dock, so you don't have to use a virtual keyboard all the time.

"When you really need to do a lot of typing, this is the way to go," Jobs says.

Keyboard that also serves as an iPad stand

Keyboard that also serves as an iPad stand. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

11:22am: A black case is available, too, that can flip open to be a stand for viewing the device.

An iPad stand

An iPad stand. (Credit: James Martin/CNET)

He's showing us one of their standard marketing videos featuring designer Jonathan Ive, Phil Schiller, and co.

11:30am: Video's over, Steve is back.

11:31am: He says that because 75 million people already own iPod Touch and iPhones, that's all people who already know how to use the iPad.

11:32am: He says 125 million credit cards are already hooked up to the iTunes and App Store, so they're scaled and ready for new customers.

11:34am: There's a hands-on area where we can go and check out the iPad for ourselves.

11:35am: And that's it. Thanks for following our blog today. We'll have follow up coverage and analysis, so please check back throughout the day.

Via CNET

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