E-books NOT neglected in latest Apple tablet rumor
While e-books get a good dissin’ at Apple’s site touting apps, here’s a day-brightener.
The new Apple tablets will “expand the iPhone and iPod touch media concept to its next potential level: as a slate-like replacement for books and magazines, plus all of the media, gaming, app, and web functionality of the iPhone and iPod touch.”
So says iLounge in Ten New Details on the Apple Tablet, inspiring a spate of follow-up reports. Apple “is currently planning to announce” the tablet “on or before January 19, 2010, and to use an iPhone-like hype buildup period to start selling it in May or June.”
iLounge also tells us:: ”Screen resolutions will obviously jump considerably from the iPhone and iPod touch 480×320-pixel displays, enabling easy reading of full-sized book and magazine pages, plus cropped newspaper pages. Expect something like 5-6 times the resolution of an iPod touch or iPhone screen (720p or thereabouts) and 7 times the touchable surface area.”
In addition, iLounge says: “It will come in two different variations: one with 3G networking capabilities, and one without 3G networking capabilities. Think of the 3G version as a bigscreen iPhone 3GS, and the non-3G version as a bigscreen iPod touch.”
A few of the other tidbits:
- “Apple has created at least three separate prototypes of its tablet computer. Let’s call it ‘iPad.’”
- “Version 1 was designed with a 7” screen, which was judged to be too small. The latest version has a 10.7” screen.”
- “It runs iPhone OS.
- “There have been reports that it looks like an iPhone. They’re sort of true. It looks like an iPhone 3G, complete with a curved back.
So what do you think, gang?




























September 30th, 2009 at 10:28 am
That’s what I’m talkin’ about. We desperately need better display quality for magazine-based text and graphic content, the biggest thing holding digital magazines back in the market IMO. Crack that, and you crack the digital magazine market.
September 30th, 2009 at 11:34 am
Big, giant iPod touch?
Reading isn’t dead. Steve Jobs just wishes it were — and evidently thinks that by declaring it so, his wish will come true.