April 22nd, 2010
In a review that was two weeks in the making, CBS writer Jean-Louis Gassée writes about his real world experiences with iPad. While some prefer a non-backlit display, Jean-Louis seems to have no problem with it:
After two weeks, Apple’s iBooks and Amazon’s Kindle still look good. I hear the debate about e-ink versus backlit screen. I don’t mind reading on a computer screen, but I also like paper. I can load a math textbook from the Kindle bookstore on my iPad, and solve exercises using pen and paper. As an investor, I’ll be watching what the iPad (and its competition) does for-or to-the textbook industry.
He goes in to great detail about the problems with importing photos through iTunes and also when using the VGA adapter.
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April 5th, 2010
Edward C. Baig of USA Today:
Apple is taking solid aim at the burgeoning electronic-reader market dominated by the Kindle. Judged solely from a sizzle standpoint: There’s no contest. Titles on the iPad such as Winnie the Pooh (which comes preloaded on the iPad) boast colorful illustrations. The 6-inch Kindle screen is grayscale. … But Amazon retains some bragging points for avid readers, starting with a cheaper $259 price that I suspect will need to drop a lot further. At 10 hours or so, the iPad battery life, while impressive, falls far short of the two weeks you might get off a Kindle charge.
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April 4th, 2010
Tim Gideon of PC Mag:
Is the iPad cheap? No. Is it flawless? Not at all. Omissions including support for multitasking, a built-in camera for video chats, and Flash support in Safari leave room for improvement, but otherwise, the Apple iPad is a very convincing debut.
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April 4th, 2010
Melissa J. Perenson of PC World / Washington Post:
I could easily scroll along the bottom of a book to jump to a specific page, with no notable delay when doing so. And I particularly liked how the iPad showed the page number, and out of how many, you were jumping ahead to; and, how it indicated the number of pages remaining in the chapter. … The flicker for a quick page turn bugged me–nevertheless, it was better than suffering through the multiple flashes that one endures on most E-Ink readers as they try to redraw the page.
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April 3rd, 2010
David Pogue at The New York Times:
You can’t read well in direct sunlight. At 1.5 pounds, the iPad gets heavy in your hand after awhile (the Kindle is 10 ounces). And you can’t read books from the Apple bookstore on any other machine — not even a Mac or iPhone.
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April 3rd, 2010
From Walter Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal:
The iPad is much more than an e-book or digital periodical reader, though it does those tasks brilliantly, better in my view than the Amazon Kindle. … I consider the larger color screen superior to the Kindle’s, and encountered no eye strain. … The iBooks app also lacks any way to enter notes, and Apple’s catalog at launch will only be about 60,000 books versus more than 400,000 for Kindle.
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April 3rd, 2010
We are excited to finally see Apple’s iPad. The purpose of this website is to keep track of the best iPad reviews and we will continue to track reviews as new generations of iPads are released.
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