Lenovo Heats up Price War With $199 IdeaPad Tablet | PCWorld

Lenovo announced a new US$199 IdeaPad tablet with a 7-inch screen and Google’s Android OS in response to the surge in demand for inexpensive tablets, the company said on Thursday.

The IdeaPad A1 tablet weighs around 400 grams (0.88 pounds) and is under 0.5 inches (1.27 centimeters) thick, and will become available in specific starting around the end of September, said Nick Reynolds, executive director of global marketing at Lenovo. The tablet provides seven hours of battery life.

The tablet will be among the cheapest 7-inch Android tablets available from a top device maker. Many competitive products cost more than $250. Acer last month started shipping its 7-inch Iconia Tab A100 tablet for US$329, and Samsung’s 7-inch Galaxy Tab screen sells for $279 through Amazon.com and Fry’s Electronics.

“This is a very accessible price point starting at US$199,” Reynolds said. Lenovo views the tablet as a companion to PCs, and a low price will open up demand for tablets, especially in emerging markets, Reynolds said.

Lenovo’s new tablet comes as prices for Android tablets drop in an effort to challenge the market dominance of Apple’s iPad 2, whose rock-steady $499 starting price has not changed since its launch earlier this year. One of the first Android tablets, Samsung’s 7-inch Galaxy Tab, went on sale late last year through Verizon starting at $600 without a contract, and was considered overpriced. But Android tablet prices have fallen. Unbranded tablets sell for as little as $100. Consumers last month scrambled to buy Hewlett-Packard’s TouchPad tablet, which was priced starting at $99 in a fire sale after the company announced it would stop selling webOS devices. Buyers’ frenzy over the TouchPads was such that HP on Tuesday said it would make a final round of the devices and have them ready for sale in coming weeks.

via Lenovo Heats up Price War With $199 IdeaPad Tablet | PCWorld.

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Adobe CreatePDF App Lets Users Create PDF Files From iPhone, iPad, iPod

Adobe Systems recently launched an application for iOS devices that lets users author files in Portable Document Format straight from their mobile devices. With CreatePDF, users can author PDFs that will appear onscreen the same way on a computer, mobile device or web browser.

Create PDFs From the Cloud

With a diverse ecosystem of computing devices, including mobile phones, smartphones, tablets and desktop computers, documents often appear differently when viewed on different devices. While desktop computers can convert documents into PDF, most mobile devices don’t have enough computing power to do this. But with Adobe’s CreatePDF, the actual conversion process is done in the cloud using Adobe’s online service. Documents published as PDF can then be sent via email or shared through other compatible iOS apps.

via Adobe CreatePDF App Lets Users Create PDF Files From iPhone, iPad, iPod.

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There’s an App – and a Risk – for That | Law.com

iPads are the hottest tablet technology in corporate America today. They’re light, sleek, and portable, and thanks to a rich and steady stream of business and entertainment apps introduced daily, people can use them for a burgeoning selection of personal and professional tasks. Now in their second iteration, iPads have proven valuable for many business functions. Salespeople have greater flexibility and access to digital product information in the field, medical professionals have bedside access to patient records, and mobile business executives can give stunning presentations and enjoy instant access to corporate data—and all right at their fingertips.

Like many new gadgets, iPads often first appear in businesses as employee-owned devices, prompting questions of if and how to allow for their connection to the corporate network. As the world of iPad apps matures, many companies have taken steps to issue the devices to their workforces, sometimes as replacements for laptops. But with technological innovation moving at warp speed, corporations need to frequently update their policies on data management and compliance to keep up with new developments—and the advent of the iPad is a case in point. The time has come for in-house counsel to take note of potential information management, e-discovery, and privacy risks presented by these devices.

Rule 34 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is written broadly enough to cover new devices, such as iPads, that create, transmit, and preserve electronically stored information (ESI). As companies deploy more and different devices, dispersing their sources of ESI, the risk that preservation and collection efforts will fail to prevent spoliation and other e-discovery perils increases. While there are currently no published court opinions addressing discovery obligations as to iPad content, courts have extended the duty to preserve and produce to content on PDAs (personal digital assistants) such as BlackBerrys, particularly when such information is unique rather than replicated on the company’s network. Counsel should assume that litigation hold obligations will extend to iPad content in their employees’ possession or control.

via There’s an App – and a Risk – for That.

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TouchPad’s Lesson: Tablets Cost Too Much | PCWorld

Sure, HP’s TouchPad fire sale could take sales away from low-volume tablet makers and further solidify Apple’s market share. Then again, maybe those low-volume tablet makers — HP included — have been hurting themselves with a pricing structure that isn’t attractive to most consumers.

After dropping the TouchPad’s price to $99 for the 16Gb model and $149 for the 32GB variation, HP has sold an estimated 350,000 units this weekend. That’s comparable to launch weekend sales for Apple’s tablet. Granted, HP’s tablet is discontinued and on clearance, but it shows that many consumers are willing to forget about the iPad, if the price is right.

Here’s the problem with the current system: many entry-level tablets cost somewhere around $500 and that’s the same price as the iPad. I’m guessing most consumers that decide to spend a $500 on a tablet will opt to get an iPad. If other manufacturers want to be competitive with Apple’s tablet, which is in many ways the definitive device on the market, they need to give consumers a reason to pick up their device instead.

That hasn’t really been done until now.

HP offering its discontinued tablet for a one-fifth the cost of Apple’s tablet seems to have registered with many price-conscious and deal-hunting consumers.

via TouchPad’s Lesson: Tablets Cost Too Much | PCWorld.

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Survey: Tablet Buyers Only Have Eyes for the iPad | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

Current tablet owners and prospective buyers alike overwhelmingly have their eyes on just one company’s device for future purchases—Apple’s iPad. Some 93 percent of consumers who already own a tablet own an iPad, according to a new survey from Baird Research & Insights, while more than 94 percent of potential purchasers are considering buying an Apple tablet.

Coming in a distant second was Hewlett-Packard’s TouchPad with webOS, named by 10.4 percent of respondents as a tablet they would consider buying, according to the Baird survey (table below). Given that respondents were allowed to give multiple responses in naming a tablet they’d consider buying, HP probably shouldn’t get too complacent about its second-place finish.

And given that Best Buy has reportedly sold only 25,000 of the 270,000 TouchPads that HP has supplied the retailer with—this despite HP slashing its asking price for 16GB and 32GB TouchPads by $100 recently—all of the other tablet makers who finished even further behind Apple probably ought to be really worried.

via Survey: Tablet Buyers Only Have Eyes for the iPad | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

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iPhone 5 to launch in early September, report says | Apple Talk – CNET News

Hang on to your hats, because there’s another rumored release date for Apple’s next-generation iPhone.

The latest comes from the China Times (translation), which says that Apple plans to produce 4 million units of the device following a production run of 400,000 test units. That’s all to ready the device for a release in the second week of September.

Other tidbits from the report, which was picked up this morning by Macrumors, include Apple purportedly working to ready another version of the iPad to bring to market “before Thanksgiving.” That would give Apple a late-year product launch that–as the last two iPad launches have proven–would make for a tough-to-get gadget during the frenzied holiday shopping season.

The China Times report has some weight in terms of timing. Apple has made a habit of holding its annual iPod-focused music event in September, usually during that first or second week of the month. Apple has also promised to release iOS 5 in “the fall,” which officially begins a few weeks later.

Turning to CNET’s lovingly updated iPhone 5 rumor roundup, this is the latest in a series of September mentions, the earliest being a Reuters report saying that the new device would be ready to go by then. In early May, Jefferies & Co. analyst Peter Misek weighed in, saying something akin to an iPhone 3GS-like update would be hitting store shelves in September. That was followed just a few days later by a Digitimes report, echoing the same timeline and noting that it would be an incremental update.

via iPhone 5 to launch in early September, report says | Apple Talk – CNET News.

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Apple now holds more cash than US government – Telegraph

The figures, released by the US Treasury department this week, show the country currently has a total operating cash balance of $73.7bn (£45.3bn).

This compares with Apple’s $76.4bn of cash reserves, which it has built up during a phenomenal half-decade of strong sales.

Apple said last week that sales of its popular iPad tablet device had more than doubled to 9.25m in the three months to the end of June, while iPhone sales reached 20.3m as quarterly profits also doubled to $7.31bn.

Meanwhile, US politicians are currently struggling to agree a deal on the best way to raise the country’s $14.3 trillion debt ceiling.

via Apple now holds more cash than US government – Telegraph.

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iPad moves ahead of Android at corporations | Reuters

The iPad is on a tear in the enterprise, and is now being activated more often than Android smartphones, according to the latest data from Good Technology. The enterprise software maker said the iPad accounted for 27.2 percent of all activations of its software in the second quarter ahead of Android phones at 24.4, the first time Apple’s tablet has pushed past Android phones.

The iPad and the iPad 2 now account for 97 percent of all tablet activations. And iPad figures have helped boost Apple’s overall share of activations to just under 80 percent, compared to just under 70 percent in the first quarter. IPhone activations are up to 66 percent, compared to 62 percent in the previous quarter. Good said iPad adoption was driven by the financial services sectors, which accounted for 46 percent of all adoption, more than triple that of any other industry.

via iPad moves ahead of Android at corporations | Reuters.

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21-year-old IT whiz creates iPad look-alike from scratch – The China Post

An enterprising Chinese man has come up with a solution for gadget-crazy people who desperately want Apple’s popular iPad tablet computer but cannot afford it — DIY.

In a 20-minute video posted on Youku — the Chinese YouTube equivalent — Liu Xinying demonstrates how to assemble an iPad look-alike using computer parts, a touch screen and a case with a keypad, to the sound of metal music.

At the end of the video dubbed “DIY IPAD 3,” the IT whiz shows off the finished version — an apparently functional tablet computer that looks like a thick iPad but runs on Windows, an operating system made by rival Microsoft.

News of Liu’s apparent feat spread on several foreign and Chinese technology websites, as well as on the nation’s Twitter-like Weibo service.

When contacted by AFP, the 21-year-old from the eastern province of Shandong said that since he posted the video online a month ago, he has knocked back requests from a dozen people wanting him to make them a DIY iPad.

“I did this for fun,” said Liu, who works at a computer store in Jinan city. “It cost me 2,000 yuan (US$309) to make it, so I guess that’s how much it’s worth.”

via 21-year-old IT whiz creates iPad look-alike from scratch – The China Post.

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AFP: Pope’s first tweet marks Vatican social media revolution

The sight of Pope Benedict XVI tweeting on an iPad reveals a transformation underway in the tradition-bound Vatican to reach a younger global audience and improve a scandal-tainted image.

A bemused pope can be seen tapping on the tablet device in his Vatican palace in footage put up on YouTube this week, with a cardinal showing the 84-year-old how to scroll through the Holy See’s new multimedia web portal.

“Dear Friends, I just launched www.news.va. Praised be our Lord Jesus Christ! With my prayers and blessings, Benedictus XVI,” wrote the pope, using his formal name in Latin — still the Vatican’s official language.

The website includes Twitter updates, YouTube videos, Flickr photos and Facebook links and was developed by the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Social Communications, which has spearheaded the Internet drive.

It is decorated with the Vatican colours — white and yellow — and brings together information from the Vatican’s radio, television and print outlets as well as news from the Fides missionary news agency about the developing world.

Bruno Bartoloni, a Vatican expert who writes for Italian daily Corriere della Sera, said the Church’s embrace of social media was also a way to bypass traditional and more critical media to deliver information directly.

via AFP: Pope’s first tweet marks Vatican social media revolution.

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