HP TouchPad
TouchPad is an new mobile tablet PC from HP, announced on February 9, 2011. And is scheduled to sell on July, 2011 in the US market. HP TouchPad is powered by WebOS. The device, as announced, will have a 9.7-inch (25 cm) screen and run webOS 3.0, and is powered by a 1.2GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon APQ8060 processor. The device will also support a new HP Touchstone Touch-to-Share proximity-based sharing feature, which allows compatible devices to instantly exchange data, media, and information, via Bluetooth, something like Cloudbook.
Contents |
Design
Next-level Multitasking
Get a simple, natural way to move from one thing to the next. Have related activities automatically grouped together.
HP Synergy
Get contacts, calendars, messages, photos, and email automatically synced from sources like Facebook,® Google,™ and Microsoft® Exchange. Keep multiple email accounts open at once View work and personal messages together or separately.
Just Type
Simply start typing to search the web, update your status, or begin just about anything.3 Think about what you want to do, not how you have to do it.
Entertainment Everywhere
Download movies and TV shows, play games, listen to music, read books and magazines, and view photos. Browse the full web with blazing speed, as well as support for the latest web technologies, including Adobe Flash Hear music the way the artist intended with Beats Audio™—only from HP
Video Calling
Have a face-to-face conversation on a large, vibrant screen.
Yo, that's what's up truhtfluly.
Product Description
Get more done with the HP TouchPad Wi-Fi 16GB, a tablet designed to work like you do. Connect, play, surf and share more easily. Stay organized by grouping your related activities into card stacks on the brilliant 9.7-inch diagonal LED backlit multitouch display. You can also enjoy more of the web, including sites with Adobe® Flash® content. Hear music the way the artists intended it to be heard with Beats Audio, plus use the front-facing camera and microphone for live video calling. HP webOS helps you multitask seamlessly. Sign in to your online accounts and this HP tablet pulls information together automatically. See your Face book friends’ birthdays in your contacts, compare work and personal calendars side by side, and view your work and personal e-mails together or separately. Just Type lets you create messages, search the web and more without launching an app first. Receive notifications of new messages, e-mails and events without interrupting what’s on your screen. Plus, charge this HP tablet wirelessly using the optional HP Touchstone Charging Dock. The HP TouchPad Wi-Fi 16GB also works better together with other HP webOS devices: Touch to share websites with your HP Pre3 or Veer Smartphone.
Action rueiqres knowledge, and now I can act!
Specs
| Specs | |
|---|---|
| CPU | 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 8960 dual-core processor |
| RAM | 1 GB |
| Storage | 16 GB, 32 GB, 64 GB |
| Operating system | HP webOS 3.0.5 |
| Graphics | Qualcomm Adreno 220 core |
| Camera | 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera |
| Connectivity | Bluetooth v2.1 micro USB 2.0 Wi-Fi 802.11a/b/g/n |
| Display | 1024×768 9.7 inch |
| Size | 240mm x 190mm x 13.7mm |
| Weight | 0.74 kg |
| Battery Life | Up to 9 hours |
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Reviews
Video Reviews
Customer Reviews
There is a single broad,overarching reason I really like this tablet after playing with it for a few hours.
It is elegant. It is refined. It does some common, basic things beautifully, unlike the others - be they android or iPad. The rest - Facebook, Kindle, thousands of apps - they will happen, but its the core device that I truly like. If the core device is rough, no amount of apps can fix that fundamental goof.
So what is more elegant? What is more refined?
1. The very first thing is the charging system. The Touchpad charges very simply; you just slide it it into its dock. You slip it in, it charges. Like Apple says, it just works. No futzing with wires, jacks and other crude methods that have not changed in the past fifty years. Even the big Kahuna, the ipad, has a wire that you turn this way and that, trying to ram it into the socket one way or the other. With the Touchpad, you simply slip it into the stand, and you are done. ipad, Android, what have you - find the connector, find the wire, line them up, twist the wire around to be sure its aligned, re-twist it, push it in, twist again if you got it wrong....
Is it that big a deal? Totally. When you have to charge it every couple of days, fumbling with wires and jacks gets boring really fast. (How do I know? From trying to charge my wife's ipad and failing half the time because the socket never really fitted right.)
2. Notifications. If you get an email in the middle of reading a webpage, for example, The iPad interrupts whatever you are doing, and blares out the notification right in the middle of the screen, right in your face - as if I would miss it if was done quietly off to the side. The Touchpad is far more refined - the notifications come up on the top. If it is an email, it will update in the background, and if the tablet is sleeping, the home button gently glows. The iPad/Androids are crude and uncouth in comparison.
Is this a big deal? Once again, to me, yes it is. When I am reading a book, the last thing I want is to be interrupted by a BIG notification blob in the middle of the page telling me I have got a text message. Say it quietly on the side - and I will get to it.
3. Apps handling. How on earth can you even deal with the gauche way apps are handled in current tablets? To open one app, you have to close the other. Ugh. Its like having to lock your bedroom before you go to the bathroom. Then lock the bathroom when you get back to the bedroom. I like leaving the rooms in my house open, so I can walk about them freely. I like leaving apps open, going from one to the other effortlessly. Does Apple seriously want anyone to believe that their way - one app at a time - is a good way to run multiple apps? And the more apps there are, the more you have to do the shut/open routine. Whats the use of a million apps if, to use one, you have to shut down the previous one?
Not to say that the Touchpad has its shortcomings. The software needs some more work, the screen rotation could use a bit of tweaking (update July 2nd - screen rotation seems to have worked itself out today - works well now), it could lose a bit of weight. But the way I see it is that the engineers who worked on the Touchpad had real focus on refinement and attention to detail. If that attitude persists, they will get there in a bit. The Android crew are all about getting a boatload of stuff out the door. And Apple is about incredible marketing and selling their kool-aid. I wish their attention to detail was as refined as their attention to marketing.
Ppl like you get all the brains. I just get to say thanks for he asnwer.