Thursday, September 9, 2010

oh yeah where to buy it?

when will the iPad release here on the Philippines?

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<a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100830-713017.htmltag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20100830-713017.htmlTue, 31 Aug 2010 02:51:40 GMT 00:00″>Autodesk to release AutoCAD for Mac, iPad, iPhone

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South Korean companies are vowing to introduce other tablet offerings to combat the iPad, which could ship to the country very soon, writes Agence France-Presse. The country’s top wireless carrier, SK Telecom, is hedging much of its bets on the Samsung Galaxy Tab, a 7-inch Android-based tablet. “We are aiming for a September release,” says SK spokesman Kim Dae-Woong, though prices and a release date are as yet undecided. “We are also considering diverse tablet PCs at the moment.”

LG is expected to release its own Android tablet by December. Apple’s local distributor in Korea, KT, says it in fact plans to launch a low-end tablet before it brings the iPad into the country. The iPad could arrive in early September, says KT spokesman Lee In-Won.

KT has reportedly sold over 1 million iPhones, approximately 880,000 of which are 3G and 3GS models. 212,000 are actually pre-orders for the iPhone 4, which will ship sometime next month. The company has not committed to firm details for the device, though monthly fees are unlikely to change much if at all.

South Korean companies pledge to combat iPad | Electronista

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2007?
Some lonely dude must have missed my hilarious punchline already included in the details bit.

Better luck reading the question next time :)

When do you think Apple will release an iPad mini?

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And in this corner, the Netbook and Tablet World Challenger – the iPad:
Let’s think about it. Netbooks can be had for as little as $200 if you play your cards right, with most priced at or around $299. either way, that’s $200 less than the base iPad, which only ships with 16GB of storage compared to the 160GB+ hard drives in netbooks. Netbooks can also play back Flash video content, while the iPad cannot. Like it or not, Flash is still a huge part of the web, and it plays a vital role in being able to enjoy the “whole” Internet. Apple’s making a huge mistake by promising a “great browsing experience” while at the same time not letting users view Flash-based pages or Flash encoded video content. Furthermore, you can basically install any application your heart desires on a Windows 7-based netbook. try installing anything on an iPad. you can’t. if it’s not in the App Store, you can’t install it on the iPad, and as great as the App Store is for the iPhone and iPod touch, we can’t say we enjoy being limited to these mini apps on what should be a full-blown tablet PC.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Users can’t remove the battery of the iPad, so you’re forced to recharge when it dies rather than swapping a new battery pack in. There’s no physical keyboard and no proper file system, so actually handling e-mail in a “real world” working scenario is impossible. For instance, you can’t easily create a PDF from a web page printout, save to your desktop, and send as an attachment to four people in your address book. to us, that is very basic, core functionality that has to be included if you’re selling a device as a “computer.” maybe Apple is just selling the iPad as a toy, but if you watched Steve Jobs’ keynote today, you’d know he was aiming far higher with this device.

iPad's Identity Crisis and Apple's Real Showstopper A4 CPU

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If you have a comment, news tip, advertising inquiry, or coverage request, a question about iPods/iPhones/iPad or accessories, or if you sell or market iPod/iPhone/iPad products or services, read iLounge’s Comments + Questions policies before posting, and fully identify yourself if you do. We will delete comments containing advertising, astroturfing, trolling, personal attacks, offensive language, or other objectionable content, then ban and/or publicly identify violators.

Apple releases iOS 4.1 Beta 3 | iLounge News

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<a href="http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20012305-37.htmltag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20012305-37.htmlMon, 02 Aug 2010 02:54:32 GMT 00:00″>Hackers release browser-based iPhone 4 jailbreak

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- I am new to investing
- I never brought stocks in my life
- just started reading about stocks online
- as my first bet on stocks, do you think “Apple” stocks will rise after 12th april -after the release of iPAD ?

I wanted to buy apple stocks this week .

Any suggestions and recommendations.

Correct me if I am thinking in a wrong way.

Will Apple stock rise after iPAD release on April 12th ?

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And in this corner, the Netbook and Tablet World Challenger – the iPad:
Let’s think about it. Netbooks can be had for as little as $200 if you play your cards right, with most priced at or around $299. Either way, that’s $200 less than the base iPad, which only ships with 16GB of storage compared to the 160GB+ hard drives in netbooks. Netbooks can also play back Flash video content, while the iPad cannot. like it or not, Flash is still a huge part of the web, and it plays a vital role in being able to enjoy the “whole” Internet. Apple’s making a huge mistake by promising a “great browsing experience” while at the same time not letting users view Flash-based pages or Flash encoded video content. furthermore, you can basically install any application your heart desires on a Windows 7-based netbook. Try installing anything on an iPad. You can’t. if it’s not in the App Store, you can’t install it on the iPad, and as great as the App Store is for the iPhone and iPod touch, we can’t say we enjoy being limited to these mini apps on what should be a full-blown tablet PC.

And that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Users can’t remove the battery of the iPad, so you’re forced to recharge when it dies rather than swapping a new battery pack in. There’s no physical keyboard and no proper file system, so actually handling e-mail in a “real world” working scenario is impossible. For instance, you can’t easily create a PDF from a web page printout, save to your desktop, and send as an attachment to four people in your address book. to us, that is very basic, core functionality that has to be included if you’re selling a device as a “computer.” maybe Apple is just selling the iPad as a toy, but if you watched Steve Jobs’ keynote today, you’d know he was aiming far higher with this device.

iPad's Identity Crisis and Apple's Real Showstopper A4 CPU

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The iPad version of Osmos is hitting the App Store today, and, needless to say, we’re excited and proud. some are calling it – gasp – the definitive version of Osmos. Gizmodo even called it “What iPad Gaming Should be All About.”

We’d also like to thank and congratulate the man behind the port, Aaron Barsky. you may remember him from such blog posts as Mac Osmos and the sordid Confessions of an Indie Game Developer. He’s done an amazing job, as we think you’ll agree.

Finally, a big thank you to our friends, family and awesome beta testers who helped us get here.

Hemisphere Games Osmos for iPad Release –

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