Tag Archive | "killed"

Are iPad Magazines Being Killed by Greed? | mediaIDEAS blog

When GQ launched for the iPad last May, the magazine’s vice president of publishing Pete Hunsinger said, “This costs us nothing extra: no printing or postage… Everything is profit, and I look forward to the time when iPad issue sales …

View full post on publishers ipad – Google Blog Search

Posted in Ebook PublishingComments (0)

Are iPad magazines being killed by greed?

When GQ launched for the iPad last May, the magazine’s vice president of publishing Pete Hunsinger said, “This costs us nothing extra: no printing or postage… Everything is profit, and I look forward to the time when iPad issue sales …

View full post on publishers ipad – Google Blog Search

Posted in Ebook PublishingComments (0)

iPad Killed The Netbook Star « IT Professionals

How many of you remember video killed the radio star on MTV about a hundred years ago? Yeah, it’s a great example of changing technologies and how they can.

View full post on ipad – Google Blog Search

Posted in Apple iPadComments (0)

Qualcomm Admits It: Apple's iPad Killed Smartbooks «

Nine months after Apple introduced the iPad, Qualcomm has finally admitted that the smartbook market it envisioned is essentially dead. Amid much criticism, I explained in January how Apple beat everyone to this market and that it …

View full post on ipad – Google Blog Search

Posted in Apple iPadComments (0)

iPAD killed the Photocopier

Not since the IBM PC was developed has a computer hit the market that can change the way we view the world. While people talk about Apple’s Tablet PC, the iPAD, being a competitor to the notebook, there are larger implications. The iPad is the first computer that can change the way we view documents. It combines the visual appeal of print and the interaction of the web together in a way no product has done before. The iPAD is the first step into a paperless world where all documents are viewed as data.

Apple sold one million iPADS in the first 28 days, outselling the iPHONE when it was launched. The iPAD succeeds where previous products such as Amazon Kindle have failed, but it was not greeted with universal approval when launched. “Isn’t it just a big iPHONE?” was the most common remark, whilst others tagged it ‘iLAME’. Dom Jolly even revamped his mobile phone sketch using the iPAD. The iPAD name, which Apple purchased from Fujitsu, has also been the butt of jokes on twitter, where users made fun of its resemblance to a feminine hygiene product. One twitter user posted “I am already going through 4 – 5 iPADS a day due to my heavy workflow”. However, Apple have a loyal following in desktop publishing with the Steve Jobs/Jef Raskin Apple Mac, and the iPAD appears to be exactly what Apple fans have been waiting for.

The tablet PC has been around for a while. Bill Gates’s Microsoft made the term popular in 2001 when it launched Windows XP Tablet PC Edition. HP-Compaq developed the TC1100 series. Axiotron, in 2007, introduced a heavily modified Apple MacBook Tablet called Modbook and there was even a Linux based tablet called the ProGear, manufactured by FrontPath.

The iPAD is the start of a new era that will see the transition from Print to Pixels, bringing the worlds of print and web publishing together. Impressive pages can now be created using interaction, animation and video streaming. Typography and design will no longer be compromised. Notebooks don’t offer the same portability of the iPAD, and the iPAD is the best in the field for screen based reading.

Printers and Photocopiers could become a thing of the past in a few years with less and less output to paper. Magazines, books and newspapers are set to be reinvented online. By changing how we read documents, Apple have created the next big hardware battle. Already Chinese manufactured iPAD clones, working on Google’s Android Software, have started to appear. Microsoft will soon be releasing Microsoft Courier, a seven inch dual screen booklet that will propel Microsoft further into hardware manufacture, following on from Zune and Xbox.

The battle for the Screen Based Reader audience is unlikely to be defined by the operating system but by the hardware itself. Imagine a iPAD that is wafer thin and you can roll up and put in your back pocket like a magazine. That is what the future holds.

Flexible display technology is close to production with a team in Ireland close to a touch screen prototype. Samsung unveiled their 7 inch flexible LCD screen in 2005 and Fujitsu have a 3.8 inch flexible LCD panel that does not require a power supply. The flexible screen technology that will soon be available to us will be the tool that finally turns users away from paper based publishing. Apple have won ’round one’ of the screen based reader and have brought their product to market before Microsoft’s Courier, but this hardware battle has a long way to run. Google have already produced the Nexus One, an internet mobile dubbed the Google Phone, and the Android operating system may yet enter into screen based readers as well. Amazon potentially have the most to lose if the iPAD continues to grow, with Apple’s iBOOKS directly competing with another part of their core business, following the success of iTUNES, so presence in the screen reader market will be essential for Amazon.

Jennifer Robinson writes for Online Connect, specialist suppliers of document solutions and digital photocopiers visit their website to compare photocopiers.

Posted in Ebook PublishingComments (0)


Kindle Wireless Reading Device, Wi-Fi, Graphite, 6" 


The all-new Kindle has a new lectronic-ink screen with 50 percent better contrast than any other e-reader, a new sleek design with a 21 percent smaller body while still keeping the same 6-inch-size reading area, and a 17 percent lighter weight at just 8.5 ounces. The new Kindle also offers 20 percent faster page turns, up to one month of battery life, double the storage to 3,500 books, built-in Wi-Fi, a graphite color option and more—all for only $139.



 Powered by Max Banner Ads 
Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Delicious button Digg button Stumbleupon button

Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Powered by Yahoo! Answers