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Apple's latest product, the iPad tablet computer, has gone on sale in America.
The first generation model has wi-fi but not 3G connectivity, and unlike other
tablet devices, it is not yet available outside the US.
The New York Apple store in Manhattan opened its doors to a 500-strong crowd at
0900 EST (1400 BST).
Queues for the new iPad were considerably smaller than the crowds which
gathered for the launch of the iPhone in 2007, according to reports.
However people had travelled to the US from around the world to purchase a
device.
'Huge hit for some'
Apple took pre-orders online but some early adopters began queuing outside
stores the day before its release.
The company's co-founder Steve Wozniak joined a queue outside an Apple store in
California on Friday evening.
He said he had pre-ordered the device, which is retailing in the US at $499 -
$829 ( 328 - 545). European prices have not yet been announced.
"It's going to be a huge hit among a very small section of the public - Mac
lovers and early adopters," said the BBC's technology correspondent Rory
Cellan-Jones.
"The bigger question is whether there is that big a market between the
smartphone and the laptop for it to fill," he said.
"Newspapers and magazines are certainly hoping so but the jury's still out."
In Palo Alto, California, tech expert and former Microsoft "technology
evangelist" Robert Scoble, who spent the night outside a store with
Chatroulette creator Andrey Ternovskiy, said there were only around 30 in the
queue.
Greg Packer and Cheline Lundin are reported to have been the first in line in
New York and Chicago respectively. Mr Packer began his wait outside Manhattan's
Fifth Avenue Apple store on 30 March.
The device appealed to him because it is "like a mini laptop," he said in a
YouTube clip.
AFP reported 15 people waiting outside the Apple store in New York on Friday
afternoon, including a mother, daughter and grandmother.
Mother Jeanney Mullen said she was planning to buy one for herself and her 11
-year-old daughter Giovanna.
Her own mother had come along to buy a third for Ms Mullen's boss, as store
customers were limited to two devices each.
Mixed reviews
However not everybody shares their enthusiasm.
Journalist and sci-fi author Cory Doctorow has attacked the iPad for being too
locked-down.
"Buying an iPad for your kids isn't a means of jump-starting the realisation
that the world is yours to take apart and reassemble; it's a way of telling
your offspring that even changing the batteries is something you have to leave
to the professionals," he wrote on website Boing Boing.
While Apple has pitched the iPad as a "third" device between a phone and a PC,
the tablet does not synchronise easily with the two according to Ian Fogg, an
expert analyst at Forrester.
"Apple has left too much in the hands of consumers to transfer and manage
manually," he wrote in a blog post.
"Tethered sync is a 20th Century product feature."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/technology/8601679.stm
Published: 2010/04/03 14:10:17 GMT