Well the secret is out, and Apple's iPad is the device everyone's talking about, although the focus has mainly being on the stuff that the iPad is missing, namely USB support, multi-tasking, phone features and basically many of the things that people thought a Tablet PC ought to have.
When it comes to video, it's no different. The 1024x768 screen of the iPad reminds us of the time before widescreen LCDs were the norm, and while the display itself is an LED unit and so quite excellent, the lowered resolution won't help with video playback. 720p is what people want these days (at the very least), but the 1024x768 screen just does not have enough pixels to natively display the 1280x720 video. The non widescreen ratio of the iPad also means letter boxing for most videos.
The worst part of it is the lack of Flash support, which means no online videos either. Of course, YouTube and Vidmeo will start using HTML5 soon, and this would at least allow video playback from these two websites on the iPad, but there are still many video and non video websites that won't work on the iPad.
And Blu-ray? Forget about it. Despite Apple being on the board of the Blu-ray Disc Association, they have no interest in adding Blu-ray support to any of their products, including the iPad. For now at least. The lack of an HDMI connector on the iPad basically rules out using it as a Blu-ray player that connects to your TV, and whether the iPad itself is powerful enough to even play Blu-ray or 1080p H.264 movies is something that has yet to be determined, as we await more detail on the graphical side of things leading up to the March release date.
There's a whole bunch of other video stuff that the iPad doesn't do (while existing media players can do).
I had always imagined the iPad being something like a cross between a netbook (for Internet, computing applications), a Logitech harmony (universal smart remote control), an iPhone (for the phone and media playback capabilities) and the iPad does many of these things. But you do get the feeling that the current version will be the one lacking essential features that nobody will want when the next version comes out, just like the very first iPhones.
When it comes to video, it's no different. The 1024x768 screen of the iPad reminds us of the time before widescreen LCDs were the norm, and while the display itself is an LED unit and so quite excellent, the lowered resolution won't help with video playback. 720p is what people want these days (at the very least), but the 1024x768 screen just does not have enough pixels to natively display the 1280x720 video. The non widescreen ratio of the iPad also means letter boxing for most videos.
The worst part of it is the lack of Flash support, which means no online videos either. Of course, YouTube and Vidmeo will start using HTML5 soon, and this would at least allow video playback from these two websites on the iPad, but there are still many video and non video websites that won't work on the iPad.
And Blu-ray? Forget about it. Despite Apple being on the board of the Blu-ray Disc Association, they have no interest in adding Blu-ray support to any of their products, including the iPad. For now at least. The lack of an HDMI connector on the iPad basically rules out using it as a Blu-ray player that connects to your TV, and whether the iPad itself is powerful enough to even play Blu-ray or 1080p H.264 movies is something that has yet to be determined, as we await more detail on the graphical side of things leading up to the March release date.
There's a whole bunch of other video stuff that the iPad doesn't do (while existing media players can do).
I had always imagined the iPad being something like a cross between a netbook (for Internet, computing applications), a Logitech harmony (universal smart remote control), an iPhone (for the phone and media playback capabilities) and the iPad does many of these things. But you do get the feeling that the current version will be the one lacking essential features that nobody will want when the next version comes out, just like the very first iPhones.
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