Advertisement

Apple's Much-Anticipated iPad Goes On Sale

People purchase the iPad at the Apple store on Fifth Ave. in New York, Saturday. Eager customers have been lining up outside Apple Stores and some Best Buys to be among the first to buy one as sales started at 9 a.m. Saturday in each time zone. (AP Photo/Diane Bondareff)
People purchase the iPad at the Apple store on Fifth Ave. in New York, Saturday. Eager customers have been lining up outside Apple Stores and some Best Buys to be among the first to buy one as sales started at 9 a.m. Saturday in each time zone. (AP Photo/Diane Bondareff)

Apple Inc. began selling its much-anticipated iPad on Saturday, drawing eager customers intent on being among the first owners of the tablet-style devices.

Some of these initial iPad buyers were drawn by the ability to read electronic books, watch video and run a myriad of useful or fun applications.

Outside an Apple Store in Freehold, Ray Majewski came with his 10-year-old daughter, Julia, partly as a reward for getting straight A's in school. He decided on an iPad over Amazon.com Inc.'s Kindle electronic-book reader.

"I like the electronic books, and my daughter is really getting into them as well," Majewski said. "I was thinking of getting a Kindle but then said to myself, `Why not get an iPad because I can get so much more from that than just reading books."

Nonetheless, although Apple is adept at generating frenetic buzz for not-yet-released products, it may have to work extra hard once the initial iPad excitement settles. Many companies have tried to sell tablet computers before, but none have caught on with mainstream consumers.

Apple will need to convince people who may already have smart phones, laptops, set-top boxes and home broadband connections to buy yet another Internet-capable device with many of the same functions.

And while early adopters who pre-ordered an iPad in recent weeks gush about all the ways they hope to use the iPad - casual Web searches on the couch, sharing photo albums with friends, reading books - skeptics point to all the ways the iPad comes up short.

They argue the on-screen keyboard is hard to use and complain that it lacks a camera and ports for media storage cards and USB devices such as printers. They also bemoan the fact that the iPad can't play Flash video, which means many Web sites with embedded video clips will look broken to surfers using Apple's Safari browser. And the iPad can't run more than one program at a time, which even fans hope will change one day soon.

Those shortfalls didn't stop customers from lining up outside Apple Stores and some Best Buys to buy one.

Carlos Herrela came to New York from Barcelona, Spain, because it won't be on sale there for a few more weeks. The 33-year-old school teacher said he wants to show his colleagues how the device can be used in classrooms. He has turned his iPad trip into a weeklong vacation.

Similar in design but much larger than Apple's popular iPhone, the iPad is a half-inch thick, weighs 1.5 pounds and has a touch screen that measures 9.7 inches on the diagonal - nearly three times the iPhone's. Also like the iPhone, it has no physical keyboard, but sports an accelerometer, which lets gamers tilt the device to control what's happening on the screen.

For now, Apple is selling versions of the iPad that can only connect to the Internet using Wi-Fi. Those models start at $499. Versions that also have a cellular data connection will be available by the end of the month. They will cost $130 more, with the most expensive ringing up at $829.

This program aired on April 3, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

Advertisement

More from WBUR

Listen Live
Close