Showing posts with label iPad2. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad2. Show all posts

Jun 18, 2012

The price of iPad

iPad 3 has been published for several months,it updates based on iPad 2,and with more functions,it is convenient and useful,but there are some men who do not buy iPad because of the price,they are wait for the cheaper one,and wait the shop do some activities,let's look at the price of iPad.

The price of iPad 2 start from $399,and the iPad 3 start at $499,these are the cheapest,if you want some extra functions,you will pay more for them.if you like the new iPad,you can do 3 steps to choose your iPad.

First,you should choose a color,which is between black and white,and the price is the same.second,you can choose a model,there are two models you can choose,Wi-Fi and Wi-Fi+Cellular,and the price are different,besides,you should choose the
storage size of your iPad,if you choose only Wi-Fi model and 16 GB storage,you should pay $499.but if you plus celluar you need pay $629,and the more size you want the more you should pay,so,if you can afford $499,you can own a new iPad.

If you like iPad very much,but you can not afford for the iPad 3,don't be too sad,iPad 2 may become your right choice,the cheapest one is just $399,it is the same as iPad 3 that has the basic functions.

iPad is changing our lifestyle,it can make your life more comfortable,but I want to say whether we buy iPad or not,we should consider our economic capability and our needs!


Jun 13, 2012

Rockville private school gives the iPad a classroom trial

Photo from Connie Coker
(From left) Fifth-grade students Hannah Piepol and Gisellah Suleman set up a science lab while Davi Lennon and Sofia Retamal document the lab report on their iPads at Green Acres School in Rockville. The private school issued fifth- and sixth-grade students the devices this year as part of a pilot program to test the iPad for classroom use.Before this year, Joie Chen would have never found her son huddled in a corner, reading a book.Now, it happens all the time. Evan Goldberg, 12, will be so entranced by a story on his iPad, he will bump into the walls of their Bethesda home as he walks and reads, his mother said.

While some parents were concerned when Green Acres School in Rockville gave each of its fifth- and sixth-grade students an iPad this year, most now say that it has excited their children’s interest in school and enhanced their learning.

Due to the success of the pilot program, the private school, which has about 305 students in prekindergarten to eighth grade, will expand it to all of its approximately 140 middle school students, said Neal M. Brown, head of school.

“It’s not really about the iPad, it’s about building a facility with technology, and using technology to give kids the opportunity to build their skills, and the opportunity to pursue their passions,” Brown said.

The school began exploring the idea in spring 2011 as a way to give students more access to computers. The school had about 32 computers in two labs, and the start-up time was taking away from valuable instruction time, said Connie

Coker, a teacher at the school.Some parents were hesitant about the pilot program at first — the children were able to take the iPad home every night; teachers and parents would need to keep a close eye on what the students were doing with the devices. The school sent out recommended guidelines, instructing parents to set time and content restrictions for their children.“Parents were worried that they will not be able to keep their kid off of it,” Chen said.

The iPads cost about $550 each, with an additional $50 each for applications, insurance and maintenance, Coker said — or $37,800 for 63 students last year.

E-texts replaced textbooks in most classes. Brown said the cost was not substantially more than what is normally spent on textbooks and technology.Curriculum did not change, but, rather, teachers found lessons to expand it, Coker said.

“The content stayed the same, but the access, the efficiency and the products our students were able to create were exponentially better because of the time,” she said.For one lesson, students took pictures of leaves on the school campus with their iPads, and then used an application that helped them identify what kind of tree a leaf came from.

Evan, who will be in seventh grade next year, said he enjoyed a lesson in which he was able to make a movie in Spanish about natural disasters, with the programs iMovie, Script and Pages.If Evan didn’t have an iPad for school next year, he would be OK with that, he said.“But I wouldn’t be as excited for school,” he added.

Evan is a much stronger reader now, Chen said, although she added that she never will know if that is because of the iPad or because his interest in reading grew.Brown said he sees his school providing technology for the school’s students in the future, whether it be iPads or other products.

“At Green Acres, we do not want to use technology just to use technology, but we don’t want to put our heads in the sand ... these kids are growing up in a world where this is how people communicate.”

This article comes from:http://www.gazette.net/article/20120613/NEWS/706139579/1042/rockville-private-school-gives-the-ipad-a-classroom-trial&template=gazette

May 28, 2012

The diffrences between new iPad and iPad 2

The main differences between the iPad 2 and New iPad is that the NewiPad has a Retina Display (high definition) screen and a 5 megapixelcamera on the back, and the iPad 2 has a standard quality screen and a VGA camera on the back, which isn't even 1 megapixel. So if you're planning on taking professional looking pictures (and if you want a higher def screen), get the newer one.

Retina display
The Retina display looks gorgeous. The screen has a 264 pixels per inch. That's a total 3.1 million pixels in a full color IPS screen. The image color seems a lot better too. They say it has 44 percent more saturation than the IPS technology they were using previously.

Apple claims that it is still a Retina display because, when you held it at a normal distance, you just can't see the pixels. That distance is 15 inches. For the iPhone, which has a smaller screen, it is 10 inches. I can't wait to test this thing with all my comics (I wonder if Marvel will have to upload them all again).



They demonstrated it running a new version of Autodesk Sketchbook Ink, a new painting app that is vector-based and resolution independent. It actually seems like you are painting on a real page.

Processor and graphics power
The processor is an Apple-designed A5X, which includes a quad-core graphics module. It's going to need all the graphics muscle if it has to push those 3.1 million pixels.According to Apple, it's twice as fast as a Tegra 3 and has "four times" the graphics performance. Hot damn.

1080p video recording
The rear camera, which Apple calls the iSight Camera (the front-facing one is the facetime camera), is capable of capturing 1080p video at 30 frames per second, which obviously looks razor sharp on the iPad's display. The video, like the iPhone 4S, is also stabilized.

Apple says it has temporal noise reduction, which is a rather clever technique that greatly reduces the noise of video by comparing what pixels actually move and guessing what is noise and what is actual detail.

New camera
The new iPad has a new camera on the back: has a 5-megapixel job with a side-iluminated sensor, a 5-element lens and an infrared filter. It's basically the same configuration as on the iPhone 4S, with three fewer megapixels. Serious specs for a tablet camera—you can expect to see more people carrying around iPads taking pictures of things. And Apple also left the VGA FaceTime camera in the front. Great.











Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...