HP bought Palm Inc almost a year ago. The most important asserts of Palm is its web-based mobile operating system. Tablet gadgets become more and more popular in recent year, I bet every body who catch in the fashion knows about Apple iPad. As a great hardware and software company, HP needs a chance to enter this huge tablet market, and the problem is that it does not have the resources to build such a product. Then it comes in the deal.
HP touch pad is the first tablet product from HP. It is powered by famous Web OS. The Touchpad slides out of its cardboard box with a lot of resistance, a precise paper seal creating a vacuum that does its best to keep its tablet firmly ensconced within. Keep pulling and the pressure equalizes, the box yields, and you're granted access to what can only be called a somewhat chunky tablet. It weighs in at 1.65 pounds (750 grams), heavier than the 1.3 pound (600 gram) iPad 2, heavier than the 1.26 pound (570 gram) Galaxy Tab 10.1, and heavier even than the 1.6 pound (730 gram) motorola xoom -- which is itself hardly a delicate flower.
Its back is black plastic, glossy with a piano-like finish. It's reminiscent of the early, similarly sheen PS3 consoles -- cool to touch and nice to look at, but an astonishingly effective fingerprint magnet. A concave shape makes it comfortable to hold for those of us with bigger hands, more so than the flat profiles of those more slender machines mentioned above, but that comes at the expense of it feeling a bit hollow. The iPad or the Tab give impressions of solidity, of devices with not a hint of room to spare (despite that not necessarily being the case), but the Touchpad feels like there's plenty of space in there for, well, more stuff.
HP Touchpad does not support a wider range of video and audio format, just AVI and MP4 are supported by its. This is the only drawback at a media fan’s perspective. Let’s say if you wan to put windows media player videos or You Tube clips to it, you have to use some video conversion software to transcode them into Touchpad format. AVS is one of the famous hp touchpad converter among hundreds of competitor. The price of HP Touchpad drops to 99.99$, so it is a great time for buying such a nice gadget both for fun and business.
HP touch pad is the first tablet product from HP. It is powered by famous Web OS. The Touchpad slides out of its cardboard box with a lot of resistance, a precise paper seal creating a vacuum that does its best to keep its tablet firmly ensconced within. Keep pulling and the pressure equalizes, the box yields, and you're granted access to what can only be called a somewhat chunky tablet. It weighs in at 1.65 pounds (750 grams), heavier than the 1.3 pound (600 gram) iPad 2, heavier than the 1.26 pound (570 gram) Galaxy Tab 10.1, and heavier even than the 1.6 pound (730 gram) motorola xoom -- which is itself hardly a delicate flower.
Its back is black plastic, glossy with a piano-like finish. It's reminiscent of the early, similarly sheen PS3 consoles -- cool to touch and nice to look at, but an astonishingly effective fingerprint magnet. A concave shape makes it comfortable to hold for those of us with bigger hands, more so than the flat profiles of those more slender machines mentioned above, but that comes at the expense of it feeling a bit hollow. The iPad or the Tab give impressions of solidity, of devices with not a hint of room to spare (despite that not necessarily being the case), but the Touchpad feels like there's plenty of space in there for, well, more stuff.
HP Touchpad does not support a wider range of video and audio format, just AVI and MP4 are supported by its. This is the only drawback at a media fan’s perspective. Let’s say if you wan to put windows media player videos or You Tube clips to it, you have to use some video conversion software to transcode them into Touchpad format. AVS is one of the famous hp touchpad converter among hundreds of competitor. The price of HP Touchpad drops to 99.99$, so it is a great time for buying such a nice gadget both for fun and business.