Review: The New iPad – Did Apple Upgrade it Enough?

 

Last Friday brought the release of The New iPad in its initial markets and lots of news followed.   Reports of shipment delays were regular, sadly it looked like apple had picked Friday, and that if there was a shipment delay, someone may need to wait until Monday  to receive the package.

By all reports, it looked like Apple customer service has been working overtime, even in the case of this reviewer. There have been many delivery issues which when release day is a Friday, leaves little leeway to get the package before Monday.  For myself, there was a delivery issue where the unit was attempted delivery during a 30 minute window where no one was home. When Apple customer support was contacted, not only did they help but the rep went over and above expectations to try and help. So, A+ in that dept., and they managed to avert a Monday delivery and made sure the item was delivered on Sat AM. Also, made us very happy!

Yesterday, Apple announced that the new model had sold an impressive 3 million units.  Very impressive with lots of deliveries direct for those who smartly avoided lines at Apple Stores.  But, even yesterday when I stopped by the local Apple store, they had  inventory on hand.

So, how does The New IPad stack up?   Is it a nice incremental upgrade offering from the last model, the IPad 2, or is it sadly too few real upgrades? Lets examine The New Ipad:

  • Retina Display:  The new display has more pixels than 1080p and it brings amazing clarity and color. Just a brilliant amazing screen with fantastic built in touch screen sensitivity.  This is the key and central upgrade for the latest iPad edition. It has double the resolution of the iPad 2.
  • Upgraded A5X CPU:  The new cpu has 1 gb of system memory built in and built in graphics chip that makes the Retina Display shine.
  • LTE Cellular Chip:  Upgraded cell data chip option which allows much faster broadband wireless in network areas.  Note the ATT and Verizon versions are incompatible with the other network, so you can’t switch later.  Also, if you are expecting to roam in foreign territories like Europe or Asia, LTE frequencies are different, so you will have to step back to 3G GSM data quality.
  • New Rear Camera: Apple “upgraded” the camera to a 5 megapixel 1080p capable video camera. Note still no flash or light.

Interesting Notes:

  • When using the iPad, you will notice it runs much warmer than the older models, perhaps this is due to the new CPU working so hard to drive the monitor.

  • The Camera upgrade isn’t too fantastic. They used the same camera module which was used in the iPhone 4.  Which  is sluggish, blurry, takes just “ok” low light pictures and is unstellar in many respects.  This is the major drawback of The New iPad. Apple really skimped here.  Also there is no Flash for the camera or light for video in dark surroundings.

  • There is no support for ThunderBolt, the new connection that virtually every Mac computer has with the lagging exception of Mac Pro.  Essentially, to transfer music, movies, pics or reinstall, it takes a long time.  Even longer if you have the larger 32 or 64GB models.
  • Charging issue:  Consumer Reports has noted that under testing that when playing the game INFINITY BLADE II, which requires heavy CPU & Graphics use, it was unable to draw power via the USB charging cable. In fact they said even with the power cable attached, it was a negative power drain.  So if the iPad is under heavy use, it may not charge and additionally it may draw down on power.
  • Upgraded graphics chips do their best to upgrade across the board, including even iphone app’s.  Which do get better visuals when compared to iPad 2.

 

iPad 2 vs. The New iPad comparison:

While the camera was slightly “upgraded,” the real star of this new model is the Retina Display and ability to watch 1080P video, which on a tablet is probably overkill, unless you are watching the video via Airplay on your Apple TV that can do 1080P also on a Television larger than 40″

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