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HP Touchpad Tablet Review

HP officially announced the release date in the United States for the future of touch screen on the HP platform Wi-Fi: July 1. Pre-order in North America and Europe will begin June 19, but the first ship to U.S. customers July 1. In the following days, HP will begin shipping to customers in the UK, Ireland, France and Germany. Canadians get the touchpad in mid-July, which is due to the availability to the end of the year in Italy and Spain as well as Australia, Hong Kong, New Zealand and Singapore.

The evolution of  HP Tablet continues with the recently announced HP TouchPad, closely following the fourth quarter of 2010 the introduction of the slate Tablet HP. In a change of direction of many of its competitors compressed using the operating system software giant for its Tablet PC. The HP Slate Pro runs under Windows operating system and Hewlett Packard HP TouchPad manages its own software WebOS. With the devices smaller and more compact devices change the way we do business, communicate and digest the media, HP seems to focus on market needs.

Nearly five months have passed by, and the world is finally getting its taste of the very first webOS 3.0 tablet in the HP TouchPad – but more importantly, some are curious to know how it stands against some of the titans in the market. Luckily, it flaunts that oh-so lovely price point of $500 for the base 16GB Wi-Fi only model, and knowing that it’s packing equally impressive specs under the hood, it should undoubtedly prove itself as a competitor. However, knowing that the bar has been set in terms of what consumers expect out of tablets, it’s going to need to excel from head to toe in order to have a piece of the pie at dessert.

Features on the HP TouchPad remain unchanged: the devices are built around a 1.2 GHz dual-core Snapdragon processor, feature a 1.3 megapixel front-facing camera, 802.11b/g/n and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR wireless networking, stereo speakers with HP’s Beats Audio technology, and the usual panoply of mobile device sensors, including an accelerometer, gyroscope, light sensor, and compass. And, of course, the TouchPad features a 9.7-inch 1024 by 768-pixel display—just like a certain Apple tablet product.

Although the interface and sleek design similar to its counterparts in Apple and Motorola, the biggest differentiator for HP Tablet TouchPad is its operating system. WebOS running on HP TouchPad own tablet PC while running the Android operating system and Apple’s iPhone competitor using IOS. WebOS HP originally acquired with its acquisition of Palm WebOS, which had developed for use on its line of smartphones. HP TouchPad is the first non-smartphone device to use WebOS. For better or for worse, it will probably be out of the Tablet PC drive many Android OS.

It resembles the cloud of music storage service Amazon has just launched, and a little like Google should be introduced soon. HP TouchPad but apparently will use an algorithm to find the songs you’re most likely to play and make sure they are cached on your shelf so you can listen even when there is no Internet connection at hand.

Full info and where to get the best deal HP Touchpad on http://hptouchpadtablet.net

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The text on the stone is a decree from Ptolemy V, describing the repeal of various taxes and instructions to erect statues in temples. Two Egyptian-Greek multilingual steles predated Ptolemy V’s Rosetta Stone: Ptolemy III’s Decree of Canopus, 239 BC, and Ptolemy IV’s Decree of Memphis, ca 218 BC.

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