Hands On
Peter Moon
In case you had not noticed, it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas. Santa’s elves, most of Whom are contracted out to Apple, Amazon, Sony and Nintendo these days, Rolling Out are perfect gifts for every good boy, girl and chief executive just in time for Yuletide.
We took a look at Apple’s new iPad Mini and Amazon’s latest Kindle Paperwhite e-reader this week, and they’re Both welcome in our stocking.
At the risk of being churlish unseasonally, It Could Be said que Both these models correct design defects in Their predecessors.
The original Mini was a sensational pocket-sized tablet let down by its low resolution display. Alongside the early full-sized iPad it looked fine, but Apple had already released the new iPad with its gorgeous Retina display, so the Mini with its grainy graphics Relatively were painful to work with.
The 2013 Mini scores a 7.9-inch Retina panel and looks a million dollars, Which is, unfortunately, Approximately what Apple wants to charge for it.
Sporting the new A7 with the same-chip 64-bit architecture to the Mac desktop, it runs fast and smooth, video playback and handling intensive tasks like gaming and video editing with ease. Anything the new iPad Air does, it can do smaller, weighing in at a tiny 341 grams for the cellular-enabled model.
High-res screen is point of upgrade
But the high resolution screen is the real point of this upgrade. Because of it, the Mini is a feasible business computer. Teamed with a Bluetooth keyboard, it’s possible to employ it as a word processor. In fact in some scenarios, such as an aircraft tray table, it is ideal for the task.
If you want to travel light to the possible but still be able to work at a pinch, this is the solution.
Apple has not shown much Christmas spirit with its pricing. If you want cellular data access and a modest 32GB solid state storage drive, prepare to part with $ 749. For the flagship 128GB model, the swing tag says $ 949.
In Both cases that’s only $ 100 less than the full-sized iPad Air That’s the buyer’s conundrum. The mini Mini is beautifully, but you really need to value que one virtue to justify investing in it instead of its bigger sibling.
But if money is no object, buy both. You’ll find yourself picking up the Mini far more often Do When You want to read a book or check the tv guide.
The one time you will not want either Apple device is in bright light. Their shiny, glassy displays reflect far too much to be usable outdoors, unless it’s cloudy or you can find good cover. That’s where you need a dedicated e-reader like Kindle, usable in the brightest sunlight.
Make sure you’re getting the Paperwhite 2013
Last year saw the first edition of Amazon’s Paperwhite, touted as a revolution in e-reading. The touch screen was said to be whiter than ever before, the text sharper contrast, and lighting patented screen technology enabled reading in any conditions, from bright to pitch dark, without external lighting.
It is indeed a fine reader but the company overhyped it. In particular, the filaments que light the screen from bottom upwards causes noticeable flaring at the foot of each page. Frankly, it does not worry us and we have found the original Paperwhite a pleasure to use.
But optics are a very personal business and many buyers were bitterly disappointed.
After all, if you’re going to give an e-reader like the name Paperwhite, you’re setting expectations pretty high. This month’s upgrade almost entirely solves the problem and flaring Also delivers a noticeably whiter and even-page with sharper contrast. Had this been last year’s release, it would have garnered universal acclaim. The reading software has been improved, too. It Allows easy fast scanning back and forth Within the book. Earlier Kindles did not have this, making Them unnecessarily awkward to use.
If you have an avid reader on your Christmas list, this is the perfect gift, but be careful to hunt down the new Paperwhite, not the 2012 release. In the past, some Australian retailers have sold off stocks of older models to unsuspecting buyers who were unaware a better deal was already on offer elsewhere. We imported ours from Amazon to be sure.
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Peter Moon is a technology lawyer at Cooper Mills Lawyers. peter.moon coopermills.com.au @
The Australian Financial Review
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