The HP TouchPad.
A year after Hewlett-Packard purchased flailing Palm, the
technology behemoth is rolling out the first tablet that uses
Palm's webOS operating system.
The July 1 release should be a triumph for HP, showcasing its
ability to compete in the increasingly crowded tablet market.
Yet while the TouchPad's software is beautiful and intuitive,
overall the tablet is more of a "meh-sterpiece" than a
masterpiece.
The TouchPad looks a lot like its peers: It's black and shiny
with just a few buttons dotting its frame. The screen, 9.7
inches at the diagonal, is the same size and resolution as
Apple's iPad. At $US500 for a model with 16 gigabytes of
storage or $US600 for one with 32 GB, the price is
essentially the same, too.
The device I tested used Wi-Fi to connect to the internet; HP
says a version will work on AT&T Inc.'s wireless network
later this summer.
At 0.54 inches thick, the TouchPad is fatter than the iPad.
It's heavier, too, at 1.6 pounds. With its rounded edges and
smooth plastic, it's also more slippery than other tablets
I've tested.
Turn it on, and the TouchPad looks like webOS smartphones.
The software makes perfect sense on a tablet. For example:
Applications appear onscreen as little "cards" that you can
scroll through sideways, tap on to enlarge or flick to close.
Each window you open within an application - numerous web
pages or in-progress emails, for example - shows up as its
own card in a small stack for that app, and you can rearrange
them as you please.
The TouchPad has the latest version of webOS, which adds
features like the ability to pull your photos from Facebook
and online photo sites into the device's photo library, and
"Touch to Share," which will let you share content with
certain webOS smartphones.
Generally, webOS made navigating a breeze. Its layout keeps
the TouchPad's home screen uncluttered, with the "Just
type..." universal search function taking up a small amount
of space in the center of the display and a strip of
applications on the bottom of the screen.
I figured that the TouchPad's screen would be great for
watching videos. I wasn't disappointed. Whether I was
streaming Lady Gaga's latest video oeuvre from YouTube or
checking out the old Mike Myers comedy So I Married an Axe
Murderer on Crackle, colours popped and images were
crystal-clear.
The TouchPad was also good for surfing the web, in part
because it supports Flash video content, which the iPad does
not.
It couldn't do everything. Here and there, a website didn't
look quite right, and TV and movie streaming site Hulu would
not work on it. Overall, however, websites loaded and
functioned as they would on a standard computer.
The device includes a fine on-screen keyboard. I wouldn't
have written up this review on it, but it was fine for
sending emails and instant messages.
The TouchPad's battery life was decent. After streaming
videos, viewing photos and surfing the web, the tablet lasted
six-and-a-half hours with Wi-Fi on. HP says it is rated for
up to 8 hours of Internet use over WiFi, or 9 hours of video
playback.
One of the TouchPad features HP touts is its ability to
connect with a Pre 3 smartphone to share content like
webpages and videos and receive texts sent to the phone on
the tablet and reply to them from the TouchPad.
Though the Pre 3 is not yet for sale (it's slated for release
this summer), HP lent me one to test this feature. The
sharing was easy to set up via Bluetooth, and to pull up a
website on the Pre all you have to do is touch its back near
the bottom of the TouchPad's screen. It's a cool idea, but
I'm sceptical the feature would really get much use.
Of course, there were plenty of fumbles.
Several times, I was in the middle of an IM conversation when
the virtual keyboard mysteriously stopped allowing me to send
text. I could type, but whenever I pressed "enter," nothing
happened. I had to restart the device to fix it.
The TouchPad also seemed to stutter sometimes, like when I
flipped through on-screen album covers while running other
apps.
And when I streamed TV shows from network websites, they
would sometimes freeze.
Once an incoming message notification somehow turned off the
sound and I couldn't turn it back on.
The video chat feature, which I'd hoped would contend with
the iPad's FaceTime, was dismal. The TouchPad has a video
camera on its front and uses Skype for video calls, so I
asked my colleague Peter to help me give it a whirl.
But when we tried to connect, he looked pixelated and sounded
OK on my end and he said I looked "like a Monet painting" and
sounded crackly on his.
I tried video chatting with a high school buddy but every
time we got the video to work the audio was muted. I also
attempted to talk with my little brother, and after four or
five misfires we got the video chat working but the picture
and sound were awful.
Like any other tablet that wants a chance of survival, the
TouchPad includes access to an application store. HP said its
App Catalog will have at least 300 TouchPad apps at launch,
and 70 percent of its 6,200 webOS phone apps will work on the
device.
Still, this is slim pickings compared to the 90,000 iPad apps
in Apple's App Store (there are hundreds of thousands of apps
total). And tablets running Google's Android software can run
any of the more than 200,000 apps in the Android Market.
Sadly, the TouchPad is more blah than brilliant. The software
is great, though, so I'm keeping my fingers crossed that HP
can come up with a stronger tablet next time around.
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