The new 'WePad' tablet PC is photographed during a news
conference in Berlin, Germany. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn)
The German maker of a new tablet PC is setting out to
rival Apple's iPad with the promise of even more technology
such as a bigger screen, a webcam and USB ports.
It is not, however, an "iPad killer" as it has been dubbed by
some blogs but an alternative to its bigger rival, Neofonie
GmbH's founder and managing director Helmut Hoffer von
Ankershoffen told reporters in Berlin.
Ankershoffen stressed the system's openness: Two USB ports
allow users to connect all kinds of devices with the WePad,
from external keyboards to data sticks.
People who want to put music on their WePad do not have to
have any particular software, Ankershoffen said - a blow at
Apple's devices that require particular Apple software like
iTunes.
The WePad's basic version, which comes with Wi-Fi and
16-gigabyte storage, is set to cost €449 (SNZ855) the
larger 32-gigabyte version with a fast 3G modem is €569
($NZ1083).
Ankershoffen claimed that given its technological superiority
and greater openness, "that's a bargain compared with the
iPad."
The iPad - which hit stores in the US less than a month ago -
is on sale there starting at $499 ($NZ699) for the smallest
version, coming with Wi-Fi and a 16 GB storage.
The WePad, with its 11.6-inch screen, is powered by an Intel
chip and relies on a Linux software basis which is compatible
with Google's Android and all Flash applications,
Ankershoffen said.
When it hits stores starting late July, it will also boast a
complete open source office package, he said.
Reporters could not test the device at the press conference.
Berlin-based Neofonie - a small company of some 180 employees
- claims it already has some 20,000 people interested in
signing up for a pre-order, even though orders won't be
formally accepted before April 27.
Ankershoffen declined to give a sales estimate. "Not
thousands, not tens of thousands but many more will be sold
before the end of the year," he said.
The WePad is to be assembled by a manufacturer in Asia -
which Ankershoffen refused to name - that can ramp up
production capacity according to demand, he said
Neofonie casts the WePad as helping the media industry find a
way to market paid content and hopes to appeal to publishers,
some of whom are disgruntled with Apple's pricing policy and
restrictions.
The device would allow publishers to sell their content on
its platform without monopolizing the customer relationship,
as Apple's iTunes or Amazon's Kindle do, the company said.
Gruner + Jahr, one of Europe's largest magazine publishers,
already has a partnership with Neofonie, offering the
company's flagship magazine, Stern, on the platform.
"It will be the first magazine, but others will certainly
follow," Stern's deputy chief Tobias Seikel said at the press
conference.
Germany's biggest publisher, Berlin-based Axel Springer AG,
is in talks with Neofonie, but no cooperation is planned yet,
spokesman Christian Garrels said.
"We want to offer our company's brands on several platforms
with a high range," Garrels told The Associated Press.
The company's flagship daily, Bild previously had trouble
with its iPhone application as Apple censors sexually
explicit content, such as the paper's daily nude photo.
Apple's iPad will go on sale in Germany at the end of April,
according to the company's website. This would give the iPad
roughly a three month lead on its German competitor.
Neofonie seems determined to face its big California rival:
The company distributed tasty red apples boasting the WePad's
logo at the press conference.
However, both companies have to prove that the touch screen
device will not only amaze the tech-savvy early users, but
will also appeal to mainstream consumers at a time when
people have already a lot of Internet-connected gadgets -
smart phones, laptops, e-book readers, set-top boxes and home
broadband connections.
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