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Apple iPad mini review



Wait, did hell just freeze over? Maybe a couple of degrees cooler? Rumors of a mini version of the iPad had been laughed at, dodged and denied - not necessarily in that order and often all at once. But here it is - the iPad mini is finally a reality. It caused due measures of excitement and perhaps a bit of disappointment. Yet, in typical Apple fashion, it's an excellent piece of hardware. In short, it's a polarizing device that may as well be the next best-selling tablet.

You have to hand it to Apple's R&D team - they know how to design hardware. The iPad mini is super thin and light, with a cool aluminum shell. Sure, they swore they'd never make a 7" tablet and the truth is they still haven't - the 7.9" screen of the mini offers 36% more real estate than the screens of the Google Nexus 7 and the Amazon Kindle Fire HD.

Less bezel on the left and right of the screen combined with the ~310g of weight make it reasonably comfortable to hold with one hand. Apple did make some compromises, which drew a lot of ire. Here's the summarized list of what's good and what's bad about the Apple iPad mini:
Key features

    Compact body: 200 x 134.7 x 7.2 mm
    7.9" LED-backlit IPS LCD touchscreen, 768 x 1024 pixels; scratch-resistant, oleophobic coating
    Dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n connectivity, carrier-dependent hotspot support
    Optional 2G/3G GSM, CDMA, LTE connectivity (data only, separate models)
    Optional GPS with A-GPS support (for the 3G model only)
    Apple A5 SoC, dual-core Cortex-A9 @ 1GHz chipset
    512MB of RAM
    PowerVR SGX543MP2 dual-core GPU
    iOS 6 with Siri, iCloud support and activation
    16/32/64GB of inbuilt storage
    Weight of 308 grams (312 grams for the Wi-Fi + Cellular option)
    Bluetooth 4.0
    16.3Wh battery
    Accelerometer, compass and three-axis gyro-sensor
    Compatible with every iPad and iPhone app without any modifications
    The base version costs less than a SIM-free iPhone 4, only $30 more than iPod touch
    5MP auto-focus camera
    1080p video recording at 30fps
    1.2MP secondary camera capable of FaceTime calls, 720p recording
    Four and five-finger gestures
    1080p TV-output with the Apple Digital AV Adapter (purchased separately for $49), 1080p video streaming
    Supports magnetic cases
    Lightning connector
    Stereo loudspeakers

Main disadvantages

    More expensive than 7" Android tablets, only $70 cheaper than iPad 2
    No Retina display, 162ppi only
    Same chipset as iPad 2, now two generations old
    iTunes still required for most of the content uploads
    Reflective screen struggles outdoors
    No standard USB port, Lightning accessories still rare and expensive
    No GPS receiver in the Wi-Fi version
    No memory card slot
    Lack of basic iOS apps - stocks, calculator, voice memos

The disadvantage list may seem longer than usual but most of the items there are general complaints that apply to virtually all Apple products, like the absence of a memory card slot. The way we see it, there are three main problems with the iPad mini - the (relatively) low-res screen, the old chipset and the price.

Apple products have so far effortlessly hit it big with users despite their perceived limitations compared to the competition. The new crop of iPads - the iPad 4 and iPad mini - already sold in the millions.

The software - iOS 6 - should be very familiar to Apple users, but the hardware is new. It's not like the big iPads, which mostly varied in thickness, this one has been designed to comfortably hold in one hand and slip into a coat pocket.
Some analysts have gone as far as to say that the iPad mini will become the iPad - it's highly portable, capable enough and drawing on the vast resources of the Apple eco-system. And if you adjust for the "Apple tax", the mini isn't that expensive.
Jump to the next page to find out just what you're getting with the iPad mini.

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