Features such as autocorrect, predictive text, and keyboard shortcuts have all been thrown in. The PlayBook's Calendar app works just as you'd expect. You can create appointments directly or subscribe to any online calendars you may already have. As shown in the above video, one interesting design trick RIM employed is to increase or minimize the calendar date depending on the number of events scheduled on it.
This way, you can glance at your calendar and immediately spot the busiest days. Its first trick is the capability to sync profile information from your connected LinkedIn and Twitter accounts. Its second trick is its integration with the Calendar app. Rescheduling an appointment on your calendar will trigger an automatic notification to the contacts you have associated with the event.
Overall, the features provided by PlayBook OS 2. For RIM's loyal base of business users, the e-mail and contact integration with LinkedIn is an attractive proposition. A few other enhancements, such as the ability to organize apps into folders, video chat with other PlayBook owners, and an application dock at the bottom of the home screen, refine an already great tablet experience.
Desktop sync Syncing media to your PlayBook from your computer isn't the simple drag-and-drop experience as on an Android device, or the time-honored iTunes sync of an iPod or iOS device. Instead, when you connect the PlayBook to a Mac or PC, a preloaded installer will pop up and run you through the BlackBerry Desktop software installation.
The setup is fairly painless, and it gives you separate tabs for manually or automatically syncing various media, such as photos, music, and videos. After the setup, your computer will maintain a wireless connection to your PlayBook over your home network, allowing you to send files to the device from the virtual drive on your computer.
One use for this feature is quickly transferring a report or presentation to your PlayBook without taking it out of your bag and physically connecting it. Included apps Out of the box, the PlayBook comes prestocked with some great apps and utilities. The PlayBook's killer app, though, is its browser. Unlike iOS and Android browsers, which evolved from the world of mobile phones, the PlayBook's browser is a clean slate no pun intended , and Web sites react to it just like a desktop browser.
This means you won't be wasting any time on mobile versions of sites designed for the small screens of smartphones--a problem that even larger tablets such as the Motorola Xoom and iPad 2 can't seem to shake. All of the Web's video, animations, games, and ads for better or worse work on the PlayBook, just like they would on your home computer.
There's even a privacy mode for the browser and advanced settings for selectively disabling cookies, WebSockets, and pop-ups. The only bad thing we can say about the browser is that it shoehorns the full Web experience onto a screen size that is ill-equipped to take advantage of it. With half the screen real estate of its iOS and Android Honeycomb peers, you spend a lot of time pinching fingers in and out to zoom pages and peer at an uncompromised Web experience through a 7-inch keyhole.
The PlayBook's video output has the unique capability of either mirroring the device's screen, or selectively locking content such as presentation slides or videos to the HDMI output while allowing the device to pursue other tasks or drive the presentation behind the scenes. The upshot of this arguably convoluted system is that the sensitive data stored in these proprietary BlackBerry apps is never actually stored on the PlayBook.
The PlayBook acts as a sort of tablet-size magnifying glass for interacting with these apps, but when the phone is taken away, no trace is left behind. For corporate users wrapped in layers of bureaucratic Enterprise and privacy concerns, the BlackBerry Bridge solution is a selling point that should in theory allow you to immediately integrate the tablet with an existing BlackBerry-based system.
Another advantage to the unique dance of device IDs that happens between the PlayBook and a BlackBerry smartphone is the way tethering is handled. In general, the PlayBook can be tethered over Bluetooth to any tether-friendly smartphone, thus accessing the Internet over the phone's cellular data connection. But when the PlayBook pairs with another BlackBerry device, the tethered connection is in theory indistinguishable to carriers, and shouldn't incur any additional charges your carrier may have in place for tethering.
App World Apps make the mobile world go 'round, especially when it comes to tablets. The selection of apps available through the App World still trails the giant storehouses of Android and iOS, but the quality of content RIM has pulled in since the PlayBook's release is admirable. Part of RIM's successful app catalog expansion is owed to the company's strategy of courting Android developers to port their existing apps into the App World catalog. Pravat Santra Certified Buyer.
After having read up a lot on the playbook, I decided to take the plunge and pick it up during the offer period. First bit of advice to anyone considering the Playbook, please do your own research, based on your requirements.
The Playbook is a brilliant device as an overall package. The biggest drawback is the lack of apps and the fact that the future of the device is uncertain.
Having said that, OS 2. Jefferson Dharmaraj Certified Buyer. I was going to buy this tablet as flipkart was giving a heavy rebate.
But then again I don't have a bb, and without bb bridge its still not worth it, doesn't even have a native email client!! No 3g, either bridge with bb or use an Android phone with hotspot. Sourav Roy Certified Buyer. I have an apple ipad and have used the bb tablet The tablet from blackberry is much bettr its got better camera Better processer And its got bluetooth Apple lacks Superb video formats no need to sit and convert videos Photos Internet Wifi Better touch And most imp..
USB port!!! Dont buy the iPad buy this. It's probably the best productivity tool out there, in tablets that is. UI is superb. Hardware top notch. There is no perfect tablet out there, so depends on whether this fits your needs, but i must highlight that this product is extremely well made. This creates a secure Bluetooth connection between the PlayBook and the phone. Scanning this code with a BlackBerry smartphone will prompt the phone to make an encrypted Bluetooth connection with the PlayBook.
You can also set up this connection manually -- the PlayBook will display a PIN that you'll need to type into the BlackBerry smartphone. Once connected to your BlackBerry smartphone, your PlayBook will allow you to check e-mail, calendar appointments and other files through your phone.
If the connection between your BlackBerry smartphone and PlayBook should break, these applications will become unavailable automatically. PlayBook uses a feature common to many tablets and smartphones -- pinch to zoom.
Technically, Apple secured a limited patent on pinch-to-zoom technology. Will Apple try to leverage this patent to throw a monkey wrench into RIM's plans? By then, Apple had a huge head start -- not only did the iPad debut in but its successor, the iPad 2, hit store shelves March 11, Could RIM's device compete against the first tablet computer to succeed in the consumer market? According to Jonathan Geller, the "Boy Genius," a source within the retail industry revealed that BlackBerry PlayBook sales failed to meet sales targets by around 90 percent.
To add insult to injury, the same source told Geller that the return rate on the PlayBook was higher than competing tablets [source: Geller ]. RIM representatives refute Geller's source, saying that according to the company's conversations with retailers sales of the PlayBook have met or exceeded expectations. A representative from retailer Best Buy was one such retailer, stating that customers were eager to purchase a PlayBook after getting some hands-on time with it in stores [source: Arghire ].
But if corporations adopt the device as the next-generation tool for today's executive, expect the PlayBook to stick around for a while. Sign up for our Newsletter! Mobile Newsletter banner close.
Mobile Newsletter chat close. Mobile Newsletter chat dots. Mobile Newsletter chat avatar. Mobile Newsletter chat subscribe. Computer Hardware. Tablet PCs. How the BlackBerry Playbook Works. See more gadget pictures. Son of PlayBook. Under the PlayBook Hood " ". Imitation and Flattery. BlackBerry in the Market " ". BlackBerry QNX.
Sources Apple. April 9, May 20, June 1, April 19, March 29, Apple iPad 2 vs.
0コメント