I placed an order for Apple Ipad. The specifications and features were well displayed so that even a lay man could understand. The processing of order was in lightening speed and reached in just two days.
Manufacturer: Apple
I placed an order for Apple Ipad. The specifications and features were well displayed so that even a lay man could understand. The processing of order was in lightening speed and reached in just two days.
The iPad mini with Retina display has arrived. As someone who dumped the full-sized iPad for the iPad mini a year ago , I've been excited to get my hands on this new model. Can its small size beat out the all-new, all-lightweight iPad Air for a place in my heart and my backpack?
My wife has had her iPad (generation 1) since they first came out. It was getting a bit long in the tooth and didn't run some applications very well. Our son had gotten the iPad mini for his birthday and she liked the size.
Extreemly portable; retina display; latest processor
Some things can look tiny
The second iPad Mini is our favorite tablet of 2013, and the current tablet to beat. We wish it cost less than $400.
Adds a high-res Retina screen; Thin; light; and comfortable to hold; Powerful 64-bit processor; New Wi-Fi antennas are fast; iOS 7 runs smooth; Battery life is still 10 hours
Camera quality has not improved; A hair thicker and heavier than iPad Mini; $400 price tag is steep for a compact tablet; No fingerprint sensor; Some users complain about iOS 7's new look
While Apple got almost everything right with the Retina iPad mini, there is a catch: The cost for every model has increased by $70 from last year's prices. The starting price for the iPad mini with Retina display is now $400.
Apple's Retina display standard once again lives up to the hype; The 64-bit A7 chip's performance impresses; just as it did on the iPad Air & iPhone 5s; Same great lightweight; ultraportable design as last year
Though lower-priced competition continues to improve; Apple has increased the iPad mini price by $70; Limited supply could make the Retina iPad mini hard to get for the holidays; Some may want to wait for Touch ID in a future model
When I concluded our iPad Air review I assumed the iPad mini with Retina Display was a true no-compromise, smaller alternative to the iPad Air. In many senses that's true. Wireless connectivity is identical between the models, battery life is pretty much the same as well.
At £319 for the 16GB, cellular-free, model, the iPad Mini Retina isn't cheap, especially compared to its rivals. Things get almost MacBook-like at the top-end, with the 128GB/4G model setting you back £659.
Stunning Retina display; Speed performance; Size and weight for daily use
Price; No Touch ID
Small doesn't have to mean second-rate, we've seen the future of tablets and it looks like the Retina iPad Mini
Gorgeous build; stunning Retina screen; All day battery life; Much faster than the original Mini
Very expensive compared to 7/8in tablets; No expandable storage; Marginally inferior colours compared to Air's screen
Review Last year's iPad Mini really was playing second fiddle to the regular iPad. Not merely smaller than its sibling, the Mini had a much lower resolution display. It had a less powerful processor too. It felt like a product Apple was obliged to make rather than one it actually wanted to.
The iPad mini Retina is here and it clears up one of the biggest complaints about the original iPad mini: the screen. With the original it wasn't as good as the iPad or the iPhone, but with the Retina display now on board the iPad mini 2 looks to be an incredible tablet device.
Portable; powerful; great screen; as a tablet should be
No Touch ID; not 802.11ac; no microSD
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