Summary: Today Apple unveiled the
long-awaited iPad mini along with a revamped -- and mostly unexpected --
iPad 4. Let's take a look at how Apple has improved its best-selling
tablet.
Today Apple finally unveiled the long-awaited iPad mini --
Apple's answer to the growing pressure from small tablets such as
Google's Nexus 7 and Amazon's Kindle Fire HD.
This is a tablet that Apple claims is small enough to fit in one hand, but just as capable as the full-sized iPad.
The iPad mini features the 8-pin Lightning port as first debuted
on the iPhone 5. This means it is compatible with accessories for the
new iPhone.
Also, the iPad mini comes in white and a black/slate look, again, just like the iPhone 5.
The construction is all glass and aluminum, and the chassis is diamond cut to ensure a perfect fit.
The iPad mini features a dual-core, dual-GPU A5 processor as found in the iPad 2, iPhone 4S, Apple TV, and the fifth-generation iPod Touch.
By bumping the screen up from 7-inch to 7.9-inch, Apple managed to give the iPad mini 35 percent more screen than the Kindle Fire HD or Nexus 7.
But don't let the size fool you -- the iPad mini's battery is rated for 10 hours, just like that of it's bigger brother.
It comes in 16GB, 32GB, and 64GB versions, in both Wi-Fi and Wi-Fi + cellular.
The biggest change made to the iPad 4 is the new processor -- the A6X.
The new A6X chip inside the iPad 4 is a new dual-core CPU combined with quad-core graphics. According to Apple, it is up to twice as fast as the previous-generation A5X chip.
The 30-pin dock connector that Apple has used on previous ipads is also gone, replaced with the smaller, sleeker 8-pin Lightning dock.
This is the same dock as found on the iPhone 5, and has the advantage of taking 80 percent less space inside the iPad.
The connector is also reversible, making it easier to connect to a computer or to charge up the tablet.
The dimensions of the iPad 4 are identical to those of the iPad 3.
Also, despite the upgraded processor, Apple has kept the battery life at 10 hours.