Actually, Thursday evening at 6:30 pm EST. TeleRead’s been invited to attend the “preview” of the Galaxy Tab by Samsung in New York.
I’ll be there and let you know what I find out. I’m really, really interested in getting my hands on this thing.
Actually, Thursday evening at 6:30 pm EST. TeleRead’s been invited to attend the “preview” of the Galaxy Tab by Samsung in New York.
I’ll be there and let you know what I find out. I’m really, really interested in getting my hands on this thing.
TeleRead.com is now a static archival site, but we're very much alive at TeleRead.org. Big thanks to Nate Hoffelder of The-Digital-Reader.com, who teamed up on the preservation project with ReclaimHosting.com.
Paul, we will look forward to your first-hand, and hands on report.
I’ve read conflicting stories about it that disagree on this question:
Like the iPhone, will the Galaxy Tab require a long-term contract from a wireless carrier?
Neither the iPhone today, nor the iPad, nor the Samsung Galaxy tomorrow “require/will require” a long-term contract. Contracts are traded for cheap thrills upfront — aka hardware subsidy. apple is selling iPhone 4’s unlocked in Canada; iPhone 3GS was sold here by the leading wireless carrier as an outright sale as well. Most people take the cheap route — but it’s hardly a requirement.
Samsung’s Tab pricing has been confusing — $200 to $300 has been floated; under $495 as well. It’s hard to imagine $495 for a Galaxy S Tab that is only 7″ and not an iSomething; so my bet is the $300ish pricepoint is more or less outright purchase. Unless people are willing to spend an extra $200 to trade the screen real estate of 9.7″ for a cell radio. Maybe.