News, Reviews and more from Australia's Macintosh Authority
ADVERTISEMENT
With perfect timing, a company called X2 has announced the iTablet, a name once rumoured for Apple’s iPad prior to Steve Jobs unveiling the tablet late last month.
Expected to be available from April, the iTablet runs Windows 7 on a 1.6GHz Intel chip. The iTablet will have space for a 250GB hard drive, 802.11b/g Wi-fi and optional 3G mobile broadband. The device will support Flash, unlike Apple's iPad, and will have 3 USB ports and a 1.3Mp webcam.
HDMI output is offered as an optional extra.
For the fashion conscious, the 10.2-inch or 12.1-inch, 252x192x35mm tablet will be offered in a choice of black, white, blue, pink, yellow, red or grey.

This is not an iPad, despite the sound-alike name X2 chose for its Windows 7 device.
Pricing has yet to be confirmed.
PC Advisor notes X2 is an industrial product design company whose technical director, Robin Daunter, was formerly the head of R&D at Evesham Technology.
However, with the exception of Windows 7, the device may not be as new as some reports suggest. “Pretty sure the X2 iTablet suddenly making the UK tech rounds is the same AMtek iTablet T200 that’s been out for years now... 2007 in fact,” notes Engadget editor Thomas Ricker on his Twitter feed.
[Via Electricpig]
The MacBook Air, Apple’s latest Intel-based laptop, is the lightest, thinnest laptop Apple has ever constructed, and according to Apple, it’s the thinnest laptop ever made. And in many ways, the story of this laptop is the story of a series of compromises, all made in order to fit an entire Mac in a three-pound package that’s three-quarters of an inch thick at its thickest point.
Jason Snell | Jan 31, 2008
Aperture 2.0.1 is the Aperture that photographers wanted all along — when you use the new Aperture, it’s obvious that Apple listened its users. The new version features added tools, a streamlined interface that is both familiar yet tweaked for a much better workflow, and improvements in workflow-related speed (loading images, rendering adjustments, toggling between views, etc).
Russ Juskalian | Mar 14, 2008
The new MacBook and MacBook Pro are here. No, not just “here” in the sense of “publicly acknowledged by Apple and being shipped to arrive in Apple Stores today.” Here in the sense of, in my office right now. So in advance of our full reviews and lab tests of these products, let me give you a quick tour of the products.
Jason Snell | Oct 16, 2008
Apple’s newest MacBooks perform markedly better than their predecessors, particularly when it comes to 3-D games. But perhaps the most interesting discovery in the first of a series of tests involving Apple’s revamped laptop line is how well the new MacBooks perform when compared to the updated MacBook Pro offerings.
James Galbraith | Oct 20, 2008
App Store developers will now be able to reach customers in 13 new countries, according to an announcement on the iPhone Developer Program news page.